That is all I will say as I have deep respect for both individuals…
this after hearing that the Pope, in his ever deteriorating state, is now using a feeding tube to boost his nourishment.
He works in strange ways does He not?
That is all I will say as I have deep respect for both individuals…
this after hearing that the Pope, in his ever deteriorating state, is now using a feeding tube to boost his nourishment.
He works in strange ways does He not?
It all depends on your sense of humour I guess:
This made me laugh:
(emphasis added)
First, it is hard to conceive that it would take more forces to provide stability in a post-Saddam Iraq than it would take to conduct the war itself and to secure the surrender of Saddam’s security forces and his army–hard to imagine.
Second, in making predictions, one should at least pay attention to past experience. And in the case of Iraq, we have some recent experience to look to. The northern third of Iraq has been liberated from Saddam Hussein’s grasp since Operation Provide Comfort, which we undertook just 1 month after the cease-fire of the Persian Gulf war in 1991.
After that operation, we withdrew our ground forces from northern Iraq completely in the fall of 1991, and in the 12 years since then, we have not had any forces–emphasize, “any forces”–on the ground there. And yet the northern third of Iraq has remained reasonably stable even though, sadly, it is subjected to the same economic sanctions that have been applied to the rest of the country, and even though the people there live under daily threat from Saddam’s military, from Saddam’s security forces, and for the last year and a half, from an al Qaeda cell that operates in northeastern Iraq called Ansar al-Islam.
….
There has been none of the record in Iraq of ethnic militias fighting one another that produced so much bloodshed and permanent scars in Bosnia, along with a continuing requirement for large peacekeeping forces to separate those militias.
Third, whatever numbers are required–and I emphasize I am not trying to make a prediction, but I will say, there is no reason, there is simply no reason to assume that the United States will or should supply all of those forces.
Many countries have already indicated to us, some of them privately, a desire to help in reconstruction of post-Saddam Iraq, even though they may not want to be associated with Saddam’s forcible removal.
Indeed, remember that we are talking about one of the most important countries in the Arab world, with not only enormous natural resources that we keep hearing about, but equally importantly, I would say more importantly, extraordinary human resources.
I would expect that even countries like France will have a strong interest in assisting Iraq’s reconstruction.
…
In short, we don’t know what the requirements will be. But we can say with reasonable confidence that the notion of hundreds of thousands of American troops is way off the mark.
That was Paul Wolfowitz, February 27, 2004.
Excuse me while I pick myself off the floor….
As a reminder…
Right now, 2 years later there are 138,000 troops in Iraq.
The Shia militias of Sadr were the first to cause trouble real trouble… then the Sunnis got rolling… they kill Kurds and Shia as well as Coalition forces almost daily. The Kurds are the only ones not being overtly violent, though they’ve done their share to destabilize and block the political process.
The Coalition of the Willing started at an optimistic 47. 2 years later, instead of growing it has consistently shrunk starting with the pullout of Spain (due to Madrid bombings and lack of UN resolution authorizing peacekeeping force)… by the end of the year Poland, the UK, Japan and Australia could be the only countries still with significant numbers of troops in Iraq. 21 countries will have completely withdrawn or significantly reduced their troop numbers. That’s nearly half.
While NATO is helping to train security forces… France is not sending troops to Baghdad anytime soon.
Excuse me for being blunt… but in any other countries that claims to be democratic this sort of arrogance and complete and utter incompetence would be greeted with a public inquiry and a swift kick in the ass by the electorate.
Yet, in the United States of America people like Paul Wolfowitz are never elected and rewarded with postings to the World Bank?
This man should be thrown in jail for comtempt of Congress or at least extreme arrogance and ignorance.
Military code generally demands that if a Private has something to say to a General… he/she has more than a few layers of COs to get through before his message gets to who he intends it to reach… if it does at all.
That is The Way it has always been… it is how the military works… well, perhaps that is changing.
The 4-star General commanding STRATCOM (US Nuclear Missile Strategic Command) has a blog… access is only on a need-to-access basis, you know, not for you and me anyway.
But… here is what he apparently had to say recently:
“The metric is what the person has to contribute, not the person’s rank, age, or level of experience. If they have the answer, I want the answer. When I post a question on my blog, I expect the person with the answer to post back. I do not expect the person with the answer to run it through you, your OIC, the branch chief, the exec, the Division Chief and then get the garbled answer back before he or she posts it for me. The Napoleonic Code and Netcentric Collaboration cannot exist in the same space and time. It’s YOUR job to make sure I get my answers and then if they get it wrong or they could have got it righter, then you guide them toward a better way…but do not get in their way.”
JAMES E. CARTWRIGHT
General, USMC
Commander, USSTRATCOM
In non-mil-speak he just said that he would take a comment on his blog as an answer to his problem no matter who said it, no matter what rank they are.
That is a serious paradigm shift.
Is blogging changing the world?
Cheers:
The National today (Monday March 28) has a very very interesting documentary about the Oil for Food program. Who speicifically benefitted from it (including French Pres. Jaques Chirac) what the UN and US position on it was at the time…. and others. If you’d like to see someone sweat, watch for the interview with one beneficiary of oil from Saddam as she sweats under basic questioning from the reporter.
He even interviews Zirinovsky (sp?), the ultra-nationalist Russian opposition leader who wanted Russia to send troops to help Iraq and who approached an American oil company to buy Iraqi oil. (that company is due to appear for questioning in Congress).
If you get CBC or CBC Newsworld… search it out… ASAP. The feature is called ‘Bribes for Baghdad”.
Tomorrow, after the interim report looking into the UforFood program is released, CBC will air a 2nd part to the documentary looking into how the corruption went to the top of the UN.
Kurdo comments today on the first sitting of the Iraqi Parliament where one MP apparently referred to the Kurdish region of Iraq as the “North”.
Major Faux-pas!
Some of the 77 MPs from Kurdistan were insulted. They shouted “Kurdistan, Kurdistan. What North”. The old man said “Sorry, Kurdistan”.
Oops. Oh well.. at least all they did was shout! No worse than the Bloc Quebecois getting uppidity when someone refers to Quebec as French Canada. If the worst they do is correct them then I’d say that’s a win for democratic institutions.
Welcome, Iraq, to the Democratic world!