
George
W. Bush's Greatest Triumph?
By Ben Shapiro
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
On
Monday, the U.S. military turned over the war-torn Karbala province to
Iraqi security forces. The assumption of control by Iraqi security
forces marked the eighth such handover by the U.S. military since the
start of the Iraq war. Of the 18 Iraqi provinces, 10 remain under U.S.
military control.
Cautious optimism is beginning to bloom in the desert. Though the
Iraqi government itself has acknowledged its foot-dragging with regard
to assuming responsibility over security -- "Allow me to say that
we are late, very late, to reconstruct, to rebuild our forces for
reasons that I do not want to mention here," said Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki -- the situation in Iraq is steadily growing
less tenuous. According to iCasualties.org, fatalities from improvised
explosive devices (IEDs) have decreased dramatically and consistently
since May 2007, from 90 in May to 16 in October. Iraqi forces are
either in control of or leading operations in broad swaths of 16 out
of 18 provinces.
The troop surge in Iraq has produced real
results on the ground. And as security improves, the movement
to take back Iraq from warring factions will snowball.
Momentum is the key to continuing improvement in Iraq.
"The reconstruction of Iraq does not hinge on security
alone," says Maliki, "but security is the key to
everything." And security continues to improve. According
to the Department of Defense, over 67,000 Iraqis have
volunteered to help coalition and Iraqi forces secure
neighborhoods. Says one lieutenant stationed south of the
Baghdad International Airport in the American-controlled
Baghdad province, "The violence and IEDs in the [area of
operations] seem to have slowed down considerably a couple
months before we arrived. It was definitely due to Iraqi local
nationals setting up their own checkpoints or ISVs (Iraqi
Security Volunteers). They police their own roads and areas to
keep [al-Qaeda] insurgents and any other bad guys out. They
have done this with great success."
The potential for success in Iraq creates an interesting
political situation domestically. While those on the right
have maintained strong support for the war -- leaving aside
the small minority of conservatives who back Chuck Hagel and
Ron Paul -- those on the left have clamored for immediate
withdrawal. That extremism has cost the left dearly. Speaker
of the House Nancy Pelosi, perhaps the most popular politician
in America only a few months ago, has seen her fortunes
tumble: Her favorability rating, which stood at 53 percent in
April 2007, now stands at 29 percent. Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid has seen a similar drop in popularity: In May,
Reid's favorability rating was 46 percent. It is now 19
percent.
The only hope for the left is the Machiavellian Senator
Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y. Among the leading Democratic
presidential candidates, only Clinton has embraced moderate
rhetoric about the future of Iraq. Her far-left base continues
to fume, but Hillary's bet hedging will likely win her the
Democratic nomination for president -- even Democrats
recognize that snatching defeat from the jaws of victory isn't
a winning 2008 campaign strategy.
Meanwhile, the Republican star rises with the burgeoning
Iraqi stabilization. The media exaggerated the pronouncement
of imminent Republican death -- a Rudy Giuliani nomination
could spell renewed electoral success in 2008. In the face of
a hostile media establishment and an unhappy American public,
George W. Bush may have pulled off the greatest success of his
presidency: winning democracy in Iraq and, in doing so,
keeping a party of defeatists out of power.
Ben Shapiro is a regular guest on dozens of radio
shows around the United States and Canada and author of Brainwashed:
How Universities Indoctrinate America's Youth.
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