The victory in Iraq....
History will be kinder to George Bush than we think...
'MARKETS without bombs. Hummers without guns. Ice cream after dark. Busy streets without fear." So began Terry McCarthy's report from Iraq for ABC's World News Sunday on March 15, one of a series the network aired last week as the war in Iraq reached its sixth anniversary.
A nationwide poll of Iraqis reveals that "60 percent expect things to get better next year - almost three times as many as a year and a half ago," McCarthy continued. "Iraqis are slowly discovering they have a future. We flew south to Basra, where 94 percent say their lives are going well. Oil is plentiful here. So is money."
In another report two nights later, ABC's correspondent characterized the Iraqi capital as "a city reborn: speed, light, style - this is Baghdad today. Where car bombs have given way to car racing. Where a once-looted museum has been restored and reopened. And where young women who were forced to cover their heads can again wear the clothes that they like."
One such young woman is dental student Hiba al-Jassin, who fled Baghdad's horrific violence two years ago, but found the city transformed when she returned last fall. "I'm just optimistic," she told McCarthy. "I think we are on the right path."
ABC wasn't alone in conveying the latest glad tidings from Iraq.
"Iraq combat deaths at 6-year low," USA Today reported on its front page last Wednesday. The story noted that in the first two months of 2009, 15 US soldiers were killed in action - one-fourth the number killed in the same period a year ago, and one-tenth the 2007 toll. The reduction in deaths reflects the reduction in violence, which has plummeted by 90 percent since former President Bush ordered General David Petraeus to implement a new counterinsurgency strategy - the "surge" - in early 2007. Even in northern Iraq, where al-Qaeda is still active, attacks are down by 70 percent.
In the wake of improved security have come political reconciliation and compromise. Iraq's democratic government continues to mature, with ethnic and religious loyalties beginning to yield to broader political concerns.
The Washington Post reports that the country's foremost Shiite politician, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, has formed an alliance with Saleh al-Mutlak, an outspoken Sunni leader. It is a development that suggests "the emergence of a new axis of power in Iraq centered on a strong central government and nationalism" - a dramatic change from the sectarian passions that fueled so much bloody agony in 2006 and 2007. In the recent provincial elections, writes the Post's Anthony Shadid, Maliki's party won major gains, with the prime minister "forgoing the slogans of his Islamist past for a platform of law and order." Despite his erstwhile reputation as a Shiite hard-liner, Maliki now echoes Mutlak's call for burying the hatchet with supporters of Saddam Hussein's overwhelmingly Sunni Baath Party.
3 Comments:
I wonder if the left wing media like the Globe, Ctv and the Red Star will cover this?
I also wonder if the THE Agenda with Steve Paiken will cover it.
I highly doubt it.
Decades of talk about 'peace in the middle east' amounted to nothing, then President Bush came along and took actions to create the conditions for peace in the middle east.
Now Obama wants to go backwards to talking softly and meaning less.
The CBC still won't run the truth about canada taking part in the Iraq war under the reign of Jean Chretien.
The CBC doesn't even watch the CPAC coverage of Q.P. be cause if they did they would have heard Alexa McDonough and many Liberals demanding to know what canadian Forces are doing with captured Fighters or Terrorist in the ITO war-zone.
Why would a M.P. ask Harper about Captured Iraqi fighters if Chretien and Paul Martin told the public and voters that canada was safe from Muslim Terrorists because we stayed out of the Iraq conflict ????
Plus, why are canadians sending letters to relatives in the Forces in the Gulf area if canada isn't there and only has Troops in Afghanistan???
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