Tag Archives: Iraq

The silly season

Pundits of my long-ago youth called the last few weeks before a national election "the silly season." They might also have said it was a time of bewildering blizzards of prevarications and outright lies dressed up as important investigative reporting and other revelations. Thus the current crop of Sunday MSM reports about that awful Bush administration. How else to win without making the incumbents look bad? On the Iraq war, however, recent claims that the violence is increasing, it’s a civil war, etc., are contradicted by, among others, the Defense Department in its latest, i.e. Aug. 29, "Report on Stability and Progress in Iraq," as summarized by NRO which has a link to the pdf version:

"…attacks against Coalition forces have dropped since the summer of 2004, while casualties of Iraqi Security Forces have increased dramatically as ISF have moved to take main responsibility for providing security in the country ( p.32).  Also the attacks remain confined mostly to one out of 18 provinces (Anbar) and Baghdad, while the vast majority of the country —  14 out of 18 provinces — has remained peaceful and largely secure."

Sure doesn’t sound that way in the 24/7 news cycle, where "violence rocks Iraq" yet again, but what can you expect? It’s the silly season–or, if you prefer, the season for lying. 

Martyrdom, that’s the ticket

This is a brag, believe it or not. Looks like the flypaper is still working.

"The new leader of al Qaeda in Iraq said in an audiotape posted on the Internet Thursday that more than 4,000 foreign insurgent fighters have been killed in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003."

Via Instapundit 

1st Cav returns to Iraq

For the men and women of the big cav unit up the road at Fort Hood, it’s back to Iraq.

"The division will uncase its colors later this fall when it takes over responsibility for Multinational Division Baghdad from Fort Hood’s 4th Infantry Division.

Turn of the screw for al Q

"Coalition forces in Iraq have suddenly received the manpower equivalent of three light infantry divisions…and now have a huge edge over al-Qaeda in al-Anbar province. How did this happen? Tribal leaders in the largely Sunni province on the Syrian border got together and signed an agreement to raise a tribal force of 30,000 fighters to take on foreign fighters and terrorists," reports StrategyPage.com.

"These leaders have thrown in with the central government in Baghdad. This is a decisive blow to al Qaeda, which has been desperately trying to fight off an Iraqi government that is getting stronger by the week. Not only are the 30,000 fighters going to provide more manpower, but these tribal fighters know the province much better than American troops – or the foreign fighters fighting for al Qaeda. Also, this represents just over 80 percent of the tribes in al-Anbar province now backing the government."

Via Instapundit 

A good tour

It’s not all gloom and doom in Iraq, even in the bullet-torn city of Najaf. In fact, SPC Mary Robinson, driver of a Humvee gun truck, is leaving it almost peaceful.

“’I couldn’t ask for a better deployment,” said the 24-year-old from Monroe, La. ‘ We’ve lost a few guys, but for the most part it’s been pretty safe.’

"For most of the last year, Robinson’s unit — the 3rd Battalion of the 16th Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Brigade, 4th Infantry Division — has helped train Iraqi army soldiers and navigated the stormy and fractured world of Shiite politics in this city of more than 1 million."

And for those who didn’t come home physically unmarked, the wounded art of Warrant Officer Michael Fay. Via Op-For

News from the 4th ID

The 4th Infantry Division is due back at Fort Hood in a few months, so here’s a summary of one staff sergeant’s thoughts on what and where they’ve been.

"Yes, they are progressing. The local Iraqi people are stepping up, more than I kind of expected," the sergeant admits. "This is my second tour over here, and the difference between a year and a half ago and now is remarkable. The local Iraqi government is more stable and in place, and is starting to take the lead, funding and supervising and putting together all these different projects that they need."

Uh, excuse me

Just in time for the congressional election end-game, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence has asserted once again that al Q and Saddam had no connection, supposedly making our invasion illegitmate. But a deputy Iraq prime minister, Barham Salih, a Kurdish politcian imprisoned by Saddam, disagrees.

"‘The alliance between the Baathists and jihadists which sustains Al Qaeda in Iraq is not new, contrary to what you may have been told.’ He went on to say, ‘I know this at first hand. Some of my friends were murdered by jihadists, by Al Qaeda-affiliated operatives who had been sheltered and assisted by Saddam’s regime.’"

Via Power Line