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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend....

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To: Sully- who wrote (1539)3/29/2004 1:42:49 AM
From: Sully-   of 35834
 
One year on, and Iraq's better off

March 28, 2004

BY MARK STEYN SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST
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Just under a year ago, Baghdad fell. A great day, or so you'd think -- especially after the idiotic predictions of how the city would be a new Stalingrad, with coalition troops fighting street to street for months on end. But, instead of even a moment of sheepish embarrassment, all the experts -- the U.N., the French, the world's media, the nongovernmental organizations and the left in general -- simply galloped on to even more idiotic predictions of doom.
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On April 12 last year, I wrote a column mocking the global
naysayers' latest Top Ten Quagmires Of The Week. If it
seems cruel to dredge them up out of the archive, I do so
because, to listen to the current ballyhoo from Democrats,
you'd think the administration's policy in this area has
been a disaster. It hasn't. Indeed, for 2-1/2 years now,
the naysayers to the Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld-Rice approach to
the war on terror have been close to 100 percent wrong on
everything.
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John Kerry, in his macho way, told Rolling Stone, apropos the Iraq war, that he never expected President Bush to f--- it up so much. In fact, Bush didn't asterisk it up at all. It's one of the least asterisked-up operations in history. The freak-show left prancing around on the anniversary demonstrations is one thing, but sensible people of all persuasions ought to be able to give the administration real credit for what they've done in Iraq these last 12 months.
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Here are 10 predictions of doom from the conventional
wisdom of a year ago, followed by some of my comments at
the time, and a note on how things have turned out:
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1. ''Iraq's Slide Into Violent Anarchy''
(The Guardian, April 11, 2003). Say what you like about Saddam, but he ran a tight ship and you didn't have to nail down the furniture.

I predicted: ''A year from now, Basra will have a lower crime rate than most London boroughs.''

One year on: Almost. According to the BBC, Basra is booming and its citizens are flush with new spending power. Despite Saddam Hussein's decision to empty the prisons of petty criminals on the eve of the war, in February British authorities reported that crime in the city has fallen by 70 percent.

2. ''The head of the World Food Program has warned that
Iraq could spiral into a massive humanitarian disaster''
(The Australian, April 11, 2003).

One year on: No humanitarian disaster. Indeed, no ''humanitarians.'' The NGOs fled Iraq in August and nobody noticed, confirming what some of us have suspected since Afghanistan: The permanent floating crap game of the humanitarian lobby has a vastly inflated sense of its own importance and is prone to massive distortion in the cause of self-promotion.

3. ''Iraqis Now Waiting for Americans to Leave''
(Associated Press, April 10, 2003).

I predicted: ''There will be terrible acts of suicide-bomber depravity in the months ahead, but no widespread resentment at or resistance of the Western military presence.''

One year on: The suicide-bomber depravity is getting more depraved even as it gets more impotent. But there remains no widespread popular ''resistance'' except in the minds of the left's armchair insurgents. According to an anniversary poll, only 15 percent of Iraqis want an immediate withdrawal of coalition troops.

4. ''If Saddam is not found dead, or caught alive, it will
be the worst of all possible closures for the war against
Iraq''
(Roland Flamini, UPI, April 10, 2003).

One year on: Saddam is in jail. His sons are dead. All but nine of the Pentagon's deck of cards now fall into one or other of those categories.

5. ''Iraq was a new country cobbled together from several
former Ottoman provinces, its lines drawn by the
Europeans'' (Mark Mazower, The Independent, April 7,
2003). It's a phony state, you can never make a go of it.

I wrote: ''There's nothing in the least bit 'cobbled' about it. . . . As long as you respect its inherently confederal nature, it'll work fine.''

One year on: Seems to be happening. The coalition transition and the new constitution both respect the realities on the ground.

6. ''Turkey is concerned that a Kurdish capture of Kirkuk
could help bankroll moves to establish an independent
Kurdistan''
(Agence France-Presse, April 9, 2003).

I predicted: ''Nothing to worry about. . . . They'll settle for being Scotland or Quebec rather than Pakistan.''

One year on: The new constitution formally enshrines them in the same semi-autonomous federal relationship as Scotland has with the United Kingdom and Quebec has with Canada.

7. ''Rather than reforming the Muslim world, the conquest
of Iraq will inflame it''
(Jeffrey Simpson, Toronto Globe and Mail, April 10, 2003).

I predicted: ''Despite the best efforts of Western doom-mongers to rouse the Arab street, its attitude will remain: Start the jihad without me.''

One year on: In Iran and Syria, it's the thug regimes who are under pressure. In the Palestinian Authority, Yasser's broke and the suicide bombers have lost their sugar daddy. In Libya, Col. Moammar Gadhafi's thrown in the towel.

8. ''Looting is always unsavory. Let's hope the Americans
don't pilfer the oil''
(Brenda Linane, The Age of Melbourne, April 11, 2003).

One year on: The only folks pilfering the oil were those officials and cronies living high off the hog from the U.N.'s disgusting Oil For Food program, a sewer of corruption that ought to force the resignation of Kofi Annan.

9. ''Weapons of Mass Destruction. Remember them? Not a
single one has yet been found''
(Bill Neely, Independent TV, April 10, 2003).

One year on: They were found. In Libya. Close enough for me. And, thanks to the suddenly cooperative Gadhafi, we now know a lot more about A. Q. Khan's role to disperse Pakistani nuclear technology throughout the Muslim world.

10. ''America is already losing the peace!'' (Everyone.)

I predicted: ''In a year's time, Iraq will be, at a bare minimum, the least badly governed state in the Arab world and, at best, pleasant, civilized and thriving. In short: not a bad three weeks' work.''

One year on: Iraq's provisional constitution is the most progressive in the Arab world. Business is booming. Oil production is up. The historic marshlands of southern Iraq, environmentally devastated by Saddam, are being restored. In February, attacks on coalition forces fell to the lowest level since the liberation. In a BBC poll, some 56 percent of Iraqis say their lives are much better or somewhat better than a year ago; 71 percent expect their lives to be better still a year from now, and only 6.6 percent say worse. Eighty percent of the country is pleasant and civilized, and the Sunni Triangle will follow.

Not a bad year's work.
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