To: Scoobah who wrote (18340 ) 12/8/2006 3:30:21 PM From: ILCUL8R Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 32591 No doubt about it, Kurdistan is a success story. Its success began after Gulf War I and it has been lucky to not get too involved in Gulf War II. Junior can take no credit for its success. Read this book:The End of Iraq: How American Incompetence Created a War Without End (Hardcover) by Peter W. Galbraith Galbraith, a leading commentator on Iraq thanks to his recent articles in the New York Review of Books, presents a clear-eyed and persuasive case against the Bush administration's nation-building project there. As a former U.S. diplomat with long experience in Iraq, he offers an insider's view of the American occupation's failures—the poor preparation for post-invasion chaos, the cluelessness about Iraqi politics, the incompetence and corruption of the occupation authority—while advancing a deeper critique. With Saddam's dictatorship and the Baathist party and army that supported it gone, he contends that Iraq is irrevocably splitting into a pro-American Kurdistan in the north, a pro-Iranian Shiite south and an ungovernable Sunni center. America "cannot put the country back together again and it cannot stop the civil war," he insists. Deeply skeptical of attempts to reunify the Iraqi state, he proposes that the U.S. withdraw from Arab Iraq and "facilitate an amicable divorce" between the fractious sections. Galbraith advised the Iraqi Kurds during recent constitutional negotiations and is palpably sympathetic to their national aspirations; his argument sometimes feels like a brief for Kurdish separatism. Still, Galbraith's authoritative grasp of the issues and his cogent, forthright call for disengagement ensure that the book will move into the center of the debate over American policy in Iraq. amazon.com Galbraith lived and worked with the Kurds on several occasions over the last 20 years. He speaks with some eloquence and experience about Iraq and its possible partition into 3 different entities.