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Iraq After the Surge

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04.07.2008 at 02:07am

The US Institute of Peace has just released its report – Iraq After the Surge: Options and Questions by Daniel Serwer and Sam Parker. This is the report cited in today’s Washington PostIraq Report Details Political Hurdles and Future Options by Robin Wright.

About the report:

… This paper describes the current policy (as well as possible variants) and presents two alternatives that would reduce the U.S. commitment to Iraq. In deciding among the options, there are important questions that remain to be answered. As General David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker are expected to appear before Congress in April, we have appended to this analysis a series of questions that they might be asked so as to clarify U.S. policy and policy options…

From the Washington Post:

A new assessment of U.S. policy in Iraq by the same experts who advised the original Iraq Study Group concludes that political progress is “so slow, halting and superficial” and political fragmentation “so pronounced” that the United States is no closer to being able to leave Iraq than it was a year ago…

Some recent favorable developments in Iraq come from factors “that are outside U.S. control” and susceptible to rapid change, the report said, including the cease-fire by Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and the new Sunni Awakening councils made up of former insurgents and tribal leaders opposed to the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki…

Hat Tip to Abu Muqawama.

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