As it turns out, the report the White House is writing for Gen. Petraeus isn’t the only noteworthy official report on Iraq that’s due out soon. A new intelligence assessment, called “Prospects for Iraq’s Stability,” is also poised for release.
“The report says that there’s been little political progress to date, and it’s very gloomy on the chances for political progress in the future,” said one Congressional official with knowledge of its contents.
The new report also concludes that the American military has had success in recent months in tamping down sectarian violence in the country, according to officials who have read it.
The report, which was intended to help anticipate events over the next 6 to 12 months, is “more dire in its assessments” than the administration has been in its own internal discussions, according to one senior official who has read it. But the report also warns, as Mr. Bush did on Wednesday, that an early withdrawal would lead to more chaos.
“It doesn’t take a policy position,” one official said. “But it leaves you with the sense that what we’ve been doing hasn’t been working, but we can’t let up, or it’ll get worse.”
Got that? According to the new intelligence estimate, our principal mission in Iraq — enabling political progress — is going nowhere. Worse, no one seriously believes conditions are going to improve. Military successes are ephemeral without political solutions, of which there are none.
But then there’s the flip side.
The same estimate says, if we leave, Iraq will get worse. So, according to the intelligence, we can stay indefinitely, and get stuck in the middle as Iraq slides deeper into a bloody civil war, or we can leave, and watch Iraq slide deeper into a bloody civil war.
As Kevin Drum put it:
So we can’t stay and we can’t leave. Terrific. What’s worse, we now have a president who’s officially decided to take history lessons from Rambo. Turns out we were this close to winning in Vietnam when the Defeatocrats decided to pull the plug. And with that, yet another longtime conservative fantasy makes its way out of the fever swamps and into the public discourse, where we’ll all be expected to stroke our chins and pretend to take it seriously for the next week or so.
Sometimes, it’s like living in the Twilight Zone.