Neo-"Conservative" Idealism Going Down the Drain in Iraq

Discussion in 'Political Debate & Discussion' started by KenH, Aug 22, 2007.

  1. KenH Well-Known Member

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    U.S. officials rethink hopes for Iraq democracy

    From Michael Ware and Thomas Evans
    CNN


    BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Nightmarish political realities in Baghdad are prompting American officials to curb their vision for democracy in Iraq. Instead, the officials now say they are willing to settle for a government that functions and can bring security.

    A workable democratic and sovereign government in Iraq was one of the Bush administration's stated goals of the war.

    But for the first time, exasperated front-line U.S. generals talk openly of non-democratic governmental alternatives, and while the two top U.S. officials in Iraq still talk about preserving the country's nascent democratic institutions, they say their ambitions aren't as "lofty" as they once had been.

    "Democratic institutions are not necessarily the way ahead in the long-term future," said Brig. Gen. John "Mick" Bednarek, part of Task Force Lightning in Diyala province, one of the war's major battlegrounds....

    The U.S. government has long cautioned that a fully functioning democracy would be slow to emerge in Iraq. But with key U.S. senators calling for al-Maliki's removal, some senior U.S. military commanders even suggest privately the entire Iraqi government must be removed by "constitutional or non-constitutional" means and replaced with a stable, secure, but not necessarily democratic entity.

    - rest at www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/meast/08/22/iraq.democracy/index.html