Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Bottoms Up -- The Long Road

clipped from abcnews.go.com


The new U.S. military strategy in Iraq, unveiled six months ago to little acclaim, is working.


In two weeks of observing the U.S. military on the ground and interviewing commanders, strategists and intelligence officers, it's apparent that the war has entered a new phase in its fifth year.


It is a phase with fresh promise yet the same old worry: Iraq may be too fractured to make whole.


No matter how well or how long the U.S. military carries out its counterinsurgency mission, it cannot guarantee victory.


Only the Iraqis can. And to do so they probably need many more months of heavy U.S. military involvement. Even then, it is far from certain that they are capable of putting this shattered country together again.


Despite political setbacks, American commanders are clinging to a hope that stability might be built from the bottom up with local groups joining or aiding U.S. efforts to root out extremists rather than from the top down, where national leaders have failed to act.