a “lame duck” escalation?..

Posted on Wednesday 8 October 2008


A nearly completed high-level U.S. intelligence analysis warns that unresolved ethnic and sectarian tensions in Iraq could unleash a new wave of violence, potentially reversing the major security and political gains achieved over the last year.

U.S. officials familiar with the new National Intelligence Estimate said they were unsure when the top-secret report would be completed and whether it would be published before the Nov. 4 presidential election. More than a half-dozen officials spoke to McClatchy on condition of anonymity because NIE’s, the most authoritative analyses produced by the U.S. intelligence community, are restricted to the president, his senior aides and members of Congress except in rare instances when just the key findings are made public.

The new NIE, which reflects the consensus of all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies, has significant implications for Republican John McCain and Democrat Barack Obama, whose differences over the Iraq war are a major issue in the presidential campaign. The findings seem to cast doubts on McCain’s frequent assertions that the United States is "on a path to victory" in Iraq by underscoring the deep uncertainties of the situation despite the 30,000-strong U.S. troop surge for which he was the leading congressional advocate…
We’ve been so overwhelmed with the Presidential Campaigns and the U.S. led collapse of the world financial markets that we’ve given short attention to the other pressing issues of our world position, like the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, or the resurgence of al Qaeda. Before the Bush Era, the National Intelligence Estimate has been our watchword on our safety in the world. It’s a compilation of the combined sixteen Intelligence Agencies in our government.

From the start, the Bush Administration used them as tools – releasing them to support their positions and with-holding them if they pointed in a different direction. At one point, one was thrown together filled with misinformation to justify our Trillion Dollar War in Iraq. Right now, the mythology on the street is that Bush’s Surge took us over the top in Iraq leading to the victory he always longed for. Some, myself included, thought of it as a Pickett’s Charge [Robert E. Lee’s desparate attempt to win his losing battle at Gettysburg in the Civil War].

Well, we may yet turn out to be righter than we now seem. But I doubt that the N.I.E. that portends of a rocky future for our Iraqi misadventure will be forthcoming prior to the election. That’s just kind of the way things go these days. I am worried that there’s the possibility of a "lame duck" escalation after November 4th based on this report…
 

and

A draft report by American intelligence agencies concludes that Afghanistan is in a “downward spiral” and casts serious doubt on the ability of the Afghan government to stem the rise in the Taliban’s influence there, according to American officials familiar with the document.

The classified report finds that the breakdown in central authority in Afghanistan has been accelerated by rampant corruption within the government of President Hamid Karzai and by an increase in violence by militants who have launched increasingly sophisticated attacks from havens in Pakistan.

The report, a nearly completed version of a National Intelligence Estimate, is set to be finished after the November elections and will be the most comprehensive American assessment in years on the situation in Afghanistan. Its conclusions represent a harsh verdict on decision-making in the Bush administration, which in the months after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks made Afghanistan the central focus of a global campaign against terrorism.

Beyond the cross-border attacks launched by militants in neighboring Pakistan, the intelligence report asserts that many of Afghanistan’s most vexing problems are of the country’s own making, the officials said…

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