1boringoldman – wrong…

Posted on Thursday 3 April 2008

Ambassador Ryan C. Crocker first learned of the Iraqi plan on Friday, March 21: Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki would be heading to Basra with Iraqi troops to bring order to the city. But the Iraqi operation was not what the United States expected. Instead of methodically building up their combat power and gradually stepping up operations against renegade militias, Mr. Maliki’s forces lunged into the city, attacking before all of the Iraqi reinforcements had even arrived. By the following Tuesday, a major fight was on. “The sense we had was that this would be a long-term effort: increased pressure gradually squeezing the Special Groups,” Mr. Crocker said in an interview, using the American term for Iranian-backed militias. “That is not what kind of emerged.” “Nothing was in place from our side,” he added. “It all had to be put together.”

The Bush administration has portrayed the Iraqi offensive in Basra as a “defining moment” — a compelling demonstration that an Iraqi government that has long been criticized for inaction has both the will and means to take on renegade militias. The operation indicates that the Iraqi military can quickly organize and deploy forces over considerable distances. Two Iraqi C-130s and several Iraqi helicopters were also involved in the operation, an important step for a military that is still struggling to develop an air combat ability.

But interviews with a wide range of American and military officials also suggest that Mr. Maliki overestimated his military’s abilities and underestimated the scale of the resistance. The Iraqi prime minister also displayed an impulsive leadership style that did not give his forces or that of his most powerful allies, the American and British military, time to prepare. “He went in with a stick and he poked a hornet’s nest, and the resistance he got was a little bit more than he bargained for,” said one official in the multinational force in Baghdad who requested anonymity. “They went in with 70 percent of a plan. Sometimes that’s enough. This time it wasn’t”…
From this article, it looks like I was wrong in my insistance that this was an American operation, disguised as an Iraqi offensive. I guess that I’ll cop to being wrong, rather than remaining skeptical. With this Admionistration, one gets so used to looking at everything with suspicion – it’s hard to accept that anything is what it appears to be. If it was, indeed, and Iraqi Operation, it doesn’t seem to have turned out very well.It is also hard to keep up. Iraqi Army, Shiite Militia[s], Sunnis, Insurgents, al Qaeda, and our guys. I hate to admit it, but I can see how McCain keeps getting mixed up about who is doing what to whom. So, I admit being wrong and unjustly paranoid [and I’ll keep looking out of the corner of my eyes].

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