Silence on Najaf

by Chris Bertram on August 27, 2004

“Four posts on al-Sadr: it’s getting to be an obsession isn’t it?” writes a commenter on “John Quiggin’s post below”:https://www.crookedtimber.org/archives/002396.html . Not really, one might think, since the continuing events in Najaf look to be of enormous significance for the future of Iraq and for the nature of whatver regime emerges. I’ve just done a tour of the various British blogs that supported the war from of liberal/lefty pov, and I find, amazingly, that they haven’t been discussing Najaf at all. Not a mention! (I’m sure commenters will dig up exceptions.) Perhaps events have deviated too far from the script? Data does not compute! What I do find is generic comment on the war or on the “war on terror”, derogatory comment on opponents of the war, occasional mention of “good news” from Iraq, and links to unreliable sources suggesting Iranian or Syrian nefariousness. The American pro-war blogs seem to have dropped everything in favour of endless comment on the Kerry/SBV affair. Those interested in the detail of what is actually happening in Iraq will, of course, continue to consult “Juan Cole”:http://www.juancole.com/ .

{ 68 comments }

1

Dan Hardie 08.27.04 at 9:53 am

This is an easy game to play, Chris. Pro-war bloggers not saying what they should, eh? What would you say about a blogger who has at various times written posts supporting British military interventions in Kosovo, Afghanistan and Sierra Leone, and who has told his chum Norman Geras that he regrets opposing the British military campaign in the Falklands, and yet who doesn’t write a single word on the Government’s funding, or rather lack thereof, of the British military? Who doesn’t write a single word praising the British military for their roles in the interventions of which he does approve? ‘Data does not compute!’ – to make a rather adolescent joke.

Actually, to be fair, I seem to remember you getting very worked up about the media attention paid to a woman who had the nerve to complain that her soldier husband had had his flak jacket taken away from him a day before he was killed by a shot in the chest- such coverage was ‘whipping up very personal hatred of Tony Blair and those close to him’, by which you claimed to mean the cretinous Mr Hoon- so I guess you’re on the case. Someone of less sophistication might have thought that the undersupply of body armour was a matter of some interest in itself, but you saw this for the triviality it was.

2

John Quiggin 08.27.04 at 10:09 am

Dan, making this point with respect to an individual would be unfair. Any given blogger might have omitted mention of Najaf for all sorts of reasons. They might have got sick of the entire topic of Iraq, might not have paid attention etc etc.

But Chris didn’t pick on individuals. The fact that no one, or almost no-one, on the pro-war left is discussing Najaf is significant.

3

Chris Bertram 08.27.04 at 10:13 am

Dan, impressed and flattered as I am by your attention to my views, you rather mistake the point I’m making. It isn’t that I’m saying that it is bad that blogger X or blogger Y has failed to comment on events in Najaf. Of course individuals, who are, after all, only blogging, will comment or not comment on events as they see fit. And a particular individual’s failure to mention this or that shouldn’t be cited as symptomatic of anything. What I find striking is not that particular blogs of a certain hue are silent, but that _all of them are_ , as far as I can tell. Moreover, they are all silent on a matter — the evolving situation in Iraq — on which they normally write frequently and at length. As a keen student of my writing, I think you’ll agree that I haven’t suddenly become silent on the subject of military expenditure after having previously obsessed about it.

4

Dan Hardie 08.27.04 at 10:32 am

‘As a keen student of my writing, I think you’ll agree that I haven’t suddenly become silent on the subject of military expenditure after having previously obsessed about it.’

I’ll quibble about the word ‘keen’; I’m merely a dabbler in your oeuvre, Chris, if one with a good memory.

But you’re ignoring the main point: you express strong views in favour of various British military interventions- four, by my count. And yet it’s precisely the case that you don’t mention ‘military expenditure’. This is, I’m afraid, intellectually risible attitude: it’s as if I were to call for the British government to provide clean water for the entire 3rd world (a policy of which I would certainly approve) without even a mention of where the funding for such a massive project was coming from.

It’s also the case that you don’t mention the British service personnel whose difficult and often dangerous task it is to carry out the interventions of which you approve. Nor do you realise the rather obvious point that a man who approves of military intervention x should also take an interest in whether his country’s armed forces are adequately funded and equipped, since if they are not, their mission will become unnecessarily dangerous, if not impossible. Now this attitude is worse than intellectually risible: it is very hard, in my eyes, to defend this morally. Further, a point which doesn’t even seem to have registered with you, to call for troops to put themselves in harm’s way and then to fail to praise them for having done so in such a brave and competent fashion is, again, morally very hard to take.

For this reason I respectfully disagree with John Q’s argument: it’s not the case that I’m criticising Chris B for failing to address a single topic (in this instance, military intervention), which as JQ notes, is something that could have multiple justifiable causes. It’s rather that I strongly object to the way in which Chris B addresses this topic. I note, as a minor point, that a tone of utter self-righteousness vis-a-vis pro-war bloggers comes ill from a man who is himself a pro-certain-wars blogger, and whose writings on the topic are a sort of fantasy exercise in which troops and their equipment magically spring out of thin air.

5

Chris Bertram 08.27.04 at 10:54 am

For the record, Dan, and just to keep you happy, I hereby praise the men and women of our armed services for their courage and devotion to duty, the doctors and nurses of our national health service, the hard working teachers in our schools, the police men and women who keep us free from crime etc etc. I hereby recognize that I have not sufficiently praised these people in the past and that in expressing opinions about defence, health, education, art, football, food, music, &c, I have failed to attend to the question of securing adequate funding for these many areas of laudable human activity. I recognise that my silence on these matters reveals my writings — where they touch on these topics and others — as a mere fantasy exercise, without any merit whatsoever. Indeed, I stand condemned by these silences as irresponsible and morally deplorable.

6

Dan Hardie 08.27.04 at 11:11 am

Shorter Chris Bertram: Oh, Christ, losing another argument…Look over there! The schools! The hospitals!

7

dsquared 08.27.04 at 11:13 am

by the way, the two Cockneys were spotted by the Guardian yesterday, so it looks like they survived.

8

Dan Hardie 08.27.04 at 11:24 am

Shorter Chris Bertram (continued):
Keep looking! The hospitals! The schools! The… er… the football!

9

reuben 08.27.04 at 12:42 pm

In his support of certain wars, Chris Bertram has not once – not once! – mentioned that unless woman have children, we couldn’t fight those wars. What is this madness?! And now that I think about it, when he writes about football, where does he think these so-called footballers come from? Brazil!? Pah! They come from wombs! Not that you’d know that to read his delirious, non-womb-mentioning rants.

As an unelected and completely unknown representative of midwives everywhere, but particularly in the Bethnal Green section of London (don’t forget the Museum of Children in your next post, Chris!), I call on bloggers everywhere to no longer comment on activities that require humans, unless said comments include mention of the fact that humans must be born.

Born, I tell you!

10

Barry 08.27.04 at 12:42 pm

Shorter Dan Hardie: only five paragraphs not getting the point.

11

Dan Hardie 08.27.04 at 1:09 pm

Shorter Barry: grammar nothing means me to.

Shorter Reuben: soldiers can, indeed should, be sent into battle to satisfy the moral urgings of Chris Bertram without any attention paid to whether they are equipped to so do. Squaddies getting shot because their flak jackets are taken away…Look over here! Random soliloquy about, er, midwives! Funn-ee!

12

Barry 08.27.04 at 1:39 pm

Thanks, Dan. I accept your retreat from the topic to that of grammar criticism. Enjoy.

13

praktike 08.27.04 at 1:48 pm

What happened to this thread?

14

John Quiggin 08.27.04 at 1:48 pm

Entertaining as this discussion has been, I’d still like to hear from anyone with a left/liberal pro-war position what they think about the Najaf fighting, or even why they it was not significant enough to merit discussion.

15

Robin Green 08.27.04 at 1:58 pm

Not covering a topic doesn’t mean you aren’t concerned about it – it could just mean that you don’t think you have anything worth adding – or at least, you have other things that you’d rather write about instead.

On the other hand, you have Chomsky’s argument about the “responsibility of intellectuals” to speak out. However, I doubt many bloggers consider themselves to be so widely read that they start to have a journalistic responsibility to cover certain things.

16

kevin donoghue 08.27.04 at 2:03 pm

As the author of the offending comment (cautioning John Quiggin about obsession) let me point out that I was not faulting his reading of the Najaf outcome. The problem he is faced with is that nobody is presenting a worthwhile case for America’s conduct of the war. So there is nobody for him to argue with. Why pick on the left? The pro-war right hasn’t had much to say for itself either. There are plenty of bloggers wittering on about Islamofascists, but no effort is made to explain how shooting up a city sacred to Shiites is supposed to slow the proliferation of these ideological hybrids. Criticise the decision to go after Muqtada and you get the schoolboy’s response: he started it. Apparently the way to extend Allawi’s authority beyond the Green Zone is to attack his principal enemy on the latter’s preferred battleground. The fact that Allawi’s own troops don’t want to fight there doesn’t matter.

Many times since Operation Rolling Blunder was first mooted I have met with complaints that Europe should be supporting American policy. What policy? The policy of destroying Fallujah’s Baathists or the policy of handing the town over to them? The policy of putting Muqtada al-Sadr behind bars or the policy of bringing him into the political arena? The policies of Garner or Bremmer, Chalabi or Allawi? Or for that matter of the State Department or the Pentagon?

I don’t think John Quiggin is wrong, merely that he is wasting his time. (So am I of course, but the opportunity cost to society is smaller.) I fear that Benjamin Franklin’s words will be the best epitaph on America’s non-policy in Iraq: experience keeps a dear school, but fools will learn in no other.

17

Barry 08.27.04 at 2:12 pm

Kevin, I think that you’re optimistic. So far, the right hasn’t even learned from experience. Or perhaps (even worse) they have – experience has taught them that being wrong isn’t harmful to them.

18

Mark 08.27.04 at 2:24 pm

I’ve been waiting for someone on the left to acknowledge that Sadrist has razed villages before and its leader has attempted to impose anti-democratic rule. I suppose this would make it more difficult to suggest that there is no justification for removing Sadr’s militia.

I’ve been through this before with John Quiggen on other threads: he simply will not distinguish between Sadrists attempt to usurp Iraqi’s chance for liberal democracy and the West’s attempt to give them that chance. When he does – when anyone on the left does – they’ll be taken alot more seriously.

19

Mark 08.27.04 at 2:28 pm

That’s John Quiggin, rather. Apologies.

20

Dan Hardie 08.27.04 at 2:42 pm

Barry- it’s not possible to discuss things when poster only writes one incomprehensible sentence; lack of retreat from topic is clearly visible in reply to other, intelligible posters. Having said that: Ideas sleep green furiously, Barry. I trust I’ll get a full reply from you.

Mark and people who think like Mark- JQ and Dsquared and others of their ilk have stated that they feel contempt for Sadr, hold him responsible for murder and other crimes, fear his goal of a theocratic (and, no doubt, autocratic, with you-know-who as the autocrat) Iraq… They despise Sadr but are not impressed by the tactics used against him. I can’t see a useful discussion developing until you at least acknowledge this.

21

Giles 08.27.04 at 2:47 pm

“Those interested in the detail of what is actually happening in Iraq will, of course, continue to consult Juan Cole .”

Why because he actually isnt in Iraq nor is he Iraqi.

22

Fantazia 08.27.04 at 3:25 pm

“Why because he actually isnt in Iraq nor is he Iraqi.”

Astronomers aren’t extraterrestrials, and don’t live in outer space either.

23

Giles 08.27.04 at 3:30 pm

yes but most astromers have their own telescope. Juan relies on hersay.

24

bob mcmanus 08.27.04 at 3:32 pm

“Why because he actually isnt in Iraq nor is he Iraqi.”

Because he speaks Arabic, reads and consults Arabic sources daily, and sifts intelligently for the benefit of his readers.

However it is still a good point, and besides the sources Cole links to on his page, Cole should be supplemented with Zeyad of Healing Iraq and Raed of Baghdad Burning, both of whom have good blogrolls of other Iraqi bloggers.

As far as the events in Najaf, I would only say that Allawi and the Americans are background players to the actually important struggle between Sadr and Sistani. What is going on in Iraq is very similar to what is going on in the US….actual politics. The fact that politics is being done with guns in Iraq with blood tragically spilled…..well it is still early in the American political season. Give us a couple weeks.

25

fantazia 08.27.04 at 3:39 pm

“yes but most astromers have their own telescope. Juan relies on hersay.”

That’s the way most people get their news about practically any event they did not witness in person. This includes Iraqis. An Iraqi in Basra gets his news about events in Najaf in exactly the same fashion Coles does.

The difference between Cole and Joe Random is the number of sources Cole has at his disposal. In that case the only relevant questions are with regards to Cole’s reliability and effectiveness as a collator.

26

naomi 08.27.04 at 3:48 pm

Well, Cristopher from Back To Iraq is in Iraq, and this is what happened in Najaf yesterday:

I was on the roof trying to get my BGan to connect when Najaf’s finest burst onto the roof with a Kalashnikov and order me and the other journalists down to the lobby. The cops had raided the hotel and forced all the journalists out onto the street. We were terrified. The cops yelled at us and pointed their weapons toward us. Several large trucks were waiting and knew we would be loaded onto them. Then they started shooting.

– as reported among others by the Guardian, see also RSF (and Body and Soul).

Not really seen this story given much attention in the media at large, though. Not to mention blogs. Maybe detaining journalists at gunpoint is also the kind of thing about Iraq that people shouldn’t “obsess” about?

27

naomi 08.27.04 at 3:50 pm

Well, Cristopher from Back To Iraq is in Iraq, and this is what happened in Najaf yesterday:

I was on the roof trying to get my BGan to connect when Najaf’s finest burst onto the roof with a Kalashnikov and order me and the other journalists down to the lobby. The cops had raided the hotel and forced all the journalists out onto the street. We were terrified. The cops yelled at us and pointed their weapons toward us. Several large trucks were waiting and knew we would be loaded onto them. Then they started shooting.

– as reported among others by the Guardian, see also RSF (and Body and Soul).

Not really seen this story given much attention in the media at large, though. Not to mention blogs. Maybe detaining journalists at gunpoint is also the kind of thing about Iraq that people shouldn’t “obsess” about?

28

praktike 08.27.04 at 4:06 pm

BTW, here is a good analysis of the politics of the situation, though it has been slightly overtaken by events.

29

some guy 08.27.04 at 4:46 pm

“The American pro-war blogs seem to have dropped everything in favour of endless comment on the Kerry/SBV affair.”

Correct, but I’d change it a bit to say “The American media seem to have dropped everything. . .”

Which of course is the whole point of the Swift Dudes. Bush has to get Iraq off the TV to get elected. Mission acomplished!

30

Sebastian Holsclaw 08.27.04 at 6:02 pm

“JQ and Dsquared and others of their ilk have stated that they feel contempt for Sadr, hold him responsible for murder and other crimes, fear his goal of a theocratic (and, no doubt, autocratic, with you-know-who as the autocrat) Iraq…”

Yes, but their version of ‘hold him responsible’ includes letting him take over cities and kill people at whim with his thugs. Their version of ‘deplore’ means ‘talk about him as a vehicle to criticize the US’ and their version of ‘feel contempt’ involves sneering from afar while he tries to set up the very kind of regime that just hanged a girl for having sex.

But other than that, they are all over him.

31

Andrew Reeves 08.27.04 at 6:13 pm

Well, I can think of one reason why one would pay less attention to Sadr. The Mahdi Army is a bunch of ghetto kids with AK-47’s; they are a threat mainly when they hold holy places hostage. Hell, Iraqi police were able to hold them out of a police station until the Marines arrived.

No, the threat in Iraq is the coalition of Ba’athists/Jihadis based in Falluja and Samarra. Sadr’s end of semester uprisings (I predict another this November/December) are a distraction from a much more real, much more intractable threat. Compare the performance of the Mahdi “Army” to that of the Ba’athists/Jihadis in Fallujah. The sad thing is that the likely result of a withdrawal is a civil war in which the Ba’athists walk all over the Shi’ites.

Basically, Sadr can pretty easily be beaten if he can be kept out of the Najaf shrine. The Fallujah crowd will be a much, much tougher nut to crack. Compared to them, Sadr is a bad joke.

32

fantazia 08.27.04 at 6:18 pm

Holsclaw wrote:
“Yes, but their version of ?hold him responsible? includes letting him take over cities and kill people at whim with his thugs. Their version of ?deplore? means ?talk about him as a vehicle to criticize the US? and their version of ?feel contempt? involves sneering from afar while he tries to set up the very kind of regime that just hanged a girl for having sex.
But other than that, they are all over him. ”

But what else can they do, Mr. Holsclaw, other than sneer from afar? You rail and rage from afar, and yet it has not the slightest impact on Sadr’s activities either. This, I fear, is the nature of blogospheric moral outrage: full of sound and fury, but signifying nothing.

33

Sebastian Holsclaw 08.27.04 at 7:02 pm

You can politically support efforts to get rid of him, or you can politically support efforts to get in the way of getting rid of him.

JQ and D-squared choose the latter.

(You could also abstain from political support either way).

34

WillieStyle 08.27.04 at 7:29 pm

You can politically support efforts to get rid of him, or you can politically support efforts to get in the way of getting rid of him.

JQ and D-squared choose the latter.

The criticism of JQ, D-squared and myself has been that efforts to get rid of him have been woefully incompetent leading to deaths of hundreds while undermining our overall efforts in iraq.

The habit of war partisans to impugne the motives of critics rather than address their criticism stirkes me as silly. Unless of course you buy the trope that their criticisms are the cause of Coalition failure in Iraq. I would be very disappointed in you Sebastian, were you to resort to such stale rightwing thinking.

35

Sebastian Holsclaw 08.27.04 at 7:51 pm

“The habit of war partisans to impugne the motives of critics rather than address their criticism stirkes me as silly.”

I haven’t impugned anyone’s motives. I don’t know about their motives. I know that if their advice were followed on a regular basis, dictators would pretty much rule anywhere the dictators were willing to spill civilian blood. That is a foolish position from otherwise bright people who try to simultaneously suggest that they ‘deplore’ dictators. I don’t accuse you, or them, of liking dictators. I suggest that you don’t dislike them enough to do be willing to authorize doing anything that is likely to be useful about them. That’s fine. You aren’t required to.

36

fantazia 08.27.04 at 7:58 pm

Holsclaw wrote:
“You can politically support efforts to get rid of him, or you can politically support efforts to get in the way of getting rid of him.”

Which political efforts to thwart the US Marines in Najaf are the Crooked Timberites supporting?

Are there in fact any other players present in Najaf other than the US/Allawi on the one hand, and Sadr on the other?

Your patriotism is touching, and I salute you, but you have no more effect on the outcome than a baseball fan cheering his team on in front of the TV set.

If there is a victory or a fuck-up in Najaf, the responsibility will lie wholly – and I mean wholly – with the parties on the ground there, and their leaders. The Crooked Timberites may be standing in front of the TV cheering for the Red Sox, but foolish would be the Braves fan who would ascribe his team’s loss to those cheers.

37

WillieStyle 08.27.04 at 8:17 pm

I don’t accuse you, or them, of liking dictators. I suggest that you don’t dislike them enough to do be willing to authorize doing anything that is likely to be useful about them.

You mean like in Kosovo, Afghanistan, Liberia, Sirrea Leone, all of which are interventions liberals like myself wholeheartedly supported.
The objection is to incompetent intervention. But of course you knew that. The attempt to deflect criticisms of incompetence by framing them as criticisms of oppossition to tyranny was clever a year ago. Now it’s just stale.

38

Dan Hardie 08.27.04 at 8:38 pm

Okay, Sebastian, anyone who suggests that any operation in any war under any circumstances may have been in any way misconceived is either a tacit supporter of the enemy or an effete, limp-wristed liberal incapable of seeing that dictators must be opposed. Case closed. I used to think that the Pentagon couldn’t have planned this occupation worse if they’d tried, but that clearly isn’t true. They could have entrusted you with operational matters, and handed budgeting over to Chris Bertram.

39

fantazia 08.27.04 at 8:40 pm

“. I don?t accuse you, or them, of liking dictators. I suggest that you don?t dislike them enough to do be willing to authorize doing anything that is likely to be useful about them. ”

And there you describe me in a nutshell. No sarcasm intended. Execute your crusades to save the world on your own damn dollar.

40

Mark 08.27.04 at 8:52 pm

The objection that anti-war leftists raise about the alleged incompetence of the post-war planning should properly be subsumed under the broader moral reasoning for or against the war. That is, one should argue that the negligent planning caused the los of further lives than would otherwise be the case. THis loss of lives and increased suffering should then be factored into the anti-war side, and weighed against the reasonably anticipated loss of life and increased suffering under Saddam’s continued rule.

I haven’t seen anyone on the left make this argument such that one could make the moral case against the war. I’d be interested to see someone make it. Until then, the anti-war left can’t credibly argue that their opposition to the war wasn’t immoral.

41

John Quiggin 08.27.04 at 9:03 pm

Mark and Sebastian have commented at length on issues that we’ve debated previously, but neither strikes me as coming from a left/liberal position.

I’d still like to see some discussion from left-liberal supporters of the war on the Najaf campaign. Don’t any readers of this blog fall into this category?

42

Sebastian Holsclaw 08.27.04 at 9:21 pm

“Which political efforts to thwart the US Marines in Najaf are the Crooked Timberites supporting?”

They oppose the US Marines fighting with Sadr when Sadr kills civilians to take over towns.

Dan Hardie, you don’t have to get so theoretical. I am criticizing specific views by actual people in this actual forum. I’m not criticizing every possible question about any possible war. I’m talking specifically about the wisdom of letting Sadr gain power or leaving Saddam in power. I’m talking specifically about the need to use actual force and often killing in order to prevent Sadr from gaining power or to remove Saddam from power.

“but neither strikes me as coming from a left/liberal position.”

Neither person or neither argument? The argument above is certainly not alien to what used to be the left.

And I presume you read Geras?

43

WillieStyle 08.27.04 at 9:34 pm

The objection that anti-war leftists raise about the alleged incompetence of the post-war planning should properly be subsumed under the broader moral reasoning for or against the war. That is, one should argue that the negligent planning caused the los of further lives than would otherwise be the case. THis loss of lives and increased suffering should then be factored into the anti-war side, and weighed against the reasonably anticipated loss of life and increased suffering under Saddam’s continued rule.

That’s an odd argument from a pro war perspective as it assumes that said incompetence was a necessary part of war in Iraq. Subsuming incompetence of the post-war planning under the broader moral reasoning for or against the war assumes that we couldn’t have one without the other.
This is an argument I’ve seen many anti-Iraq-war liberals make, but hardly one I’d expect from a war partisan.

44

John Quiggin 08.27.04 at 9:44 pm

>And I presume you read Geras?

Geras is exactly the type of person I had in mind (and I assume the same is true for Chris).

Searching his August archive for “Najaf” and “Sadr” produces a snark about Naomi Klein and some links, hostile to Sadr, but posted without comment on the fighting or the US role in it.

45

John Quiggin 08.27.04 at 9:52 pm

A Google News search for “Nick Cohen” + Najaf produces a piece about parking tickets in which Najaf is used as a trope for urban destruction [Geras does much the same in the Klein snark I mentioned] , so he obviously hasn’t ignored the news completely, but I haven’t yet seen him put a case that the left should have supported the levelling of Najaf.

A similar search on Hitchens produces nothing

Of course, as was pointed out right at the beginning of this thread, any particular individual might have good reasons for saying nothing. What’s striking is that the pro-war left has been (as far as I can see) completely silent.

46

Dan Hardie 08.27.04 at 10:25 pm

Sebastian, the point was made in some detail in comments to John’s last post that among those limp-wristed liberals worried about the decision of a USMC local commander to go after Sadr were… officers in the US Army. Link:
http://www.indystar.com/articles/7/171252-1377-010.html

You contend that people on this thread ‘use Sadr as a vehicle to criticize the US’. Well, yes, Daniel Davies is a terrorist and Ayatollah Al-Qig’n is his spiritual leader- the beard is a bit of a giveaway. But I personally am worried about what is happening to British soldiers in Basra and nearby towns, three of whom have been shot dead this month, since the formerly quiet areas of the Shi’ite south have, for inexplicable reasons, become rather violent in the last month.

What are the results of this splendid Najaf policy? After three weeks of fighting, Sadr is, as might well have been foretold, ‘as free as any Iraqi’ to quote an Iraqi minister. He’s lost his Najaf sanctuary? I predict he will head rapidly towards the 2 million inhabitants of Sadr City. Any attempt to find him there will meet with the same success as in Najaf. His Mahdi army have laid down their AKs and headed home, unmolested by Iraqi police or US troops? Yes, and it’s beyond the grounds of possibility that they will rearm themselves in a country awash with small arms and ammunition. I wouldn’t have thought, either, that they will now have learnt the lesson that holding ground is a bad idea for a guerrilla army, and switch to hit-and-run tactics instead. I shan’t dwell on the tedious details of dead Iraqi civilians, but I do note that 57 US service personnel have died this month, up from July, which in turn saw a rising death toll in relation to June. Did I mention that reports in the papers say that Sistani is demanding that Najaf and Kufa become ‘demilitarised’- ie, free of US troops, like, say, Fallujah? It really was worth fighting for three bloody weeks so that US troops could then be withdrawn from the scene of the fighting.

I rather doubt that future Staff Colleges will not be studying the brilliance of the Najaf strategy. But I’m sure it would have worked if there hadn’t been all these damn liberals determining the policy of the Bush administration in Iraq.

47

John Quiggin 08.27.04 at 10:31 pm

I have to retract, at least in part, on Hitchens. In this piece on Chalabi, on Aug 11, he says

As I write, the Allawi government in Baghdad is trying, with American support, a version of an “iron fist” policy in the Shiite cities of the south. (“Like all weak governments,” as Disraeli once said in another connection, “it resorts to strong measures.”) Chalabi, who has spent much of this year in Najaf, thinks that this is extremely unwise. We shall be testing all these propositions, and more, as the months go by.

48

praktike 08.27.04 at 10:44 pm

John, I’m a lefty who initially supported taking Sadr out but soon figured that the seige of Najaf would be a strategic defeat.

Here’s is my first Najaf post, and this is my second.

It appears that Sistani has saved our tuchus for now.

49

Detached Observer 08.27.04 at 11:42 pm

From a liberal pro-war blogger:

Perhaps one reason why some of us haven’t blogged about the details of the war is that we are not competent to do so. Whenever I have a thought which I think is mildly original and that I haven’t seen elsewhere, I put it on my blog. I haven’t had any such thoughts about Najaf.

Most of the liberal pro-war blogs are written by people who have observed domestic politics for quite a while but who are not at all experts in foreign policy. I expect the same dynamic works for them.

50

dipnut 08.28.04 at 1:30 am

Entertaining as this discussion has been, I’d still like to hear from anyone with a left/liberal pro-war position what they think about the Najaf fighting, or even why they it was not significant enough to merit discussion.

Well, Michael Totten’s out of town right now, but he blogged in favor of killing Sadr outright on August 9, 10, 12, 13, and 18.

As for me, I’m not left/liberal, so I suppose my posts of August 12, 13, 19, and 26 don’t count.

Now that your hopes and dreams have been realized vis-a-vis Sadr, you might be interested in this news:

Iraqi police said on Friday they found “many” bodies of dead civilians and police, including some who were executed and mutilated, at a religious court set up by rebel cleric Moqtada Sadr in Najaf.

“We entered the building which was being used as Moqtada Sadr’s court and we discovered in the basement a large number of bodies of police and ordinary civilians,” said the deputy head of the Najaf police, General Amer Hamza al-Daami.

“Some were executed, others were mutilated and others were burned.”

Thank goodness the Iraqis didn’t make a martyr of him!

51

Ethesis 08.28.04 at 4:10 am

http://hammorabi.blogspot.com/

That’s an Iraqi blog I ran across.

Is it accurate?

Thanks.

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John Quiggin 08.28.04 at 4:31 am

Dipnut, I found this in the (pro-war Conservative) Telegraph. Key quote

The brutality of Najaf’s police gave a glimpse of a Saddamist past that could yet become Iraq’s future if Mr Allawi fails.

Police led journalists to Sadr’s Islamic court yesterday to view 16 decomposing corpses. Waving pictures of Sadr next to the bodies, they said these were people who had been tortured by the Mahdi army for breaking Islamic law. Cans of beer were produced to suggest Sadr’s clerics had been carousing.

There was no evidence of torture and Sadr’s office said plausibly that the 16 were mainly “martyrs” whose bodies could not be evacuated because of the fighting.

OTOH, the Guardian seemed to support the police version.

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neil 08.28.04 at 4:43 am

As a liberal-hawke blogger I haven’t blogged about Najaf because I don’t fully understand the situation, nor do I think Juan Cole has much of a hande on it either. I feel that what ever half-baked opinion I would have would serve no constructive purpose.

John Quiggan is merely trying to show how much more the anti-war left Truely Cares.

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dipnut 08.28.04 at 5:47 am

Ethesis, there is reason to trust reports that the Mahdi Army is (was?) made up largely of foreigners, specifically Iranians, and not disgruntled Iraqis as Quiggin assumes. This idea is strongly supported by information which is not in doubt: the Mahdi Army have serious weapons. We know they have mortars and RPGs. The New York Times ran a picture of one of them with a belt-fed machine gun. Having such weapons (and ammunition to feed them with) suggests far stronger logistical support than an irregular “people’s army” could cobble up on short notice, especially when you consider they’re supposed to be angry because they’re unemployed and broke. Then there’s the matter of expertise. Guns don’t shoot themselves; it takes a skilled operator to get any use out of a mortar or a machine gun; skill needs training and practice, which is expensive. Quiggin, of course, is from one of those gun-fearing wussy countries, so these aren’t the kinds of things which would naturally occur to him. But the Mahdi have massive assistance from somewhere, and Tehran is the sensible guess.

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Ethesis 08.28.04 at 6:20 am

dipnut — thanks. If you’ve followed other posts of mine, I don’t always agree with the things I link to — I want feedback on them so I know whether or not to invest more time in thinking about them or considering them.

You’ve helped me validate this one.

Appreciate your thoughts.

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Dan Hardie 08.28.04 at 10:54 am

Dipnut, Australians are from one of those ‘gun-fearing wussy countries’, eh? Mention that to the next Australian you meet and I’ll pay your subsequent dental bills. Mention it to a member of the RAR and I’ll see if I can chip in some money for your wheelchair. And a ‘belt-fed machine-gun’ is evidence of logistical support from another country? Nurse, Mr Dipnut’s medication.

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John Quiggin 08.28.04 at 11:19 am

” And a ‘belt-fed machine-gun’ is evidence of logistical support from another country?
Nurse, Mr Dipnut’s medication.”

Dan, I think you must have missed the formal surrender of the Iraqi Army when they handed over all their machine guns for destruction. It was just about the time Judith Miller found the WMDs, hidden in the UN black helicopters.

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NelC 08.29.04 at 2:46 pm

Dipnut, the Iraqi army was one of the largest armies in the region (maybe Iran’s was bigger, I don’t recall), and they fought a fairly long-running war against Iran. The number of Iraqis who know how to operate belt-fed MGs, RPGs or mortars, all cheap and ubiquitous weapons in any army, must run into six figures.

And training new blood isn’t that expensive; we’re not talking Top Gun here. If poverty-stricken Afghans could learn how to use mortars, RPGs and MGs during the Soviet occupation, and Somalis could do the same during their troubles, then I’m sure that somewhat better-off Iraqis could afford to do the same.

And RPGs were designed by an unsung genius to be simple to use by any uneducated conscript. You just estimate the range, line up the target in the sights and press the trigger. If it’s really close, or you’re just laying down suppressive fire, omit step one. I seem to recall that the rounds are dirt-cheap: $40? Wouldn’t need more than a half-dozen rounds to train up to adequate accuracy, I’d think. I spend more on my language lessons.

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Look Who's Talking 08.30.04 at 10:29 pm

Dear Chris Bertram,

1. Your get-out clause — > — makes me wonder why you extrapolated from observations which you already knew were inaccurate.

2. You focus exclusively on liberal/left bloggers, suppressing the fact that many other pro-war blogs, such as Instapundit, Jeff Jarvis, Tech Central, and Mick Hartley, have covered Najaf. You focus exclusively on bloggers, which suppresses the fact that journalists such as David Aaronovitch and Johann Hari have written on Najaf. And you focus exclusively on British and American bloggers, suppressing the fact that Iraqi blogs, such as Iraq the Model, Healing Iraq, Salam Pax and Hammorabi, have written extensively about Najaf. Bias is good because it inadvertently says a lot about the person who is biased.

3. Bias is good because it inadvertently says a lot about the website which is biased. Why is Crooked Timber so interested in Palestine/Israel, yet so little interested in Chechnya, Kashmir, Tibet, and a hundred other conflicts? (John, making this point with respect to an individual would be unfair.)

Regards,

LWT

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John Quiggin 08.30.04 at 11:00 pm

1. My critique of the Najaf campaign was specifically directed at the left-liberal ‘moral’ case for the war and Chris followed up on this
2. If you look, you’ll find very few posts on CT that are directly focused on Israel-Palestine. The issue comes up all the time because of its centrality in world events, not because we focus on it.

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Look Who's Talking 08.30.04 at 11:48 pm

1. What you mean is that Chris followed up on this with a post which he was sure was untrue. Wow.
2. Has Kashmir nothing to do with world events? How many posts, comments or mentions of Tibet can you recall? Is Chechya so rarely mentioned because Crooked Timber only deals with subjects which are central to the (western) world?
3. Let’s hear what Chris has got to say for himself.

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look who's talking 08.30.04 at 11:51 pm

Can Iraqis not be liberal/left? What about journalists?

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John Quiggin 08.31.04 at 12:45 am

There’s not much news from Tibet, which tends to mean not much blogging, but I did offer the following prediction a few months ago, which generated some lively discussion

Tibet is not yet independent, but it seems safe to predict that it will become so not long after the Communist Party loses power in China.

I’ve mentioned the Kashmir situation a couple of times on my own blog, though again there doesn’t seem to be much news at present.

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dipnut 08.31.04 at 1:00 am

Australians are from one of those ‘gun-fearing wussy countries’, eh? Mention that to the next Australian you meet and I’ll pay your subsequent dental bills. Mention it to a member of the RAR and I’ll see if I can chip in some money for your wheelchair.

Point taken, Dan. I apologize, and amend my statement as follows: John Quiggin, specifically, is a gun-fearing wussy.

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dipnut 08.31.04 at 1:23 am

Nelc, you might have noticed that I left RPGs off the list of weapons that are costly to train with. Still, at $40 a shot, they’re out of the reach of Quiggin’s supposed angry peasants.

You hold up Afghanistan and Somalia as examples of piss-broke people getting reasonably proficient with semi-serious weapons. But the Somalis were supported by bin Laden back when he had money, and the Afghans were sponsored by the US, and later by Saudi Arabia.

I suppose it’s possible the Mahdi fighters are supplied with materiel looted from Saddam’s army. But Tehran has method, motive, and opportunity to support them; and several Iraqi web logs maintain that the Mahdi are Iranian interlopers.

Anybody got any cites regarding looting of Iraq’s military hardware? It certainly hasn’t been a front-page issue.

The number of Iraqis who know how to operate belt-fed MGs, RPGs or mortars, all cheap and ubiquitous weapons in any army, must run into six figures.

Iraq’s total military strength was on the low side of half a million, before the invasion. Guess again.

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John Quiggin 08.31.04 at 3:58 am

dipnut, for someone too gutless to post under your own name, you do a mean line in insults. I don’t know how I’ll carry on after this.

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look who's talking 08.31.04 at 11:07 am

John Quiggin:

The content of your own weblog has no bearing on the bias of Crooked Timber.

According to Google, Crooked Timber mentions Palestine more than twice as often as it mentions Tibet, Chechnya and Kashmir, together.

If these areas were not in the news, that would in itself be something to write about, just as Sudan would have been something to write about when it was not in the news.

Chechnya has been in the news a lot recently.

Can Iraqis not be liberal/left? What about journalists?

‘The American pro-war blogs seem to have dropped everything in favour of endless comment on the Kerry/SBV affair’ = false

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dipnut 08.31.04 at 4:23 pm

dipnut, for someone too gutless to post under your own name, you do a mean line in insults.

“Gun-fearing wussy” isn’t an insult, John. I should think you’d wear it with pride. As for my name, you may look it up anytime.

Seriously: review all the comments I’ve ever made at CT. I’ve taken a lot of abuse from your commenters, and come back with the gentle answer which turneth away wrath, as often as not.

I really do feel bad about that crack regarding Australia. Australia has stood by us splendidly, and I’m ashamed.

I’m just upset by this al-Sadr business. It marks the first major defeat in the war; a totally unjustified pre-emptive surrender. We (by which I mostly mean, Iraqis) will pay dearly for it.

You’ve signed on to some disastrous foolishness, John. So I’ll ask you the same question I asked Daniel. You don’t owe me an answer, by the way.

What do you know about war, and how do you know it?

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