The Bishop and the Butterfly: Murder, Politics, and the End of the Jazz Age

    The End of Iraq, by Peter Galbraith

    Highly recommended. This is the smartest analysis I've seen.

    Galbraith, another of JK Galbraith's sons, offers not only well-informed, biting criticism but thoughts on where to go from here: essentially, to gradually withdraw troops everywhere except perhaps in Kurdistan, where, he says, they are wanted, and could serve a useful purpose if the Sunni Arabs are unable to keep al qaeda and other anti-US terrorist groups from setting up a Taliban-like regime in the Sunni Triangle part of Iraq.

    His reasoning is lucid and persuasive, based not only on his analytic decision to treat Iraq as the three largely autonomous regions it is but on a thorough understanding, gleaned from knowing most of the key players, of what their goals and degrees of power are, including what is negotiable and what is not.

    I learned a lot from reading it, in particular about some of the history with which I am less familiar, and the situation on the ground in different parts of the nominal Iraq.

    Galbraith was a longtime staffer for the Democrats on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee as well as a high-ranking official in the Clinton Administration State Department.

    A few tidbits/observations:

    *no shock to denizens here, I am sure, but Galbraith provides compelling evidence that, two months prior to the invastion, Bush was entirely ignorant of the Sunni/Shiite history of conflict. That helps explain quite a bit right there.

    *he spends no time re-debating the merits of whether launching the war was a good idea, or something he would have chosen to do albeit in an entirely different way. He believes that about 80% of the Iraqi people--the Kurds and Shiites (I have to assume, not counting those who have died or been grievously wounded as a direct result of the war)--are better off as a result of the grotesquely misconceived and botched operation he dissects in the book. He believes that the US is considerably worse off.

    *he has known Chalabi for a long time and has a far less damning view of the man than I got from reading the Chalabi-related parade of horrors as Josh was unmasking them on the mother ship. It appears to me that this is the case in part because Chalabi at least is an Arab secularist.

    I'd recently read Vali Nasr's The Shia Revival: How Conflicts Within Islam Will Shape the Future, recently and recommend that as excellent background. Not surprisingly, Nasr, a Shiite Iranian emigre, is upbeat about the prospects of greater Shiite influence in the Middle East.

    In comparison to Galbreath's book, he portrays the Shiites as almost entirely victims of the Sunni-initiated insurgency, whereas Galbreath portrays the Shiites as having responded in kind to the various atrocities perpetrated against them, even though many of their public figures have publicly urged restraint. Galbreath believes the Shiites should be allowed to run the kind of state they want to in the South but is hardly overjoyed at this prospect. He does not, however, think it has to be a disaster for US interests to have a Shiite south with close ties to Iran.

    *Galbreath clearly sees the Kurds as "the good guys" among the 3 factions, and a group the US should support consistently, as it has often supported the US.

    Comments

      Could there be a recommended sequel to cover the years from 2006 to the present.

    I am more than have way through this book just pass the Kurdistan chapter, and possibly

    when I finish I'll find that this book doesn't need a sequel.  In that case I'd still like to have

    recomended  another book that does as good a job bringing incite to the past five yr's. i.e.

    2007 to the present (mid-2011).  Thank you           

                                                                            to life                            lev

     


    Great question. 

    It seems as though there've been more books written on AfPak over the past couple of years than on Iraq.  I'm not aware of a good book assessment (I'm sure one could learn a lot if one knows, unlike me, which blogs to look at on the war) of the war, written to be accessible to an informed popular audience, that is anywhere near recent. 

    Galbraith himself wrote a later book called Unintended Consequences, about 15 months later, but that still only takes you up to 2007.

    Dexter Filkins' The Forever War came out in mid-2009 (paperback edition) and has gotten strong reviews.  My impression is that it is more of a look at what life on the ground is like for the troops than an analytical assessment of the war's results.

    Tom Ricks' The Gamble (Feb. 2009) gets into the surge, but is still obviously dated.  

    Bing West's The Strongest Tribe, September 2009, gets you slightly closer to the present.  Of it, Kirkus, which gave it a starred review, says: "Balanced, panoramic assessment of the Iraq War by former Marine and Reagan administration veteran West (No True Glory, 2005, etc.), who heralds American soldiers as its unsung heroes amid the "fog of Washington". . .A timely, eye-opening historical analysis that provides clarity around the difficult choices the next president faces." 

    Just so you know (this would be a deal-killer for some at dag) John McCain has a positive blurb on it. 

    To give you some sense of where West, a former Marine combat vet and Reagan Assistant Defense Secretary, is coming from these days, he wrote a book published earlier this year about AfPak called The Wrong War which has gotten critical praise.  He describes its main message: "What is the book’s basic message? Our troops are trying to protect and provide projects to Pashtun tribes that are hurtling headlong into the 10th Century. Our strategy is kind and liberal, but it will take another ten years and one trillion dollars to nudge Afghanistan into a progressive, democratic, economically viable state.

    We don’t have that time. Our vital interest is to prevent a takeover of Kabul by the Taliban radicals. We can prevent this by reducing our troop levels and placing the Afghan soldiers in the lead, with American advisers. That is why my book brings the readers into combat with both British and American adviser teams. We must change what we are doing."

    I wish I had a better answer for you.