'Troops Leave, Violence Drops': How Four Words from Basra Could Shift Iraq Debate
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The change can be summed up in 4 simple words:
troops leave, violence dropsAs the deafening hubbub of propaganda drowns out every attempt to talk real policy change on Iraq, this simple descriptive formula--troops leave, violence drops--cuts through it all.
Attacks against British and Iraqi forces have plunged by 90 percent in southern Iraq since London withdrew its troops from the main city of Basra, the commander of British forces there said Thursday.
The presence of British forces in downtown Basra, Iraq's second-largest city, was the single largest instigator of violence, Maj. Gen. Graham Binns told reporters Thursday on a visit to Baghdad's Green Zone.
"We thought, 'If 90 percent of the violence is directed at us, what would happen if we stepped back?'" Binns said.
Britain's 5,000 troops moved out of a former Saddam Hussein palace at Basra's heart in early September, setting up a garrison at an airport on the city's edge. Since that pullback, there's been a "remarkable and dramatic drop in attacks," Binns said.
(full article here)The up-and-down-in-and-out logic of this description is more powerful than any protest argument about the war to date, and has an almost unlimited potential to sweep through both the broadcast media and face-to-face conversations that make up American political debate.
Bush's Phony Physics: violence fills a vacuumIn other words, American troops needed to be present in large numbers in Iraq because the absence of U.S. forces would lead to a rapid explosion of violence. In fact, there was never any evidence for this logic, but that did not matter. The power of Bush's logic of violence did not come through its truth, but through its repetition in the media.
5,000 soldiers leaveOn a much more profound and far-reaching level, however, it is the way the British pullout imposes a new logic pragmatism on the entire Iraq discussion that allows these statistics to connect strongly with Americans' sense of right and wrong, good and bad.
90% drop in violence
See more stories tagged with: politics, congress, iraq, withdrawal, british, basra
Jeffrey Feldman is Editor-in-Chief of Frameshop.
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