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March 3, 2008

Evidence That The Bush Doctrine Is Working - Via The New York Times

Who would believe such a thing could happen! The NYT has actually come out with a that confirms the Bush doctrine has been right all along (albeit a few adjustments here and there and here and there along the way).

As Abe Greenwald writes at Commentarymagazine.com:

... The paper of record, which for the past few years could accurately be described as a body count with a styles section, is now acknowledging the realization of the most ambitious goal of the Iraq invasion: the de-radicalization of Muslim citizens. This is, in its way, more important than political reconciliation and even more important than hunting down al Qaeda. This is the long war stuff, the hearts-and-minds stuff.

The goal was to offer freedom as an alternative to extremism; the criticism was that it was a dream; the reality is that it is happening.

... This Times piece represents a tectonic shift in the Iraq War and in the larger ideological struggle. From this date on, the War cannot be talked about in quite the same way. Those opposed to it can no longer snicker so easily when recalling the President's assertion that people everywhere want freedom, and they may have to check their rage before declaring we've created more terrorists. There are some who understood that changing hearts and minds was the only way to triumph in the long run, but felt that Iraq was a huge setback in that pursuit.

... It is impossible not to infer that the Bush Doctrine and the commitment the men and women in uniform has facilitated this shift. Far from "creating more terrorists" as the failed cliché goes, the war has helped to nurture an appreciation for liberty among Iraqi youth. A 24-year-old Iraqi college student is quoted as saying she loved Osama bin Laden at the time of 9/11. Now, after seeing the efforts of religious leaders to curtail her daily freedoms, she rejects extremism entirely. While George Bush's critics can make no useful connection between 9/11 and the war in Iraq, this young woman has no problem doing so.

... This Times piece represents a tectonic shift in the Iraq War and in the larger ideological struggle. From this date on, the War cannot be talked about in quite the same way. Those opposed to it can no longer snicker so easily when recalling the President's assertion that people everywhere want freedom, and they may have to check their rage before declaring we've created more terrorists.

Continue reading: An Iraqi Sea Change

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Posted by Richard at March 3, 2008 11:02 PM






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