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Newsweek: Is Bush covering up news of decreasing Iraqi casualties?

posted at 6:09 pm on October 23, 2007 by Allahpundit
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Some righty bloggers are having fun with this but it’s not far-fetched to think he’d hold back good news — if it might lead to better news.

The Bush administration is starving for good news out of Iraq, and it may finally have some: new U.S. government statistics showing that violent attacks of all kinds are down to levels not seen since 2005. But until recently, the administration appears to have resisted acknowledging a key element of the new data, because it flies in the face of President George W. Bush’s ongoing rhetorical confrontation with Iran’s clerical regime. According to three senior U.S. officials, who asked for anonymity when discussing sensitive information, the decline in Iraq violence also includes a decrease in the number of attacks attributable to insurgents backed or armed by Iran. Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell confirmed to Newsweek that “there has indeed been a drop” in such attacks, but he added that “it’s not entirely clear what the reason for that is.”

After more than a year of reports from Iraq ranging from the grim to the horrendous to the well-nigh catastrophic, they want you to believe Bush is now worried that good news might jeopardize that bombing run on Iran that Seymour Hersh has been telling us is imminent for the past, oh, 18 months or so. To take that seriously, you’d have to believe that hitting Iran is more important to the administration than (a) the bump in support for the war that would surely come if the information was known; (b) tangible progress to trumpet before Congress ahead of another round of debate over Iraq spending; and (c) its usefulness as a rhetorical bludgeon in the war of words with Tehran, as evidence that their influence is waning. But what if he was sitting on those casualty figures for another reason? Consider the possibility that we’ve reached some sort of nascent understanding with the Shiite militias and he doesn’t want to spook it by publicizing info that might expose their diminishing influence and humiliate them into a resurgence. Michael Yon wrote just this morning that:

I saw an American battalion commander, LTC Patrick Frank, in a meeting yesterday with 19 local Iraqi leaders. Often the Iraqis would break down into conversations among themselves, but each time the LTC Frank spoke, the room went silent. I have seen this repeated over and over and over in different areas of Iraq. Our battalion commanders are operating in a capacity of local leaders. They get serious respect. Even from enemies. (Perhaps especially from enemies, which clearly is part of the reason so many people are coming to the table.) The battalion commanders are the quarterbacks who are pulling this place together. Their words carry great clout.

The Iraqis know we want to leave and this is working in our favor, and in their favor.

That last sentence is an expression of both hope and fear, since we don’t want to leave a dormant terrorist framework in place just because it’s willing to play dead for a bit while we quiet things down. But it may explain the drop in attacks among Shiites. Recall also that the key event in the momentary pacification of Basra was reportedly a “deal” struck between the various militias and the new Iraqi army commander in the city. Obviously some form of negotiations is happening and bearing fruit; it’s stupid to think we’re not party to them somehow.

Here’s the latest, just hitting the wires at AFP. There were reports a few days ago that U.S. troops killed upwards of 50 militiamen in a battle in Sadr City. Outrage time for Sadr? Not quite:

“Some groups within the Jaish al-Mahdi are not following the suspension order,” the cleric said in a statement issued by his office in the central holy city of Najaf.

“We are urging everybody to implement the suspension at all the levels or they will be fired from the movement. There is no place for traitors.”

The call to order came after US troops killed 49 suspected fighters during a raid on the cleric’s Baghdad bastion of Sadr City on Sunday.

The US military claims many of Sadr’s militants have split from the main force and are participating in “criminal” activities, including the killing of Sunnis.

The fact that he’d react to something like that by insisting that his guys stand down, and in strong language, is suspicious and lends more credence to speculation about a deal. He’s also protecting his brand, though: revisit the Times article linked in this post about the transformation of the JAM from a disciplined paramilitary force into a sort of teenage mafia brigade that’s begun to alienate many local Shiites. They’re ruining Sadr’s reputation among his base and driving some Shiite tribesmen into the arms of the United States for help, which risks an Anbar-type backlash that’s probably more threatening to him long-term than a direct confrontation with the U.S. military. He may have decided that for the moment he can’t trust his people to do more good than harm so he’s willing to sit on his hands and let the Americans deal with the troublemakers in his ranks. That would explain the declining attacks. The question now is whether there’s any grander, more formal bargain that’s been reached behind the scenes.


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If there’s any way to blame bush for anything the MSM will take it regardless of how moronic and asinine it is

Defector01 on October 23, 2007 at 6:14 PM

Thoughtful analysis.

RushBaby on October 23, 2007 at 6:19 PM

If President Bush could prove without a doubt that he personally invented a cure for all forms of cancer–the MSM would decry all the health care workers he put out of a job. Sometimes you just can win.

Tennessee Dave on October 23, 2007 at 6:23 PM

Bush isn’t pumping the good news, because it has the potential to come back and bite him in the ass. It has NOTHING to do with Iran. Further, if he talks up good news, then the Dems stand to lose political ground, which will cause them to start pushing votes on more “non-binding resolutions” and screaming that Bush is a traitor, etc. etc. because their entire campaign relies on death and chaos in Iraq. They need (and hope for) this war to go badly, so if Bush were to push good news, they’d push back 10 times harder, which in turn emboldens the enemy who says “hey, the Democrats promise that if we just step up the violence, they’ll surrender when they win next year’s election!”

RightWinged on October 23, 2007 at 6:30 PM

It’s best that Bush lay low and let the facts speak for themselves. The Democrats are going to chase their tails in an effort to spin the facts to make the war seem like it is either (a) getting worse, or (b) never worth getting into, no matter the outcome.

I think Bush has learned his lesson from the “Mission Accomplished” banner.

As the surge proves itself more and more successful, Republicans are more and more guaranteed of a success next November.

WWIII on October 23, 2007 at 6:37 PM

It’s kind of a no win for him to comment. the minute he does he probably realizes that someone will blow up a hundred people to show he is wrong.
If some deal is in the works it is likely it won’t be divulged for some time.

Bradky on October 23, 2007 at 6:52 PM

No, they just suck at communicating to us

Tony737 on October 23, 2007 at 7:18 PM

Great analysis and a great article by Yon. I think that its best for the White House to keep from pumping this information right now, because one huge car bomb is all it would take for the media to turn it on them. If deals are being made between groups that have been fighting for the past 4 years they’re are most likely shaky at this point, so no need to do anything that might put them at risk. As long as the U.S. keeps taking out the troublemakers and does a good job with the PR (getting the message out that we don’t want to be there any longer than we have to) things should keep moving in the right direction.

The key is going to be giving the Iraqis a certain quality of life for a few months (security, electricity, jobs). Once they get used to it they will start to fight to keep it, no matter what Sadr does.

BadgerHawk on October 23, 2007 at 7:22 PM

Consider that the article only makes sense if one assumes that Bush’s priority is to go to war with someone, anyone, and you understand the media’s view of him.

TallDave on October 23, 2007 at 8:43 PM

Also, I’ll make the point again that these local militias can’t just go attacking the Iraqi Army the way they do the Americans and British. Iraqis love the IA and it consistently ranks at the top of the institutions they respect (we are not near the top of that list).

And anyways, the IA aren’t going anywhere; the Ameriki and their allies will go home someday but the IA are home. Even if it was politically viable for the militias to engage the Iraqi Army, they lack both the military training (they are generally spray-n-prayers) and the hardware (no APCs, no tanks) to go head-to-head with the Iraqi Army.

TallDave on October 23, 2007 at 8:49 PM

It is always wise to let sleeping dogs lie.

As far as Iraq is concerned the news medias coverage of it is napping anyway.

Bush would have to be very foolish to wake it up.

With Iraq, no news is the best news.

MB4 on October 23, 2007 at 9:30 PM

Looks like we have a new Magnificent Bastard in Gen. Patreus.

This war is lost.

- H. Reid

CliffHanger on October 23, 2007 at 9:50 PM

The Sadr move doesn’t surprise me, but it’s among the best news really. It means Sadr has put his finger to the wind and decided playing politics is now the best route to power, not violence.

TallDave on October 24, 2007 at 12:30 AM

The tide is turning in the media after months of success, yet many still find reason to fault Bush.

BSD has many levels of venom.

Black Adam on October 24, 2007 at 1:18 AM

*BDS…not BSD

Bush Derrangement Syndrome….not Battlestaff Directive

Black Adam on October 24, 2007 at 1:23 AM

I believe Mr. Hersh has been peddling his wet dream about the bombing of Iran since 2004. Scott Ritter piled on in 2005, stating that an attack would happen that summer. Meh.

Seixon on October 24, 2007 at 3:21 AM

I agree with those that say Bush can’t win with the LSM whatever he does, but the news -does- speak for itself and the Libtards grumble more and become more shrill each passing day.

The Dimwits have lost and they know it.

dogsoldier on October 24, 2007 at 6:53 AM


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