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Losing Iraq - Insurgency and Politics (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,768
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Losing Iraq - Insurgency and Politics (Hardcover)
Series: Praeger Security International
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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According to the Bush administration, the war in Iraq ended in May
2003, when the president pronounced mission accomplished from the
deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln. Yet, fighting, resistance, and
American casualties continue. Stephen Pelletiere argues that it is
Iraqi suspicion of the Americans' motives--the belief that the
United States is out to tear the state apart--that is fueling the
current rebellion. Resistance in Iraq has become a national
struggle, tied to the mood of Iraqis generally, as well as to anger
fed by experiences of the whole people over the course of the last
quarter century. Americans see Iraq as a failed state because they
lack knowledge of those experiences and of Iraqi history. That is
what Pelletiere has set out to remedy. Chief among his analyses is
a brief history of the Iraqi army, focussing on the period of the
1980s and the Iran-Iraq War. The war transformed the army, a change
which largely escaped the notice of the United States. Pelletiere
also discusses American intelligence about Iraq on the eve of the
war, characterizing it as delusory and showing that, even after the
invasion, intelligence did not improve. This has led to the
deterioration of relations with the Iraqis and precipitated the
current revolt. Finally, he discusses the clash between the
so-called expatriates and native Iraqis and the part the Islamic
Republic is playing under the occupation. Perhaps more critically,
Pelletiere relates American behavior in Iraq to the wider sphere of
U.S. interests in the Persian Gulf specifically and the Middle East
overall. In doing so, he positions the war as part of a larger
geo-political struggle that encompasses not just the Iraqis or the
Iranians, but the Israelis and all of the other client states of
the United States in the Middle East.
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