Ok, so can we maybe reach a bargain here?
If we can agree that President Bush is an idiot for comparing Iraq to Vietnam, can we please not compare the possibility of American withdrawal to The American Civil War?
Matthew Yglesias has done just that, in addition to drawing a parallel with the Lebanese Civil War. His reasoning goes as follows:
To say that our current policy is working and needs just ten more years to stabilize Iraq is lunacy — just leaving stands a perfectly good chance of working just as quickly at radically lower cost.
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By a similar token, the American Civil War ended fewer than ten years after James Buchanan’s blunders. Ten years isn’t just longer than America has political will to sustain, it’s genuinely too long. Policies that work accomplish their goals faster than that, something that’s supposed to unfold at the speed Petraeus is talking about isn’t working at all.
“Policies that work accomplish their goals faster than that”? This is absurd. I would love to talk about the Korean War, and the gradual decline of Communism and other wonderful foreign policy analogies that disprove such a comment. But NO. No more.
As for Matthew’s examples, the Civil War comparison is just silly. We had a central government. We had the foundation for a liberal and democratic society already established, which is why secession from the union was bad. The Nullification Crisis had already established this. This was Lincoln’s rally cry, and he was right. The Constitution was on his side.
The Lebanese example is equally bad. The reason being is that you could flip it on its head, and use it as a reason to stay in Iraq. The Cairo Accord forced Lebanon to allow a terrorist organization to operate within their own borders, so that said terrorist organization could attack Israel by proxy. This “civil” war was in fact fueled in many ways by foreign elements, much the way Iraq has been exacerbated by Saudis, Iranians and other foreign fighters.
So please…let’s just stop. Rich does a nice job of handling the “Spanish Civil War” comparison. Bravo!
I know it’s tempting to look back. I am guilty as charged. But I think we’ve all gotten a little bit carried away trying to prove our own points via historical context. I will not do this again in the future, unless I can lay out a very detailed analysis to substantiate the comparison. Since I don’t have the attention span, nor the desire to do so, the entire enterprise is highly unlikely.
You’re probably better off.
(Cross posted at my blog)
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