(_*_) We kept troops in Germany and Korea for over 50 years (so far). Did any body else see this :
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090701/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iraq
BAGHDAD – Not a single American soldier was in sight. Gone, too, were the American helicopters whose buzz has for years defined Baghdad's background track. Left alone to protect the capital Tuesday were thousands of Iraqi troops and police manning checkpoints, with army tanks deployed at potential trouble spots and convoys of pickup trucks with machine guns roaming the streets.
But it was elsewhere, 180 miles to the north, that militants delivered their first deadly challenge to Iraq's security forces on a highly symbolic day after the formal withdrawal of U.S. combat troops from cities at midnight.
A car bombing devastated a food market in the city of Kirkuk, killing at least 33 people and wounding 90. The early evening attack, which bore the hallmarks of Sunni extremist groups like al-Qaida in Iraq, was the second in the Kirkuk area since a truck bombing killed 82 people on June 20.
Tom
Look. I opposed the war in Iraq for two reasons.
1 Saddam was not in conivance with Al Queda, he did not have WMD, as Bush the elder's containment plan was working fine, and the country is a freaking basket case made up Kurds, Sunnis and Shiites, all of whom hate each other, and if we invaded this would become our problem with little support from any other nation. I think I was right.
2 We weren't finished with the job in Afghanistan and had barely driven the Taliban out and not yet secured the nation to prevent their return. Again, I think I was right.
The thing is if the only thing holding Iraq toghether is American soldiers, at some point we have to say "who cares". We can't stay there forever. The Iraqis will have to either:
1 Get their act toghether
2 Agree on partition
3 Decend into a Balkan style civil war that will end when either one side wins, or they get tired of killing each other.
Whichever they choose, at some point it has to be their choice and no longer our problem, to the tune of billions a year and not enough forces to deal with Iran and North Korea. (The two members of the axis of evil that actually DO have WMDs, not to mention Pakistan). Sorry Tom, but there are only so many king's horses and so many king's men. King George didn't have enough to fight forever, and neither does the Boy King. It is time to test the Iraqi government while we still have troops there. We can always go back in. But until we withdraw, rest, resupply and retrain, Iran and North Korea know we can't do much. Therefore best to turn it over to Iraqi's as soon as we responsibly can.
FQ13