The Corner

Daniel Pipes On Iraq

“The eruption of civil war in Iraq . . . would be a humanitarian tragedy but not a strategic one.”

And:

“I cheer the goal of a ‘free and democratic Iraq,’ but the time has come to acknowledge that the coalition’s achievement will be limited to destroying tyranny, not sponsoring its replacement. There is nothing ignoble about this limited achievement, which remains a landmark of international sanitation. It would be especially unfortunate if aiming too high spoils that attainment and thereby renders future interventions less likely. The benefits of eliminating Saddam’s rule must not be forgotten in the distress of not creating a successful new Iraq.

Fixing Iraq is neither the coalition’s responsibility nor its burden. The damage done by Saddam will take many years to repair. Americans, Britons, and others cannot be tasked with resolving Sunni-Shiite differences, an abiding Iraqi problem that only Iraqis themselves can address.”

(See here.)

John Derbyshire — Mr. Derbyshire is a former contributing editor of National Review.
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