Monday, April 09, 2007

A Surge

The NYTimes' Alissa J. Rubin and Edward Wong on the surge:

That has put the Americans in the middle of sectarian battlegrounds, and their death rate in the city has nearly doubled. The number of Americans killed in combat or other violence rose to 53 in Baghdad in the first seven weeks of the push, from Feb. 14 to April 2. That is up from 29 in the seven weeks before then.


Bush and John McCain keep saying, "The surge is working", while American troop deaths have doubled.

And it's not even working for Baghdad:

And while the overall death rates for all of Iraq have not dropped significantly, largely because of devastating suicide bombings, a few parts of the capital have become calmer as some death squads have decided to lie low.

But there is little sign that the Baghdad push is accomplishing its main purpose: to create an island of stability in which Sunni Arabs, Shiite Arabs and Kurds can try to figure out how to run the country together. There has been no visible move toward compromise on the main dividing issues, like regional autonomy and more power sharing between Shiites and Sunnis.


A double in American deaths to make "a few parts of the capital" calmer. And they call that "working." There's much more over there.

No comments: