Retreat of the "real enemy" from Iraq

Christopher Hitchens:

...

... If it is true, as yesterday's three-decker front-page headline in the New York Times had it, that "U.S. Considering Stepping Up Pace of Iraq Pullout/ Fall in Violence Cited/ More Troops Could Be Freed for Operations in Afghanistan," then this can only be because al-Qaida in Iraq has been subjected to a battlefield defeat at our hands—a military defeat accompanied by a political humiliation in which its fanatics have been angrily repudiated by the very people they falsely claimed to be fighting for. If we had left Iraq according to the timetable of the anti-war movement, the situation would be the precise reverse: The Iraqi people would now be excruciatingly tyrannized by the gloating sadists of al-Qaida, who could further boast of having inflicted a battlefield defeat on the United States. I dare say the word of that would have spread to Afghanistan fast enough and, indeed, to other places where the enemy operates. Bear this in mind next time you hear any easy talk about "the hunt for the real enemy" or any loose babble that suggests that we can only confront our foes in one place at a time.
Hitchens deconstructs the left's zero sum game playing Afghanistan against Iraq. I think the left's obsession against the war in Iraq springs from the belief they were coerced into supporting it because of their own rhetoric which they do not want to take responsibility for. Even though many on the left for for the war in Iraq they did so as a political calculation and therefore it is easy for them to oppose it for the same reason.

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