by ubercynicmeister » Thu 23 Feb 2006, 20:32:52
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('FoxV', 'S')o what would the US's roll be in the event of a full scale civil war.
I'm thinking that "PR" might be the best they could do:
'It's only a small civil war..."
"Um, wasn't there a story about a celebrity that you could break to?"
"Uh, no, there were only 50,000 killed today - the media are exagerrating again..."
"Oh, goodness! Is that the time?"
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd how would a civil war appear any differently than insurgency does now.
Pardon the levity, but I think that the fact that most of the "insurgency" is invisible, right now, so "appearing" might well be what it actually does.
In spades.
OK, how's this for a scenario (a hypothetical, but bear with me):
American troops suddenly face three armed and dangerous factions who are no longer able to be mollified and placated - they want each others' blood and they will shoot through you if you stand in the way. This is in addition to the "insurgents" (resurgents? upsurgents?).
Blessed are the Peacemakers for they shall be shot at by all sides.
This leads to a breakdown (well, even more of a break-down) in law-and-order than what's there right now. The troops are already over-stretched. How the heck will they be able to handle even more conflict? They won't.
This gives two alternatives: stick it out, with increasing casualties and even less likelyhood of winning or;
Getting out while the going's good.
Either choice is a bad one.
The British have (it seems) been training up the local "insurgents" as part of their own Police Force. This means that if they (the insurgents) decide to partake of this lil bruhaha in the other bits of Iraq, then the Poms will have the troops they have armed and trained as their enemies. So, they will have several things to take on at once: not only the "other guys" but their own "allies" as well. Apart from the shattering effect this has on morale, it also tends to drive the casualty rate up, and sucks up money like there's no tomorrow.
With the Americans with more to do than they can handle, the British won't be able to ask them for help. With the British "caught up" in the conflict, in their own areas, the Americans cannot ask them for help.
Now, if one wants to do a bit more a forward projection: let's assume things turn really nasty: Iran has lots of allies in the South of Iraq - Iran is Shiia as is the majority of those in the south of Iraq (where most of the Oil is). So, what happens if Iran gets caught up in the conflict? Either by design or by chance, in this case it don't matter. Iran gets the Oil, or at least prevents the West from getting it.
Looking towards the north of the country - the Kurds in northern Iraq want a homeland. OK, let's assume they take the time and trouble to obbnserve the collaspe of Central Iraqi Authority (it's defacto, right now, but this would be de jure). I think they might notice such a thing. Thus they decide to form an Independat Kurdistan (or somethign of that nature). The Turks have all of their Oil Producing regions in areas controlled by the Kurds...and they could not allow such a thing to happen - they'd have to invade. If Turkey invades Iraq, Iran will also have to invade Iraq, simply to protect their own interests.
Then that drags China into it. China is Iran's best buddy right now. THAT'S when things go global.
And that halfwit Rupert Murdoch insisted that "if we invade Iraq, the price of Oil will drop below US$20 per barrel!" What a dope.
And then we head right down the road of the Sierra Leone, only with even more brutality, because the Sierra Leone doesn't have much in the way of Oil. I'm thinking that, thanks to the utter mishandling of Iraq since the American invasion, this is now the most likely scenario. Oh, well, looks like the Iraqis didn't like the Freemarketeer experiment that they were forcing on the locals.
.
"To Get Rich you have to:
*Get up early;
*Work Hard;
*Strike Oil"
J Paul Getty