• Stumble Upon
  • Reddit
  • Digg
 

Writer: Iraq War a Long Shot Made Longer by Feith

text sizeAAA
April 9, 2008

George Packer, author of The Assassin's Gate, says Feith paints an accurate portrait of a Bush administration that just couldn't agree and was paralyzed on key decisions for post-war planning in Iraq.

But Packer says he doesn't think the tactical changes that Feith suggests — if they had settled on a security plan, for instance, or if Iraqis had been put in charge sooner — would have made a fundamental difference in the war.

"There had to be some kind of occupation," Packer says. "There was no way security was going to be provided in Iraq by so-called externals and their followers. ... Someone had to take on the militias that immediately filled the vacuum that we left, and that had to be the U.S. Army. There was no way around it."

"The Iraq war was always a long shot," Packer says. "But it was made immeasurably longer by its principal architects in Washington, including Douglas Feith, who ignored expert advice, reserved most of their effort for fighting each other in ideological battles and regarded the Iraqi people as an afterthought."

 
  • Stumble Upon
  • Reddit
  • Digg
 

Podcast + RSS Feeds

PodcastRSS

  • Iraq
     
  • Morning Edition
     
 
 

Comments

Discussions for this story are now closed. Please see the Community FAQ for more information.

 

Purchase Featured Books

The Assassin's Gate: America in Iraq

podcast

Foreign Dispatch Podcast

Foreign Dispatch Podcast

A weekly podcast of the biggest news and best stories from NPR's foreign correspondents from around the world.

Subscribe