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Sadr City Blues
The fighting between U.S. and Iraqi forces and elements of JAM in Sadr City has been fierce. The coalition reports that it has killed 200 fighters, and claims that militants h...
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Good Cop, Bad Cop
Dr. iRack has admired Tina Susman's terrific reporting on Iraq for the Los Angeles Times for a while. (Indeed, throughout the war, the LAT has often produced much better repo...
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Calling All Readers: RFI
So Abu Muqawama got into a semi-public argument with one of the world's leading al-Qaeda experts today about a subject he wants you guys to weigh in on. Basically, Abu Muqawam...
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The Most Powerful Man in Iraq?
A friend of Dr. iRack's passed along an interesting McClatchy piece on Brig. Gen. Qassem Suleimani, the commander of the Quds Force, the Iranian paramilitary and espionage org...
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In case you missed it...
Abu Muqawama is getting caught up on his reading and wants to point the way toward two really good offerings from the crew at Small Wars Journal that you guys may or may not h...
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Georgetown's Exit Strategy
Student journalist Julia Cai should be offered a job with a major American newspaper upon graduation on the strength of the opening line to her article on Doug Feith's dismiss...
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The Real Causes of Grievance
Abu Muqawama bought and read the New York Review of Books yesterday mainly because of Max Rodenbeck's review of Robin Wright's Dreams and Shadows: The Future of the Middle Eas...
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The Latest Attack in Kabul
Yesterday's ambush on dignitaries at the large, well-planned parade marking the withdrawal of the Soviet Union from Afghanistan was just the latest move in the evolution of th...
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Abu Abed Survives
Among the biggest reasons for the significant decline in violence in Iraq over the past year is the Sunni Awakening (or Sahwa). The movement includes tribal sheiks, former Sun...
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Two Apologies
Hey gang, Abu Muqawama apologizes to the readership for being MIA. He has been traveling these past few days and has another week of traveling ahead of him. Many thanks to Dr....
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The Big O
In 2003-2004, when he was the Division commander for the 4th ID in Iraq, Ray Odierno was widely criticized for for being overly kinetic and not understanding COIN. The now cla...
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Feith-less
The Washington Times, a vanguard of the liberal anti-war media propaganda machine if there ever was one, savages Doug Feith, one of the Iraq war's architects, and his new memo...
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More on the Generals
A good friend of Kip's had this to say about the Bateman response to the NY Times article on graybeards being used, tsk tsk, for information operations. An interesting civili...
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Summer Kirkuk-Off
Dr. iRack took note of a good piece in the Christian Science Monitor on Kirkuk. The area has long been seen as a potential flashpoint for ethnic strife between Arabs, Kurds, a...
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New Kagan . . . Same as the Old Kagan
Fred Kagan has a new piece in the Weekly Standard mocking all those who don't know what success means in Iraq. Fred lays it out:Virtually everyone who wants to win this war ag...
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Winner of the U.S. Presidential Election Announced Early
The soon-to-be Mrs. Dr. iRack just saw this breaking news report. Apparently, the winner of the 2008 presidential election has been announced early. Dr. iRack will report back...
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Children Swimming in Chocolate Streams . . .
. . . in Basra? Dr. iRack has detected a new narrative coming out of the Iraqi Government (and MNF-I). The story goes something like this. "Once upon a time, a brave prime min...
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Pentagon Suspends Retired General IO Campaign
Dr. iRack steps out of the desert and into the beltway for a moment. For those of you tracking the retired-Generals-as-"message force multipliers" story, the NYT reports that,...
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To the Brink in Iraq
I hate to say I told you so . . . but I told you so. A few days ago, Dr. iRack dropped the news that MNF-I was likely to roll-out new evidence of Iranian support to elements o...
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Kilcullen on Political Maneuver in COIN
Back when this blog had about 50 readers a day, it was fun because Abu Muqawama could pretty much write whatever the hell he wanted. Now that about 3,000 people read it daily ...