This is a very complicated situation that has no easy way out. Whether or not the US reduces or increases its troop sizes, there isn't going to be any end the insurgency. It's a catch 22. If the Americans stay, a certain sect of the insurgency will continue to do anything and everything it can to cause chaos on as wide of a scale as it is capable of doing, all in the hopes of having the Americans move out of the country. If the Americans leave the country, it will plunge into a civil war that could have a number of different outcomes, some of which would give rise to a regime very hostile to the United States.
In order to be able to decide what course of action is best to take, it is vital to understand the insurgency itself. There is a certain brand of insurgents that have done everything they possibly can to be accurately labeled as fundamentalist Islamic extremists. These types are not unlike bin Laden and the Al-Qaeda organization; in fact, many of them are most certainly either directly or ideologically affiliated with Al-Qaeda. These types of been trying, for some time now, to stir up a revolution of sorts within the Islamic or Arab world. It is there goal to create an Islamic state, or "Caliphate", that is based on medieval, conservative, fundamentalist interpretation of Islam. They have been trying to do so, but without much luck due to a significant lack of popular support for their cause among the masses in the Islamic and Arab world. If these groups did enjoy a broader appeal, it would most likely have been much more clearly demonstrated by much larger numbers of people protesting and revolting against their totalitarian Arab monarchies and Islamic theocracies.
Then came 9-11. What 9-11 represented was a shift in strategy. Yes, this strategy can most certainly be traced back further than this, but 9-11 was a real turning point for the obvious reason that such an attack would compel the United States to take drastic action. bin Laden is no fool. He and his top officers knew full well that 9-11 would mean one thing: American invasion into the Islamic world. As the theory goes, this would potentially create an atmosphere where a significant shift could occur in the popular support received by Al-Qaeda and other like-minded organizations in the Islamic world. Having the Americans invade an Islamic country would undoubtedly stir up anti-Americanism, and would push many of those who had not supported Al-Qaeda in the past into their arms where they would be welcomed and embraced. With this sort of sentiment spreading across the region, there would be an increased possibility of an Al-Qaeda-type revolution occurring in a number of countries, with Saudi Arabia perhaps being the gem in the entire lot.
As we can see, anti-Americanism in the Islamic world is drastically increasing. I'm not so sure bin Laden and his men had hoped for an invasion into Iraq, although this is only helping out his support, especially with the way the situation is going now.
Now, I am of the opinion that these types must be fought and crushed. But doing so will only rid us of those now that we hit. It does nothing; I repeat NOTHING to address the underlying issues that are increasing recruitment into these types of groups. The Americans, as much as they may be trying to "stabilize" the situation in Iraq, are not making ANY friends through their actions. Maybe they have been or will be successful in stabilizing Falluja from the insurgents held up there, but the way they are going about it by bombarding the city with bombs from above, and killing thousands of people in the process, isn't doing anything to decrease the number of people that will be fighting the American occupation in the future. The only way this will be done is through intelligence, groundwork police work, etc. It is necessary to conduct military operations, however I do not think the Americans are winning any hearts over in the way they are doing things. Yes, they are saving American lives in the process, but this only seeks to harden attitudes and create increases in future recruitment into both of what can be termed legitimate and illegitimate resistance.
When I say legitimate resistance I speak of those who now resist the American occupation for a number of very real and painful reasons. Those that have had family members beaten, tortured and/or killed by the Americans. The innocent that have lost everything they had from American bombs and military operations and have received no sorts of reparations for the crimes committed against them. These are very real and systematic problems within the US military and have been present for as long as I can think back. Think School of the Americas. Don't know what it is? Do some research.
In sum, the Americans are doing a terrible job at trying to win the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people. I believe that they should stay; they must stay and help out those that need it most: the people of Iraq. Although I did agree with the war, I did not agree in the way it has been fought, I do not agree with how the Americans have dismantled so many public institutions in the country, and I do not agree with the Bush administration’s obsession with putting corporate bower and business interests ahead of those of actual people. They do it to their own country and to others. Even if the Americans were not facing an insurgency in Iraq it will still be a sad state of affairs; not due to the Iraqi people, but due to the corporate interests championed by Washington at home and all around the world. We need not look too far beyond the state of economies that have gone through the IMF-imposed structural reform policies to see this. History repeatedly shows us that the way to prosperity is not through quick privatization schemes and buy-outs from foreign transnationals, but through the building of strong institutions and regulations at home, which help to empower the people and the country.
Finally, if Americans really are interested in defeating the moods and attitudes that help spawn and recruit anti-American terrorism, aside from perhaps the endeavor into Iraq at the moment, the single largest and most important grievance that must be addressed by the American government is it’s unrelenting and abhorrently slanted support for Israel in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Prior to the Iraq war, this is quite possibly the single largest grievance given by many of these Islamic fundamentalists of their “hatred” for the United States. To believe that these groups hate America for it’s own freedoms is quite absurd and is nothing short of self-destructive disillusionment. Although many of these types believe in a system of rule quite contrary to the American one, it is absolutely ridiculous to think that Osama bin Laden woke up one day, read the American Bill of Rights and suddenly declared war on America. It is due to American meddling in the Islamic world in ways that the bin Laden types do not agree with. Bin Laden may use America’s unrelenting support for Israel over the Palestinians as a grievance and justification for many of his actions. But the theory I laid out earlier coupled with the fact that so many disapprove of American policies in this reason is a much more plausible scenario as to what bin Laden is actually thinking. Bin laden may not stop his war against America if the US were to take a more balanced view of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. What this would almost certainly do, however, is erode a massive proportion of the attitudes that foment in people in which the bin Ladens are able to exploit for recruiting purposes. The Palestinian people have been occupied militarily for over 35 years. Such desperation and lack of hope creates a breeding ground for radical and fundamentalist attitudes.
Has anyone read this far? I will not be responding to any defamatory or derogatory comments. I will be happy to debate and discuss these issues in a civilized manner. I welcome the opportunity. Rant off.