In gross terms, the "battle lines" have been drawn (well, recognized) in the fight over our future in Iraq. Enough opponents of the president's policy can be characterized as simply sighing (or yelling), "Make it go away," while enough of the president's supporters say simply, "Bush, what him wrong?" In a real sense then, penetrating the general electorate's view of policy, the vying sides are: "Vilify Bush," or, on the other hand, "Vindicate Bush, at all costs (or die trying)." As you may deduce, this is not the best atmosphere for detached, deliberative analysis of how we proceed from here with the Iraq mess.
Despite that, I want to suggest the following as a partial list of requisites, perhaps overlapping some ISG recommendations themselves, though I don't know because I haven't seen the exhaustive list:
1. Convene a regional conference, with Iran and Syria involved, to establish that general chaos in Iraq would be a bane to the region, threatening a wider Sunni-Shi'ite conflict;
2. Make every effort to establish an effective process of reconciliation in Iraq, featuring amnesty, partial re-Baathification and other measures;
3. Begin a meaningful, comprehensive and dedicated outreach to the Muslim world, perhaps conceived as a "cultural offensive," a policy to identify and build upon common ground, thereby, necessarily (if effective), reducing the influence of the radicals and constructing a viable center that can responsibly present pathways for Muslim integration into the modern world ... without losing the essence of Islam; and
4. Commit perhaps 20,000 to 30,000 more troops, if available, to Baghdad to pacify the capital and thereby not only actually ease the situation in the capital itself but also provide a much-needed "victory" to rally the country around the government in Baghadad.
As Richard Haas, a foreign policy expert, warned on "Meet the Press" this morning, as part of an expert panel, one overriding consideration beyond actual success in our efforts -- which, incidentally, we should commit to with our hearts -- is the "narrative" that will emerge from the "Iraq venture." He counsels doing everything possible to help the Iraqis (the government) prevail not only as a goal in itself but as a geo-political fact that, if it comes to that, the Iraqis lost Iraq, not the Americans. He maintains that this narrative, which we can now start constructing anew, will have significant bearing on the stature of the US in the decades to come and thus our very power to influence events favorably.