Brzezinski calls for Iraq pull out
By KATHERINE GYPSON
UPI Correspondent
WASHINGTON, March 16 (UPI) -- One of America's most respected elder national security statesmen called for a full pull-out from Iraq Thursday.
Delivering the keynote address at the Center for American Progress' "Iraq; Next Steps for U.S. Policy," Zbigniew Brzezinski, the former National Security advisor for President Jimmy Carter, said that "within a year we should be able to complete a course of disengagement" and withdraw from Iraq.
Brzezinski cited several reasons for withdrawal, among them the "prohibitively expensive" cost of the war and the fact that American leadership and legitimacy has been severely undermined by the insurgency and damaged credibility.
"We have to make a really cold judgement," said Brzezinski. "Would the consequence of civil war be more devastating than the consequences of staying the course?"
Iraqi Shiites and Kurds might prevail in a civil war, Brzezinski said.
"The U.S. umbrella that is designed to prevent these wars is so porous it ends up feeding them," he said.
It would take a U.S. commitment of half a million troops to make a significant difference in fighting the Iraqi insurgency, Brzezinski said. But, "We are not in a position to do this," he said.
Brzezinski also called for a new U.S. nuclear dialogue with Iran. A precedent for one already existed in the Bush administration's multi-lateral talks with North Korea on nuclear proliferation, he said.
"Surely it cannot be our deliberate intention to fuse Iranian nationalism with Iranian fundamentalism?" he said.
(The rest is here.)
UPI Correspondent
WASHINGTON, March 16 (UPI) -- One of America's most respected elder national security statesmen called for a full pull-out from Iraq Thursday.
Delivering the keynote address at the Center for American Progress' "Iraq; Next Steps for U.S. Policy," Zbigniew Brzezinski, the former National Security advisor for President Jimmy Carter, said that "within a year we should be able to complete a course of disengagement" and withdraw from Iraq.
Brzezinski cited several reasons for withdrawal, among them the "prohibitively expensive" cost of the war and the fact that American leadership and legitimacy has been severely undermined by the insurgency and damaged credibility.
"We have to make a really cold judgement," said Brzezinski. "Would the consequence of civil war be more devastating than the consequences of staying the course?"
Iraqi Shiites and Kurds might prevail in a civil war, Brzezinski said.
"The U.S. umbrella that is designed to prevent these wars is so porous it ends up feeding them," he said.
It would take a U.S. commitment of half a million troops to make a significant difference in fighting the Iraqi insurgency, Brzezinski said. But, "We are not in a position to do this," he said.
Brzezinski also called for a new U.S. nuclear dialogue with Iran. A precedent for one already existed in the Bush administration's multi-lateral talks with North Korea on nuclear proliferation, he said.
"Surely it cannot be our deliberate intention to fuse Iranian nationalism with Iranian fundamentalism?" he said.
(The rest is here.)
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