SMRs and AMRs

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Veteran intelligence officers to President: Time to exit Iraq

Denouement on Iraq: First Stop the Bleeding

by Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity

March 14, 2007

MEMORANDUM FOR:
Speaker of the House
Senate Majority Leader

FROM: Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS)

SUBJECT: Denouement on Iraq: First Stop the Bleeding

In the coming weeks a Congress that is willing to assert its prerogative as a co-equal branch of government has a unique opportunity to stop the needless deaths and maiming of U.S. troops in Iraq and bring them home in an orderly way this year. To do that, it must use its constitutionally mandated authority -- the power of the purse. Although the president, vice president, and their most ardent supporters blindly insist that victory is a troop surge away, the current U.S. military commander on the ground, General David Petraeus, concedes that no military victory is possible. Victory will only be secured through a political solution. The question is not whether U.S. troops will remain permanently in Iraq. The vast majority of Americans agree that the U.S. presence in Iraq is temporary. The real question is how many more Americans will be killed and wounded in a civil war that pits Sunnis against Shias.

Background: VIPS is a movement of retired intelligence officers, which we created in January 2003 because of our acute concern over the the politicization of our profession. Our first analytic effort was a same-day critique of Colin Powell’s performance at the UN on February 5, 2003. (At the time, we seemed the only ones not at all impressed.) Since then we have issued eleven more briefing memoranda, most of them addressed to President George W. Bush. Our intent was to make available sane, unadulterated intelligence analysis to foster enlightened decision-making on the Middle East. We have not the slightest hint, though, that our memoranda actually reached the president. And when we released them to the media, our efforts received little ink or airtime.

(There is more here. Thanks to Minnesota Central for the tip.)

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