Sometimes I think the stuff from the Lighthouse (Independent Institute) is
just bullshit.  Not horseshit, but bullshit, with an occasional admixture of
chickenshit.  Case in point is this bit they referred to from Ivan Eland at
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=2037 .  Might as well
quote in full:
************************************************

Commentary
Iraq Is Already Partitioned: Here's How to Make it Work
October 2, 2007
Ivan Eland
Des Moines Register


In an otherwise divisive, partisan debate on the Iraq war, the 75-23
bipartisan Senate vote to divide Iraq into autonomous regions was
astounding. People who disagree on everything else about Iraq, such as
conservative Republican Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas and liberal Democrat
Barbara Boxer of California, voted in favor of the non-binding measure.

The Bush administration and the international community, made up of many
states that have their own restive minority populations, have been reluctant
to reconcile themselves to the pragmatic Senate admission that Iraq is
unlikely to have a unified democratic government.

The difference is that the Bush administration and the international
community don't have to face angry U.S. voters next year and many senators
do. The Senate is grasping for anything that could stabilize Iraq before the
2008 election and realizes that unified, democratic government is
unnecessary-and even counterproductive-toward that end. The ugly fact is
that an incomplete and unratified partition of Iraq already exists on the
ground and cannot be undone. Ethnic cleansing has separated populations, and
local militias are providing security and services.

Twentieth-century partitions, some violence-riddled, some more successful,
offer guidance on how best to proceed.

One of the lessons learned from the violent partition of South Asia into
India and Pakistan in 1947 and the partitioning of Ireland in 1921 is that
incomplete partitions are a recipe for violence and that substantial
minorities, which threaten the majority population, should not be left on
the wrong side of the partition line.

When the British divided South Asia into India and Pakistan, the well-armed
Sikhs dreaded Muslim rule and wanted their own independent state or at least
to be incorporated into India; but 2 million of them would have been
stranded in Pakistan. Also, the region of Kashmir, which was two-thirds
Muslim, was not partitioned at all. As a result, a war between India and
Pakistan in 1947 and 1948 allowed India to take most of the province and
left a substantial concentration of Muslims in the Indian part of Kashmir,
leading to a Muslim insurgency that continues to the present.

The long-term violence in Protestant-dominated Northern Ireland resulted
from a substantial Catholic community being left in the north (34 percent of
Northern Ireland's population) after the island was partitioned. Had these
predominantly Catholic areas been allowed to go with the southern Republic
of Ireland, most of this tragic violence could have been avoided.

Thus, an incomplete and unratified partition on the ground in Iraq is a
dangerous situation, exacerbated by U.S arming and training of all factions,
now including the Sunnis, which could make the ongoing civil war even worse.

Another lesson to be learned from the partition of South Asia is that
population movements need to be encouraged, rather than discouraged,
carefully orchestrated and protected with security forces. Financial
incentives could be given to spur their movement.

The lessons of the partition of Palestine in 1948 are that all parties must
agree to the partition (the Arabs didn't), the partition should not be
imposed by an outside power (the United Nations), and that defensible
borders must be created for the resulting governments. In Iraq, a nationwide
conclave must be held to work out the details of the division and draw the
lines. The threat of a rapid U.S. troop withdrawal could be used as a
catalyst to get the Shia and the Kurds, who dominate the Iraqi government,
propped up by U.S. forces, to give the Sunnis oil fields, thus speeding
their current evolution toward supporting a decentralization of Iraq.

*********************************************
Sure, the lesson is that whatever you get will not be what you want, so you
can always say that what you wanted would've been better.  Pie in the sky.
The perfect position for the radical libertarian as back seat driver, never
contributing to anything achievable.

"All parties must agree to the partition."  If you could get that, you
wouldn't need it.

"[T]he partition should not be imposed by an outside power...."  Who the
hell else is going to do it?

"Defensible borders must be created for the resulting governments...."
Defensible militarily, philosophically, or what?  It just reads as political
B.S., like Eland has no idea what he's writing about, like as long as he
sticks to generalities & platitudes nobody can prove him wrong.

"[A] nationwide conclave must be held to work out the details...."  Sure,
buddy.

I say use a situation like this to reward your friends and punish your
enemies -- and I mean the friends of the USA, not of the Bushes.  Show some
loyalty, but not to the extent of being a sucker.  Treat the Kurds the way
you should've treated the Jews, giving a hand up, not a handout.  Don't send
April Glaspie to Russia.

Truly I So Briney,
Robert

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