The point is Tenet makes a lot of absurd observations in this article, which he agreed to for the main purpose of selling his book.
Again, this thread is just another in your weekly Bush bashing silliness that really has gotten tired and old. You hate the GOP. We got it. You made no actual points in your original post except the same tired old bullshit you post ad nauseum.
I have said over and over State should have run the deal the moment the ground combat operations ended. That said, things were decided on based on poor intel and thoughts on the best way to proceed.
Regardless, you're ignoring of the fact the Iraqi's developed their own constitution without any input from us, the Iraqi's held open elections without any input from us, and the simple truth that we started to, have been, and are transitioning power refutes the crux of a lot of Tenets argument. The facts call out the idiocy of this article and the preface that we were occupying Iraq. Great for moonbats who have been swearing at Bush for years to come out and make another silly thread, but not based in factual or good assertation.
None of this changes the fact Tenet is a douchebag who fucked up and should be given about as much of an ear as any posting from Evermore or you about the GOP.
The problem was not that we controlled Iraq. It was that we sat in the Green Zone and let all the municipalities control themselves, and many were Ba'athists or unfriendly areas with a lot of streaming foreign fighters and Al Qaeda personnel. This is the opposite of what Tenet says, but it's not surprising given how incompetent the man is.
Don't take my word on it. Feel free to read the moonbat Ny Times
[url=http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/29/world/middleeast/29ramadi.html?ex=1335499200&en=9b8482299f73ca17&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss]
Uneasy Alliance Is Taming One Insurgent Bastion[/url]
RAMADI, Iraq — Anbar Province, long the lawless heartland of the tenacious Sunni Arab resistance, is undergoing a surprising transformation. Violence is ebbing in many areas, shops and schools are reopening, police forces are growing and the insurgency appears to be in retreat.
“Many people are challenging the insurgents,” said the governor of Anbar, Maamoon S. Rahid, though he quickly added, “We know we haven’t eliminated the threat 100 percent.”
Many Sunni tribal leaders, once openly hostile to the American presence, have formed a united front with American and Iraqi government forces against Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia. With the tribal leaders’ encouragement, thousands of local residents have joined the police force. About 10,000 police officers are now in Anbar, up from several thousand a year ago. During the same period, the police force here in Ramadi, the provincial capital, has grown from fewer than 200 to about 4,500, American military officials say.
At the same time, American and Iraqi forces have been conducting sweeps of insurgent strongholds, particularly in and around Ramadi, leaving behind a network of police stations and military garrisons, a strategy that is also being used in Baghdad, Iraq’s capital, as part of its new security plan.
Yet for all the indications of a heartening turnaround in Anbar, the situation, as it appeared during more than a week spent with American troops in Ramadi and Falluja in early April, is at best uneasy and fragile.
Municipal services remain a wreck; local governments, while reviving, are still barely functioning; and years of fighting have damaged much of Ramadi.
The insurgency in Anbar — a mix of Islamic militants, former Baathists and recalcitrant tribesmen — still thrives among the province’s overwhelmingly Sunni population, killing American and Iraqi security forces and civilians alike. [This was underscored by three suicide car-bomb attacks in Ramadi on Monday and Tuesday, in which at least 15 people were killed and 47 were wounded, American officials said. Eight American service members — five marines and three soldiers — were killed in two attacks on Thursday and Friday in Anbar, the American military said.]
Furthermore, some American officials readily acknowledge that they have entered an uncertain marriage of convenience with the tribes, some of whom were themselves involved in the insurgency, to one extent or another. American officials are also negotiating with elements of the 1920 Revolution Brigades, a leading insurgent group in Anbar, to join their fight against Al Qaeda.
These sudden changes have raised questions about the ultimate loyalties of the United States’ new allies. “One day they’re laying I.E.D.’s, the next they’re police collecting a pay check,” said Lt. Thomas R. Mackesy, an adviser to an Iraqi Army unit in Juwayba, east of Ramadi, referring to improvised explosive devices.
And it remains unclear whether any of the gains in Anbar will transfer to other troubled areas of Iraq — like Baghdad, Diyala Province, Mosul and Kirkuk, where violence rages and the ethnic and sectarian landscape is far more complicated.
Still, the progress has inspired an optimism in the American command that, among some officials, borders on giddiness. It comes after years of fruitless efforts to drive a wedge between moderate resistance fighters and those, like Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, who seem beyond compromise...