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February 08, 2012
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The Realist Prism: Victory vs. Democracy in Iraq

By Nikolas Gvosdev | 02 Apr 2010
World Politics Review

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Five years ago, in an essay in National Interest, Paul Saunders and I attempted to address the question of what victory in Iraq would look like. We concluded that success would include depriving al-Qaida of a base, closing Iraq's borders to foreign fighters, and the emergence of a central government capable of ensuring some degree of stability, without repressive methods or too close an alignment with Iran. "Americans and others will recognize victory," we wrote, "if we have managed to break the back of al-Qaida in Iraq and left in place an Iraqi government committed and able to prevent the jihadists from returning."

Given those criteria, has Iraq's democracy -- or "Iraqcracy", to use the term coined by Gen. David Petraeus -- delivered a result that will allow the United States to indeed proclaim victory and announce the termination of the Iraq enterprise that started in March 2003? ...

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