By Jack Jacobs, NBC News military analyst
NEW YORK – It has been a complicated logistical enterprise, but the president’s goal of reducing the American presence in Iraq seems to be proceeding more or less according to his campaign promise.
But anyone who thinks that there will be no U.S. forces in Iraq is mistaken – we will continue to suffer casualties and spend money while the fractious politicians in Baghdad try to get a grip on their fragile democracy.
Sadly, the odds of long-term success are long.
Combat troops say 'So long'
We are withdrawing combat troops, but we will leave behind a substantial support base of Americans to help the wobbly Iraqis: technical experts, logistical support, engineers, air power, administrative people and a host of other assistance that the Iraqis desperately need. Some will be located in Iraq, and some will be based in nations bordering Iraq, but they will remain in the region for a long time to come.
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U.S. troops will help provide local security, but the American combat role will be formally terminated. The thousands of soldiers, Marines and airmen left behind will serve as advisers, formed into mobile teams to train Iraqi military and police units. As we discovered in Vietnam and a number of other places, advisory work is slow, labor-intensive and frustrating.
Advisers have no authority over the Iraqis and must battle disinterest, ethnic tension, illiteracy, ineptitude, fear and corruption, all formidable opponents. Terrorists, separatists and the disaffected will have to be found and eliminated or converted, but in the meantime there will be violence. And strategic regional threats, Iran chief among them, will complicate Iraqi military recovery. Getting the Iraqis into fighting trim will be neither quick nor easy.
Lights need to come on
Not all of Iraq’s problems are security troubles. A good example of the many other things that need to be fixed is the electrical power grid. It does work, but only occasionally and not in a predictable way. Even if residents can become inured to an intermittent and insufficient supply of electricity – commerce can’t.
A viable commercial sector is a principal element of stability, and economic activity will not grow until we help the Iraqis generate adequate, reliable electricity. In a country that has consumed billions of dollars in American aid, this important task is not supposed to be difficult to accomplish.
Whatever else one can say about President Barack Obama's decisions on national security – and there is plenty to criticize – one can’t accuse Obama of failing to keep his word on Iraq.
Then an Illinois state senator, Obama voted against the invasion, and he has been consistent in saying that it was a waste of resources and distracted us from the objective of eliminating the Taliban in Afghanistan.
But Obama also has announced that, beginning in less than a year, he will order a withdrawal of combat troops from Afghanistan as well.
Presumably, he intends to fight the Taliban from a distance with remotely piloted aircraft and with the occasional special operation. Although these instruments are cost effective, they are not decisive in an asymmetrical conflict, and so his pledge to defeat the Taliban, which requires more time and troops, is a hollow one.
Different challenges, same goal
In most respects, Iraq and Afghanistan are as different as can be. Iraq was a centrally governed political entity for a long time; Afghanistan is a loose collection of tribes. Iraq has a history of successful agriculture and industry since ancient times; Afghanistan is mostly desolate and is among the poorest countries on earth.
But Obama's strategic objective in Iraq is startlingly similar to that in Afghanistan: establish and support a stable democracy that can defend itself against its enemies. However, like in Afghanistan, it is not clear that there is much to support in Iraq just yet.
There is a continuous, paralyzing and often violent argument among Iraqis about parliamentary representation, about the method of voting, about the distribution of resources, about almost everything – basic concepts on which citizens must concur if the political machinery is to operate at all. Debate is healthy, but paralysis is not, particularly in a nation that is at risk without strong leadership from Baghdad.
Everything we are doing in Iraq, and everything we continue to sacrifice, is for the purpose of giving the Iraqis safety, stability and prosperity.
We deposed a dictator and put in his place a system designed to deliver political power to those who did not have it before, but in the process we are leaving the Iraqis without the leadership it needs to survive.
In the wake of our departure, Baghdad's weakness is liable to encourage the rise of another despot, demonstrating something we learned during our own revolution but have evidently forgotten: installing democracy takes time and patience, two valuable resources in short supply.
Jack Jacobs is a Medal of Honor recipient for heroic actions during the Vietnam War.



I give it less then two years and Iraq will be back under a dictatorship, and ten years after that we will be back to half assed fix the problem again.....
Everyone agrees that we should not of entered Iraq how or when we did, but the fact remains that we did, and we should of finshed the job. Not only have we left a country with a power vacuum, we have further shown the world that we have become a country that never finishes anything.
So now that the media has screwed the US yet again, lets shed some light on the border, and redeploy our troops there.....doubtful with the current administration....
We cannot 'finish the job' because the real problem with Iraq is that its full of 'Iraqiis'! They have to grow up or be beaten down. It's their choice, not ours. Unless we plan on 'annexing' their entire country and repopulating it with Americans, there's no option for success unless the Iraqi's decide to make it so for themselves. This is their opportunity, to succeed or fail. It's not up to us or anybody else.
In my opinion, the biggest mistake we made was allowing the breakup of the Ottoman empire. Should have left the whole shebang up to them.
Its not out fault these people are extremist. History has shown that you can't change people and their ways. Its best to leave em be. All US is doing is trying to prevent a War because of WW1 and WW2... Its obvious Easterners can't live in peace so after WW2, America has taken the role to keep you f'ckers from blowing each other up instead of us just saying its your problem like we did back in the day... You guys made it our problem so here we are cleaning up after your mess and it is costing the lives of Americans.
Right.... everyone has the choice to have no choice and blame it on the other side that they made them do it, due to some social outcasts of there own society and religion who come from wealthy families, blame clientalism as well as the inability to develop good social skills with others who are different. Don't forget Europes historical past involving the Middles East that I doubt were not forgotten by those living now through oral tradition of passing down stories.
In the Middle East one doesn't blindly trust people who know a lot in their "expertise", one trusts those who are family friends and have a done good bussiness in the past with them and if you lie then your are excluded and shunned from that group of people.
In America you blindly trust someone through how much credentials they have in their field, hoping they won't sell you a "lemon" deal, by signing a contract that says "I believe that I agree to what has been mentioned and have decided that I will go through with this knowing full well that the blame is not fully on the other person but on myself as well and I will take responsibility."
Has anyone thought of where these troops are really going to. Could this have something to do with the up and coming elections? I am happy to see that our men are leaving but again when do they come home to AMERICA?
the people who are leaving are with the 2nd infantry division and are done with their tour. they will be going home. the 1st brigade 3rd infantry division is still here. still doing patrols and still being infantry and armor and scouts along with the soldiers who support thier combat, er... advise and assist operations
Col. Jacobs is the absolute real deal. An extraordinary warrior who speaks clearly and thoughtfully. "The man with outer courage dares to die; the man with inner courage dares to live" -- Lao Tze. Col. Jacobs is both.
Eh, Iraq has also the Sunni, Shi'a conflict. People will use the extreme side that small minority of each side to fuel hate, because if you know a couple of them are bad, makes them all bad. As well as the religous issue of "who should've been" that occured many years ago.
I am NOT willing to bet the farm on the success of this pullout. Our attempts to "americanize" or democratize other nations has seldom worked - especially when we expect them to become "just like us" within a decade, when it has taken us over 2 centuries to get where we are. History will bear me out on this: the most stable societies are those under harsh dictatorships (I did not say this is good, just stable); the least stable societies are those in transition, especially those in transition from dictatorships to democracies..............oh yeah, then throw in religious zealotry between the parties aspiring to take control and what do you have - Iraq in another year or two!
I honestly hope this works (as a career Marine I don't need any more battles to fight), but am skeptical.
Give them time; they'll figure it out sooner or later.
Economic Development is the "West's" way of doing things, if it doesn't bring in money then obviuosly they are not "civil" or "modernized".