Neighborhood Watch
Bloggers are impressed with a new report that shows 75 percent of Baghdad neighborhoods are now "secure." Also, they mourn the passing of the young chess master Bobby Fischer—the old, paranoid anti-Semite Bobby Fischer, less so.
USA Today carries a cover story that says 356 of the 474 neighborhoods in Baghdad are now deemed pacified by the U.S. military. The vast majority are in the "control" category of a four-tier security rating, meaning they require U.S. and Iraqi forces to keep the peace; the other areas fall under the "retain" category, meaning local Iraqi police and security forces suffice. Most bloggers see this impressive accomplishment as the result of the surge. Others are less enthusiastic.
James Joyner of Outside the Beltway hits a common refrain: "Obviously, this is very good news. It goes too far, though, to say that this demonstrates that the Surge worked. The goal was to alleviate the worst of the violence — which has happened — so as to provide breathing room for political reconciliation. That has not been achieved."
Jimmie at the Sundries Shack invites "Democrat friends to come over to the winning side now. Come on, guys. We're beating the tar out of al-Qaeda. Iraqis who, 13 months ago lived with little hope now are welcoming their neighbors home, regardless of their sectarian affiliation. The Iraqi parliament, emboldened by our wilingness to stay and do the hard work on their behalf has passed the first of what is likely to be several reconciliation laws."
Ed Morrissey at Captain's Quarters notes that "[a]lthough the USA Today report fails to mention it, the recent breakthrough on de-Baathification reform will help integrate the city's Sunnis back into the mainstream of government and society, helping to assuage sectarian conflicts."
Ana Marie Cox, at Time's Swampland, reads the article with John McCain on his campaign bus. "McCain is acutely aware the extent to which his own candidacy was revived, in part, by changing fortunes in Iraq," she writes. "And he delights in the news itself, though, as he pointed out later, 'it has come at great cost, paid with the most precious American treasure.' " National Review's Corner offers up video of McCain showing off the article on the stump Friday.
Andrew Sullivan, a surge skeptic, offers congratulations, kind of: "It's hard to know what else we can expect Petraeus to do. Some of the violence has obviously been displaced to other areas, but that doesn't detract from the achievement. Increasingly, progress is now up to the Iraqis. Quite whether that's a good or a worrying sign we shall soon find out."
Read more about the USA Today piece.
King, queen, knave: Bobby Fischer has died at age 64. It was a bitter end for the chess prodigy who defeated Soviet champion Boris Spassky in 1972 in Reykjavik, which Fischer made his adopted home after facing criminal proceedings in the United States for violation of sanctions against Yugoslavia when he played Spassky in a rematch in 1992. Fischer ended his days saying things like "I want to see the U.S. wiped out," and calling Jews "thieving, lying bastards."
Michael Weiss is the director of communications at the Henry Jackson Society, a London-based think tank that promotes democratic geopolitics. He is also the spokesman for Just Journalism, which examines how Israel and the Middle East are portrayed in the U.K. media.


