Hitch:
On many occasions, the jihadists in Iraq have been very specific as well as very general. When they murdered Sergio Vieira de Mello, the brilliant and brave U.N. representative assigned to Baghdad by Kofi Annan, the terrorists' communiqué hailed the death of the man who had so criminally helped Christian East Timor to become independent of Muslim Indonesia. (This was also among the "reasons" given for the bombing of the bar in Bali.) I think I begin to sense the "frustration" of the "insurgents." They keep telling us what they are like and what they want. But do we ever listen? Nah. For them, it must be like talking to the wall. Bennet even complains that it's difficult for reporters to get close to the "insurgents": He forgets that his own paper has published a conversation with one of them, in which the man praises the invasion of Kuwait, supports the cleansing of the Kurds, and says that "we cannot accept to live with infidels."
Ah, but why would the "secular" former Baathists join in such theocratic mayhem? Let me see if I can guess. Leaving aside the formation of another well-named group—the Fedayeen Saddam—to perform state-sponsored jihad before the intervention, how did the Baath Party actually rule? Yes, it's coming back to me. By putting every Iraqi citizen in daily fear of his or her life, by random and capricious torture and murder, and by cynical divide-and-rule among Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds. Does this remind you of anything?
Whole thing here.
I posted on this over at my site. I think Bennet's biggest issue is that he, like so many in the media, insist that these people are insurgents, when in reality they are terrorists. Once you recognize this fact, their strategy makes total sense.
Wow.
Reasonable people can disagree over the wisdom of attempting to democratize Iraq, but I am continually amazed at how little contempt - real, honest contempt - the contemprorary Left has shown for the anti-democracy fascist/theocrats that comprise the "insurgency."
There simply could not possibly be any two groups more antithetical to everything the Left claims to value than both of the (major) players in Iraq's "insurgency."
Hitchen's views make perfect sense FROM A LEFTIST POINT OF VIEW, yet he has become a pariah on the left. Bizarre.