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The World Policy
Institute
at New
School University
presents
FINDING AN EXIT FROM IRAQ
a panel discussion with
AMB. RICHARD MURPHY, Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations (former Assistant Secretary of State for Near East)
and
CRISPIN HAWES,
Director, Middle East practice, eurasia group
Moderated by
IAN BREMMER, WPI Senior Fellow, Director, Eurasia Group
Iraq has been sovereign for eight months. A democratically elected government replaces the interim one in March. The Iraqi Civil Defense Corps (ICDC) is geared up to fill the vacuum left by Saddam Hussein's demobilized army, and oil production - shy of expectations - is nonetheless a substantial source of revenues. Certainly, Iraq is ready to stand on its own. But Iraq is also beleaguered by an violent insurgency, the ICDC, while large, can barely maintain urban order let alone control Iraq's borders and large swaths in the west of the country, and governments hostile to US allies, are perched to lure the fledgling Iraqi government into their orbit. A strong argument can be made for a continuing US presence, which begs questions: When can the US withdraw its troops? What happens when it does? In Iraq? Among its neighbors? And across the region? Iraq and the US are now intertwined in complicated ways, some of the US's own making, some arising from unexpected quarters. The overarching question is then: how can America disentangle itself without leaving the new Iraqi government dangling and exposed?
Thursday, February 24, 2005, 6:00-7:30 p.m. Swayduck Auditorium,
First Floor, 65 Fifth Avenue (between East 13-14th). Admission
is free.
RSVP 212-229-5808 to reserve seating or Email: wpi@newschool.edu . If you need special accomodations, please call at least five days in advance.
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