Friday, January 22, 2010
RED HERRING: IRAQ
Shawn Baldwin/Bloomberg
Compared to what we've seen before—and what might have happened—the overall story is remarkably positive. For the markets, Iraq is suddenly an opportunity. Institutions are becoming legitimate (even with the unresolved Kurdish issue), the army is starting to function, and most important, political leaders from all communities are beginning to recognize the value of Iraq's tremendous natural resource base from which all can benefit if they make compromises to maintain the country's stability. For all the basic governance problems, there's very little chance of Iraq becoming a failed state at this point. As recently as a year ago, that constituted a meaningful risk.
Compared to what we've seen before—and what might have happened—the overall story is remarkably positive. For the markets, Iraq is suddenly an opportunity. Institutions are becoming legitimate (even with the unresolved Kurdish issue), the army is starting to function, and most important, political leaders from all communities are beginning to recognize the value of Iraq's tremendous natural resource base from which all can benefit if they make compromises to maintain the country's stability. For all the basic governance problems, there's very little chance of Iraq becoming a failed state at this point. As recently as a year ago, that constituted a meaningful risk.
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