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War on Iraq

Spinning Iraq for a GOP Victory

By Patrick Cockburn, Independent UK. Posted September 3, 2008.


With an eye on the presidential election, the White House is working to create the impression that the war is ripe for U.S. victory.
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Political events in Iraq are seldom what they seem. The handover by the U.S. military of control of Anbar province, once the heartland of the Sunni rebellion, to Iraqi forces is a case in point. The U.S. will keep 25,000 American soldiers in Anbar, so the extent to which the Iraqi government will really take over is debatable. But the future of Anbar is a crucial pointer to the fate of Iraq. It is a vast area and one of the few parts of Iraq that is overwhelmingly Sunni.

The Iraqi government is dominated by Shia Islamic parties in alliance with Kurdish nationalists. The vital question now is whether or not this Shia-dominated government can reassure the Sunni minority that they are not going to be overrun as the U.S. withdraws its forces. The Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki, is in a very confident mood. In the past four months he feels he has successfully faced down the Shia militiamen of Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army by taking back control of Basra, Sadr City and Amarah. Then he refused to sign a new security accord with the U.S. which President George Bush wanted to see agreed by August 31st.

In the past few weeks he has been confronting his Kurdish allies over the future of the oil city of Kirkuk and the town of Khanaqin.

Maliki may be overplaying his hand but there is no doubt that the Iraqi state is becoming more powerful in Iraq and the Mahdi Army, the Americans and the Kurds less so. The Americans in particular feel that he exaggerates the extent to which his success against the Mahdi Army was because of the new strength of the Iraqi security forces. These troops were doing badly until they received American support.

Nevertheless, Maliki's position is strong. He seems to have realized that he may need the U.S., but the U.S. also cannot do without him and is in no position to replace him as it did with his predecessor, Ibrahim al-Jaafari.

Much of what the White House is now doing is done to help the Republicans in the presidential election. The aim is to give the impression that Iraq has finally come right for the U.S. and victory is finally in its grasp. The surge is promoted as the strategy by which the tide was turned and it is true that the Sunni uprising against the U.S. occupation has largely ended.

But it has done so for reasons that have little to do with the surge or American actions of any kind. Crucial to the success of the government against the Mahdi Army has been the support of Iran. It is they who arranged for the Shia militiamen to go home.

It takes real cheek for Bush to claim yesterday that "Anbar is no longer lost to al-Qa'ida" since during the last presidential election in 2004, he was claiming that the media was exaggerating the success of the insurgents.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: iraq, iraq war, sadr city, john mccain, surge, basra, anbar, mahdi army, nouri al-maliki, iraq withdrawal, amarah, ibrahim al-jaafari

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Here's How the Message Gets Hammered Home
Posted by: ranchero42 on Sep 3, 2008 11:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the neo-cons make it all about "treasure". Anybody who rips off the American taxpayer while claiming "patriotism" gets time added to the prison sentence. Time as in HARD TIME. It shouldn't come down to minimum dollars stolen, but let's agree on it simply to distinguish "amateur" from "career criminal". We know a sizeable number of neo-cons engage in prison sex, we just need to help them appreciate the full-spectrum context. End the country club prison system for so-called White Collar crime. The Bush crime family clearly feels encouraged when not properly motivated.

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What we really fight for in Iraq
Posted by: SicfkOfBush on Sep 5, 2008 1:05 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It has been thoroughly established that the invasion of Iraq was to grab the oil. Freeing Iraq of Saddam Hussain was nothing but a ruse. Considering that we are really fighting in Iraq for the oil and, since the possession of that oil will not go to the people of this country but to the oil companies, what we are really fighting for in Iraq is for the oil companies grab of the oil, nothing more. And, McCain, Bush and the rest of the Republican party are doing everything to "win" the war to deliver that oil to the oil companies. There is no war to the benefit of the American people, only a war to benefit the oil companies. Moreover, who are particularly big beneficiaries? Chaney, the Bush family, and their cohorts, those with close ties to oil companies.

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Define victory!
Posted by: Scarabus on Sep 5, 2008 2:31 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you do not define "victory" or "success," then how will you or anyone else be able to tell when you've achieved it? Or when you've been stalemated or defeated?

"Mission Accomplished"? Terrific! But if the mission had already been accomplished years ago, then why are our citizens' lives and our nation's wealth and honor and reputation and influence being trashed now?

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