Bush was out there again on Wednesday trying to link Iraq to al-Qaeda and maintaining that the US was mainly fighting it in that country. In fact, No Mahdi Army Shiites are al-Qaeda. Almost all Sunni Arab guerrilla cells are Baathist or Salafi rather than al-Qaeda. Probably of 100,000 guerrillas fighting in Iraq, perhaps 2% could be categorized in some vague way as "al-Qaeda" if you take that term as referring to a franchise. They are mainly foreign fighters and if the US left Iraq, the local Sunni Arabs would slit their throats. Some slitting is going on even now, and the Bushies celebrate that while not seeming to recognize the implication that "al-Qaeda" doesn't amount to anything as an Iraqi political force.
But this making up things out of thin air is typical of W.'s Propaganda Presidency, or what Chris Floyd calls the "powerful odor of mendacity."
And all along the Bushies have invoked al-Qaeda with regard to Iraq. It doesn't matter what the real situation in Iraq is. Is it ruled by secular Sunni Arab nationalist Baathists who are afraid of al-Qaeda according to documents Bush himself captured and released? Nevertheless, Bushies find al-Qaeda in Iraq. Is Iraq dominated by Shiites allied to Iran? Bushies find an alliance with al-Qaeda. Like tax cuts, it is the answer to every problem.
On 25 July 2002, Doug Feith's Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy (OUSDP) issued a statement linking al-Qaeda to Saddam Hussein through a Dutch company named Vlemmo NV.
This sort of allegation was typical of Feith, who had been asked in January of 2002 to come up with material on the [imaginary] relationship of Bin Laden and Iraq by his superior (who had hired him apparently for this sort of purpose), Paul Wolfowitz.
Feith had been investigated by the FBI earlier in his career as a possible Israeli intelligence asset and was raised in a fringe, far-rightwing Zionist family. His father was a member of Betar, the organization devoted to teachings of fascist Zionist thinker Vladimir (Ze'ev) Jabotinsky and to "Greater Israel" expansionism. Persons in this tradition often believe that Israel extends into Iraq itself.
Starving the Americans Out
Someone in the Green Zone leaked the following memo, which shows that US personnel are now actually facing difficulties in getting food by convoy up from Kuwait. They avoid local food in the Baghdad region because of the danger guerrillas will poison it.
'Due to a theater-wide delay in food delivery, menu selections will be limited for the near future. While every effort will be made to provide balanced meals, it may not be possible to offer the dishes you are used to seeing at each meal. Fresh fruits and salad bar items will also be severely limited or unavailable.
The informant adds his own comment:
The bottom line is that our troops depend on a ground supply line that runs from Kuwait to the various bases in Iraq. When I was in Iraq last year at the U.S. base in Balad I had the chance to eat four meals a day – breakfast, lunch, dinner, and midnight rations (midrats). If you like late nights the midrats were great – steak, eggs, pancakes. Pretty good food. Well, based on this memo, it looks like those were the good old days. We don't have enough convoys to give our troops three hot meals a day. '
The Democratic leadership in the House and Senate blinked on a troop withdrawal timetable
today. The Warner plan, which substitutes 19 benchmarks to be achieved
by the Iraqi government for the exact departure dates of US troops,
puts some reporting restrictions on Bush but essentially gives him free
rein to continue to prosecute the Iraq War as he pleases. Despite now
being technically in the minority, Warner in some ways is still leading
the Senate on Iraq War policy. Since he says he does want the US out of
Iraq eventually, this is not as bad a piece of news as it could be. But
those who want a quick US departure, like Russ Feingold, are deeply disappointed.
Apparently the spending supplemental bill will be split into Iraq and
non-Iraq items, and the two parts will be voted on separately. Many
Democrats, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, are saying they will
vote against their own bill. But the Republicans probably have enough
Democratic allies to pass it in both bodies.
It turns out that if the American public really wanted out of Iraq in
short order, it needed to elect about 11 more Democrats [or Hagel- Paul
Republicans] to the Senate than it did. It is a little unlikely that
Americans will, as John Edwards proposed,
use Memorial Day as an occasiont to launch large numbers of massive
demonstrations against the war. Edwards insists that only an American withdrawal can hope to force Iraqi Sunnis and Shiites to seek reconciliation with one another.
In the meantime, the Americans leading the Iraq mission on the ground
have some ideas for how to bridge to the ultimate withdrawal, which has
now been delayed.
Hamza Hendawi and Qassim Abdul Zahra of AP report
that the Sadr Movement is positioning itself to take over Iraq if the
al-Maliki government falls. The Sadrists would have to put together a
pan-Islamic Sunni-Shiite alliance to form a government. They have 32,
and might be able to get the 24 Da'wa delegates to join with them. The
Sunni Arabs have 58, which would make 114 if the Sadrists could pull it
off. They would have to be joined by 24 other Shiites, whether
independents or Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council. Since the Mahdi Army
harbors a lot of death squad murderers of Sunnis, the notion seems a
bit far-fetched to me. But Sadrists and fundamentalist Sunnis do agree
on a lot: 1) US troops out now, 2) Islamic canon law (shariah) as the
law of the land, 3) strong central government rather than regional
confederacies. And, I'm told that the Sunni delegates in parliament are
mostly on good terms with Muqtada al-Sadr.
The Sadrists demand a US withdrawal from Iraq on a short timetable.
WaPo was leaked to on the subject of the new Crocker-Petraeus plan for Iraq. Key elements:
1. Back Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki rather than trying to organize a new government.
2. Expand and build up the Iraqi Army, which is less purely sectarian than some other security forces in Iraq.
3. And then implementation of 3 points:
a. Protect the local population from the insurgents so as to allow them to become independent actors in civil society.
b. Increase capacity and efficiency of government ministries and their integraton with provincial administrations.
c. Purge Iraq's government and security forces of "sectarian abusers," replacing them with "Iraqi nationalists."
Crocker and Petraeus are among the more capable US leaders ever to be
involved in the Iraq misadventure, and they have excellent instincts
about what needs to be done. Better, they have experience and
information, and know how to analyze it.
But I think we have to be realistic about the possibilities here. The
US is getting out of Iraq, if not in 2008, then surely in the period
after the inauguration of the next president; and if not altogether,
then very largely. As one officer quoted in the WaPo piece noted, there
is going to be a "giant sucking sound" when the withdrawal occurs.
So by 2009 it is desirable that there be a functioning civil government
and a much strengthened Iraqi army. (An unlikely outcome, admittedly,
but people making practical policy in Baghdad have to at least try.) In
essence, I don't see the Crocker-Petraeus plan as necessarily a bid to
stay militarily in Iraq but as possibly a way of transitioning out of
the occupation and toward an Iraq that can stand on its own two feet.
As a set of ideals, I don't find anything to criticize in the plan as
presented. I can think of a lot of practical obstacles to its success.
I am not sure that Nuri al-Maliki is capable of leading the whole
country in an even-handed manner. He was a key member of the
De-Baathification Commission and finds it difficult to accept the need
to seek reconciliation with ex-Baathists. It isn't just a matter of his
character. Any old-time Islamic Da'wa Party apparatchik would feel
pretty much the same. Al-Maliki has a blind spot when it comes to the
Mahdi Army, moreover, seeing it as a kind of Shiite neighborhood
protection committee and necessary to protect Shiite neighborhoods from
[Sunni] Baathi and Salafi bombings.
Moreover, al-Maliki is very much a minority prime minister. He has lost
the support of the Islamic Virtue Party (15 MPs of 275) and for the
most part of the Sadrists (32 MPs). The Sunni Arab parties are still
talking about withdrawing from the "national unity" government. I'd say
on some issues his majority in parliament is probably razor thin by
now, no more than 143 (you need 138 for a simple majority). Any 50 MPs
can introduce a vote of no confidence against the PM, and the Sadrists
are now threatening to do this. I agree with Crocker and Petraeus that
since al-Maliki is the elected prime minister, the world is stuck with
him. I'm just wondering if he can bear the burden the plan places on
him.
I just wonder if there are any genuine Iraqi nationalists left who have
any real political power or significant constituencies. Getting the
really dirty death squad leaders out of the Ministry of Interior would
be all to the good, if it can be done. But the abusers are likely Badr
Corps, and Badr is supported by the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council,
which is the leading party in the Shiite south and has a leadership
position in parliament and in several ministries. So a US purge of Badr
is pretty difficult to pull off at this point. Badr even has members in
parliament to push for their interests in the legislature.
Moreover, the Kurdish leaders seem to me not really committed to Iraq,
with the possible exception of Talabani, and do not behave as "Iraqi
nationalists." They are a net plus with regard to security and the
economy, but they continually burrow away to weaken the central
government and deny it prerogatives.
I also wonder if the goals of strengthening the Iraqi civil bureaucracy
and army, and the implicit goal of a continued alliance between the US
and the Kurds, are really compatible.
Probably the US leaders are coding Sadrists as abusive sectarians. But
if you just marginalize the Sadrists, you are creating a world of
trouble in Baghdad and the south. Playing good Sadrists and bad
Sadrists will be very difficult, in part because it won't be easy to
tell which is which. And, as we saw above, the Sadrists are a power to
be reckoned with. If there are provincial elections, as the US calls
for, they could do very well in the southern provinces now, assuming
there isn't voting fraud by SIIC, their Shiite rival.
Some of the Sunni Arab parliamentarians and ministers, moreover, are
linked to guerrilla groups such as the 1920 Revolution Brigades.
In addition, the Sunni Arab guerrilla movement is in a position to
sabotage a lot of the progress that could be made by implementing this
plan.
Toby Dodge is quoted in the WaPo article. He gave another recent
interview in which he seemed pretty pessimistic about current plans
working out. Replying to a question about the moment when the US
embassy personnel will need to be evacuated by helicopter from Baghdad,
he advised that the architects of the US embassy give it "a large roof." I fear that may indicate what odds he gives the new plan of succeeding.
Juan Cole blogs at Informed Comment
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Thursday, 24 May 2007


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