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| Conquest Non-Interruptus: Keeping the Boot on Iraq's Neck |
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| Written by Chris Floyd | ||||
| Tuesday, 07 July 2009 11:28 | ||||
To paraphrase our question from the other day, when is a withdrawal not a withdrawal? When it is a continued occupation. The indispensible Dahr Jamail reports on the reality behind the media hoopla over the putative pullout of American troops from Iraq's cities [see original for links]:We have passed the June 30 deadline that, according to a Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) signed between US Ambassador Ryan Crocker and Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari on November 17, 2008, was the date all US forces were to have been withdrawn from all of Iraq's cities. Today, however, there are at least 134,000 US soldiers in Iraq - a number barely lower than the number that were there in 2003. In addition, US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates testified on June 9 that the United States would maintain an average of at least 100,000 troops in Iraq through fiscal year 2010.
Jamail makes a further important point: the policies now being pushed by the Obama Administration and the American-backed Maliki regime are pointing in one direction: the balkanization of Iraq: Regardless of the outcome, it is clear that Iraq is further down the road of Balkanization, a plan that Biden has supported for years -to have Iraq split into three rump states. There is already evidence for this - for as Iraqi refugees in Syria and Jordan have been forced to return home due to funding to support them having been cut due to the Maliki regime pressuring hosting countries, as well as the UN, to have them return. Those returning have been unable to return to their homes. Instead, they are being forced to relocate to either Sunni or Shia areas. Moreover, the Iraqi government has been making no effort to help them return to their original homes, which indicates the Maliki regime is interested in supporting the Balkanization of Iraq.
And so the strategy behind the "surge" becomes clear: A united, independent Iraq cannot be allowed to exist, because such a state would not permit a permanent American military presence nor sign away the nation's oil wealth. Therefore, Iraq must be torn apart -- by sectarian strife, ethnic cleansing, terrorism and "counterinsurgency" warfare. And violence must continue until this shake-out is completed, in order to justify the continuing American presence.
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Sean O'Neil
said:
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what incredible ugliness is the reality of Barack Obama when he got the nod to speak at the 2004 Donkey National Confab, I started checking into his background -- who he served, where he worked, what schools he attended. on paper the guy would pass every "liberal" or "progressive" litmus test, and he carried the bonus points of half-Black racial status plus an exotic name of the sort that lib-wools and pwoggies love because it indicates something foreign and intriguing. and oh yeah, there was a foreign-ness to Obama, and there is intrigue aplenty in his track record. the people who voted for Obama because they wanted a real change, they are to be both pitied and blamed for what we have now. pitied, because the Donkey National Party took advantage of their naive, unquestioning optimism (unquestioning because of his skin color, his ivy alumnus status, his college-professor-parents youth). blamed, because they refused to be skeptical about one who could easily be seen as a cafe-au-lait version of Dubya Bush or Poppy Bush if all one did was look beneath the exotic name, the half-Black racial heritage and the hallowed, vaunted Ivy League alum status. where has Barack Obama created a significant shift from Bush/Cheney? anywhere? in any way that means anything other than a glib topical appearance of change? I beg you, Obamabots... show me where he has delivered any sort of change. and please, do not say he needs more time. he has had 6 months of opportunities as POTUS, and prior to that 3 months of opportunities while naming his advisors and cabinet post choices, to signal and implement a change from Bush/Cheney. nowhere have I seen a substantive change. nowhere. but I'd love to be proved wrong! |
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