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U.S. Troops Leave Iraqi Cities, but Unsettled Issues Remain

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Posted on Jun 30, 2009

By William Pfaff

If all goes correctly, when this column is read American troops will be gone from the cities of Iraq. Then the calculation must begin as to whether the loss of some half-million to million lives and the ruin of the infrastructure and social structure of Baghdad and much of the rest of the Iraqi nation have served some good purpose.

The United States did this in order to hunt down and hang Saddam Hussein for not possessing weapons of mass destruction (and for other and older grudges). He was a cruel ruler of the Iraqi people, although possibly no crueler than whomever it is that eventually will take his place, if the present parliamentary government fails, as it may.

If that happens, the first of the alternative outcomes possible are that the U.S. will abandon Iraq, withdraw all its forces and leave the country to civil war and chaos. This is what the Nixon administration actually did in Vietnam, professing otherwise, when it no longer had domestic popular support to continue fighting the Vietnamese communists. It abandoned the Vietnamese (and the Cambodians and Laotians, whom the United States had forced into that war) to destinies much worse than if America had never heard of Southeast Asia.

The second possible outcome in Iraq would be that Barack Obama would refuse to abandon George Bush’s war of choice, afraid of Bush Republican accusations of “surrender to terrorism” and “abandonment” of allies. This would mean that he would defend his own war of choice, in Afghanistan and Pakistan, as well as the war George Bush chose and Barack Obama condemned.

President Obama might search for a palatable political escape by expanding the U.S. contingent of mercenaries already in Iraq. That might do little for Iraq, but rid him of a public relations embarrassment. One could call this the solution through dissimulation and public deception, as practiced by the Bush-Cheney-Rove White House.

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In Iraq, the U.S. has done little effective to reinforce the fragile Shiite-Sunni truce that now exists. This writer has always believed this might prove a problem that solves itself, slowly, if painfully, the two communities having to live together because they have no other place to go to live.

The American invasion and occupation were responsible for the upheaval in the power relationship between the formerly ruling Sunni minority, associated with the tyrant’s regime and the U.S.-outlawed Baath Party, and the formerly oppressed Shiite majority. The latter lives at the frontier of the formerly revolutionary and now despotic Iran, which has been the center of Shiite power and religion since the Middle Ages, and one of the great empires of antiquity.

However, as the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war demonstrated, the Iraqi Shiites are not natural allies of their fellow religionists in Iran, having played a patriotic role in the war of aggression Saddam Hussein launched, with American approval, against the Ayatollah Khomeini’s Iran, because he feared Iraq’s revolutionary threat and expected to defeat an Iran in disarray.

Instead, the Iranians—with the suicidal sacrifice of thousands of teenaged volunteers, the generation from which the present Revolutionary Guard elite derives—fought Iraq to a standstill and then launched an invasion of Iraq, to which Iraq replied with poison gas. The casualties on both sides recall, in proportion to population, those of the 1914-1918 world war in Europe.

That leaves the most ominously unsettled issue in Iraq today, that of Kurdish territorial claims in the oil-rich area around Kirkuk, envenomed by forced expulsion of Kurds from the area by Saddam Hussein, and reciprocal expulsions of Arabs by Kurdish fighters, since America’s sponsorship and protection allowed them to establish—within as yet unrecognized frontiers—a “sovereign” Kurdish autonomous zone, including Kirkuk. This is rich in oil and coveted by foreign oil interests and governments, as well as by whatever government rules Baghdad. Neighboring Turkey and Iran, both historically hostile to an autonomous Kurdistan, especially a rich one, have large stakes in what happens.

On Monday and Tuesday nights, the last in June, there were celebrations in Iraq’s cities of what Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki assured Iraq’s people would be the arrival of national sovereignty at zero hour Wednesday.

The American uniforms have left city streets, but the troops are nearby, ready to play the arbiter’s role when trouble arrives. The combat units are supposed to be gone by the end of next year. All the Americans—except, presumably, the mercenaries, who have been as numerous as the soldiers—will go the following year. The sovereignty question will be answered between now and then. So will the fate of the foreign policy of the Obama presidency be decided.

Visit William Pfaff’s Web site at www.williampfaff.com.

© 2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


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By SamSnedegar, July 4, 2009 at 7:56 pm Link to this comment

“...I will never understand why so many americans were willing to cheerlead all that death and destruction…”

For control of the oil, of course . . .

I am fairly certain that the Saudis know that we plan to control their oil and that of Kuwait and the Emirates, and that is what it was all about from day one.

Oh…..but hush; no one needs to know that if we DON’T steal oil we go down the tubes, particularly since we may go down the tubes anyhow even as we steal ALL the oil.

We can’t admit any of this because it also admits that we lied, stole, coveted, and killed, and of course we aren’t about to fess up to our sins, are we?

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By Night-Gaunt, July 2, 2009 at 12:14 pm Link to this comment

Iran isn’t a failure to the Cabal FolkTruther. It is a success and Obama is expanding it. So I don’t see the failure for them in their endotruth. It is the exotruth to us that shows failure.

We as a republic are still in transition to a full fledged empire. That is why we see the military beginning to take over schools all over the country. One of the places is in Chicago. Not ROTC but actual parallel schools with the military part getting all of the benefits. Superior treatment too for their students. It is another danger sign as we continue to incrementally shift over till we are going to be an empire. Not Bill of Rights, not personal protections at all. This we still have but it is being muted and gutted. The wait is nearly over.

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By Folktruther, July 2, 2009 at 9:44 am Link to this comment

The lesssons of Vietnam, Mary Ann, delayed US militarism for three decades, and moved it away from China where it is less dangerous.  Since the US War on Terrorism is a gigantic failure, and Obama is pursing it to delay losing, not to win it.  It has the effect, as Chalmers Johsnon said, of bankrupting the US. Investment is going to war instead of the economy, rapidly decreasing the world power of the US.

So the hoorors of these Bush-Obama wars serve the function of pacifying the US, just as the second defeat of Germany pascified it.  Power does not learn easily and as Someone once said, history occurs the first time as tragedy and the second time as farce.

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By Mary Ann McNeely, July 1, 2009 at 1:59 pm Link to this comment

The lesson of Vietnam did not prevent the invasion and occupation of Iraq. And Iraq will not prevent the next disastrous, imperial and suicidal adventure by the United States.

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By Night-Gaunt, July 1, 2009 at 7:57 am Link to this comment

Turkey (USA ally) could settle the ‘Kurdish question’ by invasion and occupation of it. Now what would the USA do? How would that upset the plans of the Cabal on this? What contingencies have they set up if Turkey invades northern Iraq in order to ‘protect’ its boarder? Let it be since the USA has sacrificed the Kurds before? Or challenge them over the gas and oil deposits at Kurkuk under the guise of protecting the Kurdish sovereignty? Tangled isn’t it?

Such a large scale attack would put a crimp in their plans I think. They don’t care about us as long as they get military recruits eager for a place to live and get paid in this Depression.

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By Corinthia, June 30, 2009 at 10:43 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

So we went in and took out Sadam - so Iraq is better off!

We also took out bridges, hospitals, the sewers, water systems, the power system, houses, and more people then Sadam was responsible for.

We are leaving refugees, a destroyed economy, a looted history, radioactive spent shells, destroyed cities..basically they’ve been bombed back to the middle ages….no doubt they just love us!!

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By Folktruther, June 30, 2009 at 10:21 pm Link to this comment

This is another militaristic piece by Pfaff.  By ‘abandoning’ Iraq he means withdrawing troops.  He probably thinks that Obama is not really going to do it. I agree with him; Obama says he is going to withdraw and then continue as before.

Just like he withdrew from the cities.  Moving the troops to another location in lieu of withdrawing them.  Progresives still don’t understand the depths of Obama duplicity.  He is following a policy in war, the economy and a social equality where deceit is essential.  And Pfaff appears to be going along with it.

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By Arabian Sinbad, June 30, 2009 at 7:44 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

“In Iraq, the U.S. has done little effective to reinforce the fragile Shia-Sunni truce that now exists. This writer has always believed this might prove a problem that solves itself, slowly, if painfully, the two communities having to live together because they have no other place to go to live. They have coexisted on the fertile plain and delta separating the Euphrates and the Tigris since long before the Prophet Muhammad existed.”
=====================================
The passage above from Pfaff,s article is a notorious proof how the most informed Western journalists can proof to be so naively misinformed about basic facts related to the Muslim-Arab world. So in this vein Pfaff claims that “the Shia-Sunni…coexisted on the fertile plain and delta separating the Euphrates and the Tigris since long before the Prophet Muhammad existed.”

Of course, this is a deadly factual error since the Shia-Sunni dichotomy developed years after the death of Prophet Muhammad, and precisely over the issue of the rightful successor to the mantel of Prophet Muhammad.

Dear Mr. Pffaf! Though I like a good deal of what you write, I am recommending, if you read my comment, that in the future you should check your facts. I am willing to do facts checking for you without a charge if you send me your drafts before publication. I am a linguist-historian teaching at a major US university!

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By boggs, June 30, 2009 at 7:43 pm Link to this comment

You should not worry about who takes Sadams place. We have already outdone Sadam. We took his country and his people and absolutely destroyed both. We were not discriminating about who we killed. We killed babies and grandmothers. Raped little girls, tortured young boys, made refugees out of millions who are now starving and need medical care. We bombed out as many houses as we wanted. We went in like marauders or a bunch of pirates. We knew what we were doing but the biggest percent of the US citizens didn’t care. I will never understand why so many americans were willing to cheerlead all that death and destruction. Ponder on that!

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