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Three Iraqs Worse Than One?
WASHINGTON -- With a strong majority of U.S. citizens favouring withdrawal from Iraq within a year and presidential elections set for 2008, Democrats and moderate Republicans continue to face an uphill struggle to force President George W. Bush to change course.
But as many Washington insiders have publicly declared, any shift in the White House's Iraq policy cannot create a new reality; it will be bound by the fact that "there are no good options, just bad and worse options".
Enter the Biden-Brownback Iraq Federalism Bipartisan Amendment.
The U.S. Senate last week voted 75-23 to back the non-binding resolution co-sponsored by presidential hopefuls Senators Joe Biden and Sam Brownback to decentralize Iraq in a federal system to presumably stop the country from falling deeper into civil war. It proposes to separate Iraq into Kurdish, Shiite and Sunni entities, with a federal government in Baghdad in charge of border security and oil revenues.
"If the U.S. can't put this federalism idea on track, we will have no chance for a political settlement in Iraq and, without that, no chance for leaving Iraq without leaving chaos behind," wrote Biden and Leslie Gelb, former head of the Council on Foreign Relations, in a recent Op-Ed in the Washington Post.
"Federalism is the one formula that fits the seemingly contradictory desires of most Iraqis to remain whole and of various groups to govern themselves for the time being."
Democratic Presidential front-runner Senator Hillary Clinton voted yes for the bill, while her competitor Senator Barack Obama abstained from voting.
Critics argue that while the plan suggests a graceful exit strategy for U.S. forces which have been bogged down in an unpopular war in Iraq for more than four years, in reality it aims for the partition and division of Iraq by force. And the actual implementation of such a plan would mean increased U.S. involvement and the possible systematization of ethnic cleansing.
In a March Op-Ed in the Christian Science Monitor, Joost Hiltermann of the International Crisis Group wrote that the concept of soft partition "misreads Iraqi realities".
"Despite sectarian cleansing attempts, Iraqis remain deeply intermingled and intermarried in a mosaic that could be changed only through campaigns of intimidation and mass murder," wrote Hiltermann.
"Soft partition advocates counter that the country's new Constitution, which allows for the type of loose federalism that they support, was adopted by a convincing majority in a 2005 [Iraqi] referendum. While true, this claim is undermined by the fact that Iraqis voted for the Constitution as a while, not its individual provisions," he wrote.
On Sunday, representatives of Iraq's major political parties and the White House also condemned the plan.
"This proposal was based on the incorrect reading and unrealistic estimations of Iraq's past, present and future," according to a statement read by Izzat al-Shahbandar, a representative of the Iraqi National List, a secular political party.
While Biden argued that his amendment will not try to impose U.S. will on Iraqis -- "If the Iraqis don't want it, they won't and shouldn't take it" -- the resolution appears to have angered many.
"The Iraqi and Arab world's reaction to the Biden Resolution has been overwhelmingly negative," said Eric Davis, professor of political science at Rutgers University. "Even Iraq's Kurdish leaders have stated that they support federalism, but not partition. This resolution has reinforced public opinion in Iraq and the larger Middle East that the United States used the invasion of Iraq as a pretext to control Iraq's vast oil wealth."
In a statement last Sunday, the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad said that any "attempts to partition or divide Iraq by intimidation, force or other means into three separate states would produce extraordinary suffering and bloodshed."
"Our goal in Iraq remains the same: a united, democratic, federal Iraq that can govern, defend, and sustain itself," according to the unsigned written statement.
The irony is that the Biden Amendment is the first Congressional legislation to offer a political solution to the problems plaguing Iraq where the Bush administration has only offered military stop-gaps, most notably General David Petraeus's "surge strategy," that has unevenly increased security in Baghdad and select provinces.
Analysts argue that the plan remains one of the few bad options left for Iraq, but that it does not respond to realities on the ground. In a political climate that has many politicians bracing for the backlash of a vast majority of the U.S. public, it may also provide cover for Republicans eager to distance themselves of the perceived intransigence and failures of the Bush administration.
As Middle East specialist Marc Lynch wrote on his widely-read blog, www.abuaardvark.com, the Biden Amendment managed to "let Senate Republicans off the hook by allowing them to say that they voted for change even though they continue to vote against anything real; and endorse an unworkable plan which would massively increase human suffering while working against American interests in the region and not actually solving the problems."
Copyright © 2007 IPS-Inter Press Service
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10 Comments so far
Show AllOur hidebound Congress should concern themselves with the partitioning of a country much closer to home.
If at first we don't secede...
Why does Obama continuously ABSTAIN from voting? PATHETIC !
This idea is unpopular with just about everyone except Congress, so it probably would be a disaster. There already is a sort of partition, with the Kurdish area basically self-governing and cutting separate oil deals with one of Bush's Texas oil buddies.
There are no good options for Iraq; the best option for us is immediate redeployment, or cut'n'run in Republicanese.
I don't care if they think it looks cowardly, it will save more lives and treasure than anything else. Whether that's best for Iraq is hard to say, but our being there "until we win" is certainly stupid and counterproductive.
Why does Obama refrain from voting?
WHY DID AND DOES OBAMA SUPPORT WAR ON IRAN, INCLUDING WITH NUKES?!?!?!!!!
Why? Because Obama is NO REAL POLITICIAN; he's just another charlatant schmuck, as MOST U.S. politicians are; although also applying to many other countries, certainly including Canada, Britain, France, etc., etc., etc.
THE WAR ON IRAQ IS WAR WITH RESPECT TO THE MIDDLE EAST AND NATURAL RESOURCES, and what does Iraq have to particularly offer? A LOT OF OIL! Of course you don't hear or read of BIG OIL reps speaking out in favour of these GWoT wars, which did NOT start with 9-11, BTW. Why? Because these behind-the-scenes govt rulers, manipulators, ..., strategically, business-wise, must stay as hidden as they can manage to be, so they let and employ others for the front-scenes leaders, instigators, ..., of wars (of wholly criminal aggression!!).
"Diplomacy by Deception", Dr J. Coleman, but also reflected or told by other people. It's basically streets order commonsense, TOO. "Dip. by Decep." is very ordinary concept for people seriously familiar with real streets sense and ways.
Problem, Puzzle:
How do you stop a govt which is not only rogue, but also the sole superpower [and] rogue as HELL can be on Earth?!.
Want a picture of the future? You just got one snapshot.
Why does anyone even bother with Obama, Hillary C., J. Edwards, bla bla bla, all of these SICK and criminal jerks; and the same applies to also hell-bound RP Giuliani, etc.? There's no justifiable need to analyse any of these people, except for those of us who've been "totally" asleep for the past decade or more.
Obama's a liar, hypocrite, etc., and I don't need but little to PROVE this. Only a little is necessary, and he provided this years ago (definitely since 2000 anyway).
That a*hole has explicitly, literally, voiciferously supported launching war on Iran, a government and country TOTALLY WITHIN ITS RIGHTS, and abiding by laws like MOST or all U.S. allies DO NOT.
SCHMUCK A*HOLE!
Bring the a*holes like so-called "monsieur" Obama, Hillary C., John Edwards, ..., John Kerry shmerry, ..., and by far MOST DP and RP politicians and candidates out for me to debate with.
I'LL RIP THE MO-F'KERS APART, PUT THEM THROUGH THE SHREDDER AND IN FULL PUBLIC; debatively, i.e., politically correctly, nicely, ... I'll shred these bastardizations of humanity APART.
It'll be a breeze. I need NO preparation, but they're going to go nuts trying to figure out what the Q&A is going to consist of, while I don't care what they Q, for their Qs are NOT WORTH anything but sh*t.
A "little" streets sense can go a LONG WAY. BRING'EM ON; and that goes for Cheney-Bush, who are just two more HELL-[BOUND] f*cking IDIOTS.
Only question is then, "who's really running the "show", from [behind] the scenes". Those people are much more difficult to pinpoint, because if they're among any of the front-stage goons, then it's not obvious. There are other people involved and they're not up-front actors; and some of these might be or are corporations, but those are always run by people. It may be a corporation that is at fault, but a corporation does not exist without people running and owning it.
Obama is SCHMUCK foolry.
But it's always good to point out his explicit failures and worse. Those aren't worse than what his peers provide, but it can't hurt to remind of ALL of their failures that are of criminal kind. Criminal, gangster, ... en masse he is, but while it also applies to Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, John Kerry, schmuck Giuliani, etc., etc., etc., ETC, TOO.
Next election? It will be voted on by U.S. voters, but they don't really get to decide. It's all a facade, phony.
Don't believe the latter? Then you're NAIVE.
Before he "retired" Donald Rumsfeld outlined a series of options that offered a much better chance of success--at a much lower cost--than "staying the course".
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/03/world/middleeast/03military.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
Why the Democrats never climbed on board that bandwagon is a complete mystery. Instead Joe Biden comes up with a proposal that ignores Iraqi public sentiment.
WmC--thanks for the rational input. I'm rather leery of anything coming out of Donald Rumsfeld, as it is too difficult to determine which end it came from. Nevertheless, I'll check it out. Maybe he is still capable of a lucid moment.
Mike Corbeil--dial it back a notch. I feel your anger too, but this is supposed to be a discussion, so discuss. Democracy has always been about choosing between terrible and less terrible. Obama's not terrible-- Bush and Cheney are.
Mike Corbeil: Obama recently changed his mind: he would not use nuclear weapons in a war. Same goes for Edwards.
WTF does the US Senate have any authority over Iraq political issues?
Obama is running on the not as bad as Bush platform. Kucinich is our only hope among listed candidates.
Iraq partitioning would be consistent with the neocon divide and conquer strategy.
It will be easier for the neocons to extort more Iraqi oil for the multinational oil companies if they can divide the Iraqis as much as possible.