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Secret US Plan For Military Future In Iraq
A confidential draft agreement covering the future of US forces in Iraq, passed to the Guardian, shows that provision is being made for an open-ended military presence in the country.
The draft strategic framework agreement between the US and Iraqi governments, dated March 7 and marked "secret" and "sensitive", is intended to replace the existing UN mandate and authorises the US to "conduct military operations in Iraq and to detain individuals when necessary for imperative reasons of security" without time limit.
The authorisation is described as "temporary" and the agreement says the US "does not desire permanent bases or a permanent military presence in Iraq". But the absence of a time limit or restrictions on the US and other coalition forces - including the British - in the country means it is likely to be strongly opposed in Iraq and the US.
Iraqi critics point out that the agreement contains no limits on numbers of US forces, the weapons they are able to deploy, their legal status or powers over Iraqi citizens, going far beyond long-term US security agreements with other countries. The agreement is intended to govern the status of the US military and other members of the multinational force.
Following recent clashes between Iraqi troops and Moqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi army in Basra, and threats by the Iraqi government to ban his supporters from regional elections in the autumn, anti-occupation Sadrists and Sunni parties are expected to mount strong opposition in parliament to the agreement, which the US wants to see finalised by the end of July. The UN mandate expires at the end of the year.
One well-placed Iraqi Sunni political source said yesterday: "The feeling in Baghdad is that this agreement is going to be rejected in its current form, particularly after the events of the last couple of weeks. The government is more or less happy with it as it is, but parliament is a different matter."
It is also likely to prove controversial in Washington, where it has been criticised by Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, who has accused the administration of seeking to tie the hands of the next president by committing to Iraq's protection by US forces.
The defence secretary, Robert Gates, argued in February that the planned agreement would be similar to dozens of "status of forces" pacts the US has around the world and would not commit it to defend Iraq. But Democratic Congress members, including Senator Edward Kennedy, a senior member of the armed services committee, have said it goes well beyond other such agreements and amounts to a treaty, which has to be ratified by the Senate under the constitution.
Administration officials have conceded that if the agreement were to include security guarantees to Iraq, it would have to go before Congress. But the leaked draft only states that it is "in the mutual interest of the United States and Iraq that Iraq maintain its sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence and that external threats to Iraq be deterred. Accordingly, the US and Iraq are to consult immediately whenever the territorial integrity or political independence of Iraq is threatened."
Significantly - given the tension between the US and Iran, and the latter's close relations with the Iraqi administration's Shia parties - the draft agreement specifies that the "US does not seek to use Iraq territory as a platform for offensive operations against other states".
General David Petraeus, US commander in Iraq, is to face questioning from all three presidential candidates on Capitol Hill today when he reports to the Senate on his surge strategy, which increased US forces in Iraq by about 30,000 last year.
Both Clinton and Democratic rival Barack Obama are committed to beginning troop withdrawals from Iraq. Republican senator John McCain has pledged to maintain troop levels until the country is secure.
© 2008 The Guardian
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38 Comments so far
Show All"Iraqi critics point out that the agreement contains no limits on numbers of US forces, the weapons they are able to deploy, their legal status or powers over Iraqi citizens, going far beyond long-term US security agreements with other countries."
This is different from what's happening now in what way? Imagine another country occupying your town and they could simply detain you for any reason for as long as they want. Then again, imagine the US gov't occupying your town and detaining you for as long as they want...
When did the UN AUTHORIZE the illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq? I think this article is misleading.
Just heard Lindsey Graham say that he would give Petraeus 5 stars if he could and send crocker to a good place since he's been working in bad places. I'd give Petraeus an early retirement and send crocker straight to somewhere but it wouldn't be a good place.
'the draft agreement specifies that the "US does not seek to use Iraq territory as a platform for offensive operations against other states".'
We don't seek.... but if the occasion arises.... Bush said he did not seek to invade Iraq too.
Only a fool would now trust the utterances and assurances of the Bush Administration. As with Hitler, broad statments of justness, responsibility, and humaneness were/are the last words you hear before the bombing begins.
Blitskreig '08. Wonder what spiffy slogan the media will drape over an illegal bombardment of Iran?
it's so bloody 'secret' and 'sensitive' it's ended up with the guardian.......and it's only a month old!!!
Oho, so that's what's on the 'mind' of the Cheney/Bush Cabal. They intend to turn our republic into a wandering band, invading, pillaging and plundering one nation after another. We'll be the Neo-Wandering-Jews. When do we inflict our 'Christian' values on Israel itself? It's like the Last Chance for Gas, or Salvation, before Eternity.
There is no 'secret' plan for our military in Iraq. The plan for how to utilize our military can easily be found in WAR IS A RACKET, by General Smedley Butler. His book will tell you who our military works for.
Hoa binh
In order for Iraq to have self-governance the U.S. has to leave.
Who's army? Ours is beat!
What are Messrs. BUSH and CHENEY gonna do?
Did you say "DRAFT"?
Its baseball season, DODGER fans!
And make no mistake about it, all the current Presidential candidates support this open-ended occupation - but only MaCain is honest about it.
The occupation will end when the Iraqi people drive the occupiers out. Sadr has canceled his call for a mass protest, and is mulling renewed organized armed resistance instead.
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/E2DF23BE-28C7-4756-AF4F-83537DAF2978.htm
The US is the only country in the world that seems to think it has the right to invade, threaten and bully any other country in the world. I've come to the conclusion that you americans are frickin INSANE and a scourge to the world and I pray EVERY day that your country will implode.
Anybody working on the military bases being constructed in Iraq knows that they are being constructed to last 100 years or more.
McClone's recent statement about 100 years in Iraq was not hypothetical, it was intended to bolster US public opinion to support eternal occupation so the military industrial media complex will have a never ending revenue stream. The Iraq bases will be fully utilized to invade Iran and the other Asian oil producing nations.
Aren't oil producing nations everywhere depending upon the US to bring them democracy ???
This is a blueprint for a colonial occupation, pure and simple. Considering the United States has had a rather mixed record in colonial conflicts (Philippine Insurrection, Vietnam, etc.) even when American public opinion was for the enterprise (which is not the case with Iraq) at the start, it augers poorly for any G.I. deployed there.
Does anyone think this government is about to leave, (What is it?) one tenth of the entire known oil reserves on the planet in the hands of a Muslim government?
Puh LLEEEEEEZE!
A "democracy" in Iraq?! The Muslim Republic of Iraq next door to the Iranian Revolution?!!
An independently elected, locally controlled sovereign Islamic nation left alone to control all that OIL??!!
You gotta be NUTZ!!
They'll keep us in there until, like the Brits, we are broke and busted and bruised and beaten and we literally have to choose between leaving and simply dying. Always remember, it doesn't cost an insurgent anything to get to the fight, it's the occupiers that have to carry in all that stuff.
There's yer choice, kids.
elmysterio
Thanks loads. Did it occur to you that wishing that the US implodes is wishing harm to the millions of us who have opposed Bush et al. in general, and the Iraq war in particular?
Couldn't you aim your wrath at those who deserve it?
Bush/Cheney Inc. only has to beguile 51% of the voters... actually 26%, since half the country doesn't bother to vote.
Colonial occupiers must appear to be invited guests.
On the other hand, the antiwar movement only has to convince 26% of the voters that this is all a huge fraud.
Jim Glover April 8th, 2008 11:11 am
"'the draft agreement specifies that the "US does not seek to use Iraq territory as a platform for offensive operations against other states".'
We don't seek…. but if the occasion arises…. Bush said he did not seek to invade Iraq too."
Jim,
You and me are on the same page. This is exactly what I thought when I read that!
Here's another beauty!: ".... "secret" and "sensitive", is intended to replace the existing UN mandate and authorises the US to "conduct military operations in Iraq and to detain individuals when necessary for imperative reasons of security" without time limit."
"Imperative reasons of security". Here again, we have King George and his disciples deciding what the term 'imperative' means at any given moment. So much for the U.S. Constitution! When you have a King governing, the United States Constitution is just a "goddamned piece of paper".
Will the King and his disciples "detain" these individuals somewhere in Iraq or at Guantanamo Bay?
We ARE in the belly of the beast. When will CNN, New York Times, etc. draw the obvious analogy between the actual patriots in the 13 colonies who evicted the imperial globalist British and the non-AlQuaeda Sunni insurgents, the Sadrists and others who are trying to drive out The US, AlQuaeda, and all other foreigners, and the patriots (yes, patriots; mostly nationalism sucks, but not when sovereignty/independence is at stake) that drove the British out of the 13 colonies.
Ironically, or not, many of the great independence movements, such as Simon Bolivar (freedom actually on the march) drew sustenance from the American Revolution) How far we have strayed. Come home America! Oh yeah, another patriot (McGovern) snuffed out by msms ( I use the word patriot even though I agree w/an earlier poster that the term has been Orwellianized)
I feel kinship w/Jim Glover, as I originated from Gloversville, NY, and only buy CITGO.
With democracy like this, who needs fascism?
What hideously ROMAN control of language: the bases aren't "permanent" and neither are the US's interests in Iraqistan. We'll just be there as long as we feel like being there, and when we've sucked out all your wealth, we'll leave. We promise. You can have the tanks and other wreckage of our death-hardware, by the way. What the hell, it was built to be obsolete before it hit the theater of operations. Enjoy the freedom we've bestowed!
IMPEACH both BUSH and Cheney ..................NOW !!!!!!!!!!!
Not an hour has passed since learning of the death of my cousin Stuart, an Army Major, in Iraq.
Stuart was 36, had a wife and three young children. Besides his wife, he leaves a grieving mother and father and a distraught older sister. He also leaves many friends.
This is the first war death to affect my family.
I didn't know Stuart well, but still, he was family.
A member of my family has been killed in Iraq.
Mother fuckers.
iammyself
It saddens me to hear about your cousin, and to be reminded again of the grief felt by so many who've lost cousins, fathers, daughters. 4,000 dead, and many times that left grieving.
I have lost many family members, but never one to war. I don't know what I would feel or do, if I lost one to Bush's war.
SECRET PLAN?? __ What's so secret about it?
Yep, all those people who sign up to fight in Iraq are mother fuckers, all-right.
They should flip burgers at Macs like the rest of us.
Paul is right. I do not believe that either of the dimocrats will endorse this plan beyond necessity, necessity being we are mired down there and while total and immediate withdrawal may be the only real way out, someone is going to have to organize and manage the clean up of Bush's debacle. He certainly won't. Pressure from the oil interests, reflecting their need to keep their contracts in force, will continue as long as elections must be purchased and we depend on petroleum. The sheer mass of the clean-up, and everyone should pick up after themselves, will be such an economic drain and political challenge that it will control both for a very long time. The only solace which may appear is holding BushCo, in the most extended sense, fully accountable (fraudulent inducement) and stripping it of all assets, to the point that these folks are reduced to living under the auspices of FEMA in the proverbial 9th ward -- a fate awaiting many of us anyway as a result of what they have so maliciously done. We'll be following USSR's economic collapse in spades. Perhaps the nation is just too big and powerful and will have to be Balkanized to work well with the rest of the world. It looks very gloomy above the poverty level. The meek will inherit the earth.
andersd1: McClone's recent statement about 100 years in Iraq was not hypothetical, it was intended to bolster US public opinion to support eternal occupation
Iraq's oil reserves will not last 100 year, but more like 25. Now, the Repuk electorate might be convinced the oil will last 1000, but to stabilize democracy requires 100.
I agree with elmysterio - the US imploding is the only thing that might save the planet. Even those of us who intellectually oppose the war are on a certain level complicit as we go about our lives, buying cheap crap, burning cheap gas, and staying within the lines that enable their power.
There is a way for Congress to end the Bush/McCain war in Iraq NOW. Military Families Speak Out is launching a campaign this week to call on Senators who claim to oppose the war in Iraq - including Senators Clinton and Obama --to lead and sustain a filibuster that will prevent the Senate from passing President Bush's latest funding request to continue the war in Iraq.
Senator Hillary Clinton -- (202) 224-4451
Senator Barack Obama -- (202) 224-2854
Senate Switchboard -- (800) 828-0498
Go here to sign the petition:
http://www.mfso.org
Call Senator Clinton, Senator Obama and your own two Senators and tell them you want them to filibuster the war spending bill.
Military Families Speak Out
mfso@mfso.org
http://www.mfso.org
They wouldn't even need a majority of their colleagues to back them up -- all they need is 40 Senators .
If Senator Clinton and Senator Obama aren't willing to use the power they have now as U.S. Senators to end the war, what makes anyone think they will exercise bold leadership on January 20, 2009? If they fail to take action to stop funding the war that is killing our troops and the Iraqi people, we can only conclude that when their campaigns talk about ending the war, they are just using the memory of the fallen, the sacrifices of our troops, and the grief and pain of our families, for political gain.
don't worry folks. those bases and occupation won't last 100 years. the methane gas will get them all before then. (sorry kem)
I feel sad for the 4000 US troops killed but even sadder for the million Iraqis killed. I remember an Australian journalist at the 20th memorial of the Vietnam war on the american Today show saying a similar thing about having sympathy for the vietnamese being killed. You would have thought he had farted on national television by the reactions of the interviewer and other guests. The enemy of colonisers are always only wogs and slopes.
Don't apologize COCO, you are correct. They won't last 100 years, at least not occupied by humans. ___ It's more like 20 years.
Here's a three minute read on that subject.
http://www.energybulletin.net/3647.html
KEM PATRICK
within an important issue, there are always aspects no one wishes to discuss......george orwell.
"The methane gas is gonna kill all life on the planet, if we don't stop usng fossil fuels. Al Gore is right and Saddam is not dead, he's still hanging out."
~Snakeshit~ King Leer-act xxv.
Project for the New American Century (PNAC). Need I say more?
Project for the New American Century is a neo-conservative think-tank that promotes an ideology of total U.S. world domination through the use of force. The group embraces and disseminates an ideology of faith in force, U.S. supremacy, and rejection of the rule of law in international affairs.
The group's core ideas are expressed in a September 2000 report produced for Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Jeb Bush, and Lewis Libby entitled Rebuilding America's Defenses: Strategy, Forces and Resources For a New Century. The Sunday Herald referred to the report as a "blueprint for U.S. world domination."
According to the Sonoma State University media research group Project Censored, The Neoconservative Plan for Global Dominance was the Top Censored Media Story of 2002-2003.
PNAC's membership includes people such as Richard Perle, Elliot Abrams, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, and William Kristol.
PNAC began to enter the public consciousness when journalist Neil Mackay wrote about the September 2000 report in the September 15th, 2002 edition of the Sunday Herald. According to the article, the report sparked outrage from British Labour MP Tom Dalyell:
Tam Dalyell, the Labour MP, father of the House of Commons and one of the leading rebel voices against war with Iraq, said: 'This is garbage from right-wing think-tanks stuffed with chicken-hawks -- men who have never seen the horror of war but are in love with the idea of war. Men like Cheney, who were draft-dodgers in the Vietnam war.
'This is a blueprint for US world domination -- a new world order of their making. These are the thought processes of fanatasist Americans who want to control the world. I am appalled that a British Labour Prime Minister should have got into bed with a crew which has this moral standing.'
The Sunday Herald article highlighted the following goals from the 2000 report, which it termed an "American grand strategy" and "blueprint of world domination":
• The U.S. must take military control of the Gulf region whether or not Saddam Hussein is in power: "While the unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification, the need for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein."
• The U.S. must "fight and decisively win multiple, simultaneous major theatre wars" as a "core mission"
• The U.S. forces are "the cavalry on the new American frontier"
• The report builds upon the 1992 draft document "Defense Planning Guidance," which claimed that the U.S. must "discourage advanced industrial nations from challenging our leadership or even aspiring to a larger regional or global role"
• Permanent U.S. bases in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, whether or not Saddam Hussein is in power
• Increasing military pressure on China: "it is time to increase the presence of American forces in southeast Asia" which will lead to "American and allied power providing the spur to the process of democratisation in China"
• "the creation of 'US Space Forces', to dominate space, and the total control of cyberspace to prevent 'enemies' using the internet against the US"
• The report contains ambivalent language toward bioterrorism and genetic warfare: "New methods of attack -- electronic, 'non-lethal', biological -- will be more widely available ... combat likely will take place in new dimensions, in space, cyberspace, and perhaps the world of microbes ... advanced forms of biological warfare that can 'target' specific genotypes may transform biological warfare from the realm of terror to a politically useful tool"
• Development of "world-wide command-and-control system" to contain dangerous regimes of North Korea, Libya, Syria, and Iran.
Some of PNAC's members and associates have been implicated in conflict of interest scandals involving the ways that they profit from the wars and military spending that they promote. For more information, see Who Profits From War? .
funeocons
I don't buy a lot of cheap crap - (most of it comes from China!)- and I have never owned anything that burns gas.
There are a lot of people like me in this country.
Not enough obviously.