US Officials Admit Worry over a ‘Difficult' al-Maliki
WASHINGTON - U.S. officials privately admit being concerned that Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al- Maliki has become "overconfident" about his government's ability to manage without U.S. combat troops, according to an Iraq analyst who just returned from a trip to Iraq arranged by U.S. commander General David Petraeus.
Colin Kahl, a fellow at the Centre for a New American Security (CNAS) -- which has supported a long-term U.S. military presence in Iraq -- told the press this week that there was "a certain degree of grudging respect for al- Maliki" among officials with whom we met, "but more often concern about his emerging overconfidence which is making it difficult to interact with him."
That assessment contrasts with statements of George W. Bush administration officials implying that al-Maliki's public demands for a timetable for U.S. military withdrawal are merely negotiating ploys or political grandstanding.
U.S. officials admitted that al-Maliki's overconfidence has influenced the status of forces negotiations, according to Kahl. None of the U.S. officials in Baghdad would "lead off with badmouthing the prime minister," Kahl said in an interview with IPS, but upon probing further, "you get a sense they are concerned that the al-Maliki regime has an inflated sense of his power."
The Bush administration hoped negotiations with al-Maliki on a status of forces agreement would legitimise a long-term U.S. military presence in Iraq and control over a number of military bases, but the Iraqi leader refused to go along with an agreement that lacked a timetable for withdrawal of all U.S. troops.
Al-Maliki's new sense of confidence has been accompanied by a new political identity as a nationalist foe of the occupation, according to Kahl. "He is successfully fashioning himself as an Iraqi hero who kicked the Americans out. That makes him difficult to negotiate with."
One of the consequences of al-Maliki's perception of the new power relations in Iraq is that he is even less inclined than before to make accommodations with former Sunni insurgents now on the U.S. payroll in the militias called ‘Sons of Iraq'.
Kahl said in the briefing that, of the 103,000 Sunnis belonging to those militias, the Iraqi government had promised to take into the security forces only about 16,000. But in fact, it has approved only 600 applicants thus far, according to Kahl, and most of those have turned out to be Shi'a rather than Sunni militiamen.
"There's even some evidence that [al-Maliki] wants to start a fight with the Sons of Iraq," said Kahl. "Al-Maliki doesn't believe he has to accommodate these people. He will only do it if we twist his arm to the breaking point."
Kahl said al-Maliki has made a series of moves that have consolidated his personal power position within the state apparatus as well as in relation to various armed groups in the country. He has put intelligence agencies directly under his control and has set up major military operation centres around the country which report directly to the prime minister's office.
Even more important, however, Al-Maliki's power position has also been bolstered by the decisions by nationalist Shiite leader Moqtada al-Sadr not to launch a concerted military resistance to U.S. and Iraqi government campaigns to weaken his Mahdi Army in 2007 and then to give up his political-military power positions in Basra, Sadr City and Amarah in 2008 without having been militarily defeated.
Petraeus and the U.S. military command in Iraq have asserted that al-Sadr's decisions reflected the fact that the Mahdi Army had been weakened by U.S. military pressures. However, the broader set of developments over the past year suggests that the primary reason for Sadr's willingness to give up military resistance was a strategic understanding with Iran to shift to political and diplomatic resistance to the U.S. military presence.
High officials in the al-Maliki regime asserted repeatedly last fall that it was Iran's intervention with al-Sadr that brought about the unilateral ceasefire of Aug. 27, 2007. Sadr's decisions to give up military control of Basra and Sadr City before his forces were defeated were taken in the context of Iranian mediation between al-Sadr and the al-Maliki regime.
Iran's strategic relationship with al-Sadr accomplished what the U.S. military never believed would be possible even in its most optimistic scenario -- the neutralisation of the most potent political-military threat to the regime's stability. The ability of Iran to deliver that benefit to al-Maliki -- as part of a broader shift to an anti-occupation regime policy -- almost certainly strengthened the case that Iran made to al-Maliki for a demand for a timetable for U.S. troop withdrawal in the status of forces negotiations.
Kahl is sympathetic to the official U.S. concerns about al-Maliki. Both Kahl and CNAS have called for negotiation of a U.S. military presence in Iraq going well beyond the 2010 deadline for complete U.S. withdrawal that al-Maliki has put forward publicly.
In an unpublished paper for CNAS last April, Kahl advocated that the U.S. should keep 60,000 to 80,000 troops in Iraq into late 2010 in what he called a "sustainable over-watch posture".
Despite the change in the power situation, Kahl and CNAS still takes the position that Iraq needs long-term U.S. support so badly that the Bush administration should use its leverage to get the al-Maliki regime to make the political accommodations necessary to achieve longer-term stability in the country. For example, the Iraq government's need for U.S. help in recovering illegally exported funds and properties, which were included in the statement of principles governing the negotiations last November at Iraqi insistence.
Then there is the threat of immediate troop withdrawal if al-Maliki does not toe the line. Kahl said he was told in Iraq that, in one of the regular videoconferences Bush holds with al-Maliki, he said, "If the negotiations crash and burn, I will be forced to pull out all U.S. troops by Jan. 1."
That Bush threat "got al-Maliki's attention," Kahl believes. He advocates the use of such threats to force al-Maliki to accommodate the interests of the Sunnis as well as those of the Sadrists, in order to bring them fully into the political system. Otherwise, Kahl argues, the security gains of 2007 and 2008 will ultimately be reversed.
Al-Maliki is no longer dependent on Washington as he was a year or two ago. That major shift in power relations -- now reluctantly acknowledged by the Bush administration -- has brought into sharper relief the contradictions between the interests of the Iraqi government and those of the administration.
The al-Maliki regime is a Shiite-dominated government that views its Sunni Arab neighbours -- who have generally opposed Shiite rule in Iraq -- with intense distrust and looks to Iran for support against them. The Bush administration, on the other hand, has forged closer relations with Sunni regimes against Iran. The short-term Shiite dependence on the U.S. occupation to establish Shiite control of the state apparatus is giving way to a more fundamental distrust toward U.S. power in Iraq and the region.
© 2008 Inter Press Service
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17 Comments so far
Show AllThreaten to pull out by Jan 1st?
That got his attention did it?
There is a danger to saying things like that. Sure it might make him cave in...or maybe it gets him to plan for that contingency...thus even further reducing his dependance upon you and reducing your influence over him.
What if he left that call and said "Holy f!" what would I do...so then he turns to the next person that he can...Iran. "Hey, A-jaad, my man...if the US pulls out right away will you step in and help me establish security?". As if Iran would not love that. Or maybe he calls Russia? Or both?
The world grow tired of US bullying.
oops..i meant 250 million future disenfranchised. 2.5 million currently blacklisted.
i was blacklisted. TSA searched my luggage and me with special screening on EVERY SINGLE flight from major airports (small regional airports obviously did not receive the blacklist). i pretty much saw being blacklisted as a badge of honor, and being on the blacklist is probably the major reason i decided to fight these anti-american-elitist-corporate-fascist war scum openly.
however, the awful reality of being blacklisted because i believe in peace finally ended. one time i was flying alone and decided to stand. so from the second they moved me to "special screening" i fucked with them. i said "yeah, i get screened everytime, why?" to the first innocent-TSA-idiot. she told me, rudely, it was random (hahahahah, i heard that everytime). as they were going through my luggage for the 20th time in a row, i responded politely to the nicely-ignorant low level TSA employee. at the same time, i flied the fuck-you middle figer bird to the cameras during the entire luggage screening especially when she wasnt looking, as i didnt want to get her in trouble.
they never put me through extra screening again after that event. ever. either they cleared me (im a progressive american, not a terrorist) or put me on a deeper blacklist where i wont know im on the blacklist. the weird thing is i dont even believe in terror: terror is for cowards. do we fight a war against cowards? i dont get it.. as i am not afraid of scumbags, so how could there be any war terror?
oh well, those who would shred the constitution and turn against our people in the name of FEAR have to fight me now too. just one more no name, nothing, common american citizen who believes my children and yours should remain free in democracy under the constitution, and that scumbags should not rule against these simple pillars.
watta fkn joke. this is a war forever, a 100 years war, simply because it isnt winnable.
ask yourself, when do we win? what do we call winning this war? how does it end. well, it doesnt. it doesnt end because we have no definition of victory. unless victory is corporate capitalism in all muslim lands. aint gonna happen, jus ask the brits.
no, its not going to happen like the simpleminded neocons think. we are fighting a war of poses for politicos. we are fighting a war against terror. there is no winning, there is no definition of victory, there is war forever until we finally lose what could never be won.
yes, isreal wants all muslims within 1000k of its borders dead. would that be winning? all muslims watch american tv, is that winning? oil corporation multinationals rule the world, thats winning? what is winning? no more terror? saftey in conformity. making boxcutters and planes illegal? martial law in america, is that winning?
iraqi politics will forever angle away from usa control. we are in quicksand, which means sinking slowly. afghanistan? hahahahah. iran? yeah, they will be a corporate democracy soon, starbucks and everything. maybe next month even.
13 guys with boxcutters brought us down to this. we are a paper tiger in an unwinnable war, and no iraqi politician, even puppets, will change that. our weakness reeks out of the pores of our elitist technological remote bombing missions. it reeks out of the poverty of our military class, and our lack of essential healthcare as a nation. our weakness is exposed through domestic spying legislation. our strength cannot be found in these places, or in a wrong war.
ignorance is bliss if ur a neocon. shred the constitution, because after all our national resources are spent on a foreign war that we've already lost by the default fact that there is no victory plan, by the fact it is not winnable, as terror exists truly only in the hearts of cowards, we will need martial law to control the impoverished and disowned in the coming decades. by my estimates, about 2,500,000 americans.. the war on terror can only be won when 13 guys with boxcutters cannot destroy our democracy and make us a country of nazis. as long as that can happen, we are the cowards, we are the terror, and we can only win by killing the terror.. ourselves.
these wars are the path to self destruction. and iraqi puppet politicians will dance on our graves in joy at that prospect.
Inflated sense of power tranlates into will not follow US direct orders.
The US threatening to withdraw all troops by 1st of Jan. Go ahead, make my day.
Maybe that will expose the mercenaries and corporate looters to pay their own way and fight their booty, or withdraw. Of course it does not mean the US will not decide to bomb the new Iraqi government out of spite.
The wars between religious zealots and murderers will carry on regardless of US presence. Eventually enough of them will be killed so that the rest can get on with compromise, tolerance and rebuilding.
I think that he is audacious! How dare he! Govern his Occupied, decimated Homeland. The utter gall of that man, how ungracious!
The Murderer in the minimum DOES read our Emails, The Murderer said, "How dare Russia act as an Invader of a Sovereign Nation, this is an Invasion and Illegal!", wagging bony finger at Russia.
Pot calling the Kettle and such...
Ooops! Common Dreams slipped on this one. It's nothing but a big load of imperial propaganda, especially the comments from Kahl. It's really not good to re-publish such propaganda. Repetition is the tactic they use to make us believe it.
The US wants Maliki to absorb the "awakening councils," American paid militia/death squads, into the security forces.
Yeah, right.
He's gonna open fire on them asap and that will be interesting.
Who would the US benefit the most from as Maliki's percieved assassin? Al-queda? Al-Jazeera? Al-Quds? The Boy Scouts of America?
Al_Maliki the Nguyen Van Thieu of Iraq.
Take al-Maliki at his word and prepare to leave. It is ludicrous/dishonest to pretend that we are all that stands between order and chaos in Iraq.
The U.S. will not leave until Cheney/Halliburton have squeezed the last ounce of oil out.
It would appear as if al-Maliki knows that Dubya, Cheney, & Co "promises" are not worth the paper they are written on, or even as toilet paper.
Just give him his fucking country back! PERIOD!
Then there is the threat of immediate troop withdrawal if al-Maliki does not toe the line. Kahl said he was told in Iraq that, in one of the regular videoconferences Bush holds with al-Maliki, he said, "If the negotiations crash and burn, I will be forced to pull out all U.S. troops by Jan. 1."
---------------
The coffee almost came out of my nose on that one. Hilarious.
On several levels. :-)
Better yet, ask Saddam Hussein...
When a US puppet becomes too uppity and uncooperative, he wears out his welcome and ceases to be an asset.
Ngo Dinh Diem can tell you all about it, if you believe in ghosts.
i have to concede that it must be frustrating when imperial murderous americans go to great lengths to select a patsy puppet boy, buy him a nice suit, give him a nice office with all the trimmings and then he refuses to be a traitor to his country
man, some people
no wonder people have become cynical
used to be that when the american death machine bought a "boy" they song like their tunes like the tabernacle choir
goes to show, you just can't get good help these days
or - and i don't want to sound racist here - but maybe it is an arab thing
certainly the long list of us backed stooges in the central and latin americas have held up their end of the bargains - and done it well
they take their cut of the drug money - foreign aid - deposit it in offshore accounts and let the chips fall where they may
the asian tyrants have set an example of the highest order as well
even the eastern europeans have proven they can suck scum with the best of them
look at georgian president mikheil saakashvili - i mean here is a fool you can rely on
not only dos he throw his fellow countrymen in jail - in the finest american puppet regime tradition, but he was also eager to commit suicide in the name of the us, as he did in south ossetia, no doubt expecting some american aid when the shit hit the fan.
well, now he knows that the chump club has one more member than he originally thought. boy you hate it when that happens
from the article: the american war pig laments; "you get a sense they are concerned that the al-maliki regime has an inflated sense of his power."
after 7 years of american "democracy" al-maliki thinks that, as the elected head of the iraqi "government", he actually thinks he has some authority
well that train got off the track somehow
it is the beyond the obvious to say that his traitorous role, at this moment, is to sign the sofa agreement - this would of course be the death knell to iraq but so what
who in the hell does he think he is
let's look for the cia to arrange - oh i don't know - say, a plane crash or something like that
clearly, we need a new stooge
and one who has no pretensions of uppitiness
Any bets that very soon Al-Maliki's bodyguard will duck?
He is just another disposable puppet in the eyes of Washington.
President Bush,
What did you say the other day about how bullying and intimidation are unacceptable behavior in foreign policy in the 21st century?
H-Y-P-O-C-R-I-T-E!