Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Iraq Violence Set to Delay US Troop Withdrawal
The US Commanding General Ray Odierno had been due to give the order within 60 days of the general election held in Iraq on 7 March, when the cross-sectarian candidate Ayad Allawi edged out the incumbent leader, Nouri al-Maliki.
Iraqi soldiers gather at the site of a bus explosion in Iskandiriyah, 50kms south of Baghdad. Twin car bombs at a factory, followed by a suicide blast against emergency workers, and coordinated attacks on security forces killed 70 people in Iraq's bloodiest day this year. (AFP/Khalil al-Murshidi) US officials had been prepared for delays in negotiations to form a new government, but now appear to have balked after Maliki's coalition aligned itself with the theocratic Shia bloc to the exclusion of Allawi, who attracted the bulk of the minority Sunni vote. There is also concern over interference from Iraq's neighbours, Iran, Turkey and Syria
With sectarian tensions rising, the al-Qaida fighters in Iraq and affiliated Sunni extremist groups have mounted bombing campaigns and assassinations around the country. The violence is widely seen as an attempt to intimidate all sides of the political spectrum and press home the message to the departing US forces that militancy remains a formidable foe.
General Odierno has kept a low profile since announcing the deaths of al-Qaida's two leaders in Iraq, Abu Omar al-Baghdadi and Abu Ayub al-Masri, who were killed in a combined Iraqi-US raid on 18 April. The operation was hailed then as a near fatal blow against al-Qaida, but violence has intensified ever since.
All US combat forces are due to leave Iraq by 31 August, a date the Obama administration is keen to observe as the US president sends greater reinforcements to fight the Taliban in Afghanistan – a campaign he has set apart from the Iraq war, by describing it as "just".
Iraqi leaders remain adamant that combat troops should leave by the prescribed deadline. However, they face the problem of not having enough troops to secure the country if the rejuvenated insurgency succeeds in sparking another lethal round of sectarian conflict.
"The presence of foreign forces sent shock waves through Iraqis," said Hoshyar Zebari, the foreign minister. "And at the beginning it was a terrifying message that they didn't dare challenge. But then they got emboldened through terrorism and acts of resistance. And as the Americans are leaving, we are seeing more of it."
From his office in central Baghdad, destroyed in a massive explosion last August at the start of a new phase in the insurgency, Zebari said Iraq's neighbours were taking full advantage of the political stalemate. He also hinted that they may be directly backing the violence.
"They too have been emboldened, because we haven't been able to establish a viable unified government that others can respect," he said.
"In one way or another, Iran, Turkey and Syria are interfering in the formation of this government.
"There is a lingering fear [among some neighbouring states] that Iraq should not reach a level of stability. The competition over the future of Iraq is being played out mostly between Turkey and Iran. They both believe they have a vested interest here."
The withdrawal order is eagerly awaited by the 92,000 US troops still in Iraq – they mostly remain confined to their bases. This month, General Odierno was supposed to have ordered the pullout of 12,500, a figure that was meant to escalate every week between now and 31 August, when only 50,000 US troops are set to remain – all of them non-combat forces.
US patrols are now seldom seen on the streets of Baghdad, where the terms of a security agreement between Baghdad and Washington are being followed strictly: this relegates them to secondary partners and means US troops cannot leave their bases without Iraqi permission.
US commanders have grown accustomed to being masters of the land no longer, but they have recently grown increasingly concerned about what they will leave behind.
Zebari said: "The mother of all mistakes that they made was changing their mission from liberation to occupation and then legalising that through a security council resolution."
Earlier this week, Allawi warned that the departing US troops had an obligation enshrined in the security agreement and at the United Nations security council to safeguard Iraq's democratic process. He warned of catastrophic consequences if the occupation ended with Iraq still politically unstable.
- Posted in

33 Comments so far
Show AllOf course! No one could have predicted that the Sunnis and Shites would start killing each other once again, as soon as our military left (sarcasm). They would simply forget all the ethnic violence towards each other, and the barrier walls built to divide them.
They started killing each other 6 years ago, they are killing each other now, and they will kill each other 5 years from now. The killing created long festering memories. Bush created this mess, this black hole, and we must get out asap!
This isn't about civil war in Iraq, although that is what the MIC has convinced most people.
This is about divide (barrier walls)and conquer.
Steal their oil.
Turn their society into a Capitolistic one of consumption and greed.
Destroy their religion and replace it with a better controling model.
This "so called" violence is a CIA bombing false-flag tactic to give the MIC a good excuse to not pull out and finish their "Nation Building".
"There is also concern over interference from Iraq's neighbours, Iran, Turkey and Syria"
only the US is allowed to interfere!
The "al-Qaida fighters in Iraq," are likely Blackwater/Xe mercs. Many of us predicted the resumption of such attacks as the day for the US exit came closer in order to prevent that exit, and the "election" results provide a suitable context. The Iraqi Holocaust at the hands of the United States continues and is almost 20 years-old--30 if you include the decade of support for Saddam. A similar war is being waged against Iran--since 1953--but not at the level of a Holocaust--yet.
Yeah, I wrote the same things years ago when we first started talking about maybe, someday, getting out of Iraq. It has already been pretty well exposed that we were sponsoring both sides of the Sunni/Shia conflict. All we have to do is blow up a few mosques (done) and the place will explode. Then we say, "Oh my gosh, we can't leave now. Look at all the unrest."
We'll do the same thing in Afghanistan, no doubt. Sabotage any accord amongst the Afghans, then say we have to stay. About 98% of the problems in the ME would evaporate if we would just get the hell out and stay out. Oops, make that about 70%. Israel will make up the balance.
Weren't there reports circulating a few years ago about US coalition personnel who were caught dressed up as Muslims, driving around with weaponry in their cars?
Freedom fighters in Iraq are not stupid, surely they see better then most how our economy is about to go belly up, how our military is spread way too thin, and that blinded by greed are those who rule us, thinking they can still make a profit trading war materials for Middle East oil.
Tail waging the head, is this downfall of Empire USA.
Aha - there it is. I was sure someone here would point out the truth you write Truth_Light. And it is not just the freedom fighters aka national patriots.
Assume (putting aside for the moment the neocon conspiracy theory) keeping us bleeding red ink and red blood in Iraq would logically seem to be a Bin Laden basic strategy to completely crumble the empire of the great satan and alow his ilk to regain their righful place usurped by the house of Saud.
Now, picking up that conspiracy theory, staying there continues the domination of the MIC of everything Amerikan, damn the torpedoes and the red ink (they could give a good f__k about the red blood of the grunts in uniform.)
It is very, very hard not to believe that the Bin Ladens and Bushes of this world were and are acting in collusion.
I know this sounds blatantly logically contraditory but the guys in sandals and muslin robes and the guys in gortex and camo both get what they want. Despite the lofty rhetoric contained in the PNAC document, watching the actions of Chany and Bush convinced me that they could give a good damn about "American values, American intersts, freedom, democracy, blah, blah, blah...
Know this sounds confused and I'm tempted to just delete it, but think I'll leave it. And no, I'm not drunk.
I have to ask the question, why should we feel sorry for our troops? They are fighting for oil and world hegemony via the New World Order. If they are willing to lay their lives down for those things, it's their business. Let's just not confuse those things with fighting for freedom.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE
Out troops, especially our generals, all feel they deserve to self-actualize, to be all they can be, to earn all they can own and to be a dictator over all who are on land that they own. Like in the Vietnam War when they would yell at us, “Stand tall, ours is a warrior profession!”
And this brings us to the gut issue, do our troops deserve even this day of life? Absolutely not, and that is why the blood guilt for all the harm they do is on our heads. Unless of course we own or rent a house, and feel we deserve to evict any of the homeless who dare come in our house.
Article doesn't mention how many privatized non-military personnel and contractors are still there. Our military will stay in force long enough to keep the puppet regime sustained and to protect contractors and business interests. Client states don't come cheap.
It also doesn't mention the drones patrolling the skies overhead!
If anything needs to happen in reaction to the increased violence in Iraq, it is to SPEED UP our troop withdrawal instead of delaying it any further. They don't want us there; they're killing each other, we don't need any more of our troops expended needlessly (certainly not to feed the greedy oil-barons!). We need to get out of there now - - and then do the same in Afghanistan as well - - -What a waste!
If any cosmic justice exists this initial spike in "unrest" will break forth into an Iraqi version of Tet, with Maliki and Allawi receiving a treatment similar to Mussolini.
Hopefully, the American working-class kids who were tricked into participating in this Global Empire's invasion and oil looting expedition will come home safely and fully recover from their physical and psychic wounds.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
When you put it that way, the troops are the lucky ones. Even without the DU, it would take many generations for the local population to recover.
The "Civil War" Myth is an Excuse for Continued Occupation.
U.S.-backed sectarian death squads have become the foremost generator of death in Iraq, even surpassing the U.S. military machine, infamous for its capacity for industrial-scale slaughter. It is no secret in Baghdad that the U.S. military would regularly cordon off pro-resistance areas like the al-Adhamiyah neighborhood of Baghdad and allow "Iraqi police" and "Iraqi army" personnel, masked in black balaclavas, through their checkpoints to carry out abductions and assassinations in the neighborhood. Consequently, almost all of Baghdad and much of Iraq is now segregated.
The real threat of civil war in Iraq comes not from Sunni-Shia conflict but from the Kurdish- Arab tensions that have been stoked by the U.S. strategy of “Iraqification.”
If the "too much violence for us to leave" frame hadn't been picked up by the MSM, we would soon be hearing that it was now "too hot" and withdrawal would have to wait til December.
what's the point in keeping them there? they can't control anything anyway.....................
Is there anyone so stupid that they think our imperial troops will leave anywhere unless they are forced out. We'll leave Iraq when the last drop of oil is pumped out of the ground. After that, we won't care what kind of carnage the Sunni and Shiite militias inflict on each.
We have to "safeguard Iraq's democratic process." Right. There's enough BS in that statement to fertilize all of Nebraska.
The violence is being caused BY Americans, nobody else. Get the f*ck out.
Can we just *buy* the oil instead?
Ladies and gentleman boys and girls, gather round. We're not leaving Iraq or the Stans anytime soon. Get use to it! They're isn't a DAM thing you can do about it either.
Remember, we have to fight them over there so we don't have to fight them here.
That way we won't disrupt the sheople, and they can sit back living life vicariously in their apathetic easy chairs, while being DUMBED DOWN by this feckless, inane corporate media. Deal, Idol, Millionaire and . . . Dancing with the Stars!
Brought to you by GE and by the makers of Dove.
Gee Whiz, I thought such Honorable and Trust worthy people.
New President Allawi, X-CIA and all those Military Men who have such a strong code of ethics would honor their aggrements.
HA HA HO Ho HEE Hee HA!
But But But: True freedom loving Amerikans know; We gotta kill them over there before they kill us in the Home land.
They say BullShit stinks to; doesn't it?
And the oil tankers come and go, 24/7 , let the oil flow.
All the Bush/Chenney crime family members have their own oil tankers, why do I know this, because no one ever reports on how oil is being bought,sold and controlled in Iraq.
Who controls and protects the ports and the oil fields, we do.
Who is we??? Who are the movers and shakers of oil flow in Iraq???
Who is getting the money from oil exports in Iraq???
CNN, MSNBC, ABC,CBC,FOX,BBC, no one ever reports on the flow of oil, the billions it nets, and who gets the money.
CHA Ching,,, who says crime and war doesn't pay.
It pays very well when tax payers foot the bill for the war.
Americans are the stupidest people on earth, and become more poor in the empire process. I should know, I am one dumb ass American.
Cut all war funding Now. Let the crime family's pay for their own oil regimes.
BornFreemen
Victim of 24/7 fusion center right wing Christian community watch gang stalking torture for three years and running in Tampa Florida.
The more I talk, the more pressure they put on me to shut me up.
They read my comments, and use it against me, go to hell to the United warrant less surveillance Stazi of America.
USA USA USA USA USA !!!!!! UNITED STAZI of AMERICA.
Why don't the citizens of Iraq love us? We saved them from Saddam and his crazy sons, gave them Democracy and we're paying for the war with borrowed money.
Just take a good look at what we did for them. Not only that, we got rid of a lot of deadly DU that we no longer have to store away in our country for a few billion years. Those people just don't appreciate or understand how much better off they are now,... stupid rag heads. And as far as leaving goes forget it, we have an embasssy there to protect too.
No, I don't suffer from insanity. I enjoy every minute of it.
this article, among other things, reinforces why we (the collective left,right and center) need to remind the "obomber administration to get the phuck out yesterday.
Should be and can be, " a long HOt summer!!
What else is new?
It says a lot when someone thinks they are in the "know" and the rest of the people are stupid knuckledraggers.
Consider that perhaps the folks that oppose us would prefer us not to withdraw our troops. Ramp up the violence so dunderhead and his three stooges will keep our kids there.
If we are gone from Iraq, all those convienent targets are removed, all that media attention is gone and its one less cover to use.
Corporate imperialism is very expensive.
ExxonMobil and other oil corporations now have contracts to exploit Iraq's oil.
The light sweet crude in southern Iraq has an extraction cost of about $3.00 per barrel. It is then put on tankers and becomes a commodity to be traded at a huge profit.
But, by some estimates, when the military costs are figured in, the real cost to the American taxpayer is about $1,000 per barrel or more.
According to Stiglitz, the Iraq invasion and occupation is now over $3 Trillion. And it looks like the occupation is permanent at some level.
It is a small gesture, but I refuse to purchase gas at an Exxon station.
And while we're continuing to do what we have been doing so well in Iraq and Afghanistant (destroying their countries), we wish to divert attention to the possibility that Iran may be developing nuclear weapons.
As much as Ahmadinejad continually denies it, in my opinion he's a damn fool if he's not using uranium enrichment for that purpose. After all, it's clear that Israel wants us to next destroy Iran.
This violence is delaying troop withdrawal? Any excuse to continue with our military presence wherever we have placed it. Complete withdrawal by the end of 2011? Right, and there's also really a tooth fairy.
Not wishing to change the subject, but does anyone have any idea about what how much the U.S. will be kicking in to save Greece from financial disaster? Not that it really matters all that much anyway....it's not our money, it's China's.
Petrol Action Figure empirePie May 13th, 2010
‘Say Harley what’s that bobbin on your dash?
a super-size me star wars hero from McDonald’s stash?’
‘Why no Sam’ It’s my top gun plastic action hero
you know the one we thought was fightin evil doers
like he was a ‘mission accomplished’ kind of guy..
Turns out he was lying from the get go
and has us mired in lose lose wars
even worser than the jungle ones before
now don’t that blow?
You see I guess I was pretty messed up
when I honored him with dash board mount
cause I used to think as long as I had my PAH
bobbin on my hummin SUV
I wouldn’t have to fear no oil wars
I wouldn’t have to fear no star wars
I wouldn’t have to fear no over come the evil one wars
when I had my ‘bring em on hero’ bobbin on my SUV”
“But Harley..Why you still got him up there?
Well you see I got him there to remind me
who I got to thank for the $400 fill ups
and for totally tanking....
“Ya like what”?
‘like the Katrina & BP gulf rescues’
‘totally FUBAR performances of sluagh-iùl ’
“Don’t we have a new oval hero?;
Less of a dude’s dude?”
“Nerdy Truth..like true
but...
I am just waitin for McDonalds next happy meal
and the brand O hero; the PoUS series, the new pus action hero.
He’ll be just-ice fine bobbin on my new scooter Guzzi;
to the Marley beat off the ‘four score’ score
and...
I won’t have to fear no oil wars
I won’t have to fear no star wars
I won’t have to fear any ‘Black Magic Woman’ evil wars”