The Real News Network: Iraq Events Moving Out of US Control
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 28, 2008
2:00 PM
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CONTACT: The Real News Network
Kimberlee Nancekivell, 416-916-5202
smcommunications@therealnews.com |
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Iraq Events Moving Out of US Control
Sabah al-Nasseri: Washington cannot dictate politics in Iraq
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TORONTO - July 28 - In a five part interview, The Real News senior editor Paul Jay sits down with Iraqi-born professor of political science, Sabah al-Nasseri, to discuss the political situation in Iraq.
President Bush has recently changed his position on troop withdrawal from Iraq agreeing to a "general time horizon", while McCain remains firm that "any withdrawal must be conditions-based and that the troops would come home with victory and not through a set-timetable." Senator Barack Obama on the other hand, said that "he wants most US combat troops out of Iraq by mid-2010", opposing permanent US military bases, but agreeing to leave a residual force in Iraq for an "unspecified amount of time."
Al-Nasseri says that the difference in opinion between the current president and the presidential candidates is of little importance to the issue, as the choice is not theirs to make. He agrees with Patrick Cockburn's statement that if "the grand ayatollah Al-Sistani says, 'No. The occupation must end,' then [it] will end."
Paul Jay and Professor al-Nasseri also discuss the upcoming October election, and who is going to gain power over Iraq. Maintaining the current balance of forces is the best case scenario for the United States at the moment, but al-Nasseri says that Muqtada al-Sadr is being underestimated. "Sadr may be weaker militarily, but he will still be a force in the elections," due to his "legitimacy and credibility within Iraq."
According to al_Nasseri, "if the al-Sadr movement would win the election in Baghdad, in Al Kut, Al Basra etcetera, they will have not only the majority within the provincial parliament, but also they can decide about oil contracts and about the US military bases in their province." This could "jeopardize the whole project of al-Maliki and the United States."
As the political rest continues and a postponement becomes more likely, "all eyes [are] on these Iraqi elections".
Watch the interview on The Real News Network
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