Obama's Iraq: The Picture of Dorian Gray
While the US tries to present a new face, the ugliness of the occupation continues. Now it seems combat troops won’t exactly withdraw from Iraqi cities on June 30.
Remember when Barack Obama made that big announcement at Camp Lejeune about how all US combat troops were going to be withdrawn from Iraqi cities by June 30? Liberals jumped around with joy, praising Obama for ending the war so that they could focus on their "good war" in Afghanistan.
Of course, the celebrations were and remain unwarranted. Obama's Iraq plan is virtually identical to the one on Bush's table on January 19, 2009. Obama has just rebranded the occupation, sold it to liberals and dropped the term "Global War on Terror" while, for all practical purposes, continuing the Bush era policy (that's why leading Republicans praised Obama's plan). In the real world, US military commanders have said they are preparing for an Iraq presence for another 15-20 years, the US embassy is the size of Vatican City, there is no official plan for the withdrawal of contractors and new corporate mercenary contracts are being awarded. The SoFA Agreement between the US and Iraq gives the US the right to extend the occupation indefinitely and to continue intervening militarily in Iraq ad infinitum. All it takes is for the puppets in Baghdad to ask nicely...
In the latest episode of the "Occupation Rebranded" mini-series, President Obama is preparing to scrap the June 30 withdrawal timeline.
As The New York Times reports: "The United States and Iraq will begin negotiating possible exceptions to the June 30 deadline for withdrawing American combat troops from Iraqi cities, focusing on the troubled northern city of Mosul, according to military officials. Some parts of Baghdad also will still have combat troops."
According to the Times, the US is playing with the definition of the word "city" when speaking of withdrawing combat troops from all cities:
[T]here are no plans to close the Camp Victory base complex, consisting of five bases housing more than 20,000 soldiers, many of them combat troops. Although Victory is only a 15 minute drive from the center of Baghdad and sprawls over both sides of the city's boundary, Iraqi officials say they have agreed to consider it outside the city.In addition, Forward Operating Base Falcon, which can hold 5,000 combat troops, will also remain after June 30. It is just within Baghdad's southern city limits. Again, Iraqi officials have classified it as effectively outside Baghdad, so no exception to the agreement needs to be granted, in their view.
Combat troops with the Seventh Field Artillery Regiment will remain in the heart of Baghdad at Camp Prosperity, located near the new American Embassy compound in the Green Zone. In addition to providing a quick reaction force, guarding the embassy and noncombat troops from attack, those soldiers will also continue to support Iraqi troops who are now in nominal charge of maintaining security in the Green Zone.
Camp Victory is of tremendous strategic importance to the US occupation. In addition to the military's share of Baghdad International Airport, it includes four bases-Victory, Liberty, Striker and Slayer-as well as the US-run prison "Camp Cropper." That's where the US keeps its "high value" prisoners. While the US officially handed control of Forward Operating Base Freedom to "Iraqi control," the US military is keeping the swimming pool.
Meanwhile, future plans are being laid for other US bases. Camp Prosperity is going to house US contractors and other personnel, while at Camp Union III housing is being built for several thousand soldiers, trainers and advisers.
What is abundantly clear is that there are enough cosmetic changes going on in Baghdad intended to make it look like the occupation is ending, while continuing it. Again, from the Times:
The Green Zone was handed over to Iraqi control Jan. 1, when the agreement went into effect. In addition to the United States-Iraqi patrols, most of the security for the Green Zone's many checkpoints and heavily guarded entry points is still done by the same private contractors who did it prior to Jan. 1."What you're seeing is not a change in the numbers, it's a doctrine change," said First Sgt. David Moore, a New Jersey National Guardsman with the Joint Area Support Group, which runs the Green Zone. "You're still going to have fighters. Every U.S. soldier is trained to fight."
The Iraq occupation is like The Picture of Dorian Gray. No matter what public face the Obama administration attempts to present, it only grows more heinous with each passing day.
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22 Comments so far
Show All"Although Victory is only a 15 minute drive from the center of Baghdad and sprawls over both sides of the city's boundary, Iraqi officials say they have agreed to consider it outside the city."
The eruv comes to the war on terror.
"Slaughtering Iraq's Minorities",
by Layla Anwar, (An) ArabWomanBlues.blogspot.com, Apr 28 2009
http://www.uruknet.info/?p=m53781
QUOTE:
I don't think you have read this in any of your news outlet.
Someone jumping from the 10th floor in some dump in Indianapolis is more important than the slaughter of the minorities in Iraq, in particular the Christians of Iraq whom you generously came to "liberate" along with others...
Two days ago in Baghdad, a Sabaen/Mandaen family was murdered in broad daylight. Their only crime was their religion.
Yesterday, 5 Chaldeans from Kirkuk were murdered in cold blood. They belonged to two families. They were just sitting at home, trying to keep safe. The names I was able to memorize are : Bassem, Mona and Suzanne.
The Chaldean Archbishop, Louis Zako issued a plea for the world to save the Christians of Iraq from murder. He textually said :
" This is a deliberate policy on the part of the government, they fail to protect us...they want us to leave Iraq. We are Iraqis through and through. This is our land too. I ask my congregation to remain steadfast and not to leave this land..."Z
Another archbishop from Erbil added - "Since 2003, our situation has deteriorated greatly. Persecution of Christians and other minorities first started in Basra, then Baghdad. In 2008, in Mosul (the Nineveh Province - North of Iraq), entire Chaldean and Assyrian families were kicked out from their homes. And today it is Kirkuk.
The government is not protecting us despite several of your pleas. The government refuses to give us information as to who is committing these murders even though it knows their identities. We are helpless. Someone help us please."
Hundreds of Chaldeans, Assyrians, Sabaens/Mandaens, Shabak, Yazidis have been forced into exile since 2003.
The Christian population of Iraq has dwindled from 2 Million or so, to less than 600'000.
The Chaldeans were the first to embrace Christianity in the Middle East. Their history dates back to Babylonian times and some say they were the ones who built the tower of Babel. Their language is still Aramaic.
The Assyrians, another ancient minority, came about a 100 years after the Chaldeans. They too embraced Christianity.
Both Chaldeans and Assyrians are one of the oldest, most ancient communities in the Middle East.
They are the first surviving inhabitants/communities of this land. They are Iraq. Iraq is not Iraq without them.
During the reign of the "tyrant", they and other minorities were the most protected and safeguarded.
Millions of Dollars were offered to the Christians of Iraq to build new churches, and they were allowed to practice their faith in all freedom. Ditto for the other smaller minorities.
Never, and I repeat never in the contemporary history of Iraq, and I defy anyone who will tell me the contrary, anyone belonging to a minority group -- been harassed, discriminated or persecuted against because of their religion. Killing a Christian because of their Christianity was unheard of.
It took "Christian" America, the "Christian" West, to obliterate the oldest living people in the Middle East.
I wonder what Jesus Christ has to say about that ?
I find myself making another appeal. Seems to me that since 2003, we have done nothing but appeal to someone out there...
So am appealing again -- In the name of Allah, God, Jesus, Mohamed...STOP the persecution, forced exile and killing of Iraq's minorities.
They are part of us and we are part of them. We are one blood, running in the same veins. They are Iraq and Iraq is not Iraq without them.
Painting : Iraqi artist, Khaled Rahal.
END QUOTE
Layla Anwar is a very good Iraqi writer to read. She is an Iraqi woman writing with passion for her country and her passionate love and caring is very well expressed. It's sometimes righteous anger and sometimes a little too much for me, in which case I just look for analytical articles; but she's right to be angry and she expresses her passion with also evident love.
"Siouxrose April 28th, 2009 7:50 pm
Sioux Rose
Tom Engelhardt's incisive research on this topic made it clear that building Vatican size bases represented the antithesis of any call to leave Iraq any time soon. Permanent bases invalidate any such words or notions. Obama as a glib speaker will use excuses to sustain the occupation. ..."
It's definitely what I've been expecting of the Obama administration; nothing really honourable in terms of the GWoT wars. And I appreciate the reminder about the "Vatican size bases", which we should all be reminded of now and then.
"And So It Goes ...", by Dahr Jamail, truthout.org, Apr 27 2009
http://www.uruknet.info/?p=m53770
QUOTE:
Last week found Iraq swimming in blood once again. Attacks last Thursday brought the worst violence Iraq has seen in over a year, with at least 96 Iraqis killed and 157 wounded in two massive suicide bombings. Over 35 bombings have rocked Baghdad this month alone. There appears to be no end in sight for the escalating violence. For an Obama administration that plans to keep at least 50,000 US troops in Iraq indefinitely, look no further for a justification in doing so.
On Friday, further slaughter assaulted Iraq, with 93 killed and another 163 wounded as the attacks continued unabated. Saturday was a light day, with "only" 15 Iraqis killed and 22 wounded, while Iraqi security forces reportedly defused 20 bombs and two booby-trapped cars in Baghdad.
Meanwhile, violence most likely related to the growing battle between government forces and the Sahwa, who are stepping up attacks against government and US forces, continues. In the last three days, clashes erupted at a police checkpoint in Fallujah, three men were killed while planting an improvised explosive device (IED) in Khanaqin, three Sahwa fighters were arrested north of Babel while planting an IED, an IED targeting Sahwa members in Udhaim killed three members and wounded three others, gunmen killed a member of the Sahwa in Mussayab, a car bomb was defused in Fallujah and two Sahwa members were wounded in a blast in Iskandariya. And, by the way, at least five US soldiers have been killed in the last five days.
Sunday found another 12 Iraqis killed and five wounded. A US military raid of a home in Kut brought the deaths of a man and his sister-in-law, who just happened to be the wife of a local clan leader; additionally, four Iraqis, one of them, a police officer, were arrested. Protests erupted as angry Iraqis denounced the raid. During a funeral procession in Kut where the cloth-draped coffins of the dead were carried, protesters called the Americans "criminal occupiers" and demanded the release of the seized men. "We condemn this horrific incident," said Latif al-Tarfa, governor of Wasit province, "It violates the agreements between US forces and the Iraqi government. Innocent people were killed and the city is now very tense. They were poor people. They do not cause any political or security problems."
US forces denied killing the man and claimed the death of the woman was "accidental." They also claimed they had full permission from Iraqi authorities. Contradicting this US military propaganda, Maliki viewed the US military raid as a crime that violated a bilateral security pact, and wants US forces to hand those responsible to the courts, an Iraqi official in the office of Maj. Gen. Qassim Moussawi, the Baghdad security spokesman, told reporters. "The general commander (Maliki) is affirming that the killing of two citizens and detaining others in Kut is considered a violation of the security pact. He asks the commander of the multinational forces to release the detainees and hand over those responsible for this crime to the courts."
Make no mistake about it - there is a war on. The floodgates of hell have once again been opened, largely as the result of US unwillingness to pressure the Maliki government to back off its ongoing attacks against the US-created Sahwa, which have led to the Sahwa walking off their security posts in many areas, which has been a green light for al-Qaeda to resume its operations in Iraq. In addition, many of the Sahwa forces, weary of not being paid promised wages from the government, as well as broken promises by the occupiers of their country, have resumed attacks against US forces. Again, there doesn't appear to be anything in the short term to indicate these trends will stop.
General Patraeus, as part of his ongoing efforts to take responsibility for the hell he helped create in Iraq, laughably blamed the recent attacks in Baghdad on "Tunisians."
Conveniently, during her recent visit to Baghdad, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, while perched in the surreal Green Zone which is floating atop a sea of Iraqi blood, had the gall to claim "that Iraq is going in the right direction" and that the recent violence does "not reflect any diversion from the security progress that has been made" in Iraq. The primary reason for her unannounced visit was to reassure Prime Minister Maliki that if the violence continues to worsen, the Obama administration would back off its so-called withdrawal plan. Let us not forget the context of this visit - in addition to the hellish week Iraq has just experienced, overall violence there has been on the rise for the last two months.
Along with leaving up to 50,000 US troops in Iraq indefinitely, the plan to remove many of the other troops by August 2010 is slipping into the background as the justifications for remaining in Iraq are now being placed in the foreground. Iraq is Obama's occupation now, and circumstances there are ripping away the mask of any promised "change."
END QUOTE
Keep swinging, Jeremy Scahill! It is a fine thing to read something that makes sense.
Sioux Rose
Tom Engelhardt's incisive research on this topic made it clear that building Vatican size bases represented the antithesis of any call to leave Iraq any time soon. Permanent bases invalidate any such words or notions. Obama as a glib speaker will use excuses to sustain the occupation. Remember all those nifty strategic changes usually under the rubric of "surge" during the Bush era that led too many people into believing some form of viable progress towards the ultimate objective of leaving that faraway land, and leaving it as a better whole state, was an authentic part of the program?
If the average American (Fox viewer) REALLY understood all that's being done in his or her name, perhaps we would not see such overt passivity. As others have wisely pointed out, with reduction in quality of life felt by more and more workers, eventually some realization will arise. I personally hope that in anger and anguish those fed a steady diet of false news don't take out their pain on persons slightly unlike them who live nearby.
The Iraq Occupation is Dorian Gray, and Obama is Milquetoast.
Milquetoast, the XLIV and Dorian Gray
a more perfect union....
Oscar Wilde's Dorian Gray remained young, healthy, and physically attractive while his hidden portrait grew hideous and sickly as he continued to be a liar and a jerk. Jug-eared, chiclet-tooth Obama will grow old & ugly for all to see during the coming four years.
"four bases-Victory, Liberty, Striker and Slayer"
If baboons could be equipped with the power of speech, I'm sure they would give similar names to their tribal camps. For that matter, I'm sure they would form a majority in Congress within a few election cycles.
Let's not go slandering baboons now--they're mostly peaceful creatures unless attacked.
Now that the banking crisis is over, the torturers have been put in jail and the economy is humming along we can afford to expand the empire all over the Middle East without fear of it causing our inevitable collapse.
Hold on, Hold on, I'm getting word that...
Oh my f*ng Gawd!
Look out beeeellllllooooowwww!
Corrupt systems never reform themselves.
I certainly hope Jeremy will take over when Amy Goodman steps down at Democracy Now! At least he has the balls to boldly challenge a deceptive pimp for American Empire - even if the con man is a Democrat... and is black.
And supports Aparthied.
Camp Slayer? You kidding? That's what they should rename Warshington, D.C. and the White House. As for George Wanker Bushwah, aka Barack Obysmal . . . I don't know what to say anymore.
This is what Obama is up against. Email from a chickenhawk Republican:
What do people fear most?
Two magazines, Country Living (95.99% white readership) and Ebony/Jet (99.99% black readership) did surveys on .....'WHAT DO PEOPLE FEAR MOST?'
The results were interesting, to say the least..
Country Living magazine's top three answers were:
1. Nuclear war/terrorist attack in U.S.
2. Child/spouse dying/terminal illness.
3. Terminal illness/self.
Ebony/Jet magazine's top three answers were:
1. Ghosts
2. Dogs
3. Registered mail
No Kidding!
AND TO GO WITH THIS ONE:
TWO QUOTES:
ONE PITIFUL, ONE GOOD
'My friends, we live in the greatest nation in the history of the world.
I hope you'll join with me as we try to change it.'
-- Barack Obama
''Life's tough......it's even tougher if you're stupid.''
-- John Wayne
... agonizing torment awaits them for their presistent lying.
Repeat after me, folks: This is what it's like to live in an Empire. This is what it's like to live in an Empire. This is what it's like to live in an Empire.
This is what it's like to live in an Empire . . . This is what it's like to live in an Empire . . . This is what it's like.
Remember those happy days when our brave politicos wanted to combine withdrawal from Iraq with their "redeployment over the horizon" to be available if "needed" in Iraq? In those days the picture of Dorian Gray was only semi-hideous (though horrible enough) but now the narrowing of that "horizon" to Camp Victory a 15 minute ride from Baghdad puts the finishing touches on the incredible dissimulations of the "redeployment" crowd. Can the master painter/wordsmith known as our President put another coat of paint on the picture that won't send even his acolytes screaming into the night?
Can anybody explain why soldiers need civiian contractors to guard the soldiers?
Other than saying there are not enough soldiers to both kill the locals and guard themselves against local retaliation.
Please, Please don't tell me that the USA does not keep its word.
You must have them confused with another corrupt government of liars, thieves, cheats, and _______and ________and_________(you fill in the blanks).
America, your days are numbered.
Good Luck America, you really need it.
Can anybody say, 'shell game'?