A Withdrawal in Name Only
On November 17, 2008, when Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari and U.S. ambassador Ryan Crocker signed an agreement for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, citizens from both countries applauded. While many were disappointed about the lengthy timeline for the withdrawal of the troops, it appeared that a roadmap was set to end the war and occupation. However, the first step — withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraqi cities by June 30, 2009 — is full of loopholes, and tens of thousands of U.S. soldiers will remain in the cities after the "deadline" passes.
The failure to fully comply with the withdrawal agreement indicates the United States is looking to withdraw from Iraq in name only, as it appears that up to 50,000 military personnel will remain after the deadline.
The United States claims it's adhering to the agreement, known as the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), even with so many troops being left in the cities. But the United States is changing semantics instead of policy. For example, there are no plans to transfer the 3,000 American troops stationed within Baghdad at Forward Operating Base Falcon, because commanders have determined that despite its location, it's not within the city.
The original intent of moving troops out of the cities was to reduce the U.S. military role and send the message to Iraqis that the United States would be leaving the country soon. But troops that are no longer sleeping in the cities will still take part in operations within Iraqi cities; they will serve in "support" and "advisory" roles, rather than combat functions. Such "reclassification" of troops as military trainers is another example of how the United States is circumventing the terms of the SOFA agreement.
The larger loophole in the agreement is the treatment of military contractors. There has been little mention of the 132,610 military contractors in Iraq. Of these, 36,061 are American citizens, according to a recent Department of Defense report.
Since September 2008, only 30,000 troops have left Iraq. The 134,000 soldiers that remain are just slightly below the number of troops that were in Iraq in 2003. These numbers are likely to remain well above 100,000 until 2010.
Instead of sending soldiers stationed in cities home, the military has been expanding and building new bases in rural areas to accommodate soldiers affected by the June 30 deadline. And Congress just passed a war-spending bill that includes more funding for military construction inside Iraq.
The implications of the June 30 pullout are manifest: As Iraqis grapple with increasing responsibility for the security of their country and American military leaders search for avenues to project their influence, withdrawal from urban areas will set important precedents for the proposed full withdrawal of American forces.
The ability of Iraqi and U.S. commanders to subvert the SOFA and extend the stay of U.S. troops in Iraqi cities past the June 30 deadline does not bode well for the other withdrawal deadlines laid out in the agreement. Moreover, the vague language of the agreement lends itself to the possibility that U.S. forces will remain in Iraq past the December 31, 2011 deadline.
This all may be for naught, however, as a referendum on the SOFA is scheduled for July 30 in Iraq. Despite attempts by the Iraqi cabinet to postpone the vote, lawmakers think a delay is unlikely. The measure is likely to lose if it goes to popular vote given the widespread opposition to the SOFA in Iraq, which is seen as legitimizing the U.S. occupation until 2011. According to the latest polls, published in the Brookings Institution’s Iraq Index, 73% of Iraqis oppose the presence of coalition forces. If the SOFA is struck down by the vote, U.S. forces could be forced out of Iraq immediately as the forces would not be legally protected.
The referendum could create big problems for the Obama administration, which has quietly discouraged the Iraqi government from holding it. The pressure from the administration is inconsistent with their goals of promoting democracy in Iraq. The people, who have been forced to live under occupation for the past six years, deserve a chance to have their voices heard.
Obama campaigned on a promise to leave Iraq. Yet the response to the June 30th deadline, the lack of support for the referendum, and the passage of another $70 billion for the war are stark indicators of what the real Iraq policy may be.
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15 Comments so far
Show AllThe following documentary film surely provides strong insight into realising that the Obama administration and the real ruling "elites" of the government of the USA will not be planning on withdrawing from Iraq until they have conquered it; meaning they won't leave until they are certain of having a puppet regime in Iraq that will obey them.
"Award Winning Movie: "SUPERPOWER":
Order Now from Global Research",
by Barbara-Anne Steegmuller, July 9, 2009
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=14083
I do not know why GlobalResearch.ca used the date of July 9th, but maybe that's when the DVD will be available, from GR anyway.
The website for the doc. film (roughly 119 minutes) is www.superpowerTheMovie.com and Barbara-Anne Steegmuller is the director of the film. Her above article provides a or the synopsis, which is a fine statement by itself, and a clip from the website's set of clips.
The website has a couple of clips in the homepage and there's a separate page for additional clips for interviews with Noam Chomsky, William Blum, Chalmers Johnson, Michel Chossudovsky (editor of GlobalResearch.ca), and several other people. Etcetera.
I'm sure plenty of people will find this doc. film to be very appreciable.
-------------------
And the following certainly are all very complementary.
""Full Spectrum Dominance: Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order"
Review of F. William Engdahl's book"
by Stephen Lendman, June 22, 2009
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=14046
"Full spectrum dominance"(9:26), TheRealNews, Aug 21 2008
Quote: "Pepe Escobar: Welcome to the New Cold War August 21, 2008"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTwdiC5jQ-I
I haven't read the all of the following excerpts yet, but read some and it seems like a fitting page to include a link for in this post.
"excerpts from the book
Full Spectrum Dominance
U.S. Power in Iraq and Beyond
by Rahul Mahajan
Seven Stories Press, 2003, paper"
(url broken over two lines)
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/New_World_Order/
Full_Spectrum_Dominance.html
(url over one line - triple-click to highlight the whole, copy, open another tab, paste the copied url, and if whole, then you're all set and ready to load; having recently found that this actually works for me)
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/New_World_Order/Full_Spectrum_Dominance.html
An audio interview with Rahul Mahajan:
"Empire Notes on Iraq and the “Korea Analogy”", June 22, 2007
http://uprisingradio.org/home/?p=1604
Quote: "GUEST: Rahul Mahajan, author of Full Spectrum Dominance and The New Crusade"
"Empire Notes" is his website, apparently.
www.empirenotes.org
---------------------
BTW, one of the reasons I've seen stated about why the Bush-Cheney administration launched war (of aggression) on Iraq is because Saddam Hussein started to shift away from selling OIL in US$, to selling in Euros. Doing a Web search using ""saddam hussein" 2000 oil trade euro", minus the outer quotes, turns up links to plenty of articles and the following are a few of them.
"Iran's euro-denominated oil bourse to open in March: US Dollar Crisis on the Horizon",
by William Clark, Feb. 10, 2006
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=1937
The following is another copy of the above article, but the above has an additional quote at the very beginning, so perhaps there are additional edits in the more recent copy, above. But the following has at least some of the notes hyperlinked, while the above copy doesn't.
"Petrodollar Warfare: Dollars, Euros and the Upcoming Iranian Oil Bourse",
by William Clark, Aug. 2, 2005
http://www.energybulletin.net/node/7707
IN THE above article and when he writes of Saddam Hussein having announced Iraq was going to make this oil trade currency switch, Wm Clark refers readers to note 4, which is for the following piece.
"19. U.S. Dollar vs. the Euro: Another Reason for the Invasion of Iraq",
(url broken over two lines, necessarily!)
http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/
19-us-dollar-vs-the-euro-another-reason-for-the-invasion-of-iraq
Three areticles are used for sources for this above PC piece and the specific article by Wm Clark is the following; although it's a copy of the original, which was in 2003, according to PC. Since I already had this one opened in a tab, I won't look for the original copy.
"The Real Reasons Why Iran is the Next Target:
The Emerging Euro-denominated International Oil Marker",
by William Clark, Oct 27, 2004
http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/CLA410A.html
--------------------
VIDEO
"Americas Third World War
How 6 million People Were killed in CIA secret wars against third world countries
See below THE SECRET WARS OF THE CIA:
... (video)
John Stockwell, former CIA Station Chief in Angola in 1976, working for then Director of the CIA, George Bush. He spent 13 years in the agency. He gives a short history of CIA covert operations. He is a very compelling speaker and the highest level CIA officer to testify to the Congress about his actions. He estimates that over 6 million people have died in CIA covert actions, and this was in the late 1980's.
THE SECRET WARS OF THE CIA:
by John Stockwell
A lecture given in October, 1987
Part I - Part II"
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4068.htm
RV June 25th, 2009 7:28 pm,
That's an understandable post, RV. I just wanted to explicitly emphasise that the rest of the world is aware of what kind of rogue government the U.S. has become internationally and this especially since WW II; although, the U.S. had been rogue on the international level earlier, certainly with the war on the Philippines in at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries, anyway. I'm not sure how much of the rest of the world is aware of the rogue nature of the U.S. on the international level prior to WWII, but they certainly know about its rogueness over the past ... several decades.
Nationally, the U.S. has been rogue for government since basically the very start.
The, or rather most of the rest of the world realising this about the U.S., I just felt it wasn't inappropriate to specify that other governments don't particularly enter into agreements with the government of the USA, and there-by its NATO and Israel military alliances, but out of FEAR; and also greed, when fear isn't the sole factor.
So, surely VERY few people think the U.S. government is legitimate.
"U.S. forces could be forced out of Iraq immediately as the forces would not be legally protected."
That would be great, and long overdue, if it actually happens.
Unfortunately, the Iraqi people will continue to suffer, whether we stay or go, because we threw their country into chaos.
We should remove the military and send engineers, builders, and social workers, to help repair the damage.
Crowsnest June 25th, 2009 10:38 am,
You omitted important treaties the U.S. government made with the American Indians; how peculiar, to forget such history. Is it again an illustration of the symptom "Americans" have always had when it comes to the American Indians, to ... like, ya know, conveniently forget about them and what they are owed, I wonder. They'd be the first treaties the U.S. government agreed to and broke that I know of and would come to my mind before treaties on the international level would; although I also wouldn't want to forget them, either.
=========================
"RV June 25th, 2009 1:23 pm
ANYONE who enters into ANY agreement with the United States of America is just plain nuts."
A spontaneous reply to that is ... "YEP!", but a reply made after a little reflection would differ. It would say that any civilian populations wanting their governments to make supposedly promising agreements with the government of the USA are nuts, while the leaders of such countries who do accept supposedly promising agreements, which appears to mostly be to profit such leaders, instead of the populations in general, well, these leaders are insane alright, but their motivations are GREED. That's worse than only being "nuts".
RV:
"The U.S. is even less scrupulous in honoring its obligations under international laws, covenants and treaties than it is in honoring its own constitution -- which is to say not at all. In fact, for all it matters to the U.S. imperium, its ratified international obligations ARE constitutional obligations."
Legally? Definitely. It's stipulated in the Constitution itself.
RV:
"Any nation that treats its own "supreme laws" with such utter contempt is not a trustworthy party to any agreement under any circumstances and it's high time the rest of the world stopped treating the U.S. as a legitimate member of the global community. It's not. It's a criminal enterprise."
DO YOU really think the "rest of the world" treats "the U.S. as a legitimate member ...", or would they be afraid, more than anything else? I don't think the "rest of the world" is unaware of the fact that the government of the USA, combined with its real ruling "elites", is an ethically legitimate partner in anything. Instead, I think the "rest of the world" knows the U.S. government is the superpower and that it combined with NATO and Israel are definitely superpower; and that, along with the black covert ops of the CIA, British SAS, etcetera, well now it's only all the more superpower. And everyone knows that no rivals, including China and Russia, want to risk needing to face the western superpower in brutal warfare. So "the rest of the world" is held in fear and under very constant threat(s).
RV:
"In fact you'd probably be safer dealing with the Mafia than you are with the United States of America. At least you wouldn't be subjected to all that sickening hypocrisy and propaganda about being grateful for getting raped."
Perhaps. But then the Mafia(s) surely also invest in the MIC, etcetera, and if this is true, then they're not innocent in terms of what the U.S. government commits for crimes against humanity, for the Mafia would then be among the profiteers. All they'd need to do would be to fully own, or else buy and hold stocks in war-profiteering and -promoting (even if that's secretly done) corporations; it's all they'd need to do to be guilty of also being war-profiteers and -promoters.
Even McDonald's has joined the war-profiteers. It's certainly in Iraq anyway.
War, perhaps esp. of aggression, draws in malignant human predators and parasites from ... all over the place. There's a quasi-full spectrum of varieties of these parasites, vultures, exploiters, and predators.
Cancer is nasty, but at least it's innocent. After all, it can't be greedy, for it can't commit any evils at all. As definitely unfriendly and unwelcome as it is, it nevertheless has no mind and no will, therefore. Greed, charity, evil, good, deceit, truth, ... are attributes or traits that can only be expressed or exercised (practiced) by beings with the ability to think and premeditatively act; therefore, only humans can really have these characteristics. Of course some humans are so banal or animalian that maybe they're nearly as excusable, but only nearly; and nearly isn't enough.
No other animal LIES, commits hypocrisy, hegemony, .... NO others; only humans do.
So with Obama's "words", this individual who "speaks out of both sides of his mouth", as Dennis Kucinich said last year and was rather clearly correct about.
"A Withdrawal in Name Only", the title of the article of this CD page is. Indeed, "in name only".
I already believed following Obama being elected that he or he and his administration were [not] going to really plan on withdrawing from Iraq, that this was said, instead, only to drive voter support for Obama, who very quickly turned out to earn the name of "Obomba", as some people have referred to him.
I'm not completely certain that I fully comprehend all the nuances of the points you are making, but my general sense is that we're not really disagreeing about any issue of major substance. The involvement of both fear and greed is certainly undisputed.
The US military is not leaving Iraq until it runs out of oil.
The Wall Street Journal
JUNE 24, 2009
Big Oil Ready for Big Gamble in Iraq
By GINA CHON
BAGHDAD -- Next week, Iraqi officials plan a welcome-back party for Big Oil.
The government intends to auction off oil contracts to foreign companies for the first time since Iraq nationalized its oil industry more than three decades ago. If all goes according to plan in the first round, foreign oil companies will move in to help Iraq revive production at six developed fields that have suffered from years of war and neglect.
from article: "The pressure from the administration is inconsistent with their goals of promoting democracy in Iraq"
Give me a freakin break. Like anyone paying attention believes that promoting 'democracy' is the goal. Where have I heard that before? Any Neocons in the house?
Like many articles, just a bit of significant context is needed and just a tad more analyisis, otherwise this is just a bit of old news with some updates.
I think the Dakota Indians had a treaty with the U. S. concerning what is now the western half of South Dakota. The trouble with that was that gold was discovered in the Black Hills. At least today there is a lot of land in reservations for the Indians and the amount of land under their control is growing, as some of the tribes are buying back the land with the income from the gambling establishments. This means that the Iraq people need to invest in some casinos.
They'll have to invest in iron boots so they can kick this country and the Iraqi quislings that serve us in the ass and keep kicking until they boot us out.
Treaty trangressions are certainly nothing new for the United States of America. In fact, George III's proclamation of 1763 honoring treaties, prohibiting settlement west of the Appalachian mountains and requiring those already settled in those regions to return east in an attempt to ease tensions with the native population was one of the causes of the revolt of some British colonists that is commonly known as the "American Revolution."
George Washington, among others, was not pleased about the limitations it placed on his westward land speculation. Of course, if he had been granted his much sought after king's commission as an officer in the regular British army, things might have turned out differently.
ANYONE who enters into ANY agreement with the United States of America is just plain nuts.
The U.S. is even less scrupulous in honoring its obligations under international laws, covenants and treaties than it is in honoring its own constitution -- which is to say not at all. In fact, for all it matters to the U.S. imperium, its ratified international obligations ARE constitutional obligations.
Any nation that treats its own "supreme laws" with such utter contempt is not a trustworthy party to any agreement under any circumstances and it's high time the rest of the world stopped treating the U.S. as a legitimate member of the global community. It's not. It's a criminal enterprise.
In fact you'd probably be safer dealing with the Mafia than you are with the United States of America. At least you wouldn't be subjected to all that sickening hypocrisy and propaganda about being grateful for getting raped.
Our history is replete with promises/treaties made which were subsequently violated: Hawaii (1893), Cuba (1898/99), Puerto Rico (1898), The Philippines (1899), Nicaragua (1909), Honduras (1911) and then the numerous covert overthrows of governments during the 20th century, including Iran (1953).
Nobody, absolutely nobody should be surprised that the Obama administration will violate the SOFA agreement. I repeat: will subvert/violate the SOFA agreement.
I am also convinced that Iraq's decision to hold a public referendum on SOFA soon is not a voluntary decision but is a response to a U.S. veiled threat to discontinue financial support of Iraq's regime.
So when will the United States make repairs and reparations for it's illegal destruction of Iraq?
Did the US make reparations to Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos for destroying their country and slaughtering a few million people? Was anyone prosecuted for war crimes? Nixon? Kissinger?
Never!