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Iraq Withdrawal? Don’t Take It to the Bank
Since coming to Washington, Barack Obama has won a Nobel Prize for Peace, but he hasn't been much of a peacemaker. Instead, he has doubled down on his predecessor's wars while launching blatantly illegal ones of his own. But, as his supporters would be quick to point out, at least he's standing by his pledge to bring the troops home from Iraq.
Right? 
That's certainly what America's latest war president has been saying. Speaking to supporters this month, he was unequivocal. “If somebody asks about the war [in Iraq] . . . you have a pretty simple answer, which is all our folks are going to be out of there by the end of the year.”
Obama's statement was a welcome reaffirmation of what he promised on the campaign trail. "If we have not gotten our troops out by the time I am President, it is the first thing I will do,” he thundered in the fall of 2007. “I will get our troops home. We will bring an end to this war. You can take that to the bank."
But don’t count on cashing that check.The Washington Post brings the unsurprising news that Iraqi leaders have agreed to begin talks with the U.S. on allowing the foreign military occupation of their country to continue beyond this year – re-branded, naturally, as a mission of “training” and “support.” The move comes after an increasingly public campaign by top White House and military officials to pressure Iraqi leaders into tearing up the Status of Forces Agreement they signed with the Bush administration, which mandates the removal of all foreign troops by the end of 2011.
As with any relationship, saying goodbye is always the hardest part for an empire. The U.S. political establishment has long desired a foothold in the Middle East from which it could exert influence over the trade of the region's natural resources. Remember, Iraq has lots of oil, as those who launched the invasion of the country in 2003 were all too aware. They aren't too keen on giving that up.
And as is to be expected when one maintains the most powerful – and expensive – military in world history, there are strong institutional pressures within the Pentagon for maintaining the status quo. Peace may be good for children and other living things, but it's boring for generals – especially politically ambitious ones – and bad for bomb manufacturers.
The longer U.S. troops stay in Iraq and ensure that country’s fidelity to U.S. policy, the more weapons the Iraqi government will buy from American companies. Indeed, Prime Minister Maliki just announced that Iraq would buy 38 F-16 fighters, taking billions of dollars away from food and shelter for poor Iraqis while boosting Lockheed Martin’s war chest. Add in the fact that Iraq is situated right next to Iran, the one oil-rich country in the region opposed to U.S. hegemony, and you've got a good recipe for indefinite occupation.
Of course, if Obama was as committed to withdrawing “all troops from Iraq” as he claims, all he would need to do is stick by the Bush-era agreement for troops to leave by December 31. Doing so would not only provide him cover from claims he is surrendering to the terrorists – hey, a Republican negotiated the deal – but it would fulfill a key campaign pledge and help soothe liberal anger over his escalation of Afghanistan and his illegal war in Libya.
Obama has no plans for a full withdrawal, though, as his hand-picked appointees make clear. You can almost hear him thinking: What are liberals going to do, vote Republican?
Echoing the top military brass, former Defense Secretary Robert Gates first noted earlier this year supposed Iraqi “interest in having a continuing presence” in Iraq. His successor, Leon Panetta, then told senators during his June confirmation hearing that he had “every confidence” the Iraqi government would ask for such a U.S. presence beyond 2011.
Like clockwork, Iraqi leaders are set to ask for just that, withThe Washington Post reporting that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his allies have decided any request to extend the U.S. occupation will “not require signing a new accord.” That means no messy parliamentary battles or referendums, where the popular anti-American sentiment would surface.
Ah, democracy.
The Obama administration is prepared to keep about 10,000 troops in Iraq, and their “non-combat” tasks could include training, air defense, intelligence, reconnaissance and joint counter-terrorism missions. These are the same sort of operations that have left at least 56 U.S. soldiers dead since Obama announced the end of U.S. combat operations last August.
One thing is certain: U.S. officials who once claimed to be bringing democracy to Iraq couldn't be more thrilled at the subversion of it. Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff, alluded to that in a comment remarking on the Iraqis' recent decision to open talks with the U.S. on an extended, rebranded occupation. “There are some very difficult political challenges, internal challenges associated with reaching this decision,” he noted, said “challenges” being the fact that the people the occupation is ostensibly being extended to protect don't actually want the “protection” the U.S. government is offering.
Mullen added that a final agreement must include “guarantees of legal immunity for American forces.” Obviously, we wouldn’t want any ungrateful Iraqis to prosecute U.S. soldiers if they kill civilians while engaging in “non-combat” duties.
Here at home, opinion polls have for years shown that two-thirds of Americans oppose the war in Iraq. Opposition to a continued presence has also been building in Congress, always the most lagging indicator. On July 22, Congresswoman Barbara Lee and 94 other representatives sent a letter to President Obama urging him to bring all U.S. troops and military contractors home by the end of this year and she is introducing a bill that would cut off funding.
As for the Iraqi opinion, anti-U.S. cleric and politician Moqtada al-Sadr put out a statement on August 3 saying that any foreign solider remaining in his country after 2011 would “be treated as an unjust invader and should be opposed with military resistance.” We'll mark him down as a “no thanks.” According to Al-Iraqiya TV, meanwhile, 2.5 million of al-Sadr's compatriots have signed a petition calling for U.S. troops to get out.
“We want them to leave, even before the end of this year,” Youseff Ahmad, a tribal sheik from the Iraqi town of Al Rufait, recently told one reporter. “They’ve destroyed us. They’ve only brought killing and disaster.” Ahmad spoke after having just witnessed U.S. troops' “training” and “support” mission in action, the consequence of which was “a shootout involving bullets, grenades and American Apache helicopters that left the tribal Sheik and two others dead, and several wounded, including two young girls.”
Even top members of the Iraqi government are saying no thanks, even if their more powerful colleagues are toeing the U.S. line. On Sunday, Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi said that a continued American military presence in Iraq would be "a problem, not a solution,” adding that training could be done by other countries at a cheaper price.
American officials acknowledge that al-Hashemi is speaking for the bulk of his fellow countrymen, with U.S. diplomats tellingThe New York Times that their own polling shows a “majority of Iraqis have a negative view of the American role in Iraq.”
No wonder Nouri al-Maliki and his thuggish cronies, fearful their power to torture and suppress political opponents will evaporate without U.S. support, aren't willing to let average Iraqis have a say in their country’s future. The question is: will Americans, who support a complete withdrawal and want to bring the war dollars home, ever get a say in the future of their country? Tell President Obama to stick to his promises and bring the troops home.
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41 Comments so far
Show AllJill, I couldn't agree more. This ridiculous idea that Obama will do what the people want if we just let him know persists through more articles on this and other progressive sites than I can stand.
But the taking-to-the-streets solution seems pretty hopeless as well at this point. I don't think we have a lot of leverage. Most people believe what they hear in the media, and even here on CD, that's a good measure of nonsense. Those who would take to the streets have become effectively marginalized and would be treated accordingly--by the majority of the people themselves.
Bruce E. Levine does a pretty good job of explaining the job this society's done to the citizenry's minds, beginning with learned helplessness.
Jill & Elizabeath H
I want you both to know how much I LOVE your comments on these CD threads. For quite awhile....
Mahalo, Wade R
The vast Amerikan Mega-Citadel complex euphemistically branded an "embassy" in Iraq crossed my mind too, Jill.
It's a garrison for military forces of occupation, no matter what deceitful and disingenuous nomenclature its patrons and sponsors apply to it.
Like the hundreds of other Amerikan military towns implanted on foreign soil, it's a Going Concern that isn't about to be shut down, abandoned, or donated to the locals to allow the present tenants and occupiers to pack up and return to the U.S.
As this article reports, over the months there has been a constant drumbeat of events and reports suggesting that the supposedly hard and fast deadlines embedded in the Bush maladministration's SOFA agreement will be modified, amended, or superseded to extend the Amerikan Imperial presence in Iraq.
I agree that it is foolish and futile to expect that petitioning Obama to Do the Right Thing will influence him or his minions and allies in any way.
Those who still have faith in the traditional civic responsibilty or duty to petition the government and its leaders to pursue right and proper courses of action must do as their consciences dictate, of course.
It will be interesting, at least, to see when and whether many of those regularly published at CD, including Medea, will ultimately renounce or support Obama's occupying another term on the Oval Office Throne.
You have touched on a significant issue. It is standard custom that the guest country must negotiate with the host country whether any military "protection" of the guest's embassy is needed and if it is needed how many U.S. marines in this case will be allowed to "protect" the U.S. embassy. To the best of my knowledge, if such negotiations have been going on they have been behind closed doors. In this case too it will be Petraeus who calls the shots and not Hillary Clinton.
The US will not leave Iraq until the PSAs are signed on their resources and the multinational corporations granted those Profit Sharing Agreements meet the outlines of the financial world and are insured from all liability. Simple as that folks.
In the meantime the citizens of the nations that made up the "coalition of the willing" will foot the bill for their reconstruction. Not a very good deal for most of us. But then again it's just "business" as usual.
I for one am hoping the Iraqis hold out for the best deal possible. They deserve it their country never attacked ours.
No, it's not about profits. We won't be able to leave until AIPAC tells us to leave - and that will be when we are bled dry. The only path to extricate ourselves from this nightmare is to join the world in dissolving Israel, repelling the invaders, and forcing Zionists to pay reparations for the disaster they have inflicted.
Medea: Are you really still that naive? " Tell President Obama to stick to his promises and bring the troops home ". Enough said!
Not naive. A disengenuous shill.
to call her a shill is not only patently absurd but proves that idiots can post comments (with all due respect)
cruz
Are U New? Please get real this article is pap.....
"A shill, plant or stooge is a person who helps a person or organization without disclosing that he or she has a close relationship with that person or organization. Shill typically refers to someone who purposely gives onlookers the impression that he or she is an enthusiastic independent customer of a seller (or marketer of ideas) that he or she is secretly working for. The person or group that hires the shill is using crowd psychology, to encourage other onlookers or audience members to purchase the goods or services (or accept the ideas being marketed). Shills are often employed by confidence artists. Plant and stooge more commonly refer to any person who is secretly in league with another person or organization while pretending to be neutral or actually a part of the organization he or she is planted in, such as a magician's audience, a political party, or an intelligence organization (see double agent)."
definition from wiki
US military will stay in Iraq until Iraq invites the US military to stay in Iraq and then the US military will stay in Iraq because Iraq has asked the US military to stay in Iraq.
Obama will do nothing except what he is ordered to do by his fascist oligarchy owners, just like every other POS POTUS.
The neocons who are in control of this administration's foreign policy have never had any intention of quitting Iraq. Panetta has made it very clear that the administration prefers cuts to social security and medicare to serious cuts to the pentagon's budget. Obama has proven to be worse than Bush and yet the democratic party has been mostly silent on the subject.
Panetta is not the man in charge and neither is Obama. Both are public bit players. The man really in charge is Petraeus. He intimately knows all the major military players in Iraq. Panetta does not know them and neither does Obama which is exactly why Petraeus was appointed Director CIA. I believe that Petraeus has not made a single public pronouncement on Iraq even though the CIA is up to its neck there. He does not have to make public statements. He knows how to make secret commands within the Obama administration and make underlings obey his commands...or out.
It's Obama's own fault for bringing Petraeus on board. He promised everybody the moon just to get himself elected to the White House, and he doesn't intend to keep a single one of those promises he made. Don't kid yourself into thinking otherwise, and don't hold your breath.
It's NOT about OIL. If was about Oil, then we would have invaded Venezuela after the failed coup on Chavez.
Chomsky pointed out that in fact, foreign oil companies ended up with greater access to Iraqi oil than domestic ones did. What is painfully obvious is that now our long-term access to oil is more precarious than ever. All this talk about oil is simply Zionistic talking points.
No, that's not when we will leave Iraq. We will leave when we join the world in de-countrifying Israel, repelling the invaders, and forcing Zionists to pay reparations world-wide.
"If was about Oil, then we would have invaded Venezuela after the failed coup on Chavez."
That statement betrays a complete ignorance of the situation in venezuela. the us masterminded the failed coup attempt. invading (militarily) was never an option. venezuela has an army that can actually fight back and inflict significant casualties. the united states is a bully and only attacks countries that are weak, impoverished and vulnerable. and of course it's about OIL, as has been admitted by various US officials.
"foreign oil companies ended up with greater access to Iraqi oil than domestic ones did."
hello!?! that is thanks to the puppet regime installed post-invasion.
"The move comes after an increasingly public campaign by top White House and military officials to pressure Iraqi leaders into tearing up the Status of Forces Agreement they signed with the Bush administration..." Wrong. The objective of the White House is not to tear up SOFA-Iraq but to negotiate a new one starting on January 1, 2012. Iraqi leaders and the Iraqi military probably want that but the big bugaboo is the Iraqi parliament whose approval is required by Iraq law and which appears to be opposed to accepting a replacement of SOFA-Iraq. That rules out a quiet behind-the-doors deal which allows U.S. forces to remain in Iraq announced a few days before the December 31 deadline because parliaments, especially with the party of Al Sadr in the diver's seat are notoriously leaky. What will actually happen is anybody's guess. My take is that the Obama administration will totally ignore the Iraqi parliament, stay, and proclaim "come and get us". Needless to say that that will be a colossal blunder.
Roman Emperor Hadrian gave up Iraq in 117. Empires can walk away. Perhaps we should start a movement of flooding the White House with biographies of Hadrian?
He also had an eventually useless wall built in Northern England. Bush tried that in Baghdad and failed too.
"The Obama administration is prepared to keep about 10,000 troops in Iraq, and their “non-combat” tasks could include training, air defense, intelligence, reconnaissance and joint counter-terrorism missions". Keeping these in Iraq without a new agreement will be a violation of SOFA-Iraq which does not demand "combat" soldiers out but allows "non-combat soldiers" to remain in. All United States Military Forces and their civilian associates must be out, no exceptions in SOFA-Iraq. The Iraqis have a much longer experience at negotiating and haggling than Bush and Obama combined and will not fall for such tricks ever.
It is precisely the illegal joint counter-terrorism missions carried out without Iraqi pre-approval that have riled he Iraqi parliament. Any new SOFA-Iraq agreement, if there be one, will drop the "joint". Now, that you can take to the bank.
Oh, I should add that I know O won't change his mind. But it would be good political theater if thousands of books were delivered.
5,000 additional private mercenaries are about to be employed to protect the $500 Million "Green Zone" U.S. embassy.
We will leave Iraq when we go to the store, to work, to visit family and friends, when we can eat, cook, heat our homes, put clothes on our backs, wipe our butts, and on and on and on, without the support of fossil fuels. The world is hopelessly, helplessly, addicted to oil and coal. It appears likely we will continue shooting up until we overdose. In the profound words of Pogo possum,"We found the enemy, and he is us."
The writers suggest Obama may be thinking: "What are liberals going to do, vote Republican?" My answer is a resounding YES. Obama is a closet Republican with no effective opposition from the Democrats. A true Republican president would probably encounter serious resistance from the opposition party and, consequently, be able to do far less damage than Obama could. It's time for the s.o.b. to be kicked out on his ass, not only because he is a terrible leader but as a signal to the Democrats that they either represent their constituency or they are gone.
Regardless of who people vote for, democratic or republican , even green, they will still be voting capitalist.
Morticia
Short & Sweet! Thanks!
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Like many people, I used to think getting a Nobel Peace Prize meant something.
FREE AMERICA
REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY
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The Prize was always questionable. Nobel made his fortune in the explosives industry. Almost every President since Teddy ( "carry a big stick" ) Roosevelt was nominated for it. Hitler was nominated in1939 (but quickly withdrawn). Stalin was nominated in1945. So Obama's nomination is consistent. When Kissinger was awarded the prize (on the heels of the most vicious bombing and chemical attacks on a people in history ), they also awarded it to Le Duc Tho, the Vietnamese negotiator at the Paris Peace talks. He refused it, the only one to do so, yet another exemplary act of the heroic Vietnamese people.
*******
"What are liberals going to do, vote Republican?"
FREE AMERICA
REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY
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Once more my hero Medea Benjamin has hit the nail on the head. America will never leave Iraq. We have a huge, fortress of a building called an Embassy that we spend millions building, the only of its kind, and America is also planning on building one in Afghanistan. Once American boots hit the ground they never leave.
The sad part about this entire thing is that the invasion of Iraq was based on a lie, it was illegal and it was wrong, and if real justice did prevail Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Powell and Rice would be doing jail time. When I think of the thousands of soldiers who died for a lie and the thousands of innocent civilians in Iraq who also died for a lie.
I am not holding my breath, this warmongering atmosphere in this country is shameful, and those who think the Republicans don't like war are even more stupid than I thought. Get it straight, America is staying in Iraq and in Afghanistan, and she will continue to bomb Yemen, destabilizing Pakistan, Syria and Iran and encouraging NATO to bomb Libya.
This is not a Democratic or Republican thing, no matter who you put in the White house, the War Machine and Big Oil makes all the decisions, This is just America, flexing her muscles and showing the world how powerful she is. Narcissism at its worst..