U.S. No Troops -No Drones -No Bombs No Planes -No Mercenaries- No Materials To Iraq
CHICKENS
COMING HOME TO ROOST IN IRAQ
Tell
President Obama "Don't Try to Put Out the Fire in Iraq With
Gasoline!"
Have
they learned nothing? Please take action: Tell President Obama not to try putting out
the fire with gasoline – no U.S. military intervention in Iraq, invest in
diplomacy and international cooperation instead.
In the 1980’s the
US supported Saddam Hussein when he was using poison gas against
Iran and his own Kurdish population; in the 1990’s we starved Iraq with a
punishing embargo, while at the same time looking the other way when the regime
repressed uprisings by Kurds in the north and the mostly poor Shi’a majority in
the south; after the 2003 invasion US troops stood by while Iraq’s cultural
patrimony was looted and destroyed; we first installed a subservient regime
under a US pro-consul, then cultivated a Shi’a-dominated government after
elections boycotted by much of the Iraqi population; we looked the other way
when “our” Iraqi government and its supporters emptied Baghdad’s Sunni
neighborhoods under the noses of US occupying troops; then we allied with Sunni
tribal leaders to fight “al-Qaeda” but continued to look the other way when the
new Iraqi government oppressed and disenfranchised non-Shi’a Arabs; now we seem
to be trying to maneuver regime change in Baghdad to remove the same government we once
empowered..
There was no
“Al-Qaeda in Iraq” (or Syria) before
our invasion. And, it must be noted, funding for the religious fanatics comes
from “our” allies Turkey and the Gulf petro-monarchies – Saudi Arabia, Qatar,
Kuwait, and others -- along with US-allied Pakistan in the background. Just
like the “Freedom Fighters” in Afghanistan during the 1980’s, where Osama
bin-Laden came to prominence.
Amazingly, there
are now rising voices from our DC elites for US airstrikes against the Iraqi insurgents, to
send US military trainers for the Iraqi army or even to deploy US troops on the
ground. Very few seem to have learned the lesson that US intervention is the
cause of the present nightmare in Iraq, not the solution.
The catastrophic
outcomes of neo-colonial “divide and rule” have a lineage extending back
throughout the 20th century in the Middle East and beyond. Once it
was the British and French empire builders sowing chaos; now it is US
neo-conservative and neo-liberal “democracy promoters.” Same chickens,
different roost.
Black
Flags Over Mosul
An
army of Sunni fighters affiliated to al Qaida crossed the Syrian border into
Iraq on Tuesday, scattering defensive units from the Iraqi security forces,
capturing Iraq’s second biggest city of Mosul, and sending 500,000 civilians
fleeing for safety. The unexpected jihadi blitz has left President Barack
Obama’s Middle East policy in tatters and created a crisis of incalculable
magnitude. The administration will now be forced to focus its attention and
resources on this new flashpoint hoping that it can prevent the makeshift
militia from marching on Baghdad and toppling the regime of Nouri al Maliki.
Events on the ground are moving at breakneck speed as the extremists have
expanded their grip to Saddam’s birthplace in Tikrit and north to Baiji, home to
Iraq’s biggest refinery. The political thread that held Iraq together has
snapped pushing Iraq closer to a full-blown civil war.
More
OBAMA:
ALL OPTIONS OPEN ON IRAQ
US
President Barack Obama says his government is looking at "all options",
including military action, to help Iraq fight Islamist militants. But the White
House also insisted it had no intention of sending ground troops. The remarks
came after the cities of Mosul and Tikrit fell to Sunni Islamist insurgents
during a lightning advance.The US has begun moving defence contractors working
with the Iraqi military to safer areas. More
Congress
divided over US military action in Iraq
Several
Republicans urged military intervention following reports that Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki has called for US strikes by drones and manned aircraft. "There
is no scenario where we can stop the bleeding in Iraq without American air
power," Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., told reporters after a closed Armed
Services Committee briefing with Defense Department officials. House Foreign
Affairs Committee member and Iraq war veteran Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., has been
one of the most vocal proponents in the lower chamber. "We've got to get
involved with airstrikes, stiffening the spines of the Iraqis," Kinzinger told
Al-Monitor. "If Baghdad falls, it's really hard to imagine a Middle East that
looks like that." …House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., told reporters
at her weekly press conference that there is "no appetite in our country to be
engaged in any military activity in Iraq." "I don’t think this is our
responsibility," Pelosi said. More
MALIKI'S
MOST SOLEMN HOUR
Some
analysts said during the Second Gulf War that al Qaeda would be trading up from Afghanistan if it secured a base in Iraq. It
was a prescient thought, but perhaps premature: between 2007 and 2010, Iraqis by
and large rejected that fate for their country and dealt a body blow to the
foreign Sunni jihadists who entered the country. But then the Syrian Civil War
began... The most significant of these "new" groups has been the Islamic State
of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), which over the past year has spent as much time
fighting other Syrian rebels groups as the Syrian Arab Republic's forces. ISIS
was once aligned with al Qaeda's central command, but has since gone its own
way… Sunni grievances against the government are real and legion: job discrimination, undue prosecution of
activists, human rights violations by the police, welfare cuts that "punish" the
Sunnis for their collaborationist role in past dictatorships. Well before this
uprising, "the Sunnis [had] lost faith in the political process and the jihadists were
once again able to make inroads among them." More
The
Fall of Mosul and the False Promises of Modern History
The
fall of Mosul to the radical, extremist Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS)
is a set of historical indictments… Integrating Mosul into British Iraq, over
which London placed Faisal bin Hussein as imported king after the French
unceremoniously ushered him from Damascus, allowed the British to depend on the
old Ottoman Sunni elite, including former Ottoman officers trained in what is
now Turkey. This strategy marginalized the Shiite south, full of poor peasants
and small towns, which, if they gave the British trouble, were simply bombed by
the RAF. (Iraq under British rule was intensively aerially bombed for a decade
and RAF officers were so embarrassed by these proceedings that they worried
about the British public finding out.) To rule fractious Syria, the French
(1920-1943) appealed to religious minorities such as the Alawites and
Christians. More
* *
* *
No comments:
Post a Comment