US Using Iraqi Political Discord to Justify Continuance of Occupation
Dahr Jammail
On February 22, Gen. Ray Odierno, the top
There are approximately 96,000 US military personnel in
The
On February 22 alone, the same day General Odierno made his comments, at least 44 Iraqis and one
The attacks have drawn comparisons by Iraqi analysts to rampant attacks that occurred during the sectarian bloodshed that ravaged
On February 19, just days before Odierno made his comment about the possibility of ongoing violence slowing a
The elections have been seen as a pivotal point for the Obama administration, with the expectation that they would bring more political stability to
Instead, thus far, they are having the opposite effect, as General Mangum suggested might happen.
"Will there be sectarian strife after the election?" asked Mangum. "That's our biggest concern at this point."
Mangum, one of the senior military commanders in
Meanwhile,
Months of delays and growing calls for boycotts, along with actual boycotts of the election from candidates and groups recently banned from participating are fueling political discord that threatens to prevent any party from successfully forming a government in the wake of the elections.
One of Iraq's most prominent Sunni Parliamentarian's, Saleh al-Mutlaq of Iraq's National Dialogue Front, recently decided to pull his party out of the elections and boycott the vote, after being banned by the Accountability and Justice Committee for accusations of having affiliations with Iraq's dissolved Baath Party.
Mutlaq is protesting what he along with many Shia politicians call a "dirty tricks" campaign that he believes is masterminded by
Mutlaq's accusations gain credibility where Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is concerned.
The US government and corporate media prefer to focus on Iran's "meddling" in Iraq; yet, the key players responsible for most of the political discord in Iraq are US-installed and -backed men who have always had clear links to Tehran.
Maliki was an Iraqi in exile in
The Dawa party backed the Iranian Revolution, as well as backing Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini during the Iran-Iraq War. The group continues to receive financial support from
In April 2006, then US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice and her
Another US-backed Iraqi ex-patriot with ties to
Recently the
Chalabi played a major role in providing the Bush administration with information it wanted in order to justify invading
Along with Sunni leaders, his targets also include secular nationalists, and the two most important candidates who have been banned are leading members of cross-sectarian alliances, which raises fears that
Another leading Sunni political party, the Iraqi Islamic Party, blames the
"We in the Iraqi Islamic Party are surprised to read statements from the
"We ask: Who made Iraqi land an open theatre for regional and international interference? Who is legally and ethically responsible for the violations of
Threats and accusations are being hurled by the Iraqi government as well as the opposition.
On February 20, As-Sabah news reported that Maliki has claimed external money is being introduced to
On February 21, the Al-Jarida newspaper reported that Mutlaq gave this as a reason for his decision to boycott the elections: "Following the statements made yesterday by the commander of the American troops in Iraq, General Ray Odierno, and those of US Ambassador to Baghdad Christopher Hill, I believe that the Justice and Accountability Committee is run by foreign sides, namely Al-Quds force in Tehran. Therefore, the Dialogue Front has announced its boycotting of the elections."
The Quds Force is a special unit of
As a result of all of this, international observers of the upcoming elections in
On February 23, the Al-Arab newspaper carried an opinion piece by Fadel al-Rubaie. "Political observers are assuring that the post-elections stage will be much more dangerous than the current one (pre-elections) because the conflict will erupt between the different powers and on more than one front," wrote Rubaie before he went on to discuss much of the aforementioned political machinations between the candidates and parties.
For these reasons, as well as other volatile issues like Kurdish control of Kirkuk in the north and the issue of federalism in Iraq, Rubaie's conclusion is ominous: "For all those reasons, it would be delusional to say that the magical solution to Iraq's predicament resides in the elections, since quite the contrary, these elections could open the gates of hell."
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Feb. 26, 2010