“S” is for Surge and Synergy! By Maher Osseiran
... The Kurdish territory would become
the American permanent base in the Middle East and would replace or augment
Israel.
“S” is for Surge and
Synergy!Between Democrats, Republicans, and
Israel…By Maher Osseiran, April 11,
2007.Surge as a word has become
synonymous with Bush and Baghdad but that does not mean the democrats are
against it.If we follow the logic of the
Bush surge, the milestones, the benchmarks, etc…, it all results in a
timeline that indicates that Bush would have withdrawn or redeployed the troops
from Iraq sometimes in 2008, and in order to protect his legacy, he would have
achieved or is hoping to achieve something positive and lasting; could it be the
single item left from his Iraq agenda,
federalism?If we now look at the
war-funding bill passed by the democrats, Feingold’s latest –
maneuver - excluded, we see a similar timeline; a total redeployment by early
2008. Could both visions be the same
with minor differences in execution?The
answer is yes since all administrations that preceded George W. Bush were active
contributors to the goal of “regime change in Iraq”; all
administration since the end of the First Gulf
War.At the end of that war, Bush Sr.
decided not to go after Saddam because of one simple reason; there was no
substitute for Saddam that would maintain intact the critical balance in that
part of the world. This fact should be clear to most who have followed four
years of news from Iraq.If there were a
substitute, Bush Sr. would have been in Baghdad in 2 weeks; he certainly had the
manpower in place.There were two
possible but not viable substitutes at the time, the Kurds and the Shiites. The
Kurds were fragmented and plagues with infighting. The Shiites in the south got
their signals crossed, rushed to stage an uprising, only to be abandoned to die
by the tens of thousands by an American administration fearing at the last
minute that those Shiites would become an extension of Iran. That was right
after the First Gulf War.Bush Sr.
decided to keep Saddam on a short leash through the UN sanctions, later
zealously enforced by Clinton and Blair, while cultivating a substitute. Clinton
contributed, through the efforts of Secretary of State, Albright, by bringing
the Kurds together through power sharing and co-operation agreements. Clinton
nurtured the Kurds as the substitute and the new
ally.By the time Bush Jr. got in the
White House, all was in place for “regime change in Iraq”; Iraq was
actually his first choice in retaliation to 9/11. An invasion of Iraq could not
be justified at the time, but the minute Saddam attempted to remove the
sanctions, he sealed his fate. Regardless of who was in the White House, an
invasion of Iraq would have become inevitable, i.e. a war of
aggression.That explains why we do not
see much discernable difference between the positions of the leaderships of the
democrats and republicans. The strategic goal is the same and both sides are in
agreement to buy time until early
2008.What is so magical about early
2008? Because in late 2007, the issue of federalism in Iraq will be back on the
table and it is important till then that a semblance of a functioning democracy
in Iraq be preserved; that is why the surge is focused on the seat of
government, Baghdad.Without a
functioning democracy, the United States cannot wrestle the legal cover the
Kurds need. Federalism would legitimize an independent or semi-independent
status worthy of direct U.S. protection and military involvement.
The Kurdish territory would become the
American permanent base in the Middle East and would replace or augment
Israel.Israel has been overused by the
U.S. and has lost its luster as the most important destabilizing and
anti-democracy factor in that region; democracy was never important to the U.S.,
instability was key. Not that Israel is an innocent by-stander, over the years,
a synergy developed and Israel is just as guilty; we should keep in mind that
Israel has a significant presence in the Kurdish region and actively involved in
training Kurdish forces while AIPAC, Israel’s arm in Washington, is
successfully lobbying for more wars.The
Kurdish territory will have the same narrative as Israel. This narrative would
be spoon-fed to a naïve American electorate; it will be called Kurdistan,
described as a nation that has been wronged throughout history and most recently
subjected to the genocidal policies of Saddam, a nation liberated by a
benevolent U.S., and endowed with the aura of a constitutional
democracy.Such a utopian vision by both
leaderships in the democratic and republican parties totally ignores that the
Iraqis have a vote in this matter.It is
the ability of the Iraqis to read this plan to the most minute of details since
the early days of the occupation that helped them undermine it. By today, Bush
Jr. was only supposed to have 5,000 troops left in Iraq; instead, the Iraqis
forced him to maintain unsustainable troop levels for four years and forced the
recent surge.The leader of this Iraqi
vote is Moqtada Al-Sadr who, after a few missteps early on, has not made a
single mistake and was always two steps ahead of
Jr.Jr. tried to force Moqtada’s
hand and failed. Moqtada was taunted many times within Iraq in attempts to draw
him into a confrontation; he did not bite. Israel attacked Hizballah in Lebanon,
with the public blessing and support of the U.S., in order to force Moqtada to
come to their aid; Hizballah stood their ground and undermined Jr.’s
wishes.Even an attack on Iran, which
most experts agree is dangerous and would not contain Iran’s nuclear
ambitions; such an attack would take place only to force a confrontation within
Iraq.Moqtada’s recent call to the
Iraqi army to stop helping the U.S. and for the Iraqi people to work together in
opposing the occupation, even if heard by a small percentage of Iraqi troops,
would be enough to negate the surge.It
is amazing that those who oppose U.S. policy in the Middle East can effectively
undermine it with words and demonstrations, both tools of democracy, while the
U.S. can only push its policy through the muzzle of a
gun.When Jr. first uttered the word
democracy as the main theme of his Iraq policy, I said: “the Iraq war
would not be hailed as the war that brought democracy to Iraq; it would be
hailed as the war that brought democracy back to the US via
Iraq”.As a longtime supporter of
Kurdish rights, I am appalled at how their leadership accepted the role of the
new pariah in the Middle East; the new Israel, and an uncertain future for their
people.The only way the Kurds and the
rest of Iraqis can avoid future bloodshed and change their path toward
prosperity is by scrapping all what the U.S. has done to them and to espouse a
reconciliation effort modeled after than of South
Africa.Reference
Articles:Anatomy
of a Civil War; a Lebanese Perspective on Iraq…Global Research, June 15,
2005.
The
War on Iraq: a Historic Middle East Perspective...Global Research, August 30,
2005.
The Negotiated
Exit Strategy from Iraq; at What Cost?…Media Monitors Network, December
15, 2005. Alternate
Website
Posted: Wed - April 11, 2007 at 01:53 PM
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Published On: Nov 04, 2007 08:45 AM
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