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Welcome to Call to Decision
Subject: Iraqi Parliament Members Ask U.S. to Leave; Bush's secret
Iraq plan
A body doesn't know whether to laugh or to cry. But the
present disastrous conditions, with the harbinger on the horizon of
even more terrible things to come, don't allow room for laughter.
This is indeed a major turning point for Iraq and for the U.S.
invader/warmaker. If the illegitimate warmakers imagine
themselves having a bad time fighting the resistors now, they haven't
seen anything yet---not by far. The conflict in Iraq will
be taken to multiple levels over the present horror. U.S. deceit
and any concoction of so-called Status of Forces agreement, every bit
conducted with all manner of double talk, will, without doubt, come
back very soon to haunt them. Many more U.S. troops will
die for no noble cause, as well as tens of thousands or millions more
long suffering Iraqis, for the hope of freedom from occupation and
from a life of tyranny and squalor in a broken land-- and from the
ravages of civil war.
By any measure, the U.S. military is blackmailing Iraq by holding
billions of its reserves at the infamous U.S. non Federal Reserve of
N.Y. The Iraqi government has no control over Iraq's funds!!!
That money center run by the world's most powerful criminal money
syndicate, that knows no bounds in lawless doings. In this
article, see one criminal example that screams of extortion, grand
theft and money laundering, by that venal syndicate. Evil
is their name, for they know no shame.
(Why should such a renegade institution care about Iraqis, when they
don't give a damn about Americans and, indeed, have robbed them into
bankruptcy, since their sorry founding and their
"lawful" imposition upon the nation by an equally criminal
Congress in 1913.)
To top off this satyr-like show of buffoons and stark raving insanity
, the U.S. military for its foolish part, and in its desperation, is
paying militias, bandits, and mercenaries, of various ethnic groups
and creeds, in the several provinces, to supposedly keep the peace,
since the Iraqi Army can't or won't--at the same time creating all the
conditions for a protracted and brutal civil war.
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The negotiations are being held before the UN mandate authorizing
the U.S. occupation expires at the end of the year. The Independent
of London (recently) reported the U.S. is leveraging tens of
billions of dollars in seized Iraqi assets to push through its
demands.
Date: Thu, 26 Jun 2008 19:51:19 -0000
Subject: [wvns] Iraqi Parliament Members Ask U.S. to Leave
Reply-To: wvns-owner@yahoogroups.com
Veteran reporter Patrick Cockburn broke the story of Bush's secret
Iraq plan. He explains its terrible implications for Iraqi
sovereignty.
Iraq: Status of Forces Agreement
Is Iraq Independent or "a Client State of the US"
By Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article20102.htm
16/06/08 "Democracy Now!" -- -Veteran reporter Patrick
Cockburn broke the story of Bush's secret Iraq plan. He explains its
terrible implications for Iraqi sovereignty to Juan Gonzales:
Following outcry by Iraqi lawmakers, the Bush administration is now
offering limited concessions in its demands for a long-term
"status of forces" agreement between Iraq and the United
States.
The deal sought by the Bush administration, details of which were
leaked to the press, were seen as a way of extending the U.S.
occupation of Iraq indefinitely. The demands included maintaining 58
permanent military bases in Iraq, immunity for American troops and
contractors, a free hand to conduct military operations without
Iraqi approval, and control of Iraqi airspace. According to the
London Independent, the U.S. is now lowering the number of bases it
wants from 58 to "the low dozens" and says it is willing
to compromise on legal immunity for foreign contractors.
The negotiations are being held before the UN mandate authorizing
the U.S. occupation expires at the end of the year. The Independent
of London (recently) reported the U.S. is leveraging tens of
billions of dollars in seized Iraqi assets to push through its
demands.
Amy Goodman: British journalist Patrick Cockburn broke this
story. He is the Middle East correspondent for the London
Independent and has
reported from Iraq for many years now. He is the author of several
books, including The Occupation: War and Resistance in Iraq. His
latest is called Muqtada: Muqtada al-Sadr, the Shia Revival and the
Struggle for Iraq. Patrick Cockburn joins us now from Washington,
D.C.
Welcome to this country, Patrick.
Patrick Cockburn: Thank you very much.
Amy Goodman: Can you lay out for us exactly what the deal is
and how you uncovered it?
Patrick Cockburn: Well, this is an extraordinary, important
development in Iraq. It really will determine whether Iraq is an
independent country or not. Or will it be a client state of the
U.S.? As you reported, the U.S. negotiators were demanding
initially 58 bases. They're not calling them permanent bases, though
that's exactly what they are. The bases might have, let's say, an
Iraqi soldier outside and a single strand of barbed wire, in which
case the Iraqis
will supposedly be in charge of their defense, so it won't be an
American base. But everybody knows that it is.
Then there's the question of immunity for American soldiers and
Iraqi contractors, i.e. they won't come under Iraqi law. And the
U.S. will also control airspace and have various other rights.
Now, although Ryan Crocker and President Bush are saying Iraq under
this new agreement will once again be a sovereign nation, most of
the rights we associate with a sovereign nation will be in the
possession of the U.S.
Juan Gonzalez: And in terms of the reaction in Iraq among the
various forces there, as news of this has begun to dribble out?
Patrick Cockburn: There's been an explosive reaction, because
this is a deeply divisive demand by the U.S. There will be some
Iraqis who will be willing to accept it, mainly maybe the Kurds.
There will be others in the government who will do it. But there
will be many other Iraqis, almost certainly a majority, who will see
this agreement as showing that the Iraqi government is a puppet of
the U.S. It will delegitimize it. It will lay the basis for a
further deepening of the war in Iraq. So it's an extraordinary --
you know, Iraq is full of spurious invented turning points, but this
really is a turning point
for Iraq.
Juan Gonzalez: Now, your article suggests that Prime Minister
al-Maliki himself is opposed to major parts of this proposal?
Patrick Cockburn: Yes, I mean, he's -- mostly can see the
downside for himself, that this is going to go down real badly with
a lot of Iraqis, including people in his own majority Shia community
and including people in the coalition of parties which make up his
own government. And one of the senior members of his own party was
saying the Americans have asked for immunity for everybody and
everything, apart from the dogs they bring to Iraq. So this is not
very good news for him.
But on the same time, he and his government feel at the end of the
day they depend on the U.S., and they're under very intense
personal pressure from President Bush and Dick Cheney's office,
according to Iraqi officials I've spoken to, and it will be
difficult for them to stop this happening. And they've been given a
deadline of the 31st of July.
Amy Goodman: Patrick Cockburn, how is the U.S. leveraging
billions of dollars to try to force through this agreement?
Patrick Cockburn: Well, the Iraqi reserves, the Iraqi money,
is in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The reason it's there is
historical and rather surprising. It dates from 1990, when Saddam
Hussein invaded Kuwait, and there are still really sanctions against
Iraq as a danger to the rest of the world. That money, about $50
billion, is in the bank. But there have been many court cases
brought against it. It's protected currently by a presidential
immunity. And what U.S. negotiators in Baghdad have been implying
to their Iraqi counterparts is that if they don't cut a deal on
American terms, then that presidential immunity might lapse at the
end of the year, and the Iraqis wouldn't be able to get their hands
on these massive reserves, which they need very badly.
Amy Goodman: We're talking to Patrick Cockburn. He broke the
story of the U.S. proposal to Iraq that the U.S. is pushing through
right now, which includes more than 50 military bases. Now, can you
explain that? And also comment on John McCain, the once again
controversial comment he made about war. This time it was on NBC. He
was talking about -- when asked when he thinks U.S. troops
will return from Iraq, "That's not too important. What's
important is the casualties in Iraq. Americans are in South
Korea … Japan … in Germany. That's all fine." But
talk about that and these bases.
Patrick Cockburn: You know, I've been going to Iraq since
1977. I spend much of my time there. I think it's frankly a fantasy
world, because Iraq -- most Iraqis don't like the occupation.
There's nothing surprising about this. Most -- few countries do. So
long as there is a U.S. army there, there's going to be resistance
to it. And this current agreement will probably increase the level
of violence. Now, the number of American soldiers being killed has
dropped from maybe three a day to one a day, but it could go right
up again at any moment.
I think Senator McCain's idea that somehow with the end of the road,
with a pacified Iraq, where you can have a United States Army
sitting there, wholly accepted by the local population, and that
there will be no armed attacks on it is a complete
misunderstanding of the situation, you know, and it's part and
parcel of what he's been saying for a year, that the situation in
Baghdad is better than has been reported. I mean, honestly, I wish
it was. I wish I could go out and report this, but -- and he has the
advantage -- but he's wrong. And it's so dangerous. It's still very
difficult for reporters to really
get around Baghdad and stay in one piece.
Juan Gonzalez: Patrick Cockburn, I'd like to ask you, in our
headlines we mentioned this new attempt by the U.S. military in Iraq
to begin utilizing or turning over areas now to Shiite militias, as
well, to patrol, similar to what they were doing with the Sunnis in
Anbar and other areas. Your response to this increasing reliance on
not even the Iraqi military, but on militias by the U.S. military to
basically pacify areas of Iraq?
Patrick Cockburn: Yeah. This is based on what happened in
Anbar province, this enormous province west of Baghdad, about
eighteen months ago, when there was a reaction among the Sunni
tribes against al-Qaeda in Iraq. The U.S. Army has been trying to
replicate that in other parts of Iraq, mostly in Sunni areas, and
they've been trying to now in Shia areas. A lot of this is hiring --
getting local guns for hire and paying them. But first of all, these
people are often -- outside Anbar, are sometimes local
bandits. They may have some loyalty to their employers, the U.S.
government, but they certainly don't have any loyalty to the Iraqi
government.
I think that by doing it in Shia areas, this is going to create
local civil wars. Most of these people don't have -- in Shia areas,
don't really have much support. I mean, there's a desperation for
jobs, a desperation for salaries. You can always hire a man with a
gun in Baghdad. But I think this is very divisive and will lead to
fighting, lots of killing, if they try and introduce this in places
like Sadr City, where Muqtada al-Sadr's followers, the Mahdi Army,
has mass support. There are -- a lot of dead bodies are going to
start turning up in the side streets.
Amy Goodman: Patrick Cockburn, if this is pushed through
before this president leaves office, how does it bind a future
president? And what is your assessment of what these presidential
candidates in the United States are suggesting for the end of war in
Iraq?
Patrick Cockburn: Well, you know, they're describing it as a
security agreement and saying, well, we have such agreements with 80
countries. But, I mean, this is frankly baloney. I mean, the
other countries do not have an American army present which is under
continual armed attack. It's a very different type of agreement. And
of course the reason they're saying this is that they don't want to
submit it to Congress, and they also don't want to submit it to a
referendum in Iraq. In both cases, it might go down.
I think that the candidates -- I mean, what strikes me, being in
Washington, is the degree to which America is absorbed in the
presidential election, and Iraq has been far too much on the margins
of the news, as if nothing new was developing there or the situation
might be bad but it's not getting much worse, while these
enormously important developments are taking place, which are laying
the basis for future violence, for future wars, not exactly going
through on the nod, but they're being smuggled through. Their
significance is being downplayed by the U.S. ambassador in Baghdad,
by the administration here in Washington. And this is taking place
while the whole focus is on the presidential election here.
Juan Gonzalez: And how essential is this security agreement
for a possible extension of the United Nations mandate in Iraq?
Patrick Cockburn: Well, they could extend it six months. They
could extend it longer. I mean, the United Nations could certainly
do this. I don't think there's an enormous problem there,
though it leaves lots of issues hanging in the air. In some ways,
bringing up this over the last -- initially, there was a lack of
attention in Iraq to what was happening. Now there's an explosive
reaction as details leak out about this agreement. So, there are
more Iraqis, including in the government party, saying on the
record, "Well, maybe we don't need the Americans at all if our
sovereignty is going to be so compromised."
Amy Goodman: Patrick, could you explain this refusal to lift
the UN designation of Iraq as a threat to international security,
which started with Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, even though Saddam
Hussein has been executed, that makes it easier for claims against
Iraq, like particularly from corporations?
Patrick Cockburn: Yeah. I mean, there are these series of
measures against Iraq which were originally, you know, were enforced
in 1990, when Saddam invaded Kuwait, but these have all remained
pressures on Iraq over the years. This diminished formal sovereignty
has made them vulnerable to legal charges, means they don't quite
have control over their own funds.
For instance, last year -- I mean, theoretically these funds are all
controlled by Iraq. But last year, the senior Iraqi financial
officials told me that they wanted -- all these funds are
denominated in dollars. The dollar was sinking. The Iraqi finance
minister in Central Bank thought, right, we wanted to denominate
these. We don't want to take the money out of New York. We want to
denominate some of it in other currencies, in Euros, in gold, in
whatever else, which won't lose its value. And the U.S. Treasury
said, no, we don't want that, because that will make the dollar look
bad. So they couldn't do it. And they were telling me a month or so
ago they thought that this decision by the U.S. Treasury had cost
them $5 billion.
So, this is part of a pattern that you have the U.S. making formal
obeisance to Iraqi sovereignty, an independent nation, but in
practice having minute control over everything that the Iraqi
government does. Amy Goodman: Patrick Cockburn, we want to
thank you very much for being with us. His brand new book is called
Muqtada: Muqtada al-Sadr, the Shia Revival and the Struggle for
Iraq. Patrick Cockburn, just recently back from Iraq, has been
reporting on Iraq for decades.
===
Members of Iraqi Parliament Ask U.S. to Leave
Iraqi MPs speak out about occupation
Senior Iraqi MPs call for US troop withdrawal, saying US keeping
Iraqi
army dependent on US.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article20104.htm
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