Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
August 15, 2005
WB: The Great Race

Khalilzad: Talk faster, dammit!

The Great Race

Comments

A bit from the blogs:
Christopher Allbritton says the talking is important, Justin Alexander thinks it´s Guessing game, Juan Cole thinks the Irakis are in for at least some month of Shia dictatorship.
Raed calls the not-constitution another mistake of the Bush administration and Imad is right in pointing out that the most serious issue, the economic structure, is missing from the constitution drafts anyhow.

Posted by: b | Aug 15 2005 19:20 utc | 1

Slow down: Iraqi lawmakers agree to seek 10-day charter extension

The members, from the Sunni and Shi’ite communities, said the proposal would be put to the Iraqi parliament which was beginning a late-night meeting in Baghdad. As the meeting was getting underway, power briefly went out in parliament.

Posted by: b | Aug 15 2005 19:47 utc | 2

Nothing is going to put a capper on the insurgency like a hastily written, poorly understood constitution that kicks every relevant issue down the road and is completed solely as a sop for domestic American consumption and an excuse for us to bail before the ’06 midterms.
Yup, those pesky insurgents are just going to dry up and blow away in the face of such indomitable will.

Posted by: Jimmy Jazz | Aug 15 2005 22:00 utc | 3

US troops raiding a warehouse in the northern city of Mosul uncovered a suspected chemical weapons factory containing 1,500 gallons of chemicals believed destined for attacks on US and Iraqi forces and civilians, military officials said yesterday . . . Boylan said the suspected lab was new, dating from sometime after the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

If this is not a real outlier then it really is a race. Where there is one there are generally more. This “find” could have been the Kurds turning a card face-up for negotiating leverage down south. The Sunni’s (or Iranian Shia’s depending on your source) used gas on their villages once upon a time, and they probably haven’t forgotten.
Unlike Saigon, Baghdad is a LONG way from the sea.

Posted by: PeeDee | Aug 15 2005 23:50 utc | 4

Commentary No. 167,
Aug. 15, 2005
“The U.S. Has Lost the Iraq War”
by Immanuel Wallerstein
It’s over. For the U.S. to win the Iraq war requires three things: defeating the Iraqi resistance; establishing a stable government in Iraq that is friendly to the U.S.; maintaining the support of the American people while the first two are being none. None of these three seem any longer possible. First, the U.S. military itself no longer believes it can defeat the resistance. Secondly, the likelihood that the Iraqi politicians can agree on a constitution is almost nil, and therefore the likelihood of a minimally stable central government is almost nil. Thirdly, the U.S. public is turning against the war because it sees no “light at the end of the tunnel.”
As a result, the Bush regime is in an impossible position. It would like to withdraw in a dignified manner, asserting some semblance of victory. But, if it tries to do this, it will face ferocious anger and deception on the part of the war party at home. And if it does not, it will face ferocious anger on the part of the withdrawal party. It will end up satisfying neither, lose face precipitously, and be remembered in ignominy.
Let us see what is happening. This month, Gen. George Casey, the U.S. commanding general in Iraq, suggested that it may be possible to reduce U.S. troops in Iraq next year by 30,000, given improvements in the ability of the Iraqi government’s armed forces to handle the situation. Almost immediately, this position came under attack from the war party, and the Pentagon amended this statement to suggest that maybe this wouldn’t happen, since maybe the Iraqi forces were not yet ready to handle the situation, which is surely so. At the same time, stories appeared in the leading newspapers suggesting that the level of military sophistication of the insurgent forces has been growing steadily and remarkably. And the increased rate of killings of U.S. soldiers certainly bears this out.
In the debate on the Iraqi constitution, there are two major problems. One is the degree to which the constitution will institutionalize Islamic law. It is conceivable that, given enough time and trust, there could be a compromise on this issue that would more or less satisfy most sides. But the second issue is more intractable. The Kurds, who still really want an independent state, will not settle for less than a federal structure that will guarantee their autonomy, the maintenance of their militia, and control of Kirkuk as their capital and its oil resources as their booty. The Shiites are currently divided between those who feel like the Kurds and want a federal structure, and those who prefer a strong central government provided they can control it and its resources, and provided that it will have an Islamic flavor. And the Sunnis are desperate to maintain a united state, one in which they will minimally get their fair share, and certainly don’t want a state governed by Shia interpretations of Islam.
The U.S. has been trying to encourage some compromise, but it is hard to see what this might be. So, one of two possibilities are before us right now. The Iraqis paper over the differences in some way that will not last long. Or there is a more immediate breakdown in negotiations. Neither of these meets the needs of the U.S. Of course, there is one solution that might end the deadlock. The Iraqi politicians could join the resisters in a nationalist anti-American thrust, and thereby unite at least the non-Kurd part of the population. This development is not to be ruled out, and of course is a nightmare from the U.S. point of view.
But, for the Bush regime, the worst picture of all is on the home front. Approval rating of Bush for the conduct of the Iraqi war has gone down to 36 percent. The figures have been going steadily down for some time and should continue to do so. For poor George Bush is now faced with the vigil of Cindy Sheehan. She is a 48-year-old mother of a soldier who was killed in Iraq a year ago. Incensed by Bush’s statement that the U.S. soldiers died in a “noble cause,” she decided to go to Crawford, Texas, and ask to see the president so that he could explain to her for what “noble cause” her son died.
Of course, George W. Bush hasn’t had the courage to see her. He sent out emissaries. She said this wasn’t enough, that she wanted to see Bush personally. She has now said that she will maintain a vigil outside Bush’s home until either he sees her or she is arrested. At first, the press ignored her. But now, other mothers of soldiers in Iraq have come to join her. She is getting moral support from more and more people who had previously supported the war. And the national press now has turned her into a major celebrity, some comparing her to Rosa Parks, the Black lady whose refusal to move to the back of the bus in Atlanta a half-century ago was the spark that transformed the struggle for Black rights into a mainstream cause.
Bush won’t see her because he knows there is nothing that he can say to her. Seeing her is a losing proposition. But so is not seeing her. The pressure to withdraw from Iraq is now becoming mainstream. It is not because the U.S. public shares the view that the U.S. is an imperialist power in Iraq. It is because there seems to be no light at the end of the tunnel. Or rather there is a light, the light an acerbic Canadian cartoonist for the Calgary Sun drew recently. He shows a U.S. soldier in a dark tunnel approaching someone to whose body is attached an array of explosives. The light comes from the match he is holding to the wick that will cause them to explode. In the month following the attacks in London and the high level of U.S. deaths in Iraq, this is the light that the U.S. public is beginning to see. They want out. Bush is caught in an insoluble dilemma. The war is lost.
http://fbc.binghamton.edu/commentr.htm

Posted by: Greco | Aug 16 2005 0:43 utc | 5

WARNING!
Read this Times article: Inside Iran’s Secret War for Iraq. Well, it’s not exactly an article, it is a message from the Pentagon to the Iraqi Shia. But read it for yourself, especially the last paragraph:

Western diplomats say that so far, the ayatullahs appear to be acting defensively rather than offensively. An encouraging sign is that even Shi’ite beneficiaries of Tehran exhibit strains of Iraqi and Arab nationalism; and many have strong familial and tribal ties with the Sunnis. “We are sons of Iraq. The circumstances that forced me to leave did not change my identity,” says Badr leader al-Amri. He’s proud of his cooperation with the Revolutionary Guard to battle Saddam but says it extended only “to the limit of our interests.” An informed Western observer thinks that while those groups maintain a “shared world view” with Tehran, much as Brits and Americans share each other’s, they are now trying to balance their interests with those of their backers and are eager to wield power in Baghdad in their own right. “I think you’ll never break a lifelong relationship,” says the senior U.S. military officer, “but as time goes by, as they become politicians fighting local issues, they will change.”
That may be true. But Iran shows every sign of upping the ante in Iraq, which may ultimately force the U.S. to search out new allies in Iraq–including some of the same elements it has been trying to subdue for almost 2½ years–who can counter the mullahs’ encroachment. The Western diplomat acknowledges that Iran’s seemingly manageable activities could still escalate into a bigger crisis. “We’ve dealt with governments allied to our enemies many times in the past,” he says. “The rub, however, is, Could it affect [counterinsurgency efforts]? To that I say, ‘It hasn’t happened yet, but it could.'” The war in Iraq could get a whole lot messier if it does.

Posted by: Greco | Aug 16 2005 0:56 utc | 6

robert fisk
“he problem is that all these issues are played out not in Iraq but in the Alice-in-Wonderland world already described. This is a unique place in which Saddam’s trial is always being predicted to start in two months’ time – on at least four occasions this has happened – in which Iraqi reconstruction is always about to restart and in which insurgent strength is always weakening. In fact, Iraqi guerrillas are now striking at the Americans 70 times a day and so fearful are senior American officers of an increase in attacks that this has become their principle reason for trying to prevent the release of 87 further photographs and videotapes of the Abu Ghraib prison torture and abuses.”
znews

Posted by: remembereringgiap | Aug 16 2005 1:43 utc | 7

“Iran shows every sign of upping the ante in Iraq, which may ultimately force the U.S. to search out new allies in Iraq–including some of the same elements it has been trying to subdue for almost 2½ years–who can counter the mullahs’ encroachment.”
We have always been at war with Eastasia … Eurasia … whatever.

Posted by: Billmon | Aug 16 2005 2:33 utc | 8

This tells you all you ever need to know about the Gwot(Tm)
Infants have been stopped from boarding planes at airports throughout the U.S. because their names are the same as or similar to those of possible terrorists on the government’s “no-fly list.”
It sounds like a joke, but it’s not funny to parents who miss flights while scrambling to have babies’ passports and other documents faxed.
Ingrid Sanden’s 1-year-old daughter was stopped in Phoenix before boarding a flight home to Washington at Thanksgiving.
“I completely understand the war on terrorism, and I completely understand people wanting to be safe when they fly,” Sanden said. “But focusing the target a little bit is probably a better use of resources.”

Posted by: Uncle $cam | Aug 16 2005 5:12 utc | 9

Dream On Dinar
Yup, “with a 2006 mid-term election bent,” is what it’s all about,
aided and abetted by a $47.4B growing Homeland Defense,
6,000(+) porkbarrel scams in $34.9B Highway Appropriations,
and a wide-open superglide National Energy Policy horizon,
of which $30B is downpayment on $T’s in tax- payer funded
private industry-managed infrastructure development.
http://appropriations.house.gov/_files/302b3.pdf
Compare to 2003, considering real GDP after price inflation,
USD devaluation, and financial institution and war spending
corrections. Especially interesting is page two state tax ROI:
http://www.calinst.org/pubs/BalCht03.pdf
All our tax money is kicking back to the Red States. Boing!
Deficit spending is soaring faster than real GDP is growing.
Now if RNC can pull out of Iraq with a mid-term splash next
April, quash any feature news articles that follow, deliver a
series of shuddering SCOTUS decisions bracketing R.v.W.,
and not explode the economy when the Saudi’s ease up on
gas prices to aid Republican re-election, GWB’s got it made!
A triumverate, something Hitler only achieved with gestapo!
“Our revels now are ended. These our actors,
As I foretold you, were all spirits, and
Are melted into air, into thin air:
And like the baseless fabric of this vision,
The cloud-capp’d tow’rs, the gorgeous palaces,
The solemn temples, the great glove itself,
Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve,
And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,
Leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff
As dreams are made on; and our little life
Is rounded with a sleep.”
–Shakespeare’s The Tempest Act 4, Scene 1, 148-158

Posted by: tante aime | Aug 16 2005 5:41 utc | 10