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Now That the Al-Sadr Cease Fire Is in Peril, What's Next for Iraq?

Posted by Attaturk, Firedoglake at 9:10 AM on March 26, 2008.


Ah, the latest battles in the never-ending nightmare that is Iraq. The only question ever being, slow disaster or fast disaster?

Ah, the latest battles in the never-ending nightmare that is Iraq. The only question ever being, slow disaster or fast disaster?

As we see how this will play out, let me speculate based not on my extensive knowledge of religion, culture, foreign language or history. For I claim expertise over none of these things. But, like most of you, I've lived under seven years, nine weeks and two days of the the George W. Bush Administration and how it spins everything in Iraq. So let me predict the following:

1. Maliki will strut about like Bush on a caffeine bender. An Iraqi general here and there will be fired, as will random police officials.

2. Al Sadr will be as inscrutable as ever, hinting at belligerence while simultaneously extending olive branches (may not be a prediction as it is already happening).

3. Many more will die than initially reported. Not all that many will be from the Mahdi Army -- and those that do will be replaced easily and then some.

4. The Bush Administration will cheer anything that looks like shooting or blowing crap up. Chuckles Krauthammer will cry tears of joy and write it is time to bomb Iran.

5. There will be loud initial claims of victory by the Iraqi government and louder ones by Bush. These proclamations will at least last long enough to take us past the next round of Petraeus' testimony before Congress. After all, any one who dares question our impending awesomest victory over the evilizers ever is a two bit America-hatin',YouTube snippet preachin', hater!

6. Look for Glenn Reynolds to be admitted into Betty Ford after overdosing on too many "hehs" and "indeeds".

7. All the "wise geniuses" who started this mess will toss out compliments on how the Iraqi Army performed and it's all downhill from here as long as we keep 150,000 soldiers in Iraq forever. Look for various Kagans to be strategically deployed at the shows with the best caterering. Look for Michael O'Hanlon to demand a Lombardi Trophy.

8. All politicians will forced by Wolf Blitzer's control-top beard to concede that surely by now the Surge worked and cured everything from Iraq to tooth decay and the issue must be ceded to the all-knowning, John "Kiss the Chef" McCain and his extensive foreign policy experience centered around blowing stuff up.

9. Then within two weeks after the initial headlines and talking points we will find out that all the declarations of victory and chest-thumping were false and the reality far worse than we could have imagined, er, "could have anticipated." No one who matters in the media's eyes will care. Especially Howard Kurtz.

10. Nothing will change, except deaths will accelerate slightly.

Digg!

Attaturk is a regular blogger for FireDogLake


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The more things change the more they stay the same
Posted by: CJC on Mar 26, 2008 8:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The safest prediction is that more will die and more of those who die will be Iraqis than Americans. The war apologists will say that we have to stay until we win (what constitutes "winning" is NEVER specified) otherwise the Americans who have died will "have died in vain"(letters to the NYTimes, March 25 and 26, 2008), to say nothing of the tens of thousands of Americans who have had their lives ruined by devastating physical and mental injuries.

Meanwhile journalists in their statistical ignorance will assert that the most reliable number of Iraqi deaths so far is the approximately 90,000 estimated by the Iraq Body Count, when it is likely that the number is well over 200,000 (WHO) or 600,000 and counting (Johns Hopkins/Lancet), as though even the lowest estimate is not already horrendous.

The news media has slacked off in its reporting because the Iraq conflict has become "olds" rather than "news." Then the media justify their inattention by saying that the public has lost interest, forgetting the useful adage of the 1960's that "If you're not part of the solution you're part of the problem."

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the surge is working, goddamit
Posted by: KaptainSpiffy on Mar 26, 2008 11:38 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and you better damn-well believe it.

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» Oh, come on. Posted by: Aimleft
» tough audience Posted by: KaptainSpiffy
» RE: tough audience Posted by: Quannah
It is not just Iraq that has been Ruined
Posted by: ronheri on Mar 26, 2008 11:40 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America's honor, respect in the world, our economy, our military, and last but not least our soul. Ron Paul told us over and over again during the Republican debates, what we are doing to ourselves. Was anyone listening?

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We'll have to pay them more to stay out of trouble.
Posted by: rafey on Mar 26, 2008 1:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yeah. Those dern Al-Sadir-ists (or is it satirists?)... always gett'n themselves into trouble. Guess we're just not paying them enough and we'll have to give them another raise. After all, they are each being paid more by the Pentagon than are our soldiers ... and we know how little that is ! What is the definition of victory in Iraq, you ask? It is the govenment uniting and gaining control over their citizens. It is the incorporation of all those essentials that have not existed in Iraq since we destroyed their infrastructure (water, electricity, food and gas that isn't rationed, medicines, education and health care, buidings that don't collapse ... and constructed by real engineers at cost instead of Halliburtin at grossly inflated rates). Of course, their government is not and never will be able to achieve unity and I doubt that the Iraqis will be allowed to vote for a real government anytime soon.

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Obama "White Noise" Jams all Real New and Issues..
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on Mar 26, 2008 3:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's just just al-Sadr but also the 80,000 Sunnis who are complaining they have not been paid the $10 per day they were promised and who are beginning to go on strike in certain cities at this point but are planning a nation wide strike in their fight against al-Qaeda...

The Sunnis in Anbar province turning against al-Qaeda was a bigger factor in the reduction of violence than even the truce by al-Sadr and his Mahdi army though it's number are significant..

The Sunnis turning against al-Qaeda not only turned the guns on al-Qaeda but took 80,000 or there about guns off the American and Coalition forces..

The Surge was never as big a factor are were Mahdi Army truce and the Sunnis turning to fight al-Qaeda..

So this is or will get even worse and soon American casualties will once again begin to increase even now this is being under reported seriously as the news and MSM is using Obama the Obama obsession, pathology, hysteria affliction as "White Noise" to Jam all the real news and issues from the American people..

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Sadr has now called...
Posted by: Quannah on Mar 26, 2008 5:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
for a general strike in Iraq. Since the Maliki government has 15-20 thousand troops in Basra, it looks like the US has convinced them that a showdown is worthwhile.

Many estimates say the Mahdi Army and the Sadr-controlled militias far outnumber the Iraqi troops sent to Basra. This is going to be a terrible fight, I'm afraid.

I wonder if Bush has pressured PM Gordon Brown to commit British forces to help? I wonder how many US troops have been moved to Basra?

This smells like a set-up to me. I gotta bad feeling about this one. Perhaps the "Tonkin"-type justification needed to attack Iran?

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