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The Top Ten Myths About Iraq in 2007

Posted by Juan Cole, Informed Comment at 5:48 AM on December 27, 2007.


How many times have you heard the war won't matter in the 2008 election? Wrong!
r159769583213
Bush

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10. Myth: The US public no longer sees Iraq as a central issue in the 2008 presidential campaign.

In a recent ABC News/ Washington Post poll, Iraq and the economy were virtually tied among voters nationally, with nearly a quarter of voters in each case saying it was their number one issue. The economy had become more important to them than in previous months (in November only 14% said it was their most pressing concern), but Iraq still rivals it as an issue!

9. Myth: There have been steps toward religious and political reconciliation in Iraq in 2007. Fact: The government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has for the moment lost the support of the Sunni Arabs in parliament. The Sunnis in his cabinet have resigned. Even some Shiite parties have abandoned the government. Sunni Arabs, who are aware that under his government Sunnis have largely been ethnically cleansed from Baghdad, see al-Maliki as a sectarian politician uninterested in the welfare of Sunnis.

8. Myth: The US troop surge stopped the civil war that had been raging between Sunni Arabs and Shiites in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad.

Fact: The civil war in Baghdad escalated during the US troop escalation. Between January, 2007, and July, 2007, Baghdad went from 65% Shiite to 75% Shiite. UN polling among Iraqi refugees in Syria suggests that 78% are from Baghdad and that nearly a million refugees relocated to Syria from Iraq in 2007 alone. This data suggests that over 700,000 residents of Baghdad have fled this city of 6 million during the US 'surge,' or more than 10 percent of the capital's population. Among the primary effects of the 'surge' has been to turn Baghdad into an overwhelmingly Shiite city and to displace hundreds of thousands of Iraqis from the capital.

7. Myth: Iran was supplying explosively formed projectiles (a deadly form of roadside bomb) to Salafi Jihadi (radical Sunni) guerrilla groups in Iraq. Fact: Iran has not been proved to have sent weapons to any Iraqi guerrillas at all. It certainly would not send weapons to those who have a raging hostility toward Shiites. (Iran may have supplied war materiel to its client, the Supreme Islamic Council of Iraq (ISCI), which was then sold off from warehouses because of graft, going on the arms market and being bought by guerrillas and militiamen.

6. Myth: The US overthrow of the Baath regime and military occupation of Iraq has helped liberate Iraqi women. Fact: Iraqi women have suffered significant reversals of status, ability to circulate freely, and economic situation under the Bush administration.

5. Myth: Some progress has been made by the Iraqi government in meeting the "benchmarks" worked out with the Bush administration. Fact: in the words of Democratic Senator Carl Levin, "Those legislative benchmarks include approving a hydrocarbon law, approving a debaathification law, completing the work of a constitutional review committee, and holding provincial elections. Those commitments, made 1 1/2 years ago, which were to have been completed by January of 2007, have not yet been kept by the Iraqi political leaders despite the breathing space the surge has provided."

4. Myth: The Sunni Arab "Awakening Councils," who are on the US payroll, are reconciling with the Shiite government of PM Nuri al-Maliki even as they take on al-Qaeda remnants. Fact: In interviews with the Western press, Awakening Council tribesmen often speak of attacking the Shiites after they have polished off al-Qaeda. A major pollster working in Iraq observed,

' Most of the recent survey results he has seen about political reconciliation, Warshaw said, are "more about [Iraqis] reconciling with the United States within their own particular territory, like in Anbar. . . . But it doesn't say anything about how Sunni groups feel about Shiite groups in Baghdad." Warshaw added: "In Iraq, I just don't hear statements that come from any of the Sunni, Shiite or Kurdish groups that say 'We recognize that we need to share power with the others, that we can't truly dominate.' " ' '

The polling shows that "the Iraqi government has still made no significant progress toward its fundamental goal of national reconciliation."

3. Myth: The Iraqi north is relatively quiet and a site of economic growth. Fact: The subterranean battle among Kurds, Turkmen and Arabs for control of the oil-rich Kirkuk province makes the Iraqi north a political mine field. Kurdistan now also hosts the Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) guerrillas that sneak over the border and kill Turkish troops. The north is so unstable that the Iraqi north is now undergoing regular bombing raids from Turkey.

2. Myth: Iraq has been "calm" in fall of 2007 and the Iraqi public, despite some grumbling, is not eager for the US to depart. Fact: in the past 6 weeks, there have been an average of 600 attacks a month, or 20 a day, which has held steady since the beginning of November. About 600 civilians are being killed in direct political violence per month, but that number excludes deaths of soldiers and police. Across the board, Iraqis believe that their conflicts are mainly caused by the US military presence and they are eager for it to end.

1. Myth: The reduction in violence in Iraq is mostly because of the escalation in the number of US troops, or "surge."

Fact: Although violence has been reduced in Iraq, much of the reduction did not take place because of US troop activity. Guerrilla attacks in al-Anbar Province were reduced from 400 a week to 100 a week between July, 2006 and July, 2007. But there was no significant US troop escalation in al-Anbar. Likewise, attacks on British troops in Basra have declined precipitously since they were moved out to the airport away from population centers. But this change had nothing to do with US troops.

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Tagged as: bush, iraq, al-maliki, iraqi government

Juan Cole teaches Middle Eastern and South Asian history at the University of Michigan and is author of the forthcoming "Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East."


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MSM, are you listening???!!!
Posted by: rjgwood on Dec 27, 2007 8:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can't tell you the number of broadcasts that have r:epeated the lies about the "surge"

1. That it is even called a surge fits in with the administration's talking points. This is a return to previous troop levels.

2. There is NEVER a mention that the al Sadr army cease fire is the actual reason for the reduction in deaths.

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RE "Myths" aka lies
Posted by: CJC on Dec 27, 2007 11:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I heard a very knowledgeable consultant/expert/negotiator etc etc with long experience in the Middle East predict at a talk at Harvard last month that Iraq will fall apart completely in the next several months. Certainly a view more in line with Cole's myth-debunking than rosier scenarios peddled by many of the same folk who brought us the disaster in the first place.

Dahr Jamail posted an article today saying that the US-backed Iraqi government (one suspects the emphasis is on the "US" and not on the "Iraq") is proposing reducing as of June 2008 the food rationing system on which 10 million Iraqis have depended since 1991. With family incomes reported to be at about $1/day it's hard to imagine how Iraq will become more peaceful and stable.

The Bushies have been feeding us and themselves lies since Day 1. Cole is kind to just call some of the latest of these "myths."

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The violence has subsided in spite of the surge...
Posted by: jimidee on Dec 27, 2007 6:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
not because of it. The many deals for money and weapons that have been cut with the individual warlords, who then kick the outsiders out of their tribal lands, is why there is less violence. We simply morphed the objective once again. These tribal areas are hardly democratic, pro-women's rights, or anything but little dictatorships. This may mean that their is less violence for now, but someday, these warlords are going to start fighting each other for control of the oil revenues and land/resources.

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It's time to just get the hell out of
Posted by: thekidde on Jan 4, 2008 1:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Iraq. Armies of occupation NEVER win!! What is it about history and reality that many Americans and all of BushCo don't seem to get about this? Will they follow us home? Don't see any VC or NVA on my porch. Will they just book cruises and jump ashore? Please, the reason they hate us isn't because of our "freedoms", it's because they're religious fruitcakes who don't want "infidels" in their countries. Sorta like the religious fruitcakes we have in America who don't want
"non-believers" like me in their country.

Fuck 'em all, their gods and their goals and their "profit margins" and t.v. churches, mosques and synagogues. Eventually, perhaps humans will figure out that this ball of dirt and water is all we've got - forever - and that our children are our legacy when we die and rot or go up in smoke. Who dies with the most toys is - dead.

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What was the name of that PR firm?
Posted by: Patriot46 on Jan 5, 2008 8:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My memory is starting to wane a bit. But what was the name of that high powered PR firm in Washington D.C. that the Bush Administration hired to put a better spin on the illegal occupation of IRAQ?

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