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Iraq: A Small War Guaranteed to Damage a Superpower

By Patrick Cockburn, Tomdispatch.com. Posted May 11, 2007.


Iraq may have been a pushover in the invasion, but the price of occupation for America could exact a heavy toll on its empire.
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At 3 am on January 11, 2007 a fleet of American helicopters made a sudden swoop on the long-established Iranian liaison office in the city of Arbil in northern Iraq. Their mission was to capture two senior Iranian security officials, Mohammed Jafari, the deputy head of the Iranian National Security Council, and General Minojahar Frouzanda, the head of intelligence of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards. What made the American raid so extraordinary is that both men were in Iraq at the official invitation of the Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, who held talks with them at his lakeside headquarters at Dokan in eastern Kurdistan. The Iranians had then asked to see Massoud Barzani, the president of the Kurdistan Regional Government, in the Kurdish capital Arbil. There was nothing covert about the meeting which was featured on Kurdish television.

In the event the U.S. attack failed. It was only able to net five junior Iranian officials at the liaison office that had existed in Arbil for years, issuing travel documents, and which was being upgraded to a consular office by the Iraqi Foreign Ministry in Baghdad. The Kurdish leaders were understandably furious asking why, without a word to them, their close allies, the Americans, had tried to abduct two important foreign officials who were in Iraq at the request of the Iraqi president. Kurdish troops had almost opened fire on the American troops. At the very least, the raid showed a contempt for Iraqi sovereignty which the U.S. was supposedly defending. It was three months before officials in Washington admitted that they had tried and failed to capture Jafari and General Frouzanda. The U.S. State Department and Iraqi government argued for the release of the five officials as relative minnows, but Vice-President Cheney's office insisted fiercely that they should be held.

If Iran had undertaken a similar venture by, for example, trying to kidnap the deputy head of the CIA when he was on an official visit to Pakistan or Afghanistan, then Washington might have considered the attempt a reason for going to war. In the event, the US assault on Arbil attracted bemused attention inside and outside Iraq for only a few days before it was buried by news of the torrent of violence in the rest of Iraq. The U.S. understandably did not reveal the seniority of its real targets -- or that they had escaped.

Multiplying enemies

The Arbil raid is significant because it was the first visible sign of a string of highly significant American policy decisions announced by President George W. Bush in an address to the nation broadcast in the U.S. a few hours earlier on January 10. There have been so many spurious turning points in the war -- such as the capture of Saddam Hussein in 2003, the handover of sovereignty to an Iraqi government in 2004, or the elections of 2005 -- that truly critical moments are obscured or underrated.

The true importance of Bush's words took time to sink in. In the months prior to his speech, the U.S. seemed to be feeling its way towards an end to the war. The Republicans had lost control of both houses of Congress in the November 2006 elections, an unexpectedly heavy defeat blamed on the Iraq war. Soon afterwards, the bipartisan Iraqi Study Group of senior Republicans and Democrats, led by James Baker and Lee Hamilton, spelled out the extent of American failure thus far, arguing for a reduced U.S. military commitment and suggesting negotiations with Iran and Syria.

President Bush did the exact opposite of what the Baker-Hamilton report had proposed. He identified Iran and Syria as America's prime enemies in Iraq, stating: "These two regimes are allowing terrorists and insurgents to use their territory to move in and out of Iraq." Instead of reducing the American commitment, Bush pledged to send 20,000 extra troops to Iraq to try to secure Baghdad. In other words, the U.S. was going to respond to its lack of success in the conflict by escalating both the war in Iraq and America's confrontation with Iran in the Middle East as a whole. The invasion of 2003 had destabilized the whole region; now Bush was about to deepen that instability.

The raid on Arbil showed that the new policies were not just rhetoric. Iraqis were quicker than the rest of the world to pick up on what was happening. "People are saying that Bush's speech means that the occupation is going to go on a long time," the Iraqi political scientist Ghassan Attiyah told me soon after the President had stopped speaking. Although the new U.S. security plan for Baghdad, which began on February 14th, was sold as a temporary "surge" in troop numbers, it was evident that the reinforcements were there to stay.

In April, the Pentagon announced that it was increasing Army tours in Iraq from 12 to 15 months. Without anybody paying much attention, American officials stopped talking about training Iraqi army troops as a main priority. This was an important shift in emphasis. Training and equipping Iraqi troops to replace American soldiers -- so they could be withdrawn from Iraq -- had been the cornerstone of U.S. military planning since 2005. Now, the policy was being quietly downgraded, though not abandoned altogether.


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Patrick Cockburn has reported for decades on the Middle East and is author of, most recently "The Occupation: War and Resistance in Iraq."

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Redeployment Hocus Pocus
Posted by: edith on May 11, 2007 1:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Democrats like Pelosi and Murtha mumble about "redeployment" of US forces from Iraq, not withdrawal. Hilary and her PR flacks hastily assure Establishment pundits like Matthews and Russert that she will leave a "residual" force to deal with Al Queda in Iraq.

As Coburn sagely concludes his article, the end in Iraq resembles the end in Algeria for the French, who tried to carve a "residual" role for their colonial regime before de Gaulle took power and understood that the survival of France meant the end of Algeria as part of the consciousness of France. Iraq similarly consumes America's abiltiy to plan its future.

Only a few like Kucinich and Paul really understand what eventually must be done. Total and complete withdrawal from Iraq. Those who trust in Pelosi and Reid must realize that complete and total withdrawal is not what these two sleazy pro-Zionist Capitol Hill operators offer.

Furthermore, withdrawal from Iraq must be a prelude to military withdrawal from the Middle East, including a specific statement that Israel is not an "ally" of the US, and that the US will not go to war or offer Israel assistance while it occupies Palestinian territories and continues to sabotage peace negotiations.

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» RE: Redeployment Hocus Pocus Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: edeployment Hocus Pocus Posted by: elfinito
» RE: edeployment Hocus Pocus Posted by: leafsong1
What constitutes winning in Iraq?
Posted by: Democritus on May 11, 2007 5:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When defenders of Bush's war are asked who we are fighting in Iraq and what would it take to win, they invariably answer that we are fighting terrorists there, and that winning means eradicating terror in Iraq. If that is true, then the war in Iraq can only be won if we leave that country immediately. This is because our occupation has created the terrorists. When 78% of Iraqis want us to leave, that indicates that the general population thinks that we are the major cause of terrorist activities. They ought to know, because they are living there. One might also look at our occupation more cynically. Because we know that our occupation fuels terrorism, we stay because we don't want this war to end. Having to fight an ever escalating war on terror ensures that we never have to leave Iraq. After all, what's the cost? It's only a mere 1,000 American lives a year, and that's a price that the foreign oil companies that will profit from Iraqi oil are perfectly willing to pay.

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» Iraq madness. Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
As Afghanistan turned out to be
Posted by: Ydotheyhateus on May 11, 2007 5:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the graveyard for Soviet Empire, Iraq could very well be the graveyard for US empire.

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» RE: Maybe everyone's graveyard Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
The Rise and Fall of the US Empire
Posted by: boing007 on May 11, 2007 6:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Iraq may have been a pushover in the invasion, but the price of occupation for America could exact a heavy toll on its empire.

I sincerely hope that it does throw a wrench in the PNAC.

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U.S. imperialism has been in secular decline since Viet Nam
Posted by: rwa on May 11, 2007 7:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Imperial Britain was financially crippled by WWI, but it took til WWII to end it's hegemony. The U.S. overspent on Viet Nam, SDI, and now PNAC GWOT. U.S. economic power is now gone. There is no basis on which to define U.S. actions as serving empire. The empire is an empty shell. The U.S. is a net debtor nation, global free trade does not serve U.S. national interests. The U.S. fiscal position is falling rapidly. The U.S. can function as a mercenary military power as it did in Gulf War I, but it can't finance global power projection for it's own purposes, as there is no payoff. Currently the occupations are being financed by treasury purchases made by Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Kuwait. They have the surplus capital, due to increased oil prices caused by interrupted production in Iraq. That's the system of international taxation or titheing in it's current manifestation. The financial power is what counts in the end.

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Action?
Posted by: Knowmad on May 11, 2007 7:41 AM   
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As someone else mentioned, though the debacle of Iraq is definitely going to damage your country in so many ways, has already, what it won't effect, at least negatively, is the power and bank balances of your smug burgeoning 'elites'. Immoral parasites like cheney are sucking at the teat of their illegal invasion, and they won't stop until they're stopped, regardless of how many articles bemoan the fact. It's beyond that now, can't you see? For whatever psychological reasons, they simply don't care.

It looks more and more like you people are going to have to take to the streets to get your nation back, like they do in other countries when criminals are trying to control and steal everyone and everything (e.g. French revolution, though maybe without the guillotine - just hard time). All your puff and blather has apparently accomplished virtually nothing. Corruption is rampant, and the same two political groups - one less corrupt than the other, but still a joke - are vying for power, seemingly without a thought for the people. Creating another party is something worth pursuing, but it will take time; maybe longer than your country has as a free society.

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» RE: Action?......Outstanding Posted by: Captainmagic
» RE: Action?......Outstanding Posted by: Ydotheyhateus
» RE: Action?......Outstanding...wa Posted by: Captainmagic
» RE: Action?......Outstanding...wa Posted by: Ydotheyhateus
» TOM TELE Posted by: Tom Tele
» RE: TOM TELE Posted by: Knowmad
Crying........
Posted by: Captainmagic on May 11, 2007 7:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Too late.... Too late....The power brokers already know the cost of this CLUSTERF@#K.....Thats why bush senior was crying some time ago ....All those in high places know the language of holy F@#K and 'Whot Tha'... There is nowhere for Bu$hCo to hide... only the bare assed shame on the bush family name. America.. 'Built and Broke' courtesy of a F@#KWIT family.

If you as a nation of peoples allow these imbeciles to ESCAPE then eternal ridicule is your constitution.

Captain OUT

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Did you catch that?
Posted by: shannonwhite on May 11, 2007 8:34 AM   
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The US has given over $3 billion to an Iraqi intelligence accountable only to the CIA. $3 billion! You can do a lot of mischief with that amount (that's about what Israel gets from the US every year). It's enough to fund a good-sized army. My guess, the money is funding a militia and patronage network for some Iraqi strongman being groomed to take over. Could also be used for anti-Iranian activities, funding death squads, and neo-con summer homes :-) I'd also guess there's zero congressional oversight. Where's the money coming from? The CIA budget? The Oil-for-food slush fund? Oil smuggling? That reminds me: if the CIA thinks this agency is worth $3 billion of official money, then its probably getting at least that in "unofficial" money. It might take 10 years to find out, but I bet there's a sordid story behind this.

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War is the disease that affects everything in society...
Posted by: Michael Boldin on May 11, 2007 9:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
War kills people, destroys property, builds hatred, ensures future attacks, and ruins the economy.

it's also used as an excuse to lie, spy, steal, torture and restrict liberties of every kind.

Only when we change our path - from that of aggression into something completely different - will we have peace and prosperity.

We need a foreign policy based on defense, not offense and warfare as we've seen for decades and decades....

Some reading on this:

"Leaders don't kill people..." - click here

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» You know this, ad infinitum Posted by: Knowmad
Actually, the root causes of this conflict are identical to WWI
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on May 11, 2007 1:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This reporter states that "Militarily, the conflicts could not be more different." - and he doesn't mention the fundamental fact that Iraq is the home of the world's largest remaining oil deposits. 115 barrels of proven reserves exist, and there may be twice that amount in the Western Province as well as in the Kurdish North, as all oil exploration ground to a halt during the Iraq-Iran war, the Gulf War I, and the sanction years.

World War I was about the German quest for a place in the sun - for their own colonial oil paradise, which France, Britain and the United States all vehemently opposed. The first Britsh regiment deployed in World War I was sent to Mesopotamia to fight on the banks of the Tigris for this very reason. Their goal was to disrupt the rail line that Germany had built to the Middle East, and so cut off the flow of oil.

Fast forward to the present, where the 'glittering prize' is still Middle East oil, as Cheney publicly stated in 1999, and which was also the conclusion of the Cheney Energy Task Force Report. Cheney's current tour of the Middle East is all about making sure that the oil auction in Dubai, set for May 27-28, can take place as scheduled - so he's there to pressure the puppet Iraqi government to pass the oil law.

Saddam is gone, there were no nuclear or biological weapons in Iraq, and Bush has proclaimed that Iraq is now a 'soveriegn democratic nation' so why are several hundred thousand US troops and private military contractors still in Iraq?

There's only one answer to that question: to guarantee that Iraqi oil ends up under the control of foreign oil corporations that are controlled by the US-British financial system: the New York and London oil trading centers, NYMEX and IPE. This is why Blair and Bush were in bed together, after all.

In other words, this article completey ignores the central reason that US troops are still in Iraq.

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» WWI Posted by: fanny666
» WWI--Musta Missed Something? Posted by: apophenia_monkey
Is Patrick Cockburn kidding?
Posted by: TheTruthSeeker on May 11, 2007 2:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
At the end of his "Duh!" piece, Cockburn wrote, "Iraq has joined the list of small wars..."

SMALL wars? If Born-again Bush gets his way, it will be Armageddon.

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The Iraq war, then, was a good thing?
Posted by: dayahka on May 11, 2007 3:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the author is correct, then the Iraq war was a good thing for the world, though really horrible for Iraq. Pride goeth before a fall, and the US sure was proud--and arrogant--and sure has fallen.

The problem, however, is that the war in Iraq was the wrong solution to a problem. A better solution, better for the US and better for the world, would have been to recognize the State of Palestine, withdraw uncritical support for the gangsters in Tel Aviv, withdraw from Mecca (Saudi Arabia), and stop being a bully. Since these rational actions are about as likely as a pot of gold at the end of a rainbow, the Iraq debacle only slightly dented the bully's arrogance, and possibly a much worse mistake will be made in the future.

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Oil
Posted by: sofla100 on May 11, 2007 5:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well, let's be real straight. Does anyone, I mean anyone, anywhere, really believe that if Iraq did not have possibly the world's largest proven oil reserves underneath her sands, the USA would be there??? Look at Africa, take the Rwanda Genocide. Horrific, even beyond Saddam. What did the USA do? Nothing. Take Darfur. What is the USA doing? Just talking a bunch of hot air. Take when Idi Amin was in power and his atrocities. What did the USA do. Nothing. You know, it goes on and on. Yet, as it was overlooked in this article (oil), it is often overlooked in the USA media. It sounds so crass to say the USA is just there for the oil. And, perhaps that is not the only reason. Protecting Israeli security is no doubt a big reason as well. But, for democracy, for freedom? Just who would ever believe that.

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Straight facts about Gulf War 2.
Posted by: TheTruthSeeker on May 11, 2007 6:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Commander–in-Chief Bush gave the following five reasons for invading Iraq.

1. WMD: None were found
2. 9/11 connection: Never existed.
3. Al Qaeda was using Iraq for a terrorist base: Not true (Saddam considered Bin Laden his enemy)
4. To establish a self-sustaining democracy in Iraq: Hasn’t happened and won’t.
5. To prevent Iraqi oil fields from falling into terrorist hands: Almost true. George W. wants the fields controlled by U.S. petroleum companies.

For the TRUTH about Iraq, Bush 43 and his treasonous neocon cabal, visit the following websites:

CommonDreams.org
FreedomCentralUSA.com
PhonyFighterPilot.com
VoteVets.org

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The whole planet is screwed, but at least this war keeps me alive
Posted by: ateo on May 13, 2007 8:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Isn't that all that matters my fellow Americans? Looking out for number one? This war has kept me fed and well paid so I say let it go on forever and may my income as a part of the defense industry continue to grow indefinitely!

Let the world burn, but at least the remainder of my life should be lived out in relative comfort! Right, isn't that the American dream, the American way!?

Oh but I think it is, that is what all the lessons of my life have taught me and I heed those lessons well.

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