RINF.COM: HET BREKENDE ALTERNATIEF VAN HET NIEUWS

Woensdag, 11 Juni, 2008
Forum RINF
Brekend Nieuws | Forum | Brits Nieuws | Het Nieuws van de V.S. | Het Nieuws van de wereld | Politiek Nieuws | Nieuws sc.i-technologie | Het Nieuws van de oorlog & van het Terrorisme | Het Nieuws van sporten | Multimedia | Vastgestelde Homepage
BREKEND NIEUWS
NIEUW FORUM RINF!

Cheney maakt Irakezen over de Overeenkomst van de Veiligheid woedend

Maandag, 9 Juni, 2008

cheney1.jpgDoor GARY LEUPP | Dick Cheney wil de Iraakse overheid die door de V.S. wordt geïnstalleerd. beroep om een „veiligheidspact“ met Washington tegen eind Juli te ondertekenen. (Het pact, met inbegrip van een status-van-krachten overeenkomst, door de V.S. worden ondertekend. voorzitter maar niet om een verdrag te vormen dat Congresgoedkeuring.) de V.S. vereist. De ambassadeur Ryan Crocker heeft feverishly geworsteld om de uiterste termijn te ontmoeten en het volgende beleid te begaan aan de termijnen van de overeenkomst. Maar dat kan een lange orde zijn. De eerste Minister Nour al-Maliki zegt de onderhandelingen slechts in een beginstadium zijn; de publieke opinie is tegengesteld aan het pact dat op gelekte informatie over zijn inhoud wordt gebaseerd; en een meerderheid van leden van het Iraakse parlement heeft een brief aan de V.S. onderschreven. overheid die de V.S. eist. terugtrekking als voorwaarde voor „commercieel, landbouw, investering of politieke overeenkomst met de Verenigde Staten.“

Weinig Amerikanen zijn vertrouwd met het voorgestelde verdrag. Als zij waren, zouden zij bij zijn bepalingen kunnen worden geschokt, beschaamd over zijn naakt sadisme. Het:

  • verleent de V.S. rechten op lange termijn meer dan 50 militaire basissen in hun Californië-Gerangschikt land te handhaven
  • staat de V.S. toe. om een ander land van binnen Iraaks grondgebied zonder de toestemming van de Iraakse overheid te slaan
  • staat de V.S. toe. om militaire activiteiten in Irak uit te voeren zonder het raadplegen de lokale regering
  • staat de V.S. toe. krachten om om het even welke Irakees te arresteren zonder het raadplegen Iraakse overheid
  • breidt zich tot de V.S. uit. troepen en contractersimmuniteit van Iraakse wet
  • geeft de V.S. krachten controle van Iraaks luchtruim onder 29,000ft.
  • plaatst de de Iraakse Defensie, ministeries van de Binnenlandse en Nationale Veiligheid, onder Amerikaanse supervisie tien jaar
  • geeft de V.S. verantwoordelijkheid voor Iraakse bewapeningscontracten tien jaar

Juist vernederen? De soort voorwaarden de meeste Amerikanen kan niet veronderstellen die van een buitenlandse bezettende macht goedkeuren.

Ooit welke self-respecting mensen met dergelijke bepalingen zou goedkeuren? Vooral na hun land illegaal binnengevallen en bezet, op basis van leugens. Misschien is miljoen gedood door de invallers en het burgerlijke geschil dat zij hebben losgelaten. Twee miljoen zijn gedreven in buitenlands ballingschap, twee intern verplaatste miljoen. Duizenden zijn vernederd, angst aangejaagd en door de invallers gemarteld. Miljoenen' elektro en watervoorziening blijven nog achter saddam-Era niveaus achter. Millions’ personal security and enjoyment of human rights has deteriorated as a result of the invasion. Why should their leaders sign such an agreement?

No doubt some key figures in the Bush administration have asked themselves that, and here’s what they come up with. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York holds $ 50 billion of Iraq’s foreign exchange reserves as a result of the UN sanctions dating back to the first Gulf War. These include virtually all oil revenues that under UN mandate must be placed in the Development Fund for Iraq “controlled” by the Iraqi government. $ 20 billion of this is owed to plaintiffs who’ve won court judgments against Iraq, but a presidential order gives the account legal immunity. Bush can threaten to remove the immunity and wipe out 40% of Iraq’s foreign reselves if Baghdad doesn’t cooperate. At the same time, Bush can tell al-Maliki that if Iraq enters into a ‘strategic relationship” with the U.S., the U.S. will arrange for Iraq to finally escape those lingering UN “Chapter Seven” sanctions. Perhaps Bush and Cheney are confidant that this carrot and stick” approach will force the Iraqi government to sign the deal.

But Iranian political leader Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani hardly exaggerates in saying the proposed deal is designed “to turn the Iraqis into slaves of the Americans” and to create “a permanent occupation.” Many Iraqis use similar language.  “The agreement wants to put an American in each house,” claimed a supporter of Shiite cleric and nationalist firebrand Mutada al-Sadr. “This agreement is poison mixed in poison, not poison in honey because there is no honey at all.” “Why,” he asks, “do they want to break the backbone of Iraq?”

The mainstream Shiite cleric and politician Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, head of the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (SIIC; formerly the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq or SCIRI),  agrees that the proposed agreement would “violate Iraq’s national sovereignty.” He claims a “national consensus” against it has developed. (President Bush in December 2006 met with al-Hakim, calling his “one of the distinguished leaders of a free Iraq,” and he is sometimes mentioned as Washington’s first choice for prime minister if al-Maliki doesn’t adequately put out. So his opposition is especially significant.)

Al-Hakim is close to Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the most widely respected Shiite cleric in 60% Shiite Iraq. The ayatollah is thought to oppose the pact but has not yet made a pronouncement about it. Meanwhile the Association of Muslim Scholars, the largest Sunni political group in the parliament, warns that the pact paves the  way for “military, economic and cultural domination” by the Americans.

Al-Sadr’s followers staged rallies around the country after prayers last Friday and plan to continue weekly peaceful demonstrations demanding that the Baghdad government hold a national referendum on the security treaty issue. The U.S. opposes such a referendum,  aware that pact opponents would surely win.

So Al-Maliki is between a rock and a hard place. He can sign the agreement and continue to receive U.S. support, strengthening the popular perception that he is a U.S. puppet. Or he can submit to the referendum demand, alienating and embarrassing his country’s invaders, revealing to the world the depth of Iraqi antipathy to the occupation. That way he loses U.S. support. Either way he seems headed towards the door.

In January 2007 Secretary of Defense Robert Gates told Congress that if al-Maliki didn’t cooperate with U.S. forces in suppressing Shiite militias in Baghdad, “he has to face is the possibility that he’ll lose his job.” At the same time U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad and President Bush were both threatening to end support for al-Maliki if he didn’t “follow through on his promises” to the U.S. In August 2007, after al-Maliki publicly praised Iran for its “constructive role” in Iraq, Bush warned him. “My message to him,” he told the press, “is, when we catch you playing a non-constructive role, there will be a price to pay.”

For his part al-Maliki has indicated there are limits to his servility. He sent forces against al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army in Baghdad in February of this year, but they fought poorly and had to be saved from embarrassment by the mediation of a commander of Iran’s vilified Quds Force friendly with both al-Sadr and al-Maliki. He has refused to break his strong ties with the Iranian government and politely asked the U.S. to leave his country out of its quarrel with Iran. He does not seem wedded to his post or determined to retain it at any cost; “I wish I could be done with it even before the end of this term,” he told the Wall Street Journal in January 2007.  “I didn’t want to take this position. I only agreed because I thought it would serve the national interest, and I will not accept it again.” Doesn’t sound like a man who wants to go down in history as the man who sold Iraq to the Americans in the summer of 2008. Likely successor Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim has opposed the deal so far.

Meanwhile, there’s this other Iraqi item on Cheney’s urgent to-do list: the passage of the Iraq Hydrocarbon Law by the Iraqi Parliament. This was drafted by BearingPoint (a McLean, Virginia-based management consulting provider listed by the Center for Corporate Policy as the number 2 top war profiteer of 2004) in February 2006 and then  presented to the newly-appointed Iraqi Oil Minister Hussein Al-Shahristani. Shahristani then met in Washington DC with representatives of Shell, BP, ExxonMobil, ChevronTexaco and ConocoPhillips to get their comments on the draft. He promised the International Monetary Fund that the Iraqi parliament would pass the law by the end of 2006, but its members hadn’t even seen the 33-page draft law yet. Months earlier an Oil Ministry official had said that Iraqi civil society and the general public would not be consulted at all on this matter.A secret appendix to the draft law, according to London-based Iraqi political analyst Munir Chalabi, “will decide which oil fields will be allocated to the Iraqi National Oil Company (INOC) and which of the existing fields will be allocated to the IOCs [international oil companies]. The appendices will determine if 10% or possibly up to 80% of these major oil fields will be given to the IOCs.” This, in other words, is another national humiliation in the offing. As six women Nobel Peace Prize recipients wrote in September 2007, it “would transform Iraq’s oil industry from a nationalized model to a commercial model that is much more open to U.S. corporate control. Its provisions allow much (if not most) of Iraq’s oil revenues to flow out of Iraq and into the pockets of international oil companies.”It is one of those “bench marks” the Bush administration has imposed on Iraq, with Congressional support, as conditions for U.S. withdrawal, but even the most recent revised version, hammered out between Kurdish representatives and the Maliki cabinet, faces tough political opposition. Cheney was hoping this would be a done deal—done quickly on the sly—as of last summer. But al-Maliki still hasn’t delivered, and as a State Department report to Congress in April 2008 notes, labor opposition is formidable: “The 26,000 member Iraq Federation of Oil Unions has voiced its members’ strong opposition to the current draft of the hydrocarbon framework legislation and has demonstrated a capacity to disrupt oil production and refinery operations with strikes.”

Last year union chief Subhi al-Badri declared, “This law cancels the great achievements of the Iraq people. If the Iraqi Parliament approves this law, we will resort to mutiny. This law is a bomb that may kill everyone. Iraqi oil. … belongs to all future generations.” Even the Iraqi minister of planning and development, Ali Baban, has vowed to “resign one hour after [the] passing [of the] oil and gas draft law.” And the Sadrists of course are bitterly opposed.

Add the globalization of the oil industry to the security treaty provisions listed above. Imagine how Iraqi public opinion will react if Cheney and the neocons succeed in forcing this package of laws through the Iraqi parliament. Everybody knows the “return of sovereignty” is a sham, and claims of “democracy” a cover for continued occupation. The “benchmark” capitulations the Americans demand add insult to injury, inscribing in law and veneer of multilateralism that which has been seized by brute force. They oblige those under the boot to kiss it.

The Cheney cabal (exuding Islamophobia and contempt for poor and working people everywhere) seems to actually suppose it will be able to win that degree of slavishness, and to celebrate such crowning imperialist triumphs in Iraq, by the end of the Bush term. They also seem to think they can attack Iran, expanding the “Long War” before handing it over to the next administration.  But that would mean provoking the outrage of the overwhelming majority of Iranians and Iraqis simultaneously. Seems just too stupid to believe, even from a rational imperialist’s own point of view. But aside from Rep. Dennis Kucinich, few in Congress have made issues of the security treaty, hydrocarbon law, or plans for a strike against Iran. The mainstream media is for the most part unquestioning, subdued, as the Bush administration continues to subject the Muslim world to unbearable provocations.

Gary Leupp is Professor of History at Tufts University, and Adjunct Professor of Religion. He is the author of Servants, Shophands and Laborers in in the Cities of Tokugawa Japan; Male Colors: The Construction of Homosexuality in Tokugawa Japan; and Interracial Intimacy in Japan: Western Men and Japanese Women, 1543-1900. He is also a contributor to CounterPunch’s merciless chronicle of the wars on Iraq, Afghanistan and Yugoslavia, Imperial Crusades.

He can be reached at: gleupp@granite.tufts.edu

See More:  

Have Your Say: Cheney Enrages Iraqis Over Security Deal
Please note, only selected comments will be published.

Or discuss this report in our new forums

One Response to “Cheney Enrages Iraqis Over Security Deal”

  1. Bill
    Posted: Jun 9th, 2008 at 9:23 pm | Link to this

    What can be said about this, really.

    The America I was born and grew up in, that I was so proud to be a part of, is gone, and has been replaced by the worst nightmare I couldn’t even imagine if I tried.

    Reply

RSS TrackBack URL

This entry was posted on Monday, June 9th, 2008 at 2:47 pm and is filed under War & Terrorism News, General . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Translations
Translate to EnglishÜbersetzen Sie zum Deutsch/GermanПереведите к русскому/RussianΜεταφράστε στα ελληνικά/GreekVertaal aan het Nederlands/Dutchترجمة الى العربية/Arabic中文翻译/Chinese Traditional中文翻译/Chinese Simplified한국어에게 번역하십시오/Korean日本語に翻訳しなさい /JapaneseTraduza ao Português/PortugueseTraduca ad Italiano/ItalianTraduisez au Français/FrenchTraduzca al Español/Spanish Free Newsletter

Related News

Network This Report

These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • del.icio.us
  • Technorati
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Slashdot
  • Reddit
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Spurl
  • Fark
  • Netscape

Email This Page To A Friend
Latest Headlines

Archive
TOP NEWS DISCUSSIONS
LATEST NEWS DISCUSSIONS
LATEST FORUM TOPICS
The First Signs of "Peak Gas"?

Species Going Extinct Faster than Scientists Thought

House Democrats Want Bush Admin Investigated for War Crimes

Martyrs in the making at Guantanamo

Poll finds electorate split between Obama, McCain

Senate report on Bush war lies: Another cover-up of war crimes

Spying and the abuse of data

US Walks Away from UN Human Rights Council

Cheney Enrages Iraqis Over Security Deal

Democrats introduce bill to outlaw Pentagon propaganda

The War on Photography

Fisk: The West's weapon of self-delusion

Washington ordered destruction of Guantánamo interrogation records

Gait Recognition Software Proposed For Surveillance At A Distance

msfreeh commented on:
Blackwater’s Private CIA
for a partial list of crimes committed by FBI agents over 300 pages long see campusactivism. org click on...
Continue Reading & Reply

Purba Negoro commented on:
Iraq Tells US It Wants Troops Back in Barracks
Corporate Imperialism rears its’ true hideous face. First Saudi Arabia, then Iraq...
Continue Reading & Reply

Mary Marie Taylor commented on:
Washington ordered destruction of Guantánamo interrogation records
The United States Government, Bush, Cheney, MUST stop torture...
Continue Reading & Reply

DefendThyself commented on:
Iraqi lawmakers say U.S. demanding 58 military bases
Permanent bases? Why would we want to be invaders in a foreign state forever? No...
Continue Reading & Reply

RSS Forum Posts Temp Offline - See Latest Forum Posts
Activism & Protest News | Business News | Civil & Human Rights News | Environmental News | Media News | Globalisation News | Web Development News
ADVERTISEMENTS
SITE MAPS
WOWEB - Web Design

FAST GATEWAY - Web Hosting

INFOTX - Web Hosting Guides and Resources


ASHLEY GUEST HOUSE - Morecambe Guest House

Never Be Lied To Again!

Subliminal Secrets Exposed

Holographic Creation: Your Own Reality


Masonic Secrets Revealed


What You Aren't Supposed To Know
7/7 Afghanistan Alternative Energy Art BBC Big Brother Bilderberg Biometrics Bush CIA Climate Change Cover Up Cults Culture Database State David Hicks David Ray Griffin Democrats Demos Drugs Education EU False Flag FBI Fraud Free Speech Freemasons G8 Globalization Guantanamo Health News History ID Cards Internet Iran Iraq Israel Law Marches MI5 MI6 Microsoft Military MoD Money Music NASA Neocons NSA Oil Pakistan Podcast Police State Propaganda RFID RINF Rumsfeld Science Secrecy Security Slavery Space Sports Spying Stephen Lendman Technology Terrorism Tony Blair Torture TV UK News UN USA News Video Voting Warfare White House Wolfowitz World News Yahoo
2003 - 2005 Archives | 2005 - 2007 Archives | 2007 - 2008 Archives | Current Archives | Past Version
About | DVD Store | Opinion | Reviews | Special Guests | Webmasters
The views expressed in the RINF news wire and newsletter are the sole responsibility of the author (s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the webmaster.
RINF.COM: Breaking News & Alternative Media is Copyleft - Copy & Distribute Freely. News Forum