Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Bush Vetoes Supplemental for Iraq
Rice will be Polite
11 Killed in Minibus attack


Bush vetoed the supplemental appropriations bill for Iraq that Congress sent him on May 1. You know, Bush and Cheney and others got this meme going last fall that critics of the war had a responsibility to put forward their own solution to the problems. So the Congress has stepped up to that plate and said that a beginning can be made to resolving the Iraq crisis only if the US makes a commitment to bring its troops out of that country on a short timetable.

Bush is now revealing that he did not actually want to hear other proposals besides his fatally flawed "stay the course" policy. So now the ball is in his court. He has the responsiblity to lay out what he plans to do in September when it almost certainly be clear that the security situation is not substantially better and the al-Maliki government is not less paralyzed.

Charlie Rose asked him this question, and he fudged it, saying he had no plan B. That's not good enough, George. What's your plan, since you don't like that of the Congress? The American public isn't going to put up with "stay the course" any more, and they aren't buying the alleged connection of Iraq to September 11.

With regard to the prospect that Condi Rice might talk to Iranian Foreign Minister Mottaki at Sharm El Sheikh, Bush said that if there is an encounter, she will be polite. Bush sent an extra aircraft carrier to the Gulf to threaten Iran, and Cheney and Rumsfeld wanted to nuke Isfahan. But God forbid the administration should be rude to an Iranian official.

According to Reuters, guerrillas opened fire on a minibus in Iskandariya south of Baghdad, killing 11. Ten bodies were discovered in Baqubah, one hour northeast of the capital. In Baghdad on Tuesday, police found 15 bodies in the street and civilians were killed by mortar shells.

The office of the governor of Basra (Muhammad Misbah al-Wa'ili) protested his recent unseating by a vote of no confidence to Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. His opponents, however, characterize this protest letter as illegitimate and untransparent, since it was sent secretly and personally rather than openly via the government bureaucracy.

KarbalaNews.net alleges in Arabic that Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari promised the Iranians that Iraq would expel from its territory the members of the anti-Tehran terrorist group, the Mojahedin-i Khalq (MEK or MKO). Saddam had given them a base, Camp Ashraf, from which they sent terrorists over the border to blow things up in Iran. The Neoconservatives in the US Department of Defense wanted to go on using MEK in this same way, but the State Department labeled them a terrorist organization. If this report is correct, the Iraqi government may at last have taken a decisive step in this regard. And, it was possibly a demand of the Iranians with regard to their attendance at the Sharm El Sheikh Conference this week.

Ali Larijani, secretary of the Iranian national security council, met Tuesday with Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani (as well as with PM al-Maliki and Abdul Aziz al-Hakim.) Larijani rejected US accusations that Iran is aiding militias to destabilize Iraq, saying that it is rather US allies who are making mischief there (presumably a slam at Saudi Arabia).

In a recent poll, 76% of Iraqis reject the security wall the Americans were building around Adhamiya in Baghdad (Arabic).

Pepe Escobar in Baghdad-- roving the Red Zone.

Tenet claimed in his book that Tyler Drumheller did not tell his office that the drunk fabricator, the Iraqi expatriate code-named "Curveball," was a drunk fabricator. Curveball more or less wrote Colin Powell's speech at the UN in February, 2003. Shorter Tyler Drumheller: Oh, yes I did.

The letter of six former intelligence officers blasting Tenet for his failure to speak out against the flimsy pretexts for the looming Iraq War is up at Daily Kos. Given the vindictiveness of this administration, these are 6 courageous persons with a hell of a lot of integrity.

The USG Open Source Center summarizes the Iraqi press:


' Al-Mashriq publishes on the front page a 200-word follow-up report on the statement issued by Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi outlining the results of his phone call with President Bush. The report cites Harith al-Ubaydi, parliament member from the Iraqi Al-Tawafuq Front, confirming that it is too early for the front to withdraw from the government. . .

Al-Mashriq runs on page 3 a 460-word follow-up report citing Husayn al-Falluji, parliament member from the Iraqi Al-Tawafuq Front, confirming that the front supports the projected cabinet reshuffle provided the replacement of Defense Minister Muhammad Abd-al-Qadir al-Ubaydi. The report cites political sources confirming that President Talabani is seeking to form a new political front comprising of moderate Iraqi political forces. . .

Ishraqat al-Sadr publishes on page 2 a 250-word exclusive report citing Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's Advisor Karim al-Bakhati criticizing the Al-Hurrah Satellite Television Channel and denying that he rejects the withdrawal of occupation forces from Iraq.

Dar al-Salam publishes on page 2 a 300-word report entitled "Al-Fadilah Party: Threats, Violence, Extortion To Impose Political Willpower, Control Over Basra Governorate."

Dar al-Salam runs on page 5 a 300-word report confirming that the UAE Government has also declined to receive Prime Minister Al-Maliki. . .

Ishraqat al-Sadr publishes on page 2 a 400-word exclusive report citing an official source at the Al-Sadr Bureau in Al-Kazimiyah confirming that US planes shelled the bureau following the failure of US forces to break into it on 29 April. The report cites well-informed sources confirming that Law Enforcement Plan Commander General Abud Qanbar visited the district immediately after the eruption of clashes between Al-Sadr followers and occupation forces.

Ishraqat al-Sadr carries on page 2 a 400-word editorial by Adil al-Abid criticizing Iraqi security officials for their failure to prevent terrorist attacks despite the deployment of explosive detection equipment and the establishment of large number of checkpoints across Baghdad.

Dar al-Salam publishes on the front page a 350-word report accusing occupation forces and Iraqi National Guard of attacking the Al-Nu'man Public Hospital in Al-A'zamiyah District and insulting its patients and medical cadre. The report accuses the Health Ministry of closing the hospital for sectarian reasons.

Dar al-Salam runs on the front page a 400-word report entitled "US Inspector General: Iraqi Government Wastes $12 Billion." . .


Finkelstein v. Dershowitz.

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5 Comments:

At 1:11 PM, Blogger James-Speaks said...

"Bush vetoed the supplemental appropriations bill ... You know, Bush and Cheney and others got this meme going last fall that critics of the war had a responsibility to put forward their own solution to the problems."

Herein lies the problem.

There has been a great deal of questioning regarding Bush's exit strategy, not to be confused with Bush & co.'s exit strategy. The latter first:

Bush and Company do not have an exit strategy. The Halliburton/Neocon plan for Iraq has been to destroy the country and steal the oil. Money quote: " A new Iraq oil law, largely written by the Coalition Provisional Authority, is planned for ratification by June. This law cedes control of Iraq's oil to western powers for 30 years."

What of Bush's exit strategy? It is similar to his method for dealing with failed business enterprises and a military committment he was unwilling to fulfill. The George W. Bush strategy for dealing with insurmountable obstacles of his own making is to let Mommy and Daddy (or their friends) solve the problem.

This generates rage within as described in a profile by psychologist Oliver James. Money quote: "The outcome of this childhood was what psychologists call an authoritarian personality. Authoritarianism was identified shortly after the second world war as part of research to discover the causes of fascism. As the name suggests, authoritarians impose the strictest possible discipline on themselves and others - the sort of regime found in today's White House, where prayers precede daily business, appointments are scheduled in five-minute blocks, women's skirts must be below the knee and Bush rises at 5.45am, invariably fitting in a 21-minute, three-mile jog before lunch.

Authoritarian personalities are organised around rabid hostility to "legitimate" targets, often ones nominated by their parents' prejudices..."


Is it possible that Neocons selected GWB, with his inherited tendency to dehumanize all Iraqis (his father's enemny), to work in concert with Halliburton's plans for stealing their oil, as a means to enable Ariel Sharon's plans for Greater Israel?

"So the Congress has stepped up to that plate and said that a beginning can be made to resolving the Iraq crisis only if the US makes a commitment to bring its troops out of that country on a short timetable."

I think Congress needs to be very careful. The Neocons have set a trap.

"Bush is now revealing that he did not actually want to hear other proposals besides his fatally flawed "stay the course" policy. So now the ball is in his court. He has the responsiblity to lay out what he plans to do in September when it almost certainly be clear that the security situation is not substantially better and the al-Maliki government is not less paralyzed."

If this Democratically controlled Congress forces a troop withdrawal, expect the wingnuts to blame the disaster on them. If Congress does not force a withdrawal, and a Democrat wins in 2008, expect the wingnuts to blame the disaster on them.

"Charlie Rose asked him this question, and he fudged it, saying he had no plan B. That's not good enough, George. What's your plan, since you don't like that of the Congress? The American public isn't going to put up with "stay the course" any more, and they aren't buying the alleged connection of Iraq to September 11."

Perhaps their current actions are best, frustrating as the situation is. Have hearings to expose the lies of Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Feith et al, to the extent that wingbut radio can't cover them anymore, bring criminal charges for lying to Congress (can an ex-President still be indicted? I hope so.), and get the troops home as soon as possible.

Bush has a Plan B. It is the same Plan B he has always used, namely to cower out of a conflict and blame everyone else. The sooner we force Bush to his Plan B, the better. For us and the world.

 
At 2:36 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

I was wondering if you could offer your analysis on the presidential elections in Turkey and how the crises over the 'Islamist' candidate may affect the developments in Iraq...

For instance, if the Turkish military dissolves the parliament over the issue of the law to allow a direct popular vote on the presidency, will the military government of Turkey take stronger measures to check Kurdish activities in northern Iraq? Or if 'Islamist' candidates triumph in parliament and win the presidency, will they pursue a more aggressive anti-US stance in the region?

 
At 3:32 PM, Blogger LeeAnn Hansen said...

Finkelstein should probably have waited until after he'd gotten tenure before taking on Dershowitz. Not that he's not right or anything. Just as a matter of strategy.

 
At 8:18 PM, Blogger daryoush said...

Juan,

The Pepe Escobar article had this line: "Residents are adamant: the bomb was planted "by the Americans"; one of them says,"

Have you seen more on this in Iraqi press?

 
At 5:32 PM, Blogger Chris S said...

I'm hoping someone will frame Bush's veto as a refusal to fund the war and exactly the opposite of supporting the troops...the same way it is framed whenever others threaten to defund the war.
He didn't just veto the withdrawal proposal. He had to veto the entire package which means he blocked funding for the war. Everyone may know why but that's never stopped "them" from using this tactic.

 

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