Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Friday, February 29, 2008

Fact Check on McCain and Political Progress in Iraq

John McCain has been running mainly against Barack Obama in recent days, and has been running on the successes he says that the Iraqi government has racked up.

McCain (and the US corporate media) manages to avoid noticing that Turkey has staged a major incursion into Iraq and still has ground troops there and is refusing US requests to withdraw! Ironically, Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, the Turkish chief of staff used McCain's own language against the Bush administration, rejecting the idea of any timetable for withdrawal. He said Turkey could be in Iraq for as long as a year! Turkey claims to have killed 230 guerrillas of the Kurdish Workers Party inside Iraq in the past week. I mean, how great can the situation in Iraq be when our NATO ally has invaded the country we militarily occupy in order to kill guerrillas harbored by our Iraqi Kurdish allies, who have been slipping across the border for which we are responsible in order to kill dozens of NATO troops in eastern Anatolia?

Aljazeera English has video:



McCain is completely uninterested in the cost of the Iraq War. He hasn't seemed to notice that oil has surged to $103 a barrel, in part on fears of the effect of the Turkish incursion into Iraq.

McCain, who voted to go into Iraq and said it was "important" to do so, does not seem to have noticed that the price tag for it and Afghanistan is rapidly rising to $3 trillion to $5 trillion over the long term, or $10,000 for each man, woman and child in America. For a family of four, that is $40,000 or a whole year's salary that George W. Bush has stolen from us and given to his friends at Halliburton, Hunt Oil, Exxon Mobile, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, General Electric, etc., etc., etc. (See Tom Engelhardt on this and other morsels in Bush's Mulligatawny Soup of a war). Not to mention the nearly 4,000 killed in action and the thousands seriously wounded, with brain trauma, spinal injuries, confined to wheel chairs or forever impaired, who will need to be taken care of the rest of their lives (and guess to which address the bill will come-- not Crawford, Texas.) Is the war really unrelated to the growing bad times in the US economy?

Bush's loathsome toadies actually come out and say that all this spending of our blood and treasure is the price of security. But Iraq did not attack the US and was no danger to the US, and the Iraq War is actually actively producing a terrorist danger to our security, according to veteran CIA official and now security analyst Marc Sageman. All this is not to mention the invidious way the Bush administration has framed the terrorism issue, as Noam Chomsky points out at Tomdispatch.

Back to McCain: Running on the efficiency and effectiveness of the failed state in Baghdad would be an extremely risky strategy if in fact the US corporate media were telling the American people the truth (or even just anything) about what is actually going on in Iraq and Iraqi politics. So here is a fact check on two of the claims McCain is making about supposed political progress in Iraq. He has been touting a new law on the treatment of ex-Baathists (who are mostly Sunni and have been treated harshly, contributing to the violence). And he has been ecstatic about the passing of a law on the provinces and some other measures, like the budget. But is any of these laws really likely to lead to ethnic reconciliation?

In his recent response to a measure introduced by Senator Russ Feingold aimed at ending the Iraq War, John McCain ridiculed Iraq War critics who doubted the surge and doubted provincial reconciliation (as at al-Anbar):

"In the face of these new facts, supporters of withdrawal changed their argument yet again. Maybe the surge had brought about greater security, they said . . . But this was irrelevant, they said, so long as national level political reconciliation is lacking – and since we can never expect that, the troops must leave. Yet they were wrong again. In January, the Iraqi parliament passed the long-awaited de-Baathification law that restores the eligibility of thousands of former party members for government jobs lost because of their Baathist affiliation."


In fact, the so-called "debaathification law" passed in January was ruined by the followers of Muqtada al-Sadr in the Iraqi parliament. Far from promoting reconciliation between Shiites, Kurds and ex-Baathists, it was roundly denounced by ex-Baathist parliamentarians such as Iyad Allawi and Salih Mutlak. The law may forcibly retire another 20,000 to 30,000 largely Sunni ex-Baathists from their jobs, and it excludes them from many important ministries. Allawi and others are afraid that its language aims at excluding them from politics altogether. The International Center for Transitional Justice warned (pdf) that the law would actually make for less reconciliation!

Sam Dagher reports from Baghdad,

' Iraq's parliament passed a new law on Jan. 12 amending de-Baathification legislation . . but critics say it is even stricter than the first and offers even fewer chances for thousands of embittered, high-ranking Baathists to return to the fold . . .

Izzat Shabender, a secular Shiite parliamentarian from the party of ex-prime minister Iyad Allawi, who was on the committee that dealt with the law, says senior Baathists that he's in contact with, mainly in Jordan and Syria, have rejected the law. "It did not solve the problem politically, which is the core of the matter." '


Now back to starry-eyed McCain (same link as above) on all that political reconciliation:

McCain: "Earlier this month, a provincial powers law passed that devolves a significant amount of power to the provinces and mandates new provincial elections by October 1 of this year. The parliament passed a partial amnesty for detainees that can facilitate reconciliation among the sects, and it completed a landmark 2008 budget."

Oooops. As usual, McCain is too optimistic too soon. The LA Times reports that:

' Iraq's presidential council Wednesday rejected a law on the powers of local government that was approved by parliament and touted by the Bush administration as a sign of reconciliation between the country's ethnic and religious groups. The three-man council asked that parliament reexamine the complicated and multifaceted law when it reconvenes March 18. '


The LAT notes that the rejection of this law could place in jeopardy the package of laws passed in February, which McCain boasts about, including the budget and the prisoner amnesty.

At the time, the way the laws were passed, without an individual voice vote of the members of parliament, was decried as unconstitutional, in any case. Now the most important of the three has been rejected by the presidency council.

The law on the provinces allowed the prime minister to dismiss provincial governors. Since the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq controls the provincial governments of much of the Shiite south, it doesn't want the federal government to be able to remove them and so weaken ISCI's power base. Likewise, the Kurds are very suspicious of any move to strengthen the central government, because of their memory of Saddam Hussein's brutal interventions against them from Baghdad.

But the law also had set provincial elections for October 1, and this was something the Sunni Arabs very much wanted, since they boycotted the first round of provincial elections and so their provinces don't have representative governments.

The Islamic Supreme Council, in contrast, is afraid that if new provincial elections are held, it might be swept from power in Baghdad and much of the south by the followers of Muqtada al-Sadr, who are Iraqi nativists and see ISCI as an Iranian cat's paw.

So, the political progress of which McCain boasted, and which he threw in the face of Senator Feingold and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, has largely been a chimera. Even where parliament has passed laws, there is no evidence that they have contributed or will contribute to actually reducing ethnic and sectarian hatred in Iraq.

McCain argues that violence is down in 17 of 18 provinces. That argument itself suggests the irrelevancy of the US to Iraq. There are no US troops to speak of in the 3 northern Kurdish provinces, or in the southern 4 provinces from which the British have largely withdrawn. There are few US troops in most of the 8 provinces where Shiites predominate. There was no troop escalation or "surge" in the Sunni al-Anbar province. So if violence has declined in 17 of 18 provinces, US policy cannot possibly have anything to do with most of that. General Petraeus has had significant successes in Baghdad, though at the unfortunate (an unintentional) cost of further turning it into a Shiite city from which most Sunnis have been ethnically cleansed. But Petraeus is doing the practical work of trying to make a bad situation better, and makes no claims for success in the political realm in Iraq. McCain is, in contrast, just doing US domestic politics with those hard won achievements of our suffering troops, and is mostly just running on pie in the sky.

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12 Comments:

At 4:28 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

McCain has said that Iraq can cost him the elections. Regardless of the media, the war is unpopular and that is the crux of the matter. Wars are lost when they lose public support, as simple as that.

However, even if the Americans magically turn into war supporters, McCain will stil lose by a landslide on the Bush factor and the economic woes.

 
At 4:50 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Isn't the war McCain wants to win Vietnam? This whole Iraqi exercise seemed to be an attempt by old-style hawks, as well as new-style chickenhawks, to exorcise that ghost. No American military successes since 1974 have undone that defeat and proved that the US can go it alone and win a "noble cause". Grenada was too small; Gulf I was too limited; the Balkans' effort was too international. Meanwhile, efforts to make peace and prevent human rights abuses in Lebanon and Somalia resulted in defeat and retreat. Many of the Iraq warmongers disparage Reagan's cutting and running after the Beirut barracks bombing, a blasphemy in that crowd. I believe McCain has said that he thinks we gave up too soon in southeast Asia.

 
At 4:52 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Iraq" Falls Apart

Iraq is disintegrating faster than ever. The Turkish army invaded the north of the country last week and is still there. Iraqi Kurdistan is becoming like Gaza where the Israel can send in its tanks and helicopters at will. The US, so sensitive to any threat to Iraqi sovereignty from Iran or Syria, has blandly consented to the Turkish attack on the one part of Iraq which was at peace.

And back in the Gaza Ghetto, the prototype itself :

Israeli forces pound Gaza Strip

28 February Israeli forces have kept up attacks on the Gaza Strip, where they have killed at least 32 Palestinians, militants and civilians, since Wednesday morning.

Four Palestinian boys were killed in an Israeli attack as they played in a field in northern Gaza on Thursday.

The Israelis say their attacks are a response to the firing of Palestinian rockets into southern Israel.

A BBC correspondent says Gazan drivers are staying at home, worried their vehicles could be hit from the air.

Well into the night, Israeli air strikes could still be heard in Gaza, the BBC's Aleem Maqbool reports.

Palestinian rocket fire killed one man in the Israeli town of Sderot on Wednesday, and has since injured others.

Israeli attacks have killed Palestinian militants but also civilians including a six-month-old baby and the four boys, who doctors say had been playing football.

None of this is in the American news, or even in the blogosphere. The world has written off the Palestinians. The three big buck candidates for President of the United States certainly have. Mike gravel would solve the problem so he is marginalized.

No one wants a solution. Not we Americans, not the citizens of the EU countries, not the Russians or the Chinese... we all just turn our backs and look the other way. Hoping the genocide will be a done deal when we turn around and then we can go into "shocked", "isn't it deplorable" mode.

Meanwhile it's "Look at that McCain, that Obama, that Clinton... " as though those stooges stood for anything but more of the same.

 
At 7:26 AM, Blogger Tommy Times said...

Nice summary of the Iraq situation.

Given all the stories of less violence, I wonder what are the causes and practical implications?

If it is not a result of the surge, is it a result of the completion of ethnic cleansing, of changed U.S. tactics, or something else?

Also, is the violence reduced enough to make the refugees want to come home? It is reduced enough to increase reconstruction activities? Is it reduced enough to get the Iraq economy going? We know it is not reduced enough to bring our troops home, according to U.S. generals, who want to 'pause' troop drawdowns, making the troop increases that were sold as a 'surge' an 'escalation'.

 
At 7:43 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The entire cost of World War II, in today's dollars, was also $3 trillion. But that was a war for survival.

 
At 12:53 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The brilliance (yes, brilliance) of the Bush gang has been that they have successfully framed the public debate.

Sensible people concerned about ill-advised military adventures become "cut-and-runners". Limited and unsustainable military relief due to the surge becomes "progress" and even "victory".

In their world, which translates so effortlessly in the corporate media, simplicity and dichotomy rule. You want to "win the war on terror" or you don't. You are a "pinhead" or a "patriot".

Bush frames the argument, then wins the debate. He keeps mopping the floor with the democratic "oppostion" with just such tactics. Oh yeah, in closing let me just say "support the troops!"

 
At 1:06 PM, Blogger Da' Buffalo Amongst Wolves said...

I guess the "debaathification law" doesn't apply to SOME people:

Iraq Clears Way for Execution of 'Chemical Ali'

NPR.org, February 29, 2008 · A death sentence against "Chemical Ali," once among the most feared men in Iraq, will be carried out within days now that the last legal obstacles have been exhausted, Iraqi officials said Friday.


Lest we feel too smug at home in America, Democracy:

We’re #1! - Record-high ratio of Americans in prison “…Per capita or in raw numbers, it’s more than any other nation.”

“For some groups, the incarceration numbers are especially startling,” the report said. “While one in 30 men between the ages of 20 and 34 is behind bars, for black males in that age group the figure is one in nine.”

"The racial disparity for women also is stark. One of every 355 white women aged 35 to 39 is behind bars, compared with one of every 100 black women in that age group."

The largest percentage increase - 12 percent - was in Kentucky, where Gov. Steve Beshear highlighted the cost of corrections in his budget speech last month. He noted that the state’s crime rate had increased only about 3 percent in the past 30 years, while the state’s inmate population has increased by 600 percent…

In full, with informative maps relating regional poverty rates to incarceration rates at My Site

 
At 8:20 PM, Blogger MonsieurGonzo said...

Mr. McCain : cold Old War thinking for 'A New Kind Of War' hot not.

The only metrics IRAQ Occupation + escalation = "surge" supporters cite are the number of "insurgent" attacks against us, and our own rate of attrition.

IRAQ Occupation forces are not waging War, they're sustaining Defense with fewer casualties after receiving (desperately needed apparent) reinforcements from the U.S. reserves, the Turkish military; as well as active, Sunni mercenary forces and passive for-the-moment Shi'ite militias, (apparently satisfied to become rival 'Occupiers', themselves ~ after conquering most of Baghdad and Basra).

On the ground, fwiw, "The Mission" has no strategic combat meaning apparent ~ save only the simple truth of comrade survival at the Unit level: time . . . is their real enemy. "Who hurt us?" remains unknown, and unknowable ~ until we kill or capture one of them 'en flagrante' = while the crime is burning.

History reveals that Survival is sufficient for those one occupies to be victorious. Their only blessing being that they have no other choice but the struggle to remain. But an occupier must choose: either to vanquish before unraveling, and becoming irrelevant; or to vanish before a known-to-be eternal tide of active and passive resistance.

Even in raw, geopolitical terms: we can extract no profitable measure of treasure oil from IRAQ until we can extract ourselves from their bloody ore.

The Surge, a success? Not IMHO. All we have managed is to remain in this state of still being "forever", over there. . . And that is their destiny, not ours, n'est ce-pas?

 
At 11:03 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I actually heard Bush praise the presidential council's action on the provincial elections.

The way he sees it, they were using their power of the veto, which is an important part of democracy.

Can the man get any dumber?

 
At 11:44 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"McCain .... does not seem to have noticed that the price tag for it and Afghanistan ... Not to mention the nearly 4,000 killed in action and the thousands seriously wounded, with brain trauma, spinal injuries (etc)"

4,000 killed in action ? And what about the 500,000 or so Iraqis killed ? That gets multiplied by *zero* ? Presumably, you left them out since this posting addresses US domestic politics, and you imagine that dead Iraqis don't create sufficient pull there.

However, leaving out Iraqi casualties here simply reinforces the message that Iraqi deaths should be held as irrelevant in US internal political discourse. And as such, that's in blatant contradiction to whatever you're trying to do with your blog.

I'm sure you've noted and are aware of the most important point here : every dead Iraqi is every bit as valuable a human being as an American soldier, and since the vast majority of Iraqis have died as a direct consequence of the invasion supported by McCain, it must be repeatedly mentioned that there are 100 or so Iraqis dead for every American soldier killed.

 
At 5:56 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

McCain is also saying Obama and Clinton's insistence on reopening NAFTA threatens the assistance of Canada's 2,500-troop contribution to Afghanistan.

http://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/2008/02/mccain_tags_dems_on_trade_trea.php

So in addition to the $3-5 trillion, the effort is so important we must acquiesce in the continuing decimation of our middle class economy. Talk about "in for a penny, in for a pound." War supporters have become so emotionally invested in justifying their mistake, they've lost all sense of perspective.

I think this is the tact Democrats must use to criticize the war this election and counter the "surge is working" nonsense. That even under the most starry-eyed scenario, the costs of this adventure cannot be justified by any conceivable benefits. It's like we're paying $100 for a Coke, and not even Halliburton charges us that (just $45). There's got to be a better way to quench our thirst.

 
At 5:38 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I´d say that it did cost him the elections. Are there any doubts that Obama will become the next president of the US? It´s just because someone told the US-Citizens about the real costs of the war, but how did they calculate anger, pain and suffering? It´s just sad, and the mean motivation was the oil, that´s simply insane.

 

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