Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Diyala Campaign Begins

The al-Maliki government has just launched another of its military offensives against guerrillas, this time in Baquba, the capital of Diyala Province. I am skeptical about these campaigns. They are announced well in advance, allowing the guerrillas to go underground or relocate. Then in Mosul and now in Baquba the campaigns don't appear to involve any actual battles. The Diyala situation is complicated by the province's Sunni majority, which is unlikely to welcome largely Shiite government troops sent by a Shiite government. Some of the trouble in Diyala came from the dominance in the province of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, a Shiite fundamentalist party, and its paramilitary, the Badr Corps, which was until 2003 part of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps. Shiites are a minority in Diyala, but the Sunnis boycotted the January 2005 provincial elections.

Al-Zaman reports in Arabic that Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is taking great interest in the operation, because he believes it will have a direct impact on security in the capital, Baghdad. Al-Zaman said that only a small contingent of US troops supported the Iraqi army, and that they in turn were given cover by US helicopter gunships.

Al-Zaman reports in Arabic that close observers despaired that parliament would make any breakthroughs on the provincial election law on Wednesday, before it goes into a month-long recess on Thursday. Some Arab MPs have called for troops from the Middle Euphrates and the south (i.e. Shiite troops) to be sent to Kirkuk, to forestall, they say, a "foreign" incursion there (presumably by Turkey, which fears violence against the Turkmen minority, of which Ankara feels protective because of cultural and linguistic ties.

Al-Hayat reports in Arabic that Mahdi Army militiamen clad in black marched in Najaf to commemorate the death of Imam Musa al-Kadhim. They were carrying pictures of Muqtada al-Sadr and chanting against the al-Maliki government. Some called for immediate US withdrawal. Close observers of the Iraqi scene expressed fears that the Mahdi Army may be back.

Worried that parliament might pass another bill similar to the one President Jalal Talibani vetoed, which gave equal representation on the provincial council of Kirkuk to Arabs, Turkmen and Kurds, thousands of protesters rallied in Irbil on Tuesday.

Don't miss Helena Cobban's recent reflections on the situation in Iraq. She concludes that the security situation remains perilous but that power may be shifting toward Baghdad and away from Washington.

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3 Comments:

At 10:20 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I would guess that the operations of Malik's army are primarily intended to impact the domestic political situation in Iraq and in the US.

 
At 9:25 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

BushCo has demonstrated that the American audience is the most important (and perhaps most malleable) one to propagandize. News is prepared for Americans first and foremost, and the heck with the rest of them. Bushco has made some very silly and useless forays attempting to propgandize Iraqis, but apparently only BuschCo and Karen Hughes believed they were of any value. One must think really far back, to that vapid sitcome of the 60's, Bewitched, where the clueless ad writer Darrin pulls something out of hat at the last minute to save his job (a true American!!) while the real episode plot has been going on unrecognized all around him for the 22 minutes that was not given over to advertising for floor wax, steel belted radials, and breakfast cereal. BushCo is all too much like Bewitched to be funny. The real question here is why Americans are so susceptible to propaganda, buoilt by Americans, for Americans. The rest of the first world does not appear to share this susceptibility; they seem to know what's going on, and how dorky BushCo is as a rational force. Americans seem to be unique. Which I guess is fine for people who don't own any "pointed sticks", as the rather more worldly Pythons later articulated. Bush, Cheney, Rove, Feith and the others would be fine in a frat house. Let 'em out, however, and give 'em access to pointed sticks, and Iraq Today is what you get.

 
At 9:44 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

just saw your name on Katrina's letter. are you against escalation in afghanistan?

http://bloggerinterrupted.com/2008/07/katrina-vanden-horseshit-escalates-on-afghanistan

 

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