IRAQ Baghdad is under siege + njw comments 11-04-06
Newsflash: Humanity, like water, seeks its own level. The artificial boundaries created by outside meddlers (Sykes & Picot, this last go-round), in
It won’t be pretty as they go about the business of sorting it all out, while we watch from the sidelines (as always, glued to the vicareality of our electronic interlocutors – can’t get too close, can we?) as they clean up the mess we have made in our apparently never-ending compulsion to impose our hypocritical and faux-omniscient “values” on every damn person on the planet. Dubya’s right on this one; imposing one’s will on those weaker than oneself, really is “hard work.”
The one bright star in this otherwise dismal landscape is that Iraq is so obvious a “catastrophically successful” disaster to even the most bemused and distracted member of the American citizenry, that we will, in all likelihood witness a boatload of legislation (a la post –Vietnam) forfending a repeat performance. The trick will be to reign in the excesses exhibited by the Bush/Rove/Cheney administration without castrating the Executive branch’s ability to perform its constitutional duties. A weak Executive would prove as destructive to our national interests as the Incredible Hulk version has. Like porridge, it has to be “just right.”
Artificial, self-serving lines on a map; created by two fading empires, destroyed by another, having learned sweet fanny nothing from the folly of its predecessors – Santayana, unlike all of them, got it “just right.”
P.S. the price of our latest folly has been dear. The recent Amnesty International/Brookings report of 650,000 Iraqi dead comes with abundant documentation, including copies of the death certificates for more than 80% of the deceased.
From: Debby Bolen [mailto:dkbolen@worldnet.att.net]
Baghdad is under siege
By Patrick Cockburn in Arbil, Northern Iraq
01 November 2006
Sunni insurgents have cut the roads linking the city to the rest of
As American and British political leaders argue over responsibility for the crisis in
Well-armed Sunni tribes now largely surround
The Sunni insurgents seem to be following a plan to control all the approaches to
Dusty truck-stop and market towns such as Mahmoudiyah, Balad and Baquba all lie on important roads out of
In some isolated neighbourhoods in
The scale of killing is already as bad as
* upwards of 1,000 Iraqis are dying violently every week;
* Shia fighters have taken over much of
* the
* the Shia and Sunni militias control
No target is too innocent. Yesterday a bomb tore through a party of wedding guests in
Amid all this, Dick Cheney, the
And there is growing confusion over the role of the
Mr Maliki has recently criticised the
In reality the militias are growing stronger by the day because the Shia and Sunni communities feel threatened and do not trust the army and police to defend them.
One eyewitness in Balad said two
Another ominous development is that Iraqi tribes that often used to have both Sunni and Shia members are now splitting along sectarian lines.
In
The Occupation: War and Resistance in
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article1945769.ece