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Deal on American Presence in Iraq Close to Collapse


By Anonymous - Posted on 26 October 2008

Deal on American presence in Iraq close to collapse
By Marie Colvin | TimesOnLine

Senior Iraqi politicians have warned that a crucial deal between Baghdad and Washington governing the presence of American troops in the country is doomed to failure after eight months of talks.

“The Sofa [Status of Forces Agreement] is dead in the water,” said one Iraqi politician close to the talks.

He added that Nouri al-Maliki, the prime minister, believed that signing it would be “political suicide”.

The collapse of the deal would severely undermine American policy. An agreement is needed to put America’s presence on a legal basis after the United Nations mandate for its 154,000 troops in Iraq expires on December 31.

Robert Gates, the US defence secretary, claimed last week that the deal was “mostly done”.

The draft pact, painstakingly negotiated in Baghdad by Ryan Crocker, the American ambassador, and US generals, calls for a withdrawal of American forces from Iraq’s main cities by the end of 2009 and a complete withdrawal by 2011.

The Americans made what they considered to be a significant compromise by agreeing to Iraqi jurisdiction over any troops who committed “serious crimes” while off duty.

They also agreed that American soldiers acting on their own would no longer be able to arrest suspected insurgents. They would need Iraqi permission to make arrests.

Despite the concessions it emerged this weekend that Maliki, who has grown in stature as the Iraqi armed forces have taken control of security in the main cities of Baghdad, Basra and Mosul in the past year, would block the deal.

Two other serving members of Maliki’s government confirmed his view. Iraqi politics is focused on the forthcoming provincial elections, due early next year. Maliki also faces a general election in a year’s time.

Open support for the American presence is seen as a vote-loser, even though most Iraqis tacitly acknowledge the need for troops to remain in the country until their own army can enforce order.

An unofficial poll of MPs last week revealed that the deal would fall far short of gaining majority support in parliament.

“It is absolutely impossible under any circumstances that we will accept this booby-trapped agreement,” said Nasser al-Rubaie, a spokesman for the opposition group of Moqtada al-Sadr, the radical Shi’ite cleric.

“This is an agreement which takes Iraq out of direct occupation and puts it under colonialism with the help of the government of Iraq. It only serves the occupier,” said Rubaie, who is also an MP.

That view was echoed across the political spectrum. Politicians also pointed out that they saw no reason to sign such a contentious accord with the lame duck administration of President George W Bush.

“From a political point of view, how is it possible to sign an agreement with an administration which only has a few days left in power, taking into consideration the changes that will possibly take place if the Democrats were to come to power?” said Hussein al-Falluji, an MP for Iraqi Accord, a Sunni party.

If the deal fails the Americans may be forced to ask Iraq to return to the UN security council for a temporary renewal of their mandate, but the legal status of many of their actions will become uncertain.

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If they don't accept our offer gracefully the murderers in charge will just kill them and we ALL know that is the real offer on the table.

This government is WRONG and we are guilty by actively applied ignorance of the SAME CRIMES! unless we act to stop this now.

The reporter said, ". . . even though most Iraqis tacitly acknowledge the need for troops to remain in the country until their own army can enforce order." Pray tell where did that information come from? Probably not from the thousands of people in the streets of Baghdad demanding that Americans leave. Probably not from the fact that "insurgents" are killing Americans. So where does it come from but his fevered brain and the propaganda that our dear media tells us?

It is way past time for us to leave a place where we should never have been as occupiers in the first place. Diplomacy is one thing and occupation is something else all together.

4Peace

Where there is a commodity the corperate structure will be there to control and occupy if need be. The interests of the western oil companies have controlled the fate of the Iraqi people for a very long time before Sadam became the US governments best friend in the region. The corperate structure sets the table for war and occupation and the American people are to busy texting to realize they have polished off steaming pile of shit,chris dorsey

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