Iraqi Government to UN: 'Don't Extend Mandate for Bush's Occupation'
Well, great decider, decide. Leave or fuck Iraq?
Bush needs the UN's cover to justify the occupation, but the only way he can renew the expiring UN mandate is to cut Iraq's frail democracy out of the process.
The United Nations Security Council, with support from the British and American delegations, is poised to cut the Iraqi parliament out of one of the most significant decisions the young government will make: when foreign troops will depart. It's an ugly and unconstitutional move, designed solely to avoid asking an Iraqi legislature for a blank check for an endless military occupation that it's in no mood to give, and it will make a mockery of Iraq's nascent democracy (which needs all the legitimacy it can get).
While the Bush administration frequently invokes sunny visions of spreading democracy and "freedom" around the world, the fact remains that democracy is incompatible with its goals in Iraq. The fact remains that the biggest headache supporters of the occupation of Iraq have to deal with is the fact of the occupation itself. As far back as the middle of 2004, more than nine out of 10 Iraqis said the U.S.-led forces were "occupiers," and only 2 percent called them "liberators." Things have only gone downhill since then, and any government that represents the will of the Iraqi people would have no choice but to demand a timetable for the withdrawal of foreign troops. This fact poses an enormous problem, as the great triumph of the Bush administration and its supporters has been in their ability to convince a much of the Americans population that Iraqi interests and Washington's interests are in harmony, even when they're diametrically opposed.
Via Mathaba.
3 Comments:
Cutting out the Iraqi parliment makes more of a mockery of our democracy than it does of theirs.
I'm sorry. I didn't realize we have a democracy anymore.
But I'm not too bright.
Its sort of like Wylie Coyote before he realizes he's about to fall thousands of feet into the canyon.
Everything seems OK to most Americans, but they are not on solid ground.
BUT NOW I DO
I never turned my talents for
Temporal aims, like this, before--
But now I do, who loathes this war.
If every man, a small percent
Made clear unto the government
Then it must heed his discontent.
As is today, claiming some slight
Percentage mandates all the fight,
So these co-opt, by fear and sleight,
These incidentals at the helm
Whom consequences overwhelm,
Disaster´s tide too wide to stem.
Post a Comment
<< Home