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إنقاذ
العراق بقلم:
روبرت دريفوس مجلة
ذا نايشن الأمريكية - 27/6/2007 ان الولايات المتحدة تواجه
فشلاً في العراق, فعملية تعزيز
القوات لا تعمل كما يجب. و سياسة
الولايات المتحدة الجديدة في
تسليح العشائر السنية و بعض
المجموعات المقاومة الأخرى من
اجل مواجهة تنظيم القاعدة في
العراق ليست إستراتيجية صحيحة. Saving
Iraq Robert
Dreyfuss Last
week, a fierce critic of the Bush Administration's war
in And
she's not the only one. Many opponents of Bush's
adventure in Such
sentiments are being challenged by a nascent bloc of
Iraqi nationalists who, against all odds, are working to
put together a pan-Iraqi coalition that would topple the
US-backed government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.
Maliki's ruling alliance includes separatist Kurdish
warlords and Iranian-backed Shiite fundamentalists, both
of whom want to carve out semi or wholly independent
statelets. Although it has not yet jelled, Maliki's
opposition--which includes Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds, as
well as Christians, Turkmen and others--is within
striking distance of creating a functioning
parliamentary majority. More
important, outside Parliament the nationalists represent
an overwhelming majority of rank-and-file Iraqis. Among
the Sunnis, who have fifty-five seats in the 275-member
Parliament, there is broad support for maintaining
Iraq's territorial integrity not only among its deputies
but throughout the armed Iraqi resistance, a diverse
group that includes Baathists, Sunni tribal leaders,
former military officers and the Association of Muslim
Scholars, a Sunni religious organization that claims to
be the political arm of the resistance. Among
the Shiites, most Iraqi observers believe that if new
elections were held, the big winners would be Muqtada
al-Sadr's party, which controls much of
eastern Baghdad and wields great power in the holy
cities of Najaf and Karbala, and the Fadhila party, a
quasi-Sadrist party with great strength in Iraq's south,
particularly Basra. The big losers would be the ruling
Dawa party, which has little or no remaining support,
and the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in
Iraq (SCIRI), an Iranian-backed paramilitary party that
now calls itself the Supreme Islamic Council of Iraq
(SICI). Add
to those forces the dwindling but still significant
influence of secular nonsectarian Iraqis, whose titular
leader is Iyad
Allawi. Allawi's party, which has friends in
the Almost
unnoticed in the American media, these nationalist
forces have been groping toward an accommodation that
could oust Maliki. In fits and starts, and under the
worst possible conditions--literally under fire--they
are looking for a way out of the ethnic and sectarian
crisis. It is an effort that has been under way for
nearly a year. But they are doing so not only without
American support but with determined opposition from the
Bush Administration. Even
though the nationalists represent what is probably Why
isn't Over
the past two months, the nationalists in Parliament have
won two landmark votes: the first in support of a bill
calling for the For
Americans concerned about what Although
The
most active Iraqi politician working to assemble the
nationalist bloc in Of
course, achieving that is a tall order. There is
enormous suspicion among many of the potential players
in the opposition. And with each passing day, as more
Iraqis are killed, as sectarian atrocities pile up and
as attitudes harden and fears grow, it becomes more
difficult to bridge those divides. On top of all that,
opposition leaders have to deal with the heavy-handed
influence of the Last
month, when I asked David Satterfield, the State
Department's chief Iraq person, if the United States
could see itself supporting an alternative to Maliki, he
shot down the suggestion in the strongest terms.
"We strongly, explicitly support the government of
Prime Minister Maliki," he said, through a clenched
jaw, and looking me in the eye. "It is not helpful
to talk about alternatives." Similarly,
two weeks ago, at a conference in What's
important about all this is that perhaps the best chance
to end the war in Iraq will come not from the US
Congress, hamstrung by presidential veto and limited by
the more timid instincts of its most conservative
members, and not from the White House, which seems
committed to preserving current US policy in Iraq into
2009, but from the Iraqis themselves. With or without
Maliki, Iraqi opposition to the The
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20070716/dreyfuss ----------------- نشرنا
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