[Marxism] The puppet talks back
Louis Proyect
lnp3 at panix.com
Sat Oct 28 08:52:29 MDT 2006
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-iraq28oct28,0,7510504.story?coll=la-home-headlines
'Not America's man in Iraq,' Premier says
Aides say Maliki warns U.S. to respect nation's sovereignty.
By Borzou Daragahi
Times Staff Writer
October 28, 2006
Iraq's prime minister sharply criticized U.S. policy Friday during a
private meeting with the American ambassador, pointing to the United
States' failure to either reduce violence or give his government
authority over security matters, aides to the Iraqi leader said.
The criticism was the latest example of tension between the two
governments and stood in contrast to a joint public statement issued
after the meeting.
Prime Minister Nouri Maliki and the U.S. Embassy said in the
statement that they had agreed to unspecified timelines to make tough
political and security decisions on the country's future.
Privately, however, Maliki criticized what he called the patronizing
U.S. tone toward the Iraqi government and warned U.S. Ambassador
Zalmay Khalilzad to respect Iraq's sovereignty, two of the prime
minister's advisors said.
"I'm a friend to the United States, but not America's man in Iraq,"
Maliki told Khalilzad, according to Hassan Senaid, one of the prime
minister's closest advisors.
Previously, Maliki had vehemently rejected the notion of deadlines
for his government to achieve key goals, but the statement said that
"the Iraqi government has made clear the issues that must be resolved
with timelines for them to take positive steps forward on behalf of
the Iraqi people."
The statement also said that "Iraq and the United States are
committed to working together to respond to the needs of the people."
It affirmed that the United States would "continue to stand by the
Iraqi government" amid rumors that Washington might be seeking
alternatives to Baghdad's Shiite-led administration.
Maliki's supporters downplayed the reference to timelines as
insignificant, saying they were meant as rough guidelines to hand
security over to the Iraqis.
U.S. officials in Baghdad could not be reached for comment.
After days of back-and-forth recriminations, the contrast between
private criticism and the public statement brought into sharper focus
a dispute that might have already undermined the Maliki government
and increased friction between the United States and Iraq's majority Shiites.
Khalilzad is at odds with Maliki on how to address the Shiite Muslim
militias wreaking havoc on large parts of Iraq. The ambassador last
year persuaded Sunni Arabs, now victimized by the militias, to enter
the government. He has insisted armed Shiite groups and Sunni Arab
insurgents be treated similarly.
Maliki draws political support from the groups backing the militias.
He said they should be drawn into the political process and disarmed
peacefully.
U.S. military and political officials have grown frustrated over what
they see as Iraqi government inaction on the militias, now deemed by
Americans as the No. 1 impetus of sectarian violence.
Khalilzad told reporters Tuesday that Iraqis must "achieve key
political and security milestones" by certain deadlines or face
unspecified consequences. But he was rebuffed by Maliki and U.S.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, who told critics to "back off"
making unreasonable demands on the 5-month-old Iraqi government.
Maliki's inner circle, huddled in a late-night briefing, said the
prime minister would call President Bush today to clear the air about
what his government viewed as unproductive interference on the part
of U.S. officials in Baghdad.
"Khalilzad's demand for a timetable was clear interference with the
sovereignty of the Iraqi government," said Nada Sudani, a member of
parliament from Maliki's Islamic Dawa Party. "Maliki rejects any
exterior body giving a timeline for the performance of the Iraqi government."
Prickly truths underlie the squabbling and confusion: Maliki's
government has lost public support over five months of car bombs,
death squads and economic misery, and increasingly relies on narrow
cliques of Islamist political parties, including the radical movement
of anti-American cleric Muqtada Sadr.
The U.S. government, undertaking a massive nation-building project
while fighting off a ferocious insurgency, has little choice but to
back Maliki's Iranian-influenced Shiite government. Any U.S. move
against Maliki could spark greater violence and anti-American animosity.
Maliki has demanded that Americans let him try to politically co-opt
Sadr, who has gone from a rabble-rousing street firebrand in the
early days after the U.S.-led invasion to one of the most powerful
figures in the country who controls 30 seats in parliament and
several key ministries.
There have been numerous signs that Sadr has tired of the most
troublesome of his loyalists. During prayers Friday in the southern
city of Kufa, Sadr's principal pulpit, his deputy denounced recent
violence in Iraq caused by "people who violated and stood against the
wise and honorable leadership" of the cleric.
"If you would ever fail to comply with [his orders], then I frankly
tell you that you will regret it, and you'd rather die," said Sheik
Jabir Khafaji, one of Sadr's chief advisors.
Among his followers' alleged misdeeds was the Monday night abduction
of a U.S. soldier of Iraqi descent. U.S. troops continued a days-long
crackdown on Baghdad's volatile Sadr City neighborhood, where they
suspect the soldier is being held.
Witnesses said U.S. forces raided schools, mosques and homes over the
last few days in search of the missing soldier. He was taken from a
home in central Baghdad on Monday night after he left the Green Zone
to spend the Muslim holidays with relatives.
Sadr City is a stronghold of bands of Sadr's followers, who call
themselves the Al Mahdi army. Sadr launched the organization as a
tool to mobilize and organize Shiites who are poor, young and devout.
But U.S. and Iraqi officials suspect that splinter groups under no
central authority have started using the Al Mahdi army as a cover for
various forms of criminal activity, including wanton targeting of
Sunni Arab men.
Sadr has ordered followers to refrain from violence during the latest
U.S. raids, and for the most part Friday the command held.
"The Mahdi army members are restraining themselves," said Qahtan
Sudani, a 28-year-old Sadr City resident and supporter of the cleric.
"It's Muqtada's orders that confrontation with the occupier will be
through peaceful methods."
At least one U.S. soldier was reported killed Friday, bringing the
number of American troops killed in Iraq this month to 97, the
highest for any month since January 2005. The soldier, assigned to
the 3rd Brigade of the 1st Cavalry Division, died of wounds sustained
in combat in Diyala province Thursday.
A British soldier serving near Basra died in a motor vehicle
accident, news agencies reported.
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