Daily Kos

Basra Assault Exposes Fraud of "National Reconciliation" in Iraq

Fri Mar 28, 2008 at 04:12:53 PM PDT

Critics of the Bush Administration's policies in Iraq have charged that the Bush Administration's "surge" policy has failed, since its stated intention was to improve security to create the political space for "national reconciliation" in Iraq. Since national reconciliation has not taken place in Iraq, the surge has failed.

Indeed, it was only on Monday that I wrote: "[The conventional wisdom that the 'surge' has succeeded] misses the fact that the 'surge' has failed to produce national political reconciliation in Iraq, its stated goal."

But after this week's US-assisted Iraqi government assault on neighborhoods in Basra controlled by Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army, I regret writing that sentence. I fear that it praises with faint damnation. I fear that it could be construed to accept the premise that the Bush Administration is trying to produce national political reconciliation in Iraq, while arguing that it has failed to achieve its goal.

After this week, I regard this premise to be a clear fraud.

While President Bush says the Iraqi government offensive showed that the prime minister believed "in evenhanded justice" - presumably because the government was showing that it would attack Shiite as Sunni militias - supporters of the Mahdi Army claimed that it was a political attack on their movement to weaken it prior to regional elections scheduled for October. But this interpretation of events is by no means limited to Iraqis.

The Washington Post reports:

Some [U.S] officials have concluded that [Iraqi Prime Minister] Maliki himself is firing "the first salvo in upcoming elections," the administration official said. "His dog in that fight is that he is basically allied with the Badr Corps" [a rival Shiite militia, associated with a rival Shiite political party that is part of the U.S.-backed government] against forces loyal to Sadr, the official said. "It's not a pretty picture."

U.S. officials claim that Prime Minister Maliki "decided to launch the offensive" without consulting U.S. officials. This is an incredible claim, when you consider that the U.S. is participating in - and now in some places leading, the Post reports - the offensive:

U.S. forces in armored vehicles battled Mahdi Army fighters Thursday in the vast Shiite stronghold of Sadr City, and military officials said Friday that U.S. aircraft bombed militant positions in the southern city of Basra, as the American role in a campaign against party-backed militias appeared to expand. Iraqi army and police units appeared to be largely holding to the outskirts of the Sadr City fighting, as U.S. troops took the lead.

Whatever one thinks of Moqtada al-Sadr and the Mahdi Army, they are hardly a marginal political force in Iraq. In 2006, the New York Times noted, supporters of Sadr constituted the largest bloc in the Shiite parliamentary alliance.

Not surprisingly, the majority of casualties in Basra have been civilian, according to hospital officials.

How, exactly, will this assault contribute to "national reconciliation"? Why are U.S. soldiers killing and dying in this operation that was decided, supposedly, without consultation with U.S. officials? Members of Congress should be asking. It's one thing if the train from New York to Washington is late. It's quite another story if we discover that the train is headed to Chicago.

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Congress should ask why the U.S. is participating in the assult on the Mahdi Army

93%134 votes
6%10 votes

| 144 votes | Vote | Results

Tags: basra, Basra fighting, Iraq, iraq surge, Iraq war, George W. Bush, success of the surge, Rescued (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 23 comments

  •  well, on the plus side (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Johnny Rapture

    The puppet government is feeling secure enoguh after the surge to try to improve its political situation by force. I'm sure this can be pointed to as a sign of success. Look, they are cocky enough to leave the Green Zone and attack political rivals! That's a sign of a country on the rise.

    Do not rejoice in Hitler's defeat, for though the world has stood up and stopped the bastard, the bitch that bore him is in heat again. Bertolt Brecht

    by Marcion on Fri Mar 28, 2008 at 04:22:11 PM PDT

    •  but (3+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      vcmvo2, Marcion, Losty

      but Maliki and the Iraqi army got its ass kicked today.  They lost ground all over, Mass defections within the army took place, police simply left there stations when told to by the Sadr army.

      Maliki himself look like a total ass.  Yesterday he said insurgents had " 72 hours to turn themselves in or else"  then by miday he changed that to " you have 10 days to trun yourselves in..."  by days end he stated " we will offer money for guns turn in instead"    If it wasnt so tragic it would be hysterical.

      •  the British picked commander in Basra (0+ / 0-)

        Wanted three more months to prepare for an offensive. I have to believe that they expected to temporarily lose control of their bases within the city before they cleared the neighbhoods from the outside. I think in the end the Iraqi army with US air support will grind it out, but yeah, they are nto impressing anybody with this blitzkrieg.

        The way I read the amnesties is that miltiamen still have until Saturday to surrender, while everybody else can turn in heavy weapons and get rewards for the next 10 days. Not that either will happen.

        I think Maliki figures to be ousted by the end of the year, so he wants to pull in the US to do his dirty work agaisnt the Sadr block while he still has a chance and there are some free forces in country. It's interesting how reluctant the US is to aid this campaign, but they won't be able to resist for long, not while bad guys are around and there's an opportunity to kick some ass.

        Do not rejoice in Hitler's defeat, for though the world has stood up and stopped the bastard, the bitch that bore him is in heat again. Bertolt Brecht

        by Marcion on Fri Mar 28, 2008 at 05:21:58 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  Congress should quit asking (4+ / 0-)

    and demand that we get the hell out of Iraq and begin making reparation payments to the people in Iraq.

    What FDR giveth; GWB taketh away.

    by Marie on Fri Mar 28, 2008 at 04:22:13 PM PDT

    •  First, congress has to want us out of Iraq (0+ / 0-)

      before they will demand that we get the hell out. They've had plenty of chances to stop funding the war and have yet to provide any significant resistance, R's and D's.

      They haven't reached that point yet. Many of them are still convinced that we have "strategic interests" in the region and that we have our military there to make certain our interests are seen to. No amount of death and destruction is going to get in the way of that, at least not into the foreseeable future.

      "Control oil and you control nations; control food and you control people..." Henry Kissinger

      by truong son traveler on Sat Mar 29, 2008 at 08:26:23 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  Hard to achieve national reconciliation when (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    vcmvo2, Owllwoman

    you don't have Shi'ite reconcilitation, Sunn'i reconciliation, or Kurdish reconciliation.

  •  The US is attacking the Madhi (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Eiron, Johnny Rapture, Marcion

    army mainly because the Iraqi troops laid down their guns and refused to kill their own Countrymen.  You made an excellent point about Maliki that I had not thought of.  He is not well liked in Iraq and what better way to win in elections than to wipe out your contender.

    "Though the Mills of the Gods grind slowly,Yet they grind exceeding small."

    by Owllwoman on Fri Mar 28, 2008 at 04:25:09 PM PDT

  •  "National reconciliation" has always meant (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Marcion

    that Iraqis should reconcile themselves to a long term US presence on the Air Force bases it has constructed for the purpose of monitoring the region (Asia and North Africa) and shifting components of the missile defense from Western Europe to the edge of the Persian Gulf.  The Kurds have always been moderately agreeable to the US presence, as long as we don't interfere in their efforts to extend influence over parts of Turkey and Iran.  The Sunni's, whose lands have been requisitioned in Al Anbar and Diyala province, interfering with their grazing rights and trade routes, are not agreeable and the Shia under Al Sadr just want the Americans gone.  Al Sadr announced the cease fire after the Helsinki Agreement, which spelled out their goals.  Nothing has been achieved.  If anything, the bombardment by US planes and drones has increased in an effort to eliminate the insurgent leadership.
    Bush Two is still throwing good money after bad because he can't face that the plan to set up a gigantic espionage operation has gone south.  What are they going to do with the mega embassy if it doesn't become a sort of N.S.A. East?  Never mind that there's a good chance that the wiring isn't adequate anyway.

    How do you tell a predator from a protector? The predator will eat you sooner rather than later.

    by hannah on Fri Mar 28, 2008 at 04:36:43 PM PDT

    •  spot on (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Jefficus

      and don't forget Maliki stole the oil in Feb 08 by cancelling all existing oil and gas contracts with multi national corporations.  Next day, exactly the next day, announced Iraq would only do deals with 5 Majors (all US).  Very next day, a joint announcement by the oil ministers from Turkey and Iraq state they are signing 5 Majors to oil deals - claiming not significant contracts just assistance kind of stuff ALL WHILE THE PARLIMENT OF IRAQ WAS NOT IN SESSION.

      Cheney appeared on the scene about 10 days later.

      All hell has broken loose.

      My son is there.

      I'm mad as hell at Cheney and Bush because they have raped this country, achieved their end game which is permanent bases as you suggest and theft of all the country's natural resources through their puppet Malaki.

  •  "We" decided to participate, I guess, (0+ / 0-)

    because Bush woke up in the morning, scratched his butt, and decided on a whim it would be a kick-ass thing to do. The fact that many innocent people's lives are on the line doesn't factor into Bush's gameplay.

    Thou shalt not kill except for a long list of good reasons is like saying you should not covet your neighbor's wife unless she's hot.

    by FudgeFighter on Fri Mar 28, 2008 at 04:39:16 PM PDT

  •  Looks like a decisive battle (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    vcmvo2, Marcion, Losty

    Shiek Ali al-Sauidi, a prominent member of the Moqtada al-Sadr-led movement in Basra, said his men were being targeted not by the Iraqi government but by government militias loyal to the rival Supreme Islamic Council faction.

    "They are a executing a very well drawn plan. They are trying to exterminate the Sadrists and cut and isolate the movement before the September local elections," he said in a telephone interview with the Guardian.

    "The Sadrists are the only Shia resistance movement against the occupiers and we have wide popularity. We are going through a battle of existence we will fight to the end. We either survive this or we are finished."

    Having credibility when making an argument is the straightest path to persuasion.

    by SpamNunn on Fri Mar 28, 2008 at 04:49:55 PM PDT

    •  The rule on civil wars: (0+ / 0-)

      Pick a side. Make sure that side wins.  That's what is going on here.  

      Apparently, sitting on the fence and working the rebuilding angle has not been working.   This will be very ugly.

      Having credibility when making an argument is the straightest path to persuasion.

      by SpamNunn on Fri Mar 28, 2008 at 04:51:51 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  But Hakim's SCIRI Badrist's (0+ / 0-)

        aren't clearly stronger. Better organized and led, but Sadr's dudes have more popular support.
        Ironically, the US is backing the same side as Iran.  Go figger.

        what a goat rope.  Like going into Soweto in the bad old days.

        Those who hear not the music-think the dancers mad

        by Eiron on Fri Mar 28, 2008 at 05:32:11 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  This is how voter suppression is REALLY done. (2+ / 0-)

    F that caging crap. Bomb your opposition.

  •  I'm so sorry that Americans are just plain dumb (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    truong son traveler

    We fought this war already, you know, the one where we could capture the "hearts and minds" of people by force of arms.
    Our arms are beyond incredible, staggering even, and yet human hearts and minds remain unpersuaded. I guess it's only the people who skipped class, who had "other things to do" who didn't get the message.

    All the world over I will back the masses against the classes. Gladstone

    by DaNang65 on Sat Mar 29, 2008 at 08:24:28 PM PDT

  •  US has no "reliable"partner (0+ / 0-)

    to run the occupation of Iraq.

    Maliki is part of the Dawa, a smaller fraction. The Badr Corps is a Shiite pro Iranian group, temporarily allied with Maliki. There are some Sunnis, who are now on the payroll. Then there are some Kurds, who also are joining the Iraqi security force the US has constructed or "stood up". Maliki is resisting employing other Sunni,Shiia groups like those allied with Moqta.

    Illyad Allawi, Chalabi were marginal players.  The ones who are suspicious of, or do not want US minders in their coalition are frozen out.  So it's Maliki, or nobody.  Maliki needs to gut and decimate his rivals before the elections in October which were boycotted last time.  If those elections goes as the distribution of players actually is, the Sadr Shia not connected with the pro Iranians now running the government will make Dawa and other factions lose  many reps and get small enough they might not be ruling coalition anymore.

     The players calling for an independennt Iraq and the US and foreign fighters to leave might become Prime Minister and have electoral control.

    So this attack by PM with US backing is an attempt to drive off the Sadrist block and keep the reins of power with the US puppets Maliki and Co past next October.

    It is not about the disgrace and humiliation of losing being hung around the neck of GWB. It is about the dignity and worth of a troubled and occupied people and their desire to live free of interference and throw the thieves and killers out of their country,and have a chance to create a peace among the Iraqis that is impossible with occupation.

    John McCain: a survivor, not a hero. Just ask his first wife. He had his chance to be a hero and blew it.

    by Pete Rock on Sat Mar 29, 2008 at 09:13:19 PM PDT

  •  Here's the real helluvit (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    ghett

    Despite US press reports, al-Sadr is a nationalist who does not have the support of the Iranian leadership. They support...Maliki and the militias they trained themselves, the other two major Shia factions. And that's who the US is aligned with.

    Yet, we are supposed to think that it is Iran causing US deaths...

    Until we break the corporate virtual monopoly on what we hear and see, we keep losing, don't matter what we do.

    by Jim P on Sat Mar 29, 2008 at 09:29:02 PM PDT

  •  yes (0+ / 0-)

    I find the idea that we were "surprised" very unlikely. Didn't Cheney visit just a little over a week ago and meet with Maliki?

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/...

    If they really had kept their plans "secret" from him, our government would have responded by undercutting Maliki, not by supporting or even leading the offensive.

Permalink | 23 comments