What,if anything,Has Changed in Iraq / Prof.B.Rubin

George Packer, a writer on Iraq who rather likes President Barack Obama, gave a devastating critique of the chief executive's claim that the U.S. troops had now ended their combat mission. This was, Packer said:

“A meaningless milestone, constructed almost entirely out of thin air,” since the remaining 50,000 troops are still combat troops “in everything but name.” Packer agreed that Obama had kept his word by declaring on the designated date what he had said he would.

What’s most important of all, however, is the political mess in Iraq. Packer explains:

“”Almost six months after national elections, the country’s politicians remain unable to compromise and cut a deal….In the vacuum, Sunni extremists are showing just how much—and how little—Iraqi security forces are going to be capable of in the post-American-combat-mission era. It’s not a very encouraging picture,” especially when one adds in the ongoing violence, lack of security, plus shortages of electricity and water.

Who is at fault is not my concern, though I'm on record as favoring a withdrawal as early as 2005. What is essential is that Iran and Syria are now likely to take advantage of the situation by simultaneously pushing their local proxies, aiding the terrorist insurgents, and proclaiming that the withdrawal proves that America is weak and an unreliable ally.

Of course, the Iraqi government can and should be able to defend itself, that is why a withdrawal is the right thing to do. But coupled with a weak U.S. stance and a lack of credibility, the withdrawal is much more of a potential strategic problem.

Combined with the growing Iran-Syria-Hizballah control over Lebanon, Hamas’s escape from heavy sanctions, the shift of Turkey’s regime toward Tehran, and Iran’s steady advance toward nuclear weapons, the tide is shifting against the West in the region. The Obama Administration not only has no answers for these problems, in many cases it doesn’t know that these defeats and dangers exist.

Of course, it is aware that Iran’s getting nuclear weapons is dangerous and the increase of sanctions has been significant—more than I had predicted—though this still falls far short in extent and implementation to be effective. But the threat posed by Syria, the Turkish regime, events in Lebanon, and by Hamas, along with the other issues mentioned above is simply not comprehended in Washington.

The congratulations over Iraq may well be accompanied by a worsening situation in Iraq and the Gulf. I'm not saying that Iraq will collapse or be taken over by Iran. Not at all. I'm just saying that this is one more element adding to the instability mix in the area and things could go wrong.

At Last! A Moderate, Articulate Opposition Leader to Defeat Turkey's Islamist Regime at the Ballot Box

Posted: 04 Sep 2010 02:04 PM PDT

By Barry Rubin

Turkey’s current Islamist regime, after seven years in power, better start getting nervous. For in opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu--a Kurd by background, a social democrat by world view, and a man known for being both articulate and incorruptible--it has a tough opponent for next year’s election. He doesn’t mince words. Here’s what he told Der Spiegel:

“Our prime minister's tantrums create problems for us. We are a modern country; our laws and ethical principles are Western. The government is in the process of gambling away this tradition. They are scaring away our partners. They are beginning to exert their power over the state, step by step….We currently have a prime minister who is strongly polarizing -- overseas as well as at home. Do you not agree that a less aggressive political style would suit our country better?”

Meanwhile, in Turkey, the media and public are waking up about the mess their government has led them into. Semih Idiz writes in Hurriyet:

“It is clear that Turkish-American ties have not been the same since Turkey voted against the Iran sanctions at the Security Council. The Mavi Marmara incident, on the other hand, increased the tension in Turkish-Israeli ties, which was in the doldrums anyway since the famous incident in Davos. This in turn has had an added disruptive effect on Turkish-American ties.

“One could even say at this stage that the normalization of Turkish-Israeli ties has become a kind of a precondition for the normalization of Turkish-U.S. ties, and until that happens it seems that Ankara’s relations with Washington will not carry the `strategic value’ they may have had in the past.”

“….If there is not careful management of the adverse situation that exists this could end up being one of the worst periods in Turkish-U.S. ties. The problem here is not so much with the U.S. administration, of course….”

http://www.gloria-center.org/


Post new comment

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters (without spaces) shown in the image.