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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumar89 who wrote (57619)12/20/2004 12:15:04 AM
From: techguerrillaRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
What are you smoking? China? My lifetime? <eom>



To: Brumar89 who wrote (57619)12/20/2004 1:07:19 PM
From: sea_biscuitRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
I can't wait for the "elections" in Iraq to be over. After that, what other fig leaf will you idiots think of?! :-)

(ARTICLE)

A poll governed by fear: millions will get no chance to vote, and the war will go on
The 30 January election will go ahead, even though violence is unabated and the campaign may worsen divisions
By Patrick Cockburn in Baghdad

19 December 2004

The Iraqi election on 30 January, for which campaigning began last week, will be one of the most secretive in history. Iraqi television shows only the feet of election officials rather than their faces, because they are terrified of their identity being revealed. It will be a poll governed by fear.

Those fears were amply borne out yesterday when insurgents launched attacks on election offices in northern Iraq. Two people were killed and eight wounded when mortars landed on an election office in Dujail, one of many around the country registering and educating potential voters. Two Iraqis were killed in execution-style shootings and four American contractors were wounded by a roadside bomb in other incidents.

When Iyad Allawi, the interim Prime Minister, announced his slate of candidates for the 275-member National Assembly in Baghdad last week, it was to a small audience of American security guards. The venue had been changed at the last minute to baffle potential assassins, and foreign journalists deemed it too dangerous to attend.

Shopkeepers distributed registration forms, tucked into the bags of monthly rations on which most Iraqis depend for survival. In Sunni districts in Baghdad some shopkeepers, fearing execution by the resistance, had begged their customers not to reveal where they got the forms.

There is now little doubt that the elections will go ahead. The Sunni political powers, fearing mass abstention by their constituents, would like a delay. But they could provide no convincing argument that the security situation will be any better in six months. Hoshyar Zebari, the powerful foreign minister, argued that "a delay in holding the election would be taken as a sign of weakness", and the interim government is doing what it can to manipulate public opinion.

Announcements that former members of the Saddam regime will go on trial this week, starting with the notorious "Chemical Ali", Ali Hassan al-Majid, are seen as electioneering more than anything else. The same applies to news yesterday that judges had begun interrogating him and another top suspect.

It is doubtful if the election, at least at first, will mark a real change in the balance of power between the three main communities in Iraq: the Shia, the Sunni and the Kurds. Nor is it likely to see a shift in authority from the US to Iraqis. The outcome could simply be a photocopy of the present government.

Few votes will be cast in the Sunni cities, towns and villages strung along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers north of Baghdad. Even if voters did want to go to the polls, it would be extremely dangerous to do so in places where anybody seen co-operating with the US is a target.

American and British officials persistently underestimate the extent to which all of Iraq is unstable. President George Bush and Tony Blair genuinely appear to believe that there are only limited trouble spots in Iraq and the rest of the country is at peace. Since the beginning of the insurgency, Washington and London have portrayed it as confined to the so-called "Sunni triangle" west and north of Baghdad. The phrase is designed to minimise the extent of the uprising, but in reality there is guerrilla warfare in all the Sunni towns and cities as well as Baghdad.

As US generals were issuing triumphant claims of victory in Fallujah, with a population of 300,000, last month they lost control of Mosul, 250 miles to the north, with a population of 1.2 million. The unexpected insurgent uprising on 10 November, which led to the disintegration of the 8,000-strong police force, was clearly planned to take advantage of the US assault on Fallujah on 8 November.

In the most militant cities there is no sign of insurgent activity diminishing: Every day there are attacks on US and interim government forces in Baiji, Baquba, Ramadi, Samarra and Tal Afar. Fallujah itself is far from subdued. Ayham al-Samarrai, the minister of electricity, told The Independent on Sunday that it would be difficult to hold fair elections in provinces with a total population of eight million - a third of the Iraqi population.

Most serious of all is the situation in Baghdad. US military briefings give the impression that Fallujah has been the heart of the uprising since the invasion. In reality the deadliest location for a US soldier in Iraq is Baghdad, where 240 US troops have been killed since March last year, more than twice as many as in Fallujah. It is the capital that may witness the most violence as the election gets closer.

Whatever the outcome of the poll, the five million Sunni in Iraq are numerous enough to continue the uprising. The feeling that their community is being disenfranchised may increase support for the resistance. Because all Iraq is being treated as a single constituency, the Sunni may have few representatives. Had each of the 18 provinces in Iraq been allocated a set number of deputies to the National Assembly, then the Sunni provinces would be represented, despite a low turnout.

Voters will go to the polls in Iraqi Kurdistan, the Shia districts of Baghdad, and in southern Iraq. Ever since the US invasion overthrew Saddam Hussein in April last year, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani has demanded an election in which the Shia could show that they make up between 15 and 16 million of the 25 million Iraqi population.

But power in Iraq today grows out of the barrel of a gun. When Dr Hussain al-Shahristani, the highly respected and influential nuclear scientist tortured and imprisoned by Saddam Hussein, announced the Shia electoral list earlier this month, it was in the Convention Centre in the Green Zone in Baghdad, protected by US soldiers.

Ayatollah Sistani, the most influential Shia religious leader, is behind the Shia list, but it is not quite clear how far behind. The list may not elect 120 to 130 members of the National Assembly, as it expects.

The Shia leaders, though they have agreed an electoral pact, are deeply divided. At the head of the list is Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, the head of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), a party long based in Iran. Perhaps the most popular politician in Iraq is Ibrahim al-Jaafari, the head of one of factions of the Dawa party. But the list also includes Ahmed Chalabi, once the choice of the Pentagon to be the new leader of Iraq.

Mr Allawi, the surprise choice as interim Prime Minister, could go on holding the job, for the same reason he got it in the first place: the main players can live with him. The most important of these is the US. "There is simply no one else on whom the National Assembly could reach consensus," a senior official from a leading Shia party was quoted as saying. "Kurds would rather deal with Allawi than an Islamist Shia. So would Sunnis. We also realise that an Islamist Shia prime minister is a red line for the Americans."

But Mr Allawi has shown that he looks first of all to Washington for instructions. He supported the assault on Fallujah, despite the bloodshed. Militarily he is dependent on the US army. This might not damage him in the eyes of many Iraqi voters if he had satisfied their desire for security or improved the supply of electricity and fuel. Unfortunately for him the shortages are getting worse.

The police and the National Guard lack legitimacy. Often they are not prepared to fight the resistance. During the uprising in Mosul last month, the insurgents captured 10 police stations, some of them simply by phoning ahead and telling the police to get out.

The problems for the US and the interim government will be largely unchanged after the election. The Sunni will not stop their uprising while the occupation continues. The government will still depend on American guns to defend it. The differences between the three main Iraqi communities are increasing, and the war will go on.

IRAQ WATCH

The first in a series during the run-up to the Iraqi elections, in which 'The Independent on Sunday' will list the deaths and injuries suffered by all sides in the conflict each week.

The figures will be gleaned from press reports, reliable independent sources and official announcements, in an attempt to assess the full human cost of the conflict.

The total death toll for Iraqi civilians is impossible to calculate, because no accurate records have been kept. Casualty figures for UK and US forces are more reliable.

* 7 US forces killed

All seven were marines, killed in two incidents west of Baghdad last Sunday.

* British sailor dies

Petty Officer Simon Owen died of natural causes on HMS Chatham in the Gulf.

* 3 foreign workers killed

The men, thought to be Turkish, were killed with their Iraqi driver by gunmen in Mosul on Friday. One victim was beheaded.

* 16 Iraqi civilians killed

Eight died in a bomb attack close to a Shia shrine in Karbala on Wednesday. Suicide car bombs around Iraq claimed seven more lives on Monday.

* 51 Iraqi civilians wounded

The Karbala bombing wounded 32 people, including a senior cleric. Attacks in Baghdad injured 19.


20 December 2004 10:00
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To: Brumar89 who wrote (57619)12/20/2004 4:33:09 PM
From: sea_biscuitRespond to of 81568
 
More "wonderful" news from Dumbya's "valley of peace"

12/20/04 WW: GI dissent shakes up the Pentagon
A series of events in early December signaled a major shift in political consciousness within the U.S. Armed Forces. Together they struck fear in the hearts of the general staff.

12/20/04 FOCUS News: Four People Dead After Car-Bomb Attack
Four people are dead including three with foreign citizenship, after an attack with a car-bomb in the suburbs of the Iraqi town of Samara North of Baghdad, told AFP citing Iraqi police sources. Three of the people killed are foreign citizens.

12/20/04 FOCUS News: Turkish Truck Driver Killed in North Iraq
A Turkish truck driver has been killed near Tikrit, Internet edition of Turkish newspaper Zaman announced. The truck of the killed has been part of US convoy travelling to Tikrit. According to local police, he died as a result of car bomb explosion.

12/20/04 Houston Chronicle: League City soldier dies in Kuwait accident
Today, the family gathered to mourn his death. The 23-year-old U.S. Army Sgt. Barry Meza soldier died after being struck by a car as he changed a flat tire Sunday morning in Kuwait.

12/20/04 Islam Online: US Convoys, Bandits Sow Death on Iraqi Highways
Bandits are another element that adds insult to the injury in a country where the occupation troops and the interim government fail to maintain security.

12/20/04 AP: Explosion Hits Shiite Holy City in Iraq
A bomb exploded at a police checkpoint in the Shiite holy city of Karbala on Monday, damaging surrounding buildings but causing no casualties.

12/20/04 Reuters: Power shortage in Baghdad and suburbs
The Iraqi capital has been suffering from a power shortage for nearly a month. Ministry of Power officials say that problems with the main generators for the city will take longer than expected to be repaired

12/20/04 AFP: Polish special forces back home
Some 56 members of the GROM elite unit were deployed in Iraq in 2003 and took part in operations to take control of oil platforms near the southern city of Basra.

12/20/04 AP: 50 suspects detained in Najaf bombing
In the town of Ramadi, west of Baghdad, insurgents attacked a U.S. patrol with rocket-propelled grenades and machine guns in the center of the city, witnesses said. It was unclear whether there were any casualties in the clash.

12/20/04 AP: Security Requested for Election Workers, Convoy Attacked
Meantime, one US soldier was wounded when a roadside bomb planted near Baghdad's airport destroyed an Army Humvee today.

12/20/04 Journal: Injured soldier's education mission accomplished
Recovering in a hospital bed late last year, surrounded by wounded soldiers, Sgt. Chuck Bartles had plenty on his mind. The blast. His right arm, which no longer was by his side.His comrades -- the one that didn't survive the blast...

12/20/04 Telegraph: Update; Two U.S. soldiers killed in accident
Two U.S. soldiers were killed and two were injured in a traffic accident outside Kuwait City on Sunday, the U.S. military said in a statement.

12/20/04 Journal: Turkey Implies Iraqi Kurds Ambushed Turkish Team
Eight Turkish special team members appointed to provide security for Turkey's Baghdad Embassy were reportedly subjected to an ambush in Musul Northern Iraq, killing two attackers and five members of the special team.

12/20/04 irinnews: Displaced Fallujah residents unsure of when they can return home
More than two weeks after major fighting ended in Fallujah, about 60 km west of Baghdad, close to 200 families, amounting to more than 1,000 residents of the devastated city...

12/20/04 middle-east-online: Four killed in northern Iraq ambush
Four men, three of them believed to be foreigners, were killed in a roadside ambush north of Baghdad on Monday, an Iraqi police officer said.

12/20/04 AP: At least 60 die in Iraq attacks
Car bombs tore through a Najaf funeral procession and Karbala’s main bus station Sunday, killing at least 60 people and wounding more than 120 in the two Shiite holy cities.

12/20/04 guardian: 50 arrested after Najaf bombing
Adnan al-Zurufi, the governor of Najaf, today announced that 50 people had been arrested in connection with yesterday's suicide car bombing in which 54 died.

12/19/04 Iraq Pipeline Watch #180
December 18 - 8.30am blast on oil pipeline between Bayji and Daura refinery at Dilja, 12 miles (20 km) north of Samarra.

12/19/04 Iraq Pipeline Watch #177
December 17 - attack on pipeline supplying refined products from Bayji refinery to Baghdad. A statement circulated in Bayji said that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi had blown up a pipeline, following orders from ''supreme commander Osama bin Laden''.
12/19/04 AP: Manufacturer cranking out "run-flat" Humvee tires
And as violent attacks persist on Iraqi battlefields, the devices known as "run-flat" wheels, which allow Humvees and other military vehicles to escape ambushes - even if their tires are shot out

12/19/04 Iraq Pipeline Watch #179
December 18 - 7:30am attack on pipeline supplying oil from Kirkuk to the IT-1A storage tanks near Bayji.

12/19/04 Iraq Pipeline Watch #178
December 17 - attack on the northern pipeline near Fatha, 53 miles (85 km) west of Kirkuk

12/19/04 Iraq Pipeline Watch #176
December 17 - attack on pipeline supplying oil to Baghdad's Daura refinery.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (57619)12/21/2004 12:51:44 AM
From: RichnorthRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 81568
 
I regret I don't have the time to go into details and provide links for this and that. But suffice it to say that the Asian and Latin American countries that "adopted" democracy or had it rammed down their throats experienced all sorts of problems they never had before. As I recall it, one Harvard law professor has written a book on this subject. (By the way, Indonesia tried adopting democracy in the 1950s and 1960s. Result: shit-loads of problems and the then Indonesian president, Sukarno, was forced to create "Guided Democracy" which also failed miserably. Today, the democracy you see in Indonesia is not real democracy.

It has seemed to me for a very long time that America imposes herself upon vulnerable countries whenever and wherever she sees that political and/or economic advantage may be gained. (By the way, Colin Powell in Reagan's time wrote a report in which he recommended that American troops should not get involved in any country where there will be no return of political advantage for America.)

To be sure, America has been using "democratization" as an excuse to exert her hegemony over vulnerable states. As far as that self-styled born-again-Christian Bush is concerned, he most probably has "Christianization" of Moslem lands in mind, too. Democratization is all too often just a facade of noble and good intentions to cover up real long-term motivations ---
hegemony over others and exploitation of their natural resources.

Lord Acton once wrote something to the effect that all power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. This describes America today rather well, now that there is no more countervailing force against US hegemony worldwide from the once mighty Soviets.

.