An Internet hub with domestic and international news, analysis, original reporting, and popular features from the left, center, indies, centrists, moderates, and right

Another Blow to Iraqi Reconciliation

01akurds.jpg

Turkish gunship near Iraqi border

The never ending road to reconciliation in Iraq is littered with many setbacks.

The U.S. bears responsibility for two of the worst — the foolish de-Baathification of the Iraqi army, which has had awful consequences, and a civil war now temporarily on hold while various sectarian interests inimical to reconciliation consolidate power in the face of a largely toothless central government that is only good at corruption.

Now comes another setback in which the U.S. plays a role so twisted that it is difficult to sort out:

The Kurds in northern Iraq have been on board the reconciliation train from the time it first left the station.

But the Kurds have a nagging problem with the separatists at their backs who keep making cross-border forays into Turkey.

Turkey is a usually reliable U.S. ally. Most of the materiel for the Iraq war is transshipped through Turkey.

Turkey has a really big problem with the separatists.

Turkish aircraft entered Iraqi airspace on Sunday to bomb separatist mountain redoubts.

The U.S. denies giving even tacit approval for this major escalation of the Turkish-separatist conflict.

But the U.S. provided targeting intelligence for the airstrikes from a center in Ankara based on feeds from U.S. aircraft and drones.

Now the Kurds are furious with Washington for helping the Turks and with the central government for not intervening.

The Baghdad government is furious with Washington because it was never asked for permission for its airspace to be entered.

Who can blame them?

Politics in this part of the word have always been complex.

But when the U.S. bigfooted in to topple the Saddam Hussein regime and then so thoroughly botched the post-invasion occupation, it set off a chain of unintended consequences, not the least of which are the serial obstacles to the reconciliation that would expedite troop withdrawals, that will reverberate through this latest mess and well into the future.

Reconciling the Obvious

Across the board, Iraqis from all sectarian and ethnic groups believe that the U.S. invasion is the primary cause of the violent differences among them and see the departure of U.S. troops as the key to national reconciliation.

More here.



opinions powered by SendLove.to

One Response to “Another Blow to Iraqi Reconciliation”

  1. Megaman_X says:

    On “Your World With Neil Cavuto”, I saw one of the worst captions I’ve ever seen on television news:

    Sex With Underage Boys: Could It Be A Good Thing?

    Okay, it didn’t really say that, but what it actually said was even worse:

    All-Out Civil War In Iraq: Could It Be A Good Thing?

    No matter how bad things get in Iraq, no matter how many more humiliating secrets that the Bush administration covered up are exposed, no matter how badly our reputation around the world gets damaged by this war, there will always be people trying to rationalize the huge mess we continue to build.

© 2003-2011 The Moderate Voice | Site design by Elegant Themes | Site customization, hosting, and security by Mode Equity