Senate proposal: another bad plan
WW commentary
By
John Catalinotto
Published Oct 8, 2007 9:29 PM
During the last four-and-a-half years the U.S. occupation has murdered a
million Iraqi people and destroyed Iraqi social life, producing a humanitarian
crisis that in a just world would have already earned the Bush gang a
conviction for war crimes.
Now, with the Pentagon on the brink of defeat, the U.S. Senate is offering its
own bad idea for a U.S. “victory.” Instead of cutting off war funds
or even setting a timetable for withdrawal, the Senate had the unbounded
arrogance to propose that Iraq be divided into three parts—Shiite, Sunni
and Kurd—with an umbrella federal government in Baghdad. Sen. Joseph
Biden, a Democrat from Delaware, has been pushing this partition of Iraq since
late 2003, when it became apparent that the Iraqi occupation would not be
cheap, clean or easy. On Sept. 26 the measure passed 75-23.
Partition has always been a weapon in the imperialist arsenal. All the actions
of the occupation have provoked differences among those in the population who
identify as Shiite or Sunni, causing much death and suffering, while also
encouraging the separation of the Kurdish region.
In the Balkans, partition was a central feature of the NATO strategy to
recolonize Yugoslavia. Some senators said they based their support for
Biden’s Iraq proposal on the Bosnia experience. The NATO strategy, backed
by a U.S. air war, turned the former socialist Yugoslavia into half a dozen
semicolonial ministates.
The U.S. occupation of Iraq, on the other hand, has been an unmitigated
disaster for the U.S., as well as inflicting misery on the Iraqis. Ever since
the Iraqi resistance first sprang up in the summer of 2003 and started creating
a quagmire for U.S. troops, Biden and others have pushed their program for the
division of the country.
Until recently this idea of division had received little public support in the
U.S. imperialist establishment. There is no doubt, however, that now many look
to division or partition as a way out of the quagmire. But judging by the first
public reactions out of Iraq, there is no grouping, party or political leaders,
with the possible exception of some of the Kurdish parties and the Supreme
Islamic Iraqi Council, who will openly support it.
Even the U.S. Embassy there had to criticize the Senate. Also, the
U.S.-installed puppet regime led by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki attacked the
plan. Moqtada al-Sadr, the head of the Shiite-based Mahdi Army, which is part
of the puppet government but which also has clashes with the occupation, has
also denounced it, as has Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. All the Sunni-based
parties that participate in the puppet government are also against it.
Whether one takes these groups at their word or not, their opposition means
they know the mass of the Iraqi people insist on remaining in a single country.
And they vehemently oppose any scheme or plan imposed on them by a hated U.S.
occupation force.
For varied reasons, the governments of Iraq’s neighboring states of
Turkey, Iran and Saudi Arabia have also denounced the U.S. Senate’s
plan.
What is more important than the reaction of the neighboring states and of these
forces allied with the puppet regime is the reaction of the Iraqi resistance. A
hint of this comes from the Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars, which opposes
the U.S. occupation. It condemned the U.S. Senate plan, saying that anyone who
backed it would be “a traitor of the nation and faith.”
There is no doubt that the Iraqi Ba’ath Party, the Iraqi Patriotic
Alliance and the other organizations of the resistance, who have pinned down
the Pentagon for the past 54 months, will refuse any “solution”
imposed by the U.S. occupation forces, be it a puppet central government or a
division of their country into three parts. And that is the most important
reaction because, however long the struggle takes, Iraq’s future belongs
to the resistance, which is the only honest representative of the Iraqi
people.
E-mail: [email protected]
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