Two VERY troubling Iraq stories
First is the statement by Sistani that he will no longer attempt to restrain the violence in Iraq, "admitting that there is nothing he can do to prevent the country sliding towards civil war."
This has been developing for awhile as his influence has been failing in favor of the more militant Sadr-type clerics. Sistani has decided not to squander any more of his power pushing against the tide. Calls for peace are now the route to irrelevancy in Iraq. Enough said.
Interestingly, this statement comes just one day after Sistani met with Prime Minister Maliki. Iwould like to know what went on in that meeting.
Second, Kurdish President Barzani has ordered the replacement of the Iraqi flag with the Kurdish one, a symbolic but meaningful statement towards independence with regional implications.
(Later: Kurdish PKK guerillas killed seven Turkish soldiers in four separate attacks in 24 hours in southeastern Turkey.)
(Later still: (AP) "Meanwhile, authorities canceled a highly touted ceremony in which the U.S.-led coalition was to hand over control of Iraq's armed forces command to the Defense Ministry after disagreements emerged over Iraqi forces' responsibilities and the coalition's role. The ceremony, initially set for Saturday, was postponed to Sunday and then canceled altogether.")
The NYTimes, on the sliding US troop morale.
And, Sistani's statement might well be related to the Iraqi Government's announcement to extend the Baghdad security operation into Sadr city(bottom.)
This has been developing for awhile as his influence has been failing in favor of the more militant Sadr-type clerics. Sistani has decided not to squander any more of his power pushing against the tide. Calls for peace are now the route to irrelevancy in Iraq. Enough said.
Interestingly, this statement comes just one day after Sistani met with Prime Minister Maliki. Iwould like to know what went on in that meeting.
Second, Kurdish President Barzani has ordered the replacement of the Iraqi flag with the Kurdish one, a symbolic but meaningful statement towards independence with regional implications.
(Later: Kurdish PKK guerillas killed seven Turkish soldiers in four separate attacks in 24 hours in southeastern Turkey.)
(Later still: (AP) "Meanwhile, authorities canceled a highly touted ceremony in which the U.S.-led coalition was to hand over control of Iraq's armed forces command to the Defense Ministry after disagreements emerged over Iraqi forces' responsibilities and the coalition's role. The ceremony, initially set for Saturday, was postponed to Sunday and then canceled altogether.")
The NYTimes, on the sliding US troop morale.
And, Sistani's statement might well be related to the Iraqi Government's announcement to extend the Baghdad security operation into Sadr city(bottom.)
4 Comments:
The Kurd situation seems to get very little coverage, yet it has the potential to destabliize the entire region - Iraq, Turkey, Iran, at least.
You cover all these events very well. I always find something on your site that I missed. Thanks.
By abi, at 9:31 AM
Thanks, that's what I'm trying to do on these Iraq posts is to gather together the stuff I think is telling.
I don't have a really good grip on the Kurdish thing from the Turkish side. It's a very heated topic, and I don't know whether the Turkish talk is rhetoric or real threat. On the Iranian side, I would bet there will be alot more action in the coming months as they are (somewhat) a US proxy actor.
Also, right now, the Iraq situation is acting as a brake on broader Kurdish actions. If the government really breaks down or the Kurds declare independence, the forces are going to get much stronger.
Mike
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