duh…

Posted on Monday 8 October 2007

Top Iraqis Pull Back From Key U.S. Goal
Reconciliation Seen Unattainable Amid Struggle for Power

For much of this year, the U.S. military strategy in Iraq has sought to reduce violence so that politicians could bring about national reconciliation, but several top Iraqi leaders say they have lost faith in that broad goal.

Iraqi leaders argue that sectarian animosity is entrenched in the structure of their government. Instead of reconciliation, they now stress alternative and perhaps more attainable goals: streamlining the government bureaucracy, placing experienced technocrats in positions of authority and improving the dismal record of providing basic services.

"I don’t think there is something called reconciliation, and there will be no reconciliation as such," said Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih, a Kurd. "To me, it is a very inaccurate term. This is a struggle about power."

Humam Hamoudi, a prominent Shiite cleric and parliament member, said any future reconciliation would emerge naturally from an efficient, fair government, not through short-term political engineering among Sunnis and Shiites.

"Reconciliation should be a result and not a goal by itself," he said. "You should create the atmosphere for correct relationships, and not wave slogans that ‘I want to reconcile with you.’ "

The acrimony among politicians has strained the Shiite-led government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki close to the breaking point. Nearly half of the cabinet ministers have left their posts. The Shiite alliance in parliament, which once controlled 130 of the 275 seats, is disintegrating with the defection of two important parties…
As TPM points out, "In other words, the strategic goal of the Surge — creating the breathing room for political reconcilation — is one the Iraqi government no longer appears to believe is either credible or realistic. So what we’ve signed on for is being the permanent armed mediator in the Iraqi domestic quarrel, or perhaps protracted divorce." But how hard was that to know a long time ago? The thing that made Saddam Hussein’s regime work was a forced reconciliation. So I disagree with Josh Marshall [not really]. I disagree with "we’ve signed on." Bush signed on, that’s who signed on. Not me. Bring our troops home, or send them to Afghanistan, or Myanmar. But Iraq isn’t our problem anymore – something about a Silk Purse and a Sow’s Ear

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