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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-07-08 10:06 AM
Original message
Petraeus's Ponzi Scheme
Edited on Mon Apr-07-08 10:12 AM by babylonsister
| Posted 04/07/2008 @ 09:34am
Petraeus's Ponzi Scheme
Tom Engelhardt



They came, they saw, they… deserted.

That, in short form, is the story of the recent Iraqi government "offensive" in Basra (and Baghdad). It took a few days, but the headlines on stories out of Iraq ("Can Iraq's Soldiers Fight?") now tell a grim tale and the information in them is worse yet. Stephen Farrell and James Glanz of the New York Times estimate that at least 1,000 Iraqi soldiers and policemen, or more than 4% of the force sent into Basra, "abandoned their posts" during the fighting, including "dozens of officers" and "at least two senior field commanders."

Other pieces offer even more devastating numbers. For instance, Sudarsan Raghavan and Ernesto Londoño of the Washington Post suggest that 30% of government troops had "abandoned the fight before a cease-fire was reached." Tina Susman of the Los Angeles Times offers 50% as an estimate for police desertions in the midst of battle in Baghdad's vast Sadr City slum, a stronghold of cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia.

In other words, after years of intensive training by American advisors and an investment of $22 billion dollars, US military spokesmen are once again left trying to put the best face on a strategic disaster (from which they were rescued thanks to negotiations between Muqtada al-Sadr and advisors to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, brokered in Iran by General Qassem Suleimani, a man on the U.S. Treasury Department's terrorist watch list). Think irony. "From what we understand," goes the lame American explanation, "the bulk of these {deserters} were from fairly fresh troops who had only just gotten out of basic training and were probably pushed into the fight too soon."

This week, with surge commander General David Petraeus back from Baghdad's ever redder, ever more dangerous "Green Zone," here are a few realities to keep in mind as he testifies before Congress:

1. The situation in Iraq is getting worse: Don't believe anyone who says otherwise. The surge-ified, "less violent" Iraq the general has presided over so confidently is, in fact, a chaotic, violent tinderbox of city states, proliferating militias armed to the teeth, competing regions armed to the teeth, and competing religious factions armed to the teeth. Worse yet, under Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker, the U.S. has been the great proliferator. It has armed and funded close to 100,000 Sunnis organized into militias reportedly intent on someday destroying "the Iranians" (i.e. the Maliki government). It has also supported Shiite militias (aka the Iraqi army). In Basra, it took sides in a churning Shiite civil war. As Nir Rosen summed matters up in a typically brilliant piece in the Nation, Baghdad today is but a set of "fiefdoms run by warlords and militiamen," a pattern the rest of the country emulates. "The Bush administration," he adds, "and the U.S. military have stopped talking of Iraq as a grand project of nation-building, and the U.S. media have dutifully done the same." Meanwhile, in the little noticed north, an Arab/Kurdish civil war over the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, and possibly Mosul as well, is brewing. This, reports Pepe Escobar of Asia Times, could be explosive. Think nightmare.

more...

http://www.thenation.com/blogs/notion?bid=15&pid=307286
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birdseye Donating Member (6 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-07-08 11:00 AM
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1. They came, they saw, they… deserted.
Since they're being paid by US to fight, I suppose they really just went out on strike for a raise.
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annabanana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-07-08 11:06 AM
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2. Bookmarking for reference against the surge of bilge that is
coming to The Hill tomorrow..
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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-07-08 11:19 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. This is a good synopsis of what's actually been going on vs.
what we'll be hearing.
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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-08-08 07:32 AM
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4. Kick to edcuate yourself on what will be said vs. what's really happening. nt
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