Two caliphates in Baghdad, simultaneously . . . are we crazy?
By Ben Tanosborn
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jun 25, 2008, 00:19
The Brits made an imperial mess of Iraq back
in 1930; now it is America�s turn!
We followed the fate of the French in Vietnam; are trying
hard to imitate the Russians in Afghanistan; and now, our emulation-in-progress
is of our beloved European cousins. Who would ever think that it was an
American philosopher (by way of Spain), George Santayana, who stated just a
century ago, �Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat
it." And American government leaders always seem to be the forgetful ones,
although as it happens in all these cases, it is the American people who are
condemned to pay the consequences in both blood and dollars.
We are not even speaking of millennia ago, or even
centuries; only the recent past. How can we be so forgetful as to how the
British bamboozled a timid Iraqi Parliament, where the true nationalists lacked
a voiced, into signing an agreement in 1930 that would have Iraq in turmoil
with coup after coup until Saddam Hussein came to power in 1979? And we all
know what has happened since then. Seventy-eight years later here we are,
cramming down their throats an illegal �strategic alliance� that is similar in
both content and tone to that Great Britain �imposed� on Iraq almost eight
decades ago.
And I say illegal for both Iraq and the United States. For
Iraq, it�s a nonvalid agreement since it will be contracted under duress from
an occupier�s demands, whatever excuses are brought forward to obtain
legitimacy. For the US, it�s also an invalid pact unless it is subsequently
ratified by the US Senate. We are told that the wording in this strategic
alliance has been crafted so as to �avoid such ratification.� Nonsense, if the
provisions in such agreement or alliance have the underlying intent of a
treaty, it is a treaty; and as a treaty, constitutionally, it must be ratified.
True that the American Executive Branch has been operating
for decades outside of the Constitution in taking the nation to war (undeclared
war) and entering into treaties (or agreements) thanks to a spineless Senate
and the de-facto consent of Americans, who really care little, or are
brainwashed by the White House, unless the conflict turns sour.
It is remarkable that the two senators who will be
contending for the highest office in the land next November, McCain and Obama,
aren�t exercising their duty as senators, making this issue one of national
concern, one to be handled with both transparency and care. Malfeasance in
office by members of the Senate made Bush�s invasion of Iraq fait accompli;
once again, it will be malfeasance if the Senate remains blind, deaf and mute
to this travesty.
It is interesting that Barack Obama claims that �had he been
a member of the Senate back in 2002, he would have voted against granting Bush
permission to invade Iraq.� Well, he is a member of the Senate now . . . but
one hears little noise from him on this important issue, one that could keep the
United States involved in the Middle East until the area runs out of oil or
Israelis, whichever comes last. Time for deeds, Sen. Obama!
Iraq does not appear to be willing to have the U.N. mandate
extended beyond its current expiration date, at the end of this year; and the
US really doesn�t care whether its effective control is through a mandate
granted by the U.N. or an agreement with a government which may not be of unity
or consensus. The US must have a tacit control of Iraq�s oil while maintaining a
solid military presence in that part of the world to counter not just Iran and
its nuclear aspirations, but any �problems� that may emerge anywhere in
Southwest Asia.
Although the hush-hush negotiations on the Strategic
Framework Agreement and the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) had reached an
impasse by the second week in June -- Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki referring
the deadlock on what his government felt were critical sovereignty issues --
both Iraqi Foreign Minister Zebari and Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad (US) appear
confident that an agreement will soon be reached since both countries are
committed to a joint security pact. Yes, we will have two caliphates out of
Baghdad; one run locally by Iraqis, the other run by Americans as part of the
Empire.
What remains to be seen, even if an agreement is reached, is
whether the US Senate will once again capitulate to the White House, allowing
its duties and responsibilities to be usurped by Imperator George W. Bush. And
whether the American people really give a damn now that they are paying over $4
per gallon of gasoline, soon projected to be $5, which. when added to the other
economic miseries the country is enduring, calls for either a revolution or
surrender. My bet is on the latter.
� 2008 Ben
Tanosborn
Ben
Tanosborn, columnist, poet and writer, resides in Vancouver, Washington (USA),
where he is principal of a business consulting firm. Contact him at ben@tanosborn.com.
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