This is a new puppet being set up by the Americans. The US has never been pro-democracy. If you seriously expect them to want the people of an oil-rich middle Eastern county to genuinly choose their own leadership, then you are naive, and know nothing about history.
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Iraq moves towards self-rule.
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It's a good beginning, IMO. Yes, as has already been pointed out, the Americans can overrule the council's decision (precisely to prevent oppression of minority groups by the majority), but in time, this body will lead to free elections, I feel sure.
Won't happen overnight, but it's starting, and that's a good sign. Now, if it comes with a rebuilt native police body, answering to the Council, that's even better!
-=Vel=-
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A risk? Sure. One of many, I would say. But, if whatever government is to eventually grow out of this council is to be democratic-minded, then the Shi'ites will only be as effective as their ability to win the hearts and minds of the voters. They have the here and now to get ready and practice for that day. If they don't, or choose not to....their loss.
-=Vel=-
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I'm really puzzled that you guys are talking as if someone wants a true democracy in Iraq. Either you've got me on your ignore list, or you really think the Republican administration seeks an Iraq whose government puts the interests of Iraqis before the interests of the oil-corporations and US will.Freedom Doesn't March.
-I.
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Given that we don't have "true" democracy in the US or UK what makes you think Iraq should have it.
More to the point the US economic interest is served by a low oil price, regardless of who sells or who buys. As long as a new government in Iraq doesn't offer a base to terrorism and keeps producing enough oil to hold the world price down then it is mission accomplished for the US.
Of the oil sold from Iraq since the invasion most has gone to US companies with some to BP and Shell and one cargo to a Swiss trading company.Never give an AI an even break.
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Not ignoring you, problem_child, and while I agree with you that the Shrub's intentions are....questionable (to say the least), I think it's too early to call. Let's see what comes out of the council, before we start drawing too many conclusions.
-=Vel=-
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Originally posted by problem_child
I'm really puzzled that you guys are talking as if someone wants a true democracy in Iraq. Either you've got me on your ignore list, or you really think the Republican administration seeks an Iraq whose government puts the interests of Iraqis before the interests of the oil-corporations and US will.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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Originally posted by problem_child
This is a new puppet being set up by the Americans. The US has never been pro-democracy.If you seriously expect them to want the people of an oil-rich middle Eastern county to genuinly choose their own leadership, then you are naive, and know nothing about history.Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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I could have been more tactful I suppose, but I stand by my point, The US is not pro-democracy, not within itself, and not outside itself.
(By the US I mean those that call the shots, not the average Jo Citizen, the rich and the powerful don't get that way by being democraticly minded.)Freedom Doesn't March.
-I.
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1. Interesting it finally came about. The question remains how representative it is, and how much legitimacy it will have in the eyes of Iraqis. US appointed, hand-picked... at least it has some critics of the US presence.
2. Even more interesting is that it seems it has some powers. The first crucial test is: Can they agree on solutions, and will a down-voted minority accept the majority will?
3. The real crucial test is, what happens when the council does something that collides with Bushist interests? When it opts against giving the US bases, or against privatizing the oil industry etc etc.... then we will see what all this talk about Iraq for the Iraqis is worth.
4. Yes, I have no idea why the Bushists would want democracy in Iraq. Maybe they just confuse "democracy" with something else...“Now we declare… that the law-making power or the first and real effective source of law is the people or the body of citizens or the prevailing part of the people according to its election or its will expressed in general convention by vote, commanding or deciding that something be done or omitted in regard to human civil acts under penalty or temporal punishment….” (Marsilius of Padua, „Defensor Pacis“, AD 1324)
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Re #1, while it is U.S. appointed, the US just appointed what was already there and organized. It looks like they have all of the headline political figures from the opposition, except SCIRI, for which they have the number 2. I also note the two slots that were given to Daawa, the only party with two representatives. This makes a lot of sense, since it has been the strongest and longest-lived party in the south.
Indeed, it looks like Bremer negotiated with the groups back to Jay Garner's original position, begging the question of why Bremer changed the plans and wasted some time.
More to the point the US economic interest is served by a low oil price, regardless of who sells or who buys. As long as a new government in Iraq doesn't offer a base to terrorism and keeps producing enough oil to hold the world price down then it is mission accomplished for the US.
This isn't precisely our interest. Our primary interest is to have a diversified global supply bought and sold at a market price.Last edited by DanS; July 14, 2003, 10:48.I came upon a barroom full of bad Salon pictures in which men with hats on the backs of their heads were wolfing food from a counter. It was the institution of the "free lunch" I had struck. You paid for a drink and got as much as you wanted to eat. For something less than a rupee a day a man can feed himself sumptuously in San Francisco, even though he be a bankrupt. Remember this if ever you are stranded in these parts. ~ Rudyard Kipling, 1891
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Originally posted by GePap
Good step, but when do they gain control of security in most areas? Does what little Iraqi police that exists answer to them, or the US command?
I expect a gradual transfer of effective control over Iraqi police. Probably faster in the South and the Kurdish zones, which are quiet, and much later in Baghdad and the Sunni Arab Triangle"A person cannot approach the divine by reaching beyond the human. To become human, is what this individual person, has been created for.” Martin Buber
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Originally posted by HershOstropoler
1. 4. Yes, I have no idea why the Bushists would want democracy in Iraq. Maybe they just confuse "democracy" with something else...
At least one faction in the admin wants democracy out of US self interest - the argument goes that the only alternative, "friendly authoritarian" states like Egypt and Saudi, tends to generate terrorists who blow up large building the US. Democracy in the region is therefore in the US national interest, regradless of whether the democrat regime supports us on bases and oil, etc. In any case, what incentive would a democratic regime have to keep Iraqi oil off the market??? They will continue to have large development needs, best served by pumping as much oil as they can. Main reason to restrain oil production would be pressure from neighbors like Saudi, but a democracy may be in better position to resist such pressures that an authoritarian state.
The question of bases is a more likely area of friction. Of course given the presence within the Iraqi polity of strongly pro-US elements like the Kurds, and Iraqs own security needs (assuming Iran and Syria have not gone away or turned pacifist) theres a reasonable chance a genuinely demo Iraq will want US bases. They may not, but thats a risk worth taking."A person cannot approach the divine by reaching beyond the human. To become human, is what this individual person, has been created for.” Martin Buber
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