Maliki
Stunner: He
Wants US
Pullout
Timetable
By Robert
Dreyfuss
07/07/08
"The
Nation"
-- - The
long-running
showdown
over the
proposed
US-Iraq
treaty,
aimed at
legitimizing
the American
occupation
of Iraq, is
coming to a
head, and it
doesn't look
good for the
United
States.
Prime
Minister
Nouiri al-Maliki
tossed a
bombshell
today. In a
news
conference
about the
still-secret
US-Iraqi
talks, which
began in
March,
Maliki for
the first
time said
that the
chances of
securing the
pact are
just about
nil, and
instead he
said Iraq
will seek a
limited, ad
hoc renewal
of the US
authority to
remain in
Iraq, rather
than a
broad-based
accord.
More
important,
Maliki and
his top
security
adviser,
Mouwaffak
al-Rubaie
added that
Iraq intends
to link even
a limited
accord to a
timetable
for the
withdrawal
of US
forces.
Reports the
Sydney
Morning
Herald:
Iraqi Prime
Minister
Nuri al-Maliki
raised the
prospect of
setting a
timetable
for the
withdrawal
of US troops
as part of
negotiations
over a new
security
agreement
with
Washington.
It was the
first time
the
US-backed
Shi'ite-led
government
has floated
the idea of
a timetable
for the
removal of
American
forces from
Iraq. The
Bush
administration
has always
opposed such
a move,
saying it
would
benefit
militant
groups.
Here's the
quote from
Maliki:
"The current
trend is to
reach an
agreement on
a memorandum
of
understanding
either for
the
departure of
the forces
or a
memorandum
of
understanding
to put a
timetable on
their
withdrawal."
Don't think
for a minute
that Maliki,
or his
Shiite
allies, want
the US
forces to
leave. But
they are
under a lot
of pressure.
First of
all, they
are under
pressure
from Iran,
whose regime
remains the
chief ally
of the
ruling
alliance of
Shiites,
including
Maliki's
Dawa party
and the
powerful
Islamic
Supreme
Council of
Iraq (ISCI),
led by Abdel
Aziz
al-Hakim.
Iran's goal
is to
neutralize
Iraq as a
possible
threat to
Iran, and
Iran's
leaders are
pressuring
Maliki and
Hakim to
loosen their
reliance on
the United
States.
Interestingly,
Maliki
reportedly
told
President
Bush
personally,
in a video
teleconference
on Friday,
that the
United
States
cannot use
Iraqi
territory to
attack Iran,
and he added
that
"fomenting
tension in
the region
and pushing
for military
action
against
Tehran could
wreak havoc
on the
entire
region,
including
Iraq."
Maliki is
also under
pressure
from a broad
coalition of
Iraqi
nationalists,
from angry,
disenfranchised
Sunnis to
Muqtada al-Sadr's
movement.
But Maliki's
statement is
a big deal.
At a
minimum, it
presents an
enormous
problem for
Bush and
John McCain,
who are
arguing for
an
indefinite
US stay in
Iraq til
"victory,"
and who
oppose a
timetable.
True, Maliki
seems to be
linking his
timetable to
Iraqi
military
success,
which is not
too
different
from the
Bush-McCain
formula. But
inside Iraq,
the pressure
is building
day by day
for a US
withdrawal,
and Maliki
is by no
means in
control of
the process.
The fact
that both
Iran and
Sunni
nationalists,
who are on a
collision
course,
agree that
US forces
need to
leave Iran,
only means
that pro-
and
anti-Iranian
factions
will settle
their
differences
(either by
peaceful
diplomacy or
by violence)
once the
United
States is
gone.
Another
factor is
that Maliki,
who is
visiting the
United Arab
Emirates, is
working hard
to gain the
support of
the
Sunni-led
Arab regimes
for his
shaky
coalition.
The UAE and
Jordan have
both
announced
that they
will be
sending
ambassadors
to Baghdad,
and King
Abdullah of
Jordan will
himself make
a visit to
Baghdad
soon, the
first by an
Arab head of
state since
the US
invasion.
Despite US
bungling, it
seems
increasingly
likely that
Iran and
Saudi Arabia
are working
behind the
scenes to
negotiate a
Shiite-Sunni
accord in
Iraq, but
both Tehran
and Riyadh
will want it
conditioned
on a US
withdrawal.
