Thursday, August 02, 2007

Iraq Unraveling from Within

Is US intelligence a joke or are Bush and his cronies really that obtuse? Two headlines caught my eye this week:

Sunnis Quit Cabinet
Gates: U.S. Underestimated Iraqi Political Rift

Only an idiot -- or apparently, the US government -- didn't see this coming! The Sunni-Shiite (and to a lesser degree, Kurd) split has long been at the root of Iraq's inability to form a viable government. Only by viciously suppressing one faction in favor of another has the country ever been able to function as a political unit. Only with Saddam's iron fist pummelling the Shiites and Kurds into submission were the minority Sunnis able to control the country.

In its arrogance and naivete, the Bush gang apparently believed that once Saddam was removed, the Iraqi people would rise up as one, embrace democracy and lead a new wave of western-styled freedom through the Middle East. However, with no single strongman rising from their interminable internal squabbling and no history of cooperative government, the Shiites have been unable to form, much less maintain, even the marginal semblance of a national government.

"In some ways, we probably all underestimated the depth of mistrust and how difficult it would be for these guys to come together on legislation," US Defense Secretary Robert Gates said this week.

What an understatement! Has nobody in the Bush administration ever opened a history book? You don't change centuries of cultural behavior by dangling a foreign carrot in front of a stubborn mule. And American politicians are so culturally obtuse, they never thought to find out if the donkey likes carrots!

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Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Iran Sentences Kurdish Journalists to Death

Today Iran convicted two Kurdish journalists of crimes against Islam and the state and sentenced them to death. Click here to read the full story.

The two journalists were convicted of moharebeh, Arabic for fighting, according to judiciary spokesman Ali Reza Jamshidi. In Iran the term is used to describe major crimes against Islam and the state. The men's crimes and details about how their sentences will be carried out have not been disclosed. However, the journalists were arrested as activists during the 2005 Kurdish protests in Sanandaj, the capital of Kurdistan, an Iranian province on the Iran-Iraq border.

Despite Tehran's constant pressure on journalists and news media to tow the party line, imprisonment and conviction, much less a death sentence, are rare. Tehran likes to flaunt its tolerance and freedom of speech to the outside world, even if the reality inside its borders is more myth than fact.

Analysts wonder if the incident signals the beginning of a new crackdown against rebellious Kurds inside Iran. The Kurds, whose domain straddles Iran, Iraq and Turkey, have long sought autonomy and national unity. Concerned Turks are massing military units along Turkey's Kurdish border with Iraq. While Turkey says its goal is to prevent Kurdish rebels from slipping across Iraqi borders into Turkey, some analysts believe Turkey is positioning itself to invade Iraq and solve its problem with the Kurds by subjugating them under iron Turkish rule.

Whatever the truth, the killing of Kurdish journalists for nebulous political crimes is sure to fan the flames of Kurdish rebellion.

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