- Aug 28, 2005
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Taken from The New York Times (originally AP Newswire):
Wanna bet why there will be no peace possible...? As usual, it's all about the oil money...
Do we REALLY believe that any amount of US intervention is going to settle this dispute about which religious faction gains the oil wealth??? A lasting settlement?
Our whole internal war debate is centered around the assumption that there are only a few thousand "bad terrorists" that hate us, and if we can neutralize them, then things will settle down. We have an implied assumption that if if this occurs, we can get the Shiites to settle down and participate in the government, and that all will be well...
Suppose that isn't the case - suppose that what we are seeing is merely the outward battle of two factions that each will fight a civil war to the death over the oil wealth - regardless of US intervention, regardless of US wishes. That EACH side sees that the domination of the oil wealth is the key to controlling their destiny - and is willing to fight for as long as necessary for it.
Do we REALLY still buy the assertion that this is all about "creating democracy"? Even if it is or was, do our best wishes trump the innate desire for one or the other factions to dominate the oil wealth - and as they can couch it in religious terms, they could literally fight for decades over this?
Future Shock
NB - Oh, wait, what am I worried about? I'm sure the sensible, trustworthy Iraqi Oil Minister will be able to craft an agreement that will split the oil revenues justly and fairly and avoid a civil war...:roll:
Also Monday, a leading Shiite lawmaker suggested that he will pursue a federal region in southern Iraq after next month's elections, pushing forward demands for Shiite autonomy that Sunni leaders fear could tear the country apart.
''We have major missions ahead,'' Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, who heads the largest bloc in the interim parliament, told a gathering of tribal leaders. ''The central and southern regions should be achieved after the elections'' set for Dec. 15.
According to Iraq's new constitution, the country's 18 provinces -- except for Baghdad -- can combine to create self-ruled areas. Kurds have such a region in the north and Sunni Arabs fear that a similar Shiite-run mini-state in the south would deprive them of a share of the nation's oil wealth -- concentrated in those two areas.
Wanna bet why there will be no peace possible...? As usual, it's all about the oil money...
Do we REALLY believe that any amount of US intervention is going to settle this dispute about which religious faction gains the oil wealth??? A lasting settlement?
Our whole internal war debate is centered around the assumption that there are only a few thousand "bad terrorists" that hate us, and if we can neutralize them, then things will settle down. We have an implied assumption that if if this occurs, we can get the Shiites to settle down and participate in the government, and that all will be well...
Suppose that isn't the case - suppose that what we are seeing is merely the outward battle of two factions that each will fight a civil war to the death over the oil wealth - regardless of US intervention, regardless of US wishes. That EACH side sees that the domination of the oil wealth is the key to controlling their destiny - and is willing to fight for as long as necessary for it.
Do we REALLY still buy the assertion that this is all about "creating democracy"? Even if it is or was, do our best wishes trump the innate desire for one or the other factions to dominate the oil wealth - and as they can couch it in religious terms, they could literally fight for decades over this?
Future Shock
NB - Oh, wait, what am I worried about? I'm sure the sensible, trustworthy Iraqi Oil Minister will be able to craft an agreement that will split the oil revenues justly and fairly and avoid a civil war...:roll: