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Iraq
Iraq to resume oil exploration after 20 years
2008-08-08
Iraq will resume searching for oil on Friday for the first time in two decades, the oil ministry said on Thursday, in the hope of finding vast reserves that lay undiscovered because of sanctions and war.

Iraq has 115 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, the third largest in the world, but the government believes the country's actual oil reserves may be three times as high.

Asim Jihad, spokesman for Oil Ministry, said it had trained three teams of geophysicists, geologists and engineers and would kick off exploration in the Gharraf field in Nassiriya in southern Iraq on Friday.

"Tomorrow, the equipment will be turned on to start the first oil exploration for 20 years, at a ceremony which will be attended by the oil minister and senior officials," Jihad said on Thursday.

Jihad said Iraq had only used about a fifth of the country's 500 possible oil-producing sites and they needed to explore more to try and confirm potential reserves. "These three teams are part of a group the oil ministry formed to renew exploration activity in order to change the unconfirmed reserves to confirmed ones," he said.

The first team will carry out seismic tests on the Gharraf field using up-to-date technology supplied by international companies, he said.

Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih told Reuters in April he had seen estimates from "reputable companies" that put Iraq's oil reserves at some 350 billion barrels, a massive figure which would put the country ahead of Saudi Arabia.

Saudi Arabia is currently ranked first in the world with proven reserves of about 264 billion barrels, followed by Iran with some 137 billion and then Iraq on 115 billion. Iraq, whose primary source of revenue comes from oil, needs huge amounts of investment to boost oil output and rebuild the country after years of sanctions and war.

Violence in the country is now at its lowest since 2004. Iraqi Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani also said in June Baghdad hoped to let foreign firms bid on many non-producing oil fields and potential oil deposits from next year.

Link


Iraq
Maliki raises possibility that Iraq might ask U.S. to leave
2008-06-14
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki raised the possibility that his country won't sign a status of forces agreement with the United States and will ask U.S. troops to go home when their U.N. mandate to be in Iraq expires at the end of the year.

Maliki made the comment after weeks of complaints from Shiite Muslim lawmakers that U.S. proposals that would govern a continued troop presence in Iraq would infringe on Iraq's sovereignty.

"Iraq has another option that it may use," Maliki said during a visit to Amman, Jordan. "The Iraqi government, if it wants, has the right to demand that the U.N. terminate the presence of international forces on Iraqi sovereign soil."

Earlier, Maliki acknowledged that talks with the U.S. on a status of forces agreement "reached an impasse" after the American negotiators presented a draft that would have given the U.S. access to 58 military bases, control of Iraqi airspace and immunity from prosecution for both U.S. soldiers and private contractors.

The Iraqis rejected those demands, and U.S. diplomats have submitted a second draft, which Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih told McClatchy included several major concessions. Among those would be allowing Iraq to prosecute private contractors for violations of Iraqi law and requiring U.S. forces to turn over to Iraqi authorities Iraqis that the Americans detain.

Salih stressed that the Iraqi government wants to reach an agreement with the United States. But he said the Iraqi government wouldn't be pressured into accepting terms that compromised Iraq's rights as a sovereign state.

"Our American allies need to understand and realize that this agreement must be respectful of Iraqi sovereignty," Salih said. "We need them here for a while longer, and they know they have to remain here for a while."

American negotiators have hoped the talks would be finished by the end of July, but Maliki's latest remarks — as well as those by influential members of parliament — make that deadline seem unrealistic.
More at link
Link


Iraq
Iraq wants to restrict movement of US troops
2008-06-07
BAGHDAD - Iraq said on Friday it would not grant U.S. troops freedom of movement for military operations in a new agreement being negotiated on extending the presence of American troops on its soil. Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih said the United States wanted its forces to operate with no restrictions, but this was not acceptable to Iraq.

The United States is negotiating an agreement with Iraq aimed at giving a legal basis for U.S. troops to stay in Iraq after Dec. 31, when their United Nations mandate expires. While the Iraqi government has confirmed there are major differences between the two sides in the negotiations, few details of the sticking points have been made public.

"What I can confirm now, with no hesitation, is that there will not be freedom of movement for American (forces) in Iraq," Salih told Arabiya television.

U.S. officials said this week they would not comment on the content of the negotiations. But Western diplomats say it is unlikely the Americans would agree to any deal that would require them to seek permission from the Iraqi government for every military operation.

"If we reach an agreement ... any American military movements should be in the framework of Iraqi approval and decisions and through consultations with the Iraqi side," Salih said.
At some point that has to become the usual state of affairs. We didn't continue to manuever at will through Germany after the war; at some point we and the Germans reached an agreement. Ditto Korea. So there's a fair bit of posturing going on. If we get some slack now, we can give back more to the Iraqis later.
The talks have angered many Iraqis who suspect the United States of wanting to keep a permanent presence in Iraq. But U.S. ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker on Thursday rejected such suggestions as "flatly untrue".

Salih said the United States had asked Baghdad to maintain the U.S. military's current status, which does not require a green light from the Iraqi government for military operations. "The U.S. side asked to extend the existing status and the Iraqi side didn't see any use of that," he said.

The Iraqi government's room to manoeuvre may be limited, however, by its dependence on U.S. firepower to secure its borders and tackle armed groups that defy its authority.
Which in practical terms means the Iraqi government will give us a blank 'yes' for some time to come, but want at some point to be able to say, 'we want to think about that'.
While U.S. officials say the Iraqi army's capabilities have improved in recent months, it is still dependent on the U.S. military for logistical and aerial support. Iraqi security forces control only half of Iraq's 18 provinces.

U.S. and Iraqi officials are also negotiating a strategic framework agreement that defines long-term bilateral ties.

In Washington, a supposedly bipartisan group of U.S. senators complained to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates over what they said was a lack of consultation over the long-term agreement with Iraq. In a letter to Rice and Gates, the four senators said Iraq had proposed "significant changes" to the agreements and the Bush administration had not followed through on its commitment to consult with Congress about these changes.

The letter was signed by senior members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Democratic Sens. Joseph Biden of Delaware and John Kerry of Massachusetts as well as Republican Sens. Richard Lugar of Indiana and Chuck Hagel of Nebraska.
Link


Iraq
'Iraq must not isolate al-Sadr movement'
2008-04-30
Iraq’s government will pursue its war on militias but must avoid isolating the movement of Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr or pushing his followers into the arms of groups bent on chaos, the deputy prime minister says.

Shia Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki launched an offensive against militias a month ago, sparking fighting with Sadr’s Mehdi Army that has led to hundreds of deaths. Some analysts say if the government pushes too hard - including carrying out a threat to bar the Sadr movement from October elections unless the Mehdi Army is disbanded - the cleric could launch a full-scale uprising.

Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih said the government had to distinguish between Sadr’s mass movement and so-called “special groups”, which the US military says are rogue Mehdi Army elements backed by Iran. “This is a major political challenge for us as a government, to avoid pushing the followers of the Sadr movement together with the special groups,” Salih said in an interview this week.

“On the other hand, leaders of the Sadr movement must also help in distinguishing themselves and their followers from these bad elements who are trying to hijack their movement to use it as a cover for their malicious agenda.” The US military accuses Shia Iran of giving arms, funds and training to the “special groups”. Iran denies the allegations. Maliki says his crackdown is designed to disarm militias, but Sadr’s followers see it as an attempt to sideline the movement before provincial elections on Oct. 1. Competing in local polls for the first time, the movement could do well at the expense of Shia parties backing Maliki, especially because it provides food and services to poor Iraqis. A report by a US-based relief group this month said the movement was now Iraq’s main humanitarian organisation.
Link


Iraq
On The Waterfront, Iraqi style " I cudda been a contender"
2008-03-13
Iraqi Troops May Move to Reclaim Basra’s Port

BASRA, Iraq — Several senior Iraqi officials said on Wednesday that the government might soon deploy Iraqi Army troops to seize control of this city’s decrepit but vital port from politically connected militias known more for corruption and inciting terrorism than for their skill in moving freight. Iraqi soldiers are expected to wrest control of Um Qasr and other parts of Basra’s port from local militias in coming weeks.

Iraqi sailors accompanied a government delegation to Um Qasr. Japan has agreed to $2.1 billion in reconstruction loans. The officials refused to disclose many details but appeared to suggest that this entire southern port city, whose streets have been increasingly torn by violence as the militias vie for power, would be affected. No specific timetable was given for the move.

“There must be a very strong military presence in Basra to eradicate these militias,” said Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih, who led a delegation of government officials to a conference here to promote investment in the port.

As Iraq’s only major gateway to the Persian Gulf, the port is critical for the nation’s economy but is beset by labor problems and is in serious need of dredging and modernization.

Mr. Salih declined to give particulars, but when asked if the central government’s plan to seize control in Basra involved a troop buildup, he said, “Definitely so.” He also said Western troops would be involved, raising the possibility that the effort could parallel the American troop increase in Baghdad that has been credited in part with reducing violence there. But, Mr. Salih said, Iraqi troops would lead the effort in Basra.

Iraq’s national security adviser, Mowaffak al-Rubaie, was more direct, telling the conference that “we will launch a campaign to rid us of the bad elements.” He blamed the ascendance of the militias on what he called “the weakness of the local government” as local officials sat uncomfortably in the audience.

Mr. Rubaie later said in an interview that the central government had effectively given the provincial governor, Muhammad al-Waeli, an ultimatum to combat the militias in the port and elsewhere in the city or lose the support of Baghdad.

But Mr. Waeli suggested in an interview that Basra might not be ready for the reforms sought by the central government. “Rubaie doesn’t know exactly what is happening in the ports,” Mr. Waeli said.

Shiite militias controlled by Mr. Waeli’s political party, Fadhila, are widely considered to be in control of the dock workers’ union. The governor said, however, that the real problem was that the central government had ignored Basra. “So we blame the central government for what has happened,” Mr. Waeli said of problems at the port.

The main port, called Um Qasr, is about 30 miles south of the Basra city center and is connected to the Persian Gulf by a waterway littered with nearly 300 sunken navigation hazards, including 82 large ships, said Michael J. McCormick, the transportation attaché at the United States Embassy in Baghdad, who was along on the trip.

The port is divided into a northern and a southern section, both of them sprawling, Mr. McCormick said. The northern part is “a usable port, but it’s not an efficient port,” he said, with mostly small cranes typical of the 1960s, a militia-controlled union that will load and unload ships only eight hours a day — rather than the 24 hours a day typical of modern ports — and a general air of seediness.

At first, large stacks of some 8,000 shipping containers on the docks seem to indicate that a brisk commerce is taking place at the north port. But Mr. McCormick pointed out that most of the containers were empty. Ships leave the containers, taking a heavy financial loss, because dock workers take too long to hoist the empty containers back onto the ships, he said.

He added that the southern part was essentially derelict and would be opened to international investors in hopes that it could be built almost from scratch into a modern facility. With all those problems, he said, progress at Um Qasr would require physical work like dredging and clearing wrecks, security improvements and general economic development.

And indeed, part of the rationale for the conference was to highlight $2.1 billion in long-term, low-interest loans that Japan has agreed to give Iraq for a series of reconstruction projects, many of them in the south, including $254 million for dredging and other rehabilitation work at the port. Kansuke Nagaoka, minister-counselor at the Japanese Embassy, who was also along on the trip, said the national importance of the project was its greatest selling point. “As many people have pointed out, Um Qasr is not only for Basra but for the entire country,” Mr. Nagaoka said.

But before any of that work is likely to have an impact, the entrenched powers on the docks must be subdued, Iraqi officials at the conference said. And that almost certainly means military action involving the Iraqi Ministry of Defense, often referred to here in shorthand as M.O.D.

“We have a plan that is already set by M.O.D. and the prime minister’s office, and we’re going to implement it in a scientific way,” said Gen. Mohan Fahad al-Fraji, the top defense official here, and the one who would carry out the plan. The additional forces called for in that plan, General Fraji said, “are not going to control the port itself, but they’re going to provide security.”

Mr. Rubaie suggested that the plan would be carried out with a vigor commensurate with the stubbornness that the militias have shown in holding their territory on the waterfront. “Whoever gets in the way will be dealt with swiftly, decisively and with no mercy,” Mr. Rubaie said.
Link


Iraq
Iraqi Leaders Unsure About US "Reconciliation" Goal
2007-10-08
For much of this year, the U.S. military strategy in Iraq has sought to reduce violence so that politicians could bring about national reconciliation, but several top Iraqi leaders say they have lost faith in that broad goal.
So even if the surge is working, we're still quagmired.

Iraqi leaders argue that sectarian animosity is entrenched in the structure of their government but certainly not in the tribal culture. Instead of reconciliation, they now stress alternative and perhaps more attainable goals: streamlining the government bureaucracy, placing experienced technocrats in positions of authority and improving the dismal record of providing basic services like controlling their borders.

"I don't think there is something called reconciliation, and there will be no reconciliation as such," said Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih, a Kurd. "To me, it is a very inaccurate term. This is a struggle about power."

Humam Hamoudi, a prominent Shiite cleric and parliament member, said any future reconciliation would emerge naturally from an efficient, fair government, not through short-term political engineering among Sunnis and Shiites. "Reconciliation should be a result and not a goal by itself," he said. "You should create the atmosphere for correct relationships, and not wave slogans that 'I want to reconcile with you.' "
Except in the US Congress and several other guilt-ridden European contries.
Link


Iraq
Oops! Dems Will Have To Move The Goalposts Again
2007-08-27
ht to AOSHQ
Iraq's top Shi'ite, Sunni Arab and Kurdish political leaders announced on Sunday they had reached consensus on some key measures seen as vital to fostering national reconciliation.

The agreement by the five leaders was one of the most significant political developments in Iraq for months and was quickly welcomed by the United States, which hopes such moves will ease sectarian violence that has killed tens of thousands.

But skeptics will be watching for action amid growing frustration in Washington over the political paralysis that has gripped the government of Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

White House spokeswoman Emily Lawrimore congratulated Iraq's leaders on the accord, hailing it in a statement as "an important symbol of their commitment to work together for the benefit of all Iraqis."

The apparent breakthrough comes two weeks before U.S. President George W. Bush's top officials in Iraq present a report that could have a major influence on future American policy in Iraq.

"I hope that this agreement will help Iraq move beyond the political impasse," Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih told Reuters. "The five leaders representing Iraq's major political communities .... affirmed the principle of collective leadership to help deal with the many challenges faced by Iraq."

Maliki's appearance on Iraqi television with the four other leaders at a brief news conference was a rare show of public unity.

The other officials present were President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd; Sunni Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi; Shi'ite Vice President Adel Abdul-Mahdi, and Masoud Barzani, president of the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region.

Iraqi officials said the five leaders had agreed on draft legislation that would ease curbs on former members of Saddam Hussein's Baath party joining the civil service and military.

Consensus was also reached on a law governing provincial powers as well as setting up a mechanism to release some detainees held without charge, a key demand of Sunni Arabs since the majority being held are Sunnis.

The laws need to be passed by Iraq's fractious parliament, which has yet to receive any of the drafts.

Yasin Majid, a media adviser to Maliki, told Reuters the leaders also endorsed a draft oil law, which has already been agreed by the cabinet but has not yet gone to parliament.

But a statement from Talabani's office said more discussions were needed on the draft oil law and constitutional reforms. Committees had also been formed to try to ensure a "balance" of Shi'ites, Sunni Arabs and Kurds in government.

The oil law is seen as the most important in a package of measures stalled by political infighting in Maliki's government.

The lack of action has frustrated Washington, which has been urging more political progress before the pivotal report on Iraq is presented to the U.S. Congress around September 11.

The report by the U.S. military commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, and ambassador Ryan Crocker, is seen as a watershed moment in the unpopular four-year-old war, with Democrats likely to use the negligible political progress to press their case for troops to begin pulling out soon.

Bush is pleading for patience, pointing to the military's apparent success in reducing levels of violence between majority Shi'ite Muslims and minority Sunni Arabs.

The White House's Lawrimore said in her statement that the United States would "continue to support these brave leaders and all the Iraqi people in their efforts to overcome the forces of terror who seek to overwhelm Iraq's democracy.

"The President also welcomes the desire of the Iraqi leadership to develop a strategic partnership with the United States based on common interests."

But Democrats are not convinced, and presidential hopeful Senator Hillary Clinton and fellow Senator Carl Levin have called for Maliki to be replaced.

Maliki hit back on Sunday, saying: "There are American officials who consider Iraq as if it were one of their villages, for example Hillary Clinton and Carl Levin."

"This is severe interference in our domestic affairs. Carl Levin and Hillary Clinton are from the Democratic Party and they must demonstrate democracy," he said. "I ask them to come to their senses and to talk in a respectful way about Iraq."
Link


Iraq
Iraq's leaders agree on key benchmarks
2007-08-27
Karl Rove and Iraq's top Shi'ite, Sunni Arab and Kurdish political leaders announced on Sunday they had reached consensus on some key measures seen as vital to fostering national reconciliation. The agreement by the five leaders was one of the most significant political developments in Iraq for months and was quickly welcomed by the United States, which hopes such moves will ease sectarian violence that has killed tens of thousands.

But skeptics in the Democrat party will be watching for action amid growing frustration in Washington over the political paralysis that hads gripped the government of Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

"I hope that this agreement will help Iraq move beyond the political impasse," Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih told Reuters. "The five leaders representing Iraq's major political communities .... affirmed the principle of collective leadership to help deal with the many challenges faced by Iraq."

Maliki's appearance on Iraqi television with the four other leaders at a brief news conference was a rare show of public unity. The other officials present were President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd; Sunni Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi; Shi'ite Vice President Adel Abdul-Mahdi, and Masoud Barzani, president of the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region.

Iraqi officials said the five leaders had agreed on draft legislation that would ease curbs on former members of Saddam Hussein's Baath party joining the civil service and military.

Consensus was also reached on a law governing provincial powers as well as setting up a mechanism to release some detainees held without charge, a key demand of Sunni Arabs since the majority being held are Sunnis.

Yasin Majid, a media adviser to Maliki, told Reuters the leaders also endorsed a draft oil law, which has already been agreed by the cabinet but has not yet gone to parliament.

The White House's Lawrimore said in her statement that the United States would "continue to support these brave leaders and all the Iraqi people in their efforts to overcome the forces of terror who seek to overwhelm Iraq's democracy. "The President also welcomes the desire of the Iraqi leadership to develop a strategic partnership with the United States based on common interests."

But Democrats are shitting in their panties not convinced, and presidential hopeful Senator Hillary Clinton and fellow Senator Carl Levin have called for Maliki to be replaced. Harry Reid was seen on at the Capitol Hill CVS with a cartful of Depends.

Maliki hit back on Sunday, saying: "There are American officials who consider Iraq as if it were one of their villages, for example Hillary Clinton and Carl Levin."

"This is severe interference in our domestic affairs. Carl Levin and Hillary Clinton are from the Democratic Party and they must demonstrate democracy," he said. "I ask them to come to their senses and to talk in a respectful way about Iraq."

Link


Home Front: Politix
Anti-War Liberal Schakowsky Not Convinced by Petreaus
2007-08-26
When Rep. Jan Schakowsky made her first trip to Iraq this month, the outspoken antiwar liberal resolved to keep her opinions to herself. "I would listen and learn," she decided.

At times that proved a challenge, as when Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih told her congressional delegation, "There's not going to be political reconciliation by this September; there's not going to be political reconciliation by next September." Schakowsky gulped -- wasn't that the whole idea of President Bush's troop increase, to buy time for that political progress?

But the real test came over a lunch with Gen. David H. Petraeus, who used charts and a laser pointer to show how security conditions were gradually improving -- evidence, he argued, that the troop increase is doing some good.

Still, the U.S. commander cautioned, it could take another decade before real stability is at hand. Schakowsky gasped.
"I come from an environment where people talk nine to 10 months," she said, referring to the time frame for withdrawal that many Democrats are advocating. "And there he was, talking nine to 10 years."
"I come from an environment where people talk nine to 10 months," she said, referring to the time frame for withdrawal that many Democrats are advocating. "And there he was, talking nine to 10 years."

Seated at the Venus (Chicago restaraunt), her white notebook in front of her, Schakowsky recounted some of the day's more vivid images. The irony of having to wear body armor to a meeting of Sunni and Shiite leaders to discuss their progress in working together. The creepy feeling when she examined the improvised explosive devices used to devastating effect against U.S. soldiers, from crude models activated by cellphones to sophisticated Iranian designs that Schakowsky described as "sleek copper bowls." The blasts of a simulated raid by Iraqi soldiers on a terrorism suspect's house. And the stifling heat that felt "like a hair dryer on the back of your neck."

But it wasn't just Republicans who came away impressed after visiting Iraq. Rep. Brian Baird (D-Wash.) announced that he will no longer support a timetable for withdrawal, warning of a "potentially catastrophic effect" on the region.

Schakowsky acknowledged that the military's presentation may have been effective. "If you took the briefings at their face value, without context, without bringing anything to it -- clearly they were trying to present that positive spin, and that's what [other lawmakers] took away from it."

In other words, she didn't learn anything. More at link.
Link


Iraq
Sens. Warner and Levin Travel to Iraq, Praise Surge Results - Whatsup???
2007-08-21
WASHINGTON — After a brief trip to Iraq, Sen. Carl Levin said Monday that the Iraqi Parliament should vote no confidence in the government of Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki because of its sectarian nature and leadership.

"The Maliki government is non-functional," Levin, D-Mich., said in a conference call with reporters.
He hasn't bothered checking out the Dhimmicratic Congressional Caucus lately, has he?
Levin, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and Sen. John Warner of Virginia, the panel's top Republican, just returned from a fact-finding mission to the country. The two reported that they are encouraged by the effects of the recent U.S. military surge there, but their enthusiasm is tempered by concerns about Iraq's political climate.

"We have seen indications that the surge of additional brigades to Baghdad and its immediate vicinity and the revitalized counter-insurgency strategy being employed have produced tangible results in making several areas of the capital more secure. We are also encouraged by continuing positive results — in al-Anbar Province, from the recent decisions of some of the Sunni tribes to turn against Al Qaeda and cooperate with coalition force efforts to kill or capture its adherents," the two said in a statement issued after leaving the country.

Speaking with reporters, Levin said he hopes when the Parliament reconvenes in the next few weeks, it will dissolve the government, which he said "cannot produce a political settlement because it is too beholden to sectarian leaders."

Levin said "broad frustration" exists across Iraq and within the Bush administration with al-Maliki, and he noted that the Iraqi constitution provides that 25 members of Parliament can sign a petition to hold this vote.

In a separate event, Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, an on-again, off-again supporter of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki told a British newspaper on Monday that the Iraqi government is on the brink of collapse. "Al-Maliki's government will not survive because he has proven that he will not work with important elements of the Iraqi people," the cleric was quoted by The Independent as saying. "The prime minister is a tool for the Americans, and people see that clearly. It will probably be the Americans who decide to change him when they realize he has failed. We don't have a democracy here, we have a foreign occupation."

The trip, which included an excursion to Jordan, gave the lawmakers a chance to see progress on the ground. The two met with a host of American and Iraqi officials, including Gen. David Petraeus, commander of Multi-National Forces-Iraq, Gen. Ray Odierno, the commander of Multi-National Corps-Iraq, U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker and Stuart Bowen, special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction. The senators also met with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, Deputy Presidents Adil Abd Al-Mahdi and Tariq Al-Hashimi and Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih.

The visit comes ahead of an expected September report from Petraeus that is to outline the 18 benchmarks laid out by Congress to measure progress in Iraq. The White House said Monday that report should be provided in open hearings on Capitol Hill on Sept. 11 or 12.

Levin and Warner said that during their meetings they had few reassurances that the Iraqi government will be able to cooperate in any meaningful way. "In many meetings with Iraqi political leaders, of all different backgrounds, we told them of the deep impatience of the American people and the Congress with the lack of political progress, impressed upon them that time has run out in that regard, and told them of the urgent need to make the essential compromises," the lawmakers said. "In all of our meetings we witnessed a great deal of apprehension regarding the capabilities of the current Iraqi government to shed its sectarian biases and act in a unifying manner."

Levin said the Iraqi government is "stronger and more capable" than 10 months ago when Levin was last in Iraq. The Iraqis have trained 10 of 12 divisions — 163,000 troops. But he said that until U.S. troops pull out of Iraq, the country's army won't take the lead. Levin is still pushing for the U.S. to begin drawing down to well below pre-surge levels in the next four months.

Despite progress being made on the military side of the surge, Sen Levin said that without political progress the military successes won't add up to much. "There is consensus: there is no military solution to the conflict," Levin said.

While many of the military goals have been met, opponents of the Iraq war are using the failure for reconciliation on several key political goals as ammunition to call for a withdrawal.

Without a political compromise, a lasting calm seems unlikely. However, an additional 20,000 troops are expected to rotate in by December. This is not associated with the surge but would briefly increase the numbers of U.S. soldiers in the country.
Link


Iraq
Iraq leaders hold “cordial, candid” talks
2007-08-19
BAGHDAD - Iraq’s political leaders held ”cordial but candid” talks on Saturday in an attempt to revive national reconciliation efforts and repair the fractured unity government. The five leaders, representing Iraq’s majority Shia Muslims, Sunni Arabs and Kurds, met for about 90 minutes and are expected to meet again on Sunday, Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih told Reuters. It was the first time they had met for two months.

“The meeting was cordial but characterised by candid discussion of the issues and a sense of responsibility to resolve the political crisis afflicting the country,” Salih said. Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki attended the talks with President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, Sunni Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi, Shia Vice President Adel Abdul-Mahdi, and Masoud Barzani, president of the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region.
"Tea, Tariq?"
"Yes, thank you, Nuri."
"Jalal, can I get you some biscotti?"
"If it's not too much of a bother, Adel."
"Hot out, isn't it?"
Salih said the leaders discussed the results of preparatory talks that had been going on almost daily since July 15. The results included tentative agreements on a review of the de-Baathification law, provincial powers and “frameworks for crucial issues dealing with militias, insurgent groups, detainees and powersharing”, Salih said.
Link


Iraq
Weekly Wrapup in Iraq (State Dept.)
2007-05-04
AQI Security Emir Killed:
• In an operation conducted April 20, Coalition forces killed Muhammad Abdullah Abbas al-Issawi, also known as Abu Abd al-Sattar and Abu Akram, an al-Qaida terrorist leader who operated in the Karmah and Amariya areas and was the al-Qaida in Iraq (AQI) Security Emir of the eastern Anbar province.
• Abu Abd al-Sattar had links to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and was reported to have been in contact with him from late 2004 until Zarqawi’s death in 2006. He was also a weapons supplier to insurgent forces and had links to the recent surge in chlorine Vehicle-Borne Improvised Explosive Device (VBIED) attacks across Iraq. Additional reports also indicate that his VBIED cell used 12- to 13-year-old children in suicide VBIED attacks.

Iraq Civilian Deaths Down in April:
• According to numbers compiled by the Iraqi Interior, Defense, and Health ministries, violence against Iraqi civilians dropped nearly 20% in April with 1,506 civilians killed, down from 1,861 in March. The drop is largely attributable to the ongoing Operation Fardh al-Qanun and the increased security operations aimed to reduce sectarian violence in the capital and surrounding areas.
• This increased operational tempo, greater numbers of U.S. troops on the streets, and the move from large, more secure Forward Operating Bases to smaller combat outposts and patrol bases in Iraqi neighborhoods also contributed to April being the deadliest month in Iraq for the U.S. military in Iraq so far in 2007, with over 100 U.S. troops killed.

Sunni Bloc Threatens to Pull Ministers:
• The largest bloc of Sunni Arabs in the Iraqi parliament threatened to withdraw its ministers from the Shia-dominated Cabinet in frustration over the Iraqi government’s failure to deal with Sunni concerns. President Bush called one of Iraq’s two vice presidents, Tariq al-Hashimi, a Sunni Arab, and invited him to Washington in an attempt to forestall the withdrawal.
• The bloc, known as the Iraqi Accord Front (Tawafuq) and made up of three Sunni Arab parties, claimed in a statement that they have “lost hope in rectifying the situation despite all of its sincere and serious efforts to do so.”

Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Seeks to Work Out Differences on Oil Law:
• Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih said May 1 that he was confident a draft oil law will be approved in parliament after officials from the central government and Kurdistan meet to iron out differences.
• Kurdish lawmakers had planned to oppose U.S.-backed legislation to regulate Iraq’s oil industry and some Sunni legislators have also raised objections, saying the oil law would give foreigners too great a role in the country’s oil industry.
So, take a lesson from the Hugo playbook, and nationalize it later. Hugo learned it from Nassar and Castro.

Iran Says Earmarks $1 Billion Credits for Iraqi Projects:
• Speaking in Najaf, Ali Larijani, Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Council, announced that his country has earmarked $1 billion in credits for Iraqi projects and pledged support for Iraqi reconstruction.
The Mad Mullahs destroyeth, and the Mad Mullahs giveth away.

Ministry of Industry & Minerals Participation in Training and Certification for ISO 9000:
ISO 9000 Certification is no small task!
• The Ministry of Industry & Minerals has announced that it is planning to have important State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) certified and made compliant to ISO 9000 quality standards. The certification process would allow for contracting opportunities in international trade where ISO 9000 is a prerequisite. This move could also enhance the SOEs’ prospective investment potential to international strategic partners if they become available for privatization.
• The Ministry of Oil and Minerals manages 59 SOEs, including over 200 factories in six industrial sectors: Petrochemicals, Cement and Construction Materials, Engineering and Heavy Industry, Textiles, Food & Drug, and Industrial Services.

Hill Conference on FY07 Supplemental Has Concluded:
• The House-Senate Conference on the FY07 supplemental bill has concluded. The supplemental bill appropriates over $2 billion for economic reconstruction and other related programs in Iraq.

CCCI Convicts 41:
Bad week to be a convicted terrorist in Iraq.
• The Central Criminal Court of Iraq (CCCI) convicted 41 individuals April 1-14 for violations of the Iraqi Terrorist Law, Penal Code, and Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) Orders enforced by the Iraqi judiciary.
• CCCI sentenced four individuals to death after being found guilty of violations of Iraq’s Terrorist Law. The convicted individuals were charged with participating and planning terrorist operations.
• The trial court sentenced three individuals to life imprisonment after being found guilty of violating Iraq’s Terrorist Law and 14 individuals were sentenced to 30 years imprisonment for violating CPA Order 3/2003, possession of illegal weapons. One individual was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment for violating Article 194 of the Iraqi Penal Code, organizing, heading, leading or joining an armed group.
• Since its establishment under an amendment to CPA Order 13, in April 2004, the Central Criminal Court has held 2,084 trials for suspected criminals apprehended by Coalition forces. The Iraqi Court proceedings have resulted in the conviction of 1,788 individuals with sentences ranging from imprisonment to death.

UN Secretary-General in Egypt to Launch International Compact with Iraq:
• United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will co-launch with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki the International Compact with Iraq in Sharm al-Shaik, Egypt May 3.
• The International Compact with Iraq is a five-year national plan that includes benchmarks and mutual commitments from both Iraq and the international community, all with the aim of helping Iraq on the path towards peace, sound governance and economic reconstruction.
Benchmarks! Hear that, Harry?

New Zealand Pledges Support to Assist Iraqi Refugees:
• New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters announced his country’s plan to donate $1 million to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees to feed, house and protect Iraqi refugees.

Japan Reaffirms Support for Reconstruction and Airlift Operations:
• Japanese Defense Minister Fumio Kyuma visited the U.S. Central Command in Tampa, Florida April 29 and assured the U.S. military that Japan will continue to support reconstruction efforts in Iraq through extending the deployment of Japanese air troops for airlift operations.

Radio Veteran Survives Assassination Attempt:
• Amal Mudarris, 58, survived an assassination attempt April 29. The Baghdad radio veteran suffered serious head injuries when she was shot several times outside her Baghdad home the morning of April 29. Doctors said later in the day that her condition had stabilized and she was expected to recover. The evening of April 29, Iraqi television aired footage of Mudarris in a hospital recovery room.
I assume, since the Orcs tried to off her, that she must have some integrity.
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