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  • Unending Nightmare

    UNENDING NIGHTMARE

    Khaleej Times
    Oct 15 2007
    United Arab Emirates

    THE White House's claim of progress on Iraq has suffered yet another
    strong setback, this time one of the former US commanders on the
    ground rubbishing the official line. Lt Gen Ricardo Sanchez ®, who
    led the Joint Task Force 7 in Iraq in '03, is a weighty addition to
    the anti-war drive's momentum that is questioning the White House's
    handling of the insurgency.

    Having led the US forces at the beginning of the campaign, his word
    no doubt carries more weight than media watchdogs and thinktanks,
    and therefore poses greater difficulties for the Bush lobby. That
    is especially so since his take is in stark contradiction to the
    commander now running the show. Putting things in perspective, it
    is little surprising that the General is extremely critical of the
    recent troop-surge, which General Petraeus claims has made way for
    considerable improvements.

    And if the show so far has featured "a glaring unfortunate display
    of incompetent strategic leadership", then the immediate days ahead
    stand to be much worse. The unnecessary standoff with Turkey is all
    set to create havoc in the only part of Iraq that enjoys a relative
    degree of stability - the Kurdish north. Considering the US congress'
    ill-timed decision to rub salt into Turkey's Armenian wounds, only the
    most subtle diplomacy will stop Ankara from authorising use of force
    to deal with the irritating Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) from inside
    Iraq. And going by the recent track record of Condi and her team, with
    little impressive stemming from their engagement with Middle Eastern
    countries, Pakistan and now Russia, concrete progress is unlikely.

    A Turkish assault on the PKK would not only introduce another active
    front in the war-torn country, but also block key supply routes for
    America's struggling military presence in the rest of the country.

    And even the prospect of the debacle has sent international oil prices
    to unprecedented highs. Therefore, on top of the current chaos,
    yet more uncertainty seems destined to come Iraq's way in not too
    distant the future.

    It is unfortunate that no matter what lows the Iraq equation touches,
    there is not the slightest show of soul-searching from George Bush
    and his team. They continue to justify their policies, with their
    more-of-the-same rhetoric insulting concerned opinion across the
    globe. Iraq's continuously worsening situation reminds one of the
    old adage, "No matter how bad things are, they can always get worse."

    --Boundary_(ID_BeeDjZZ1uksOYEX0QFC/s g)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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