January Elections in Iraq? 141
bettiwettiwoo writes "Last week Kofi Annan claimed, in a BBC interview, that: 'You cannot have credible elections [in Iraq] if the security conditions continue as they are now.' Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi disagreed ('pointedly disagreed', according to the International Herald Tribune):'We definitely are going to stick to the timetable of elections in January ... Democracy is going to prevail and is going to win in Iraq.' According to Tony Blair: 'The people who are trying to stop that Iraq coming about, who are engaged in killing, maiming and acts of terrorism, are people who are opposed... to every single one of the values that we in countries like this hold dear.' Iraq the Model points to an IRI poll which states: 'In a stunning display of support for democracy and a strong rebuttal to critics of efforts to bring democratic reform to Iraq, 87% of Iraqis indicated that they plan to vote in January elections. Expanding on the theme, 77% said that "regular, fair elections" were the most important political right for the Iraqi people and 58% felt that Iraqi-style democracy was likely to succeed.' It would appear that the poll was undertaken sometime in July/August this year, but if such a large majority of the Iraqi population continues to favour elections, would it really be fair to the Iraqis to postpone the January elections whatever the security situation and whomever might be against them?"
87% of whom? (Score:3, Insightful)
I took at a poll on job satisfaction at a Bush rally and it was around 95%. I guess America thinks Bush is doing a bang-up job!
Re:87% of whom? (Score:3)
Glorious!
Re:87% of whom? (Score:3, Insightful)
Then, again, this *is* slashdot...
Seriously, though...assuming (as you appear to) that people in hostile locations weren't polled, how do you accomplish that?
Side-note: I'm not a W supporter, but I'm employed...don't vote Kerry out of stupidity, please. Plenty of presidential alternatives to the awful two big ones at www.vote-smart.org [vote-smart.org]
Re:87% of whom? (Score:1, Flamebait)
http://johnkerryisadouchebagbutimvotingforhimanyw
Re:87% of whom? (Score:4, Insightful)
That is the thinking that puts true radicals in power. Putin is reinstating the USSR because "we must defeat Chechens no matter what." The US Electoral system is based on voting for candidates, not against them. If we don't remember that, we risk the continued race to the bottom the two parties have us on.
What about the nonsense "a vote for Nader is a vote for Bush?" I know of several people that are so ticked that Nader may not be allowed on their state ballot, that they are going to march to the polls and vote Bush if Nader isn't a choice. I hope Democrats doing the most un-democratic thing imaginable (trying to deny ballot access) backfires.
And, if Kerry wins because people voted against Bush, would he really have a mandate?
No. In our system, you march to the polls and vote in support of someone. I plan to march to the poll on election day and pull the leaver in support of the candidate I favor the most.
Re: 87% of whom? (Score:2)
> And, if Kerry wins because people voted against Bush, would he really have a mandate?
Yes: don't do what Bush was doing.
Re:87% of whom? (Score:2)
If we don't remember that, we risk the continued race to the bottom the two parties have us on.
you're right- I voted for nader last time and I'll probably vote for Badnarik this time. but, and it's a big but this year, I live in IL and we have no risk of electing bush in this state- which is where my vote ends.
unlike gore, I actually like kerry a lot more then bush and want to see him as president.
Re:87% of whom? (Score:2)
Re:87% of whom? (Score:1, Interesting)
Absolutely unreal, and yet further evidence that programming requires no intelligence.
Re: 87% of whom? (Score:2)
> and goes around executing people after holding secret trials
That one cuts a bit close to the knuckle.
Re:87% of whom? (Score:1)
Interestingly enough, it is alleged that [abc.net.au] Iyad Allawi did the same without even the benefit of "secret trials". [smh.com.au] Not even a word about it in the US media.
Of course, back in the 90s, Allawi was setting off car bombs in Bhagdad. Those days. it was considered a *good thing* to set off car bombs in downtown Bhagdad. (Allawi was even caught on tape by the British media complaining that he had not been compensa
Re:87% of whom? (Score:2)
Cognitivie Dissonance is the primary symptom of Moral Equivalence Syndrome.
Re:87% of whom? (Score:2)
I didn't think so. There are none so blind as those who hate.
Re:87% of whom? (Score:2)
You said it baby! Setting off car bombs that kill innocent people in the middle of the market place certainly makes a strong impact on a dictator and his murderous sons who are sitting in their luxurious palaces sipping their martinis.
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Because, of course, we all know that Saddam and his sons did all their dirty work completely by themselves and every other person in Iraq was completely innocent.
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any one know where all these village-idiots come from anyways?
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Look in the mirror.
Re:87% of whom? (Score:2, Interesting)
you can't have a full election.. (Score:2)
maybe the information minister had a face/off operation.
No... (Score:5, Insightful)
In a stunning display of support for democracy and a strong rebuttal to critics of efforts to bring democratic reform to Iraq, 87% of Iraqis indicated that they plan to vote in January elections.
You mean, 87% of Iraqi RESPONDENTS indicated that they plan to vote in January elections. This is a self-selecting question: people likely to respond to a poll are more likely to go to the polls than people who don't respond to a poll. At any rate, everyone outside Iraq believes that Iraqis should have the right to self-determination. We believe the same thing of the people of China. But it wouldn't be a smart thing to invade China to effect that.
IRI (Score:5, Insightful)
PS: Did anyone happen to look at who IRI is [iri.org]?
RI's board of directors is chaired by U.S. Senator John McCain (R-Ariz.) and includes former Secretary of State Lawrence S. Eagleburger, former U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations Ambassador Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, former National Security Advisor Brent Scowcroft, current members of the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate, and individuals from the private sector with backgrounds in international relations, business and government.
Yeah, this is ENTIRELY independent. Mind you, at least one member of the board has some independent ideas [pbs.org].
Q - I thought President Bush said in his speech that, "Either you're for us or against us....anyone who harbors terrorists, or fosters their activity," and he meant terrorists in general. Doesn't Saddam qualify?
...We need to be skillful about this. We need to use scalpels, not sledgehammers.
A - We've got to be looking at priorities here. Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden have one thing in common, and that is they both hate the United States. Otherwise, they have very little in common.
As a matter of fact, my guess is, if it weren't for the United States, Osama bin Laden would turn on Saddam Hussein. Why? Because Saddam Hussein is the head of a Ba'athist party -- a secular, socialist party. He is anathema to the kind of world that Osama bin Laden wants to reinstall So he's part of the problem; he's not part of the solution. That doesn't mean they can't cooperate, and might not cooperate. But what I'm saying is we need to get our priorities straight, and we've got them straight right now. We're going after number one target.
Iraq could turn out to be number two, but there are a lot of other candidates. Hezbollah, for example, is a global terrorist network, which has attacked the United States and U.S. interests before. How about that?
Re:IRI (Score:3, Informative)
Uh-oh, a FOXLies link. And it doesn't take long:
Together with
this "proves" that the UN financed Al Qaeda.
Re:IRI (Score:2)
According to U.S. officials and the United Nations itself, MIGA is less an "empty box" than a container of Al Qaeda-related mysteries. One of those mysteries appears to be Abdul Rahman Hayel Saeed, with his charter MIGA membership and his prominent part in a Yemen conglomerate doing hundreds of millions worth of b
Re:IRI (Score:2)
Re:IRI (Score:2)
If I didn't believe you the first time, what makes you think I'll believe you the second? Repeating things doesn't make them true, nor is it a very good way to carry on a discussion. If you can point out something specific in the article which is a lie, that'd be much more helpful than just repeating your own apparently dogmatic belief.
Re:IRI (Score:2)
The best part is that the guy posting the original story in his own post admits that the lie was a lie.
Re:IRI (Score:2)
Re:IRI (Score:2)
ooooooo (Score:2)
The facts are against the right wing, so just blabber until you piss off the opposition! WHee!!
How about this: When bush says that Saddam sought "uranium in Nigeria", or that "Saddam and Al-Quaeda were working together" or that "Iraq was a threat to the US"... you understand that, right? Even though it's all total bullshit? Of course. STFU.
Re:IRI (Score:2)
right wing lunatic zealots (Score:2)
I modded that loony flamebait and troll... but /. undid my moderation when I posted an anonymous comment.
You're totally right of course... and you could point a rightwinger's eyeballs at the naked Sun, they'd tell you it was dark if they thought it would help their party line.
I'm so bummed. I'm just posting this because it's the only thing I can really add... I just don't have the energy to pound his empty, pointy little head in today. :-/
He's really crazy tho :) Best wishes, Phy
Re:IRI (Score:2)
Re:IRI (Score:2)
The evidence is just as "good" as that for the existence of WMD in Iraq. So where are they (and I don't mean small amounts of ammunition made before the invasion of Kuwait). The evidence probably even comes from the same source, a source that produced (and I don't mean "to bring forth") evidence for the US - Ahmed Chalabi's Iraqi National Congress. And that evidence was always convenient, mostly for the
What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:5, Insightful)
However, what happens if they don't like the result? I see one of two outcomes being more likely than the interim government being re-elcted and legitimised:
(1) They are re-elected, but international monitors (the UN etc.) do not agree that the election was free and fair. To some extent this is what Kofi Anan is already worrying about.
(2) Ignoring whether (1) is the case or not, what happens if the result of the elections is not what Bush/Blair want? What if an Iran-style shia religious party is elected? This is the problem with democracy - it doesn't always give you the answer you want. The US was quite happy with democracy in South American until socialists like Allende started being elected in Chile and elsewhere. Then they sent in the CIA and regimes like Pinochet's were the result. Is this the future that the middle east has to look forward to?
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:2, Insightful)
Actually events in January have no political effect on Bush whatsoever. If he loses the election, those events will reflect poorly on Kerry. If he wins, those events will lower his approval rating but since he can't run for a third term what does he care? If anything it hurts cheney politically as he will be tied to the bush administration and any attempts by h
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:1)
*I understand that there are people on both sides of the aisle who have proven themselves to be unreasonable
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:2)
As a people, we're quite capable of putting blame or credit pretty much anywhere we please, so if Kerry wins and the election goes badly, we could always say, "Well, with a weak President taking office, of course the radical Iraqis took advantage of the situ
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:1)
While agree that some people will be arguing one or the other (if they have a chance), that doesn't make it reasonable. First we would be presuming to know the meaning behind terrorists' actions, and secondly we would be blaming the Republican spin machine on Kerry! If
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:2)
It didn't really matter, though, that Carter ws stubborn and held to various sanctions that Reagan gave away -- the perception was that Carter was weak and Reagan strong, so that the Iranians caved in the moment Reagan ascended. I'm not sure it's even right to blame Reagan for that perception.
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:1)
Re: What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:2)
> It didn't really matter, though, that Carter ws stubborn and held to various sanctions that Reagan gave away -- the perception was that Carter was weak and Reagan strong [...]
That's... odd. The guy that played hardball was weak?
Maybe it was just an October Surprise [wikipedia.org] kind of thing.
Reagan bought the hostages several more months. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Reagan bought the hostages several more months. (Score:2)
Re:Reagan bought the hostages several more months. (Score:2)
Re:Reagan bought the hostages several more months. (Score:2)
In fact, the more I think about it, the more sure I am that I would NOT use the term -- it's simply innapropriate. Congress passed laws regarding aid to the Contras, and those laws were violated, but that isn't treason anymore than speeding is treason.
Re:Reagan bought the hostages several more months. (Score:2)
I'd also call it treason when our national security is undermined by covert action compromising our intelligence agencies with secret,
Re:Reagan bought the hostages several more months. (Score:2)
As for the Contra part, "illegal wars contrary to the foreign policy sanctioned by Congress" is a crime, but not treason. The US defines that word pretty carefully, which is why neither Robert Hanssen nor Aldrich Ames wa
Re:Reagan bought the hostages several more months. (Score:2)
Let's say that VP Dick Cheney showed Saudi Ambassador Bandar our plans for war with Iraq (marked "NOFOR", no foreigners allowed access) before the invasion, before even Sect'y of State Powell was shown the plans. Let's say that Bandar approved the plans, assuring Cheney that he'd get the Saudis to
Re:Reagan bought the hostages several more months. (Score:2)
Re:Reagan bought the hostages several more months. (Score:2)
While you're saying that we're not at war with the Saudis, I've got two towers near Brooklyn I'd like to sell you. Vice Presidential collaboration with them, in full knowledge of their role as documented in t
Re:Reagan bought the hostages several more months. (Score:2)
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:1)
Amer
Re: What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:2)
> No I wouldn't reasonably blame Kerry [...] Americans don't like hearing about hard to understand concepts such as "political inertia" we like hearing things like patriot, axis of evil, terrorist, nukular, security, etc etc.
Curiously, a Republican Fundamentalist I used to work with once exclaimed with dismay, "See what Clinton got us in to in Somalia!"
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:2)
As to the Bush side, things would be much more difficult for him internationally (if that was possible!) if he's seen to be behind an electoral disaster in Iraq. Politics is not just an issue of being able to win re-election, its also about being able to do what you want once you've been elected.
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:3, Insightful)
If Bush wins and the public turn against him, his clout with Congress plummets. Regardless of statuatory authority (or really, I suppose, because of the limits of that authority,) a President who lacks popular support doesn't get much done. Whether or not the President is up for re-election, Congresscritters are always campaigning, and one-third of the Senate is up every two years, so if there is advantage to defiance of the White House then d
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:1)
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:2)
Assisting with legislation is part of it, of course, but budgets and appointments are also an important part of the job and involve Congress. There's a balance to the whole thing that makes it more of a dance than the Consti
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:1)
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:2)
Re: What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:2)
> I'm sure there will be some kind of election in Iraq in January - there's too much at stake politically for Blair and Bush for it not to happen.
Bush only has to insist "stay the course!" for another six weeks. If he's re-elected, he can do whatever the heck he wants after that.
Re:What if Bush/Blair don't like the result? (Score:2)
In my dreams and prayers he'll be a normal citizen and have to watch from the sidelines.
Not really trolling, just saying that there is a chance that he (Bush) won't be in office when this happens
Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:5, Insightful)
Also at the risk of being modded off topic I'd like to make a genaral statement on international terrorism.
Recently a proBush stance by a columnist in my local free rag (Galway, Ireland) attracted a letters page full of rebukes. The columnist in question retaliated by saying that global terrorism is the biggest threat to "the world" today (it's not, poverty is) and that George Bush is the only solution. Well I agree that terrorism is a huge problem but ya know if the British government had listened to the plight of the Catholics in Northern Ireland in the sixties, there would be no IRA today. With aid reconciliation and understanding. Attempts to understand the root causes of support for radicalism ie. war, alienation and poverty are often met with more success then hate.
Hate breeds hate. Radical action breeds radical reaction. Stop bombing people into the ground and it just might not happen to you.
If you think I'm talking waffle then google 'canary wharf IRA' and compare that with last weekends round of talks where sworn enemies are now sitting around a table to talk.
There is a way out and it is not about increased defence spending, unethical imprisonment and unilateral invasion.
It is about putting peace before closing your eyes to world suffering.
Get informed [fpif.org]
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:3, Insightful)
democratically appointed? What the hell is that supposed to mean? An official is either elected, or appointed. And I sure as hell don't remember voting for (or against) Kofi.
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:1)
2. Kofi Annan is an appointed representative in this institution.
That's what the hell it's supposed to mean.
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:2)
No, it's not. It is, in fact, completely indifferent toward democratic principles. none of the representatives to the UN are elected by the people they represent. They are appointed, many by governments that we would not consider to be legitimate much less wholly democratic.
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:2)
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:2)
The exact categorization of that election as "democratic" is debatable. It may be argued that you've democratically elected an aristocracy who then makes decisions on your behalf, the same as an imposed aristocracy would.
Besides, we don't have elections to vote for our electors to vote for the head of the UN. Or did I miss that election?
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:2)
But I never voted for Kofi Annan. As far as I'm aware, I never had the option of voting for any representitive in the UN. That means it's not even a representitive democracy. Which I don't always consider so-called "representitive democracies" true democracy. The U.S., for example, is not a democracy, and that's a good thing. It'd be even more of a mess if it were.
So I'm
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:2)
US is a democracy. It's a representational democracy (a republic), which is a subclass of democracy. The other subclass is the direct democracy (which is mostly a historical curiosity nowadays).
To the best I can understand, you seem to think that a government is a "democracy" if it "operates according to the general precepts of a democracy", even if it's not elected by the people?
That's because it
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:2)
I don't know if this is what you meant to imply, but a "republic" isn't quite the same as a "representational democracy", and the US is a bit more complex than either of these labels. At the very least, it's a constitutional federal republic made of semi-sovereign states which are each represtational democracies. Though, the exact form of government for each state is left largely to the state (doesn't necessarily need to be a "democracy"),
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:2)
Getting back to my original point. I believe that the pursuit of the tenets laid out by the UN charter and the pursuit of same by democratic means is the only real hope of achieving peace.
Again, I feel like we're talking past each other. Whether the UN has benevolent and good intention
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:3, Informative)
"Democratically?"
Let's see... the People's Republic of China gets as many votes as the Federated States of Micronesia (namely, one), so it's not democratic in the popular sense (double entendre!)
"Democratic" can be more broadly defined as being selected by a mechanism through which the people at large have ultimate control. The US ambassador to the UN is selected by a democratically-elected president and approved by a democratically-elected Senate, so it can be
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:2)
Ahh yes, but if UN votes were based on the number of voters in each nation (i.e. 1 UN vote per N voters in the member nation), then Micronesia and China would be equal, or maybe even Micronesia is under represented. After all only then elite Communist members have any real authority in China.
Ans speaking of China... At what poi
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:2, Offtopic)
You say that very authoritatively, that poverty is the "biggest threat to 'the world'." I'm not sure how you can be so sure about it. Sounds like propaganda.
I mean, what does it mean to be a threat to 'the world'? Can you threaten the world?
It seems like poverty is maybe the biggest threat to poor people, if to anyone, and you might argue that angry poor people are t
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:2)
So I do think it's worth being clear what you're talking about when you say "threaten the world". Threatening the Earth? Do you think poverty is going to crack the planet or send us reeling into the sun? Do you mean threatening to one world organizati
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:2)
What society, existant today, what full-blown society's power-structure isn't based on inequality of the people within it? Poor/rich, oppressor/oppressed. Even within families (not full-blown societies) there is often a power-structure. I'm not saying it's good, I'm saying it is.
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:1)
Essentially what you're saying here is that whenever a minority group has a grievance, if the government does not accommodate them, then blowing up civilians in downtown London is an understandable recourse. I understand that Catholics in Northern Ireland were terribly oppressed by the Protestants, and that the gove
Re:Learn to say it. quagmire (Score:1, Flamebait)
That's the most ignorant statement I've heard all day. That's like saying that darkness is a threat.
Poverty is nothing more or less than the relative condition caused by the absence of wealth. We draw an arbitrary line and say that people with less than X wealth are living in poverty while people with more than X wealth are not.
What you really mean here, what you're really talking about, is not poverty but rather inequity. You're one of those "let's make everyone equal" nutcases who
Annan no neutral observer (Score:2)
You're trying to paint Annan as a neutral observer.
It just doesn't pass the laugh test. Annan's office directed hush letters [opinionjournal.com] to administrators in the Iraq Oil-For-Food program, from which billions of dollars have gone missing. Supervising the import/export of the goods in question was Cotecna, who employeed Annan's son first as an employee then as a consultant
Don't misunderestimate Kofi! (Score:5, Insightful)
The quote is taken out of its relevant context. Another way to rephrase the quote could be:
Military gangwar is part and parcel of the current conflict. The feudal ganglords will not cede authority easily. Those with support (military and political) will bargain for power in the same manner as the Afghani process. Suspicious one-candidate boundaries will be drawn up and ad-hoc ministerial privileges doled out to unelected strongmen.
Bottom line: Its not democracy.
Re:Don't misunderestimate Kofi! (Score:2)
Representative republics and parliamentary systems with checks and balances are a much more effective form of government at preserving individual liberties.
Of course, civics education in the various "democracies" around the world sucks so badly, that hardly anyone realizes this.
Two choices in the near future (Score:4, Insightful)
1.) Escalate.
2.) Pull out.
Either way we lose. Thanks Mr. Bush for giving us two great choices.
Re:Two choices in the near future (Score:2)
Re:Two choices in the near future (Score:2)
Its up to the Iraqis (Score:5, Insightful)
> the January elections?
There is no chance that the US or anyone else is going to tell the Iraqis not to hold elections. Allawi knows that his continued power is absolutely dependent on his ability to hold elections on time.
He also knows that most Iraqis live in areas where the security situation permits voting. If a security disaster ensues and precincts containing 20% of population have to be repolled due to security incidents, then 80% of the Iraqi people will have had the chance to choose their own government and Allawi can rightly claim an historic achievement.
I also disagree with the posts that claim the polling data is out of touch with the Iraqi people. The same polls that show that Iraqis overwhelmingly want to choose their own government also show that over 80% do not believe that Americans will allow the Iraqis to choose their own government. Their views are entirely self consistent, they just don't take our goernment at its word. By enabling the Iraqis to choose their own leaders, the United States will go a tremendous distance towards easing their fears.
Re:Its up to the Iraqis (Score:1)
Re: Its up to the Iraqis (Score:2)
> Allawi knows that his continued power is absolutely dependent on his ability to hold elections on time.
He may also benefit if certain provinces aren't able to vote.
Absolutely unrealistic (Score:4, Insightful)
Now let's compare with Iraq: Unlike the Germans, the Iraqis have no cultural ties or common traditions with the Americans/British occupying them. They have absolutely no democratic legacy, not even a failed one, that anyone can remember there. There is a strong resentment against the occupying forces, and any ideas stemming from them.
Unlike occupied Germany there is absolutely no safety guaranteed by the occcupying forces. The land has spun out of control, several cities are out of control, and military action is still taking place. No economic recovery is taking place, and doing business is now again nearly impossible for foreign investors, abductions of foreigners is commonplace.
There are no well-known political movements beyond ties to ethnic group and maybe clan. The interim government is resented by many Iraqis as a puppet of the occupying forces, and the only media trusted or at least respected by most Iraqis are American-critic Al-Dschasira. Media installed by the USA like Al-Hurra are perceived as propaganda instruments, and this is most likely a correct assumption.
So there are no political movements to have enough confidence in that they worth casting a vote for, a big problem about independent media and therefore freedom of speech, a population resenting the US and Western ideas, sometimes including democracy, and an unstable situation in general.
In a country where it is even problematic to get one's children into a school, and safely home and fed, is there really that much a chance for democracy? I guess not.
This is just an illusion made up to content American voters for this fall, not really help the Iraqis with anything.
Re:Absolutely unrealistic (Score:2)
Re:Absolutely unrealistic (Score:4, Interesting)
Iraq's economy is actually stronger now than under Saddam.
More cities have electricity now than under Saddam.
There are several thousand foreign workers in Iraq. Less than 20 have been abducted. That's not terribly commonplace.
Out of hundreds of Iraqi cities, three are causing problems, and only one, Fallujah, which was a Saddam stronghold is the site of continued on-going military action.
The interim government is not resented by the general populace as evidenced by large numbers of iraqis signing up to be police in the new government and by the fact that the insurgents are targeting the interim government infrastructure more and more frequently. They would not do this unless they saw the interim government as effective and a threat to their goals of de-stablilzing the country.
There are something like thirty different newspapers all through Iraq publishing widely different political viewpoints. As long as they don't call for riots and assassinations, they are allowed to operate (calling for riots and assassinations will get your paper shut down in any European democracy as well. Heck, calling a Muslim a scarf-wearing terrorist will get you hauled to court in France).
Schools are opening all over Iraq where they were once closed.
Iraq is not as safe as, say, downtown Singapore, but it's a whole lot safer than downtown Washington D.C. or Mexico City.
Re:Absolutely unrealistic (Score:2, Informative)
This shows what a cynic you are. I don't hear of regular autobomb explosions, and jets bombing urban centers in both that cities. You are an apologist.
For the free media: There are newspapers, but most of them are organs of policy of a political force (see here, in German [heise.de] ).
People signing up for police and army have deserted on a lot of various occasions. A need for jobs triggered b
Re:Absolutely unrealistic (Score:2)
False. Under Saddam, Iraq had around 20x the GNP it does today. Oh, did you want to pick the WORST economy Saddam had, instead of the best? Well in that case, you'd have to admit that the problems were caused by the USA's attack.
Out of hundreds of Iraqi cities, three are causing problems, and only one, Fallujah,
Do you not read the newspapers, or can you just not count? Even Bagdad contains streets that the US Army is unwilling to drive down
Re: Absolutely unrealistic (Score:2)
> They have absolutely no democratic legacy, not even a failed one, that anyone can remember there.
Actually, someone did set them up the democracy once before. Of course, it fell to a military coup, which somehow led to control by the Baath Party, which then led to personal control by the party's security chief, Saddam.
Admittedly, not the sort of history that inspires confidence in gunpoint democracy.
Re:Absolutely unrealistic (Score:2)
There are other major differences between Iraq and Germany (and also Japan). The biggest one is that Iraq, like the geographically similar Islamic nations in the region (which doesn't include Turkey, Pakistan, or Egypt), has no prospect for a useful economy.
Iraq, like Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, is a barren desert (and with global warming, it'll only get worse). The only reason for many people to live there is oil revenues- but that's not something that can provide employment
42 % doubtful? (Score:2)
No need to doubt the veracity of the poll. It's gloomy enough in itself.
And of course ALL of the Shi'ites will favor free and fair elections, since they will put them on top - which may cause the Kurds to secede and the Sunni to rebel, to simplify it horribly.
Re:42 % doubtful? (Score:2)
Besides, there is the alternative of a 'working democracy' where all viable choices are American puppets, you know, like in Afghanistan, where only the former CIA collaborator Hamid Karzai has a realistic chance of getting elected.
Iyad Allawi used to work for the CIA, too. Would you like a former KGB agent as president? That alone should ensure a steady supply of insurgents, unless Allawi gets as tough as Saddam. The bombings of 'insurgent h
It doesn't say "democratic" elections... (Score:3, Informative)
Allawi on disenfranchising insurgent collaborators (Score:2)
Those places where stability is the worst have one thing in common - the local populace is not doing anything significant to actively combat, passively deny, rat the insurgents out to the Iraqi gov't, or otherwise discourage the behavior of the insurgents. So, they, rightly I think, should have less of a voice.
It's only when insurgent behavior is exported that you get an unfair situation -
Re:Allawi on disenfranchising insurgent collaborat (Score:2)
Suppose the US was invaded and occupied [by, er, martians] and a puppet government was installed. However, due to a resistence movement, they could not control the whole country. I suppose you would consider it fair for people in the resisting areas to have "les
Re:Allawi on disenfranchising insurgent collaborat (Score:2)
I, for one, would welcome our Martia
US should take a lesson from Disney... (Score:1)
Give the Iraqis true self-determination, and the US will definitely be disappointed on the outcome. It's a "can't please everyone" scenario.
Re:US should take a lesson from Disney... (Score:1)
Oh please. That's just as bad as the continual "Disney to buy Apple" rumors.
Re:Suppose that there was a free and fair election (Score:1)
Of course, I am assuming that democracy will take root in Iraq. If Iraq falls into a dictatorship again, then power can be quickly consolidated, unreset quelled, the problems of the people ignored. Then Iraq could pursue WMDs, but so could a lot of other countries that want them.