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Neocon Nuttery See other Neocon Nuttery Articles Title: U.S. senator calls for change in Iraqi leadership The chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, after completing a two-day tour of Iraq, said that the government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki should be voted from office because it had proved incapable of reaching the political compromises required to end violence there. The Democratic chairman, Senator Carl Levin of Michigan, and the committee's ranking Republican, Senator John Warner of Virginia, who traveled to Iraq together, issued a joint statement Monday that was only slightly more temperate than Levin's remarks. They warned that in the view of politicians in Washington, and of the American people, "time has run out" on attempts to forge a political consensus in Baghdad. Levin said that in his view, the political stalemate in Iraq could be attributed to Maliki and other senior Iraqi officials who were unable to operate independently of religious and sectarian leaders. "I've concluded that this is a government which cannot, is unable to, achieve a political settlement," Levin said. "It is too bound to its own sectarian roots, and it is too tied to forces in Iraq, which do not yield themselves to compromise." In a conference call with reporters from Tel Aviv, Levin called on the Iraqi Parliament to vote the Maliki government from power because it had "totally and utterly failed" to reach a political settlement, and to replace it with a team better able to forge national unity. Levin and Warner are among their respective parties' most esteemed legislators on national security issues. Their committee will be among those hearing directly from General David Petraeus, the top American commander in Iraq, and the U.S. ambassador, Ryan Crocker, when the two men deliver their report measuring military and political progress in Iraq next month. A White House spokesman said Monday that the Capitol Hill testimony could be expected Sept. 11 or 12. Warner did not explicitly call for the removal of the Maliki government. But he joined Levin in a joint statement that, while noting some success under the current troop increase in improving the security situation in Iraq, was tempered by a grim assessment of political progress. "While we believe that the 'surge' is having measurable results, and has provided a degree of 'breathing space' for Iraqi politicians to make the political compromises which are essential for a political solution in Iraq, we are not optimistic about the prospects for those compromises," the joint statement said. The statement warned that recent meetings among Iraqi political leaders "could be the last chance for this government to solve the Iraqi political crisis." Should that effort fail, the senators wrote, "We believe the Iraqi Council of Representatives and the Iraqi people need to judge the government of Iraq's record and determine what actions should be taken - consistent with the Iraqi Constitution - to form a true unity government to meet those responsibilities." U.S. intelligence agencies on Monday delivered to Congress their own assessment of the sectarian violence in Iraq and the prospects for political reconciliation there. The new National Intelligence Estimate updates an assessment completed in February, which painted a bleak picture of the ability of Iraqi politicians to tamp down sectarian violence. The new assessment should play a significant role in the upcoming congressional debate about the course of the Iraq war, as it is likely to be used by both sides as a more independent assessment of the security situation than the Petraeus-Crocker report. The assessment completed in February also said that Iraq's fractured military would be "hard-pressed" over the next 12 to 18 months to "execute significantly increased security responsibilities, and particularly to operate independently against Shia militias with any success." Gordon Johndroe, the National Security Council spokesman, said President George W. Bush was briefed about the new assessment Monday.
Poster Comment: Levin and Warner are among their respective parties' most esteemed legislators on national security issues. Translation: Signing agreements and cooperatinig with Iran and Syria is counterproductive for Eretz Y'israel.
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#2. To: Eoghan (#0)
On board for the Coup D'Etat Train. Imagine the leader of the Argentine Senate calling for the replacement of Bush. But, then again, the Argentinians are not OverLord Okkupiers of America. Ya expect the Shias to give up what they got now? Heck, it's only hundreds of years since they've exercised so much control over Southern Mesopotamia. Well, as soon as we get the Sunni tribes fully armed, all systems are a-go.
If we rile the Iraqi Shiahs, how do we maintain those supply lines out of Kuwait?
We shouldn't rile the Shias, for starters, but since that is probably going to be a non starter now, we move troops into the zones along the highways to be vacated by the Britishers.
You may remember that we had trouble maintaining control of a three-mile stretch of road between Baghdad and its airport.
he.. A Land ruled by Murphy's Law filled with Hobson's Choices in an Arabian Quagmire.
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