The Socialist

The Socialist 10 August 2006

Israel out of Lebanon now!


Israel out of Lebanon now!

Afghanistan - NATO troops face a resurgent Taliban

Iraq - a country splitting along sectarian lines

Huge protest against the invasion of Lebanon

Police given licence to terrorise


Fighting to defend the health service


Young = exploited

Tommy Sheridan's victory over News of the World

Sinking under a debt mountain


DWP: Action gets results

Lincs firefighters fight cuts

Inspiring film of GAMA struggle

 
 
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Iraq - a country splitting along sectarian lines

FOR GEORGE Bush and Tony Blair, the architects of 'regime change' in Iraq, their swift victory over Saddam Hussein in 2003 must seem like another era as the country descends into sectarian conflict and chaos.

All their political initiatives - from elections, to a new constitution, a new government and a 'reconstruction' programme - has resulted in a fracturing rather then a unification of Iraq. This was spelt out in a leaked memo sent to the Blair government by the outgoing British ambassador to Baghdad, William Patey. He says the country is closer to civil war and partition rather than democracy.

This doom laden analysis was echoed by general John Abizaid, the head of US central command, to a US Senate committee: "I believe that the sectarian violence is probably as bad as I've seen it in Baghdad in particular, and that if it could not be stopped, it is possible that Iraq could move toward civil war," he said.

Bush and Blair downplayed these critical assessments with a less than convincing - 'we've got to see the job through' - response. But their real concerns were revealed when a further 3,700 US troops were rushed to Baghdad. An estimated 100 Iraqi civilians die in the city every day despite the presence of 50,000 soldiers.

At the end of July the US military recorded a daily average of 34 bombing and shooting attacks in Baghdad, up from the daily average of 24 attacks a month ago. A recent United Nations report said 14,338 civilians had died in the first six months of 2006. Deaths jumped from 2,669 in May to 3,149 in June.

The redeployment also underlines the fact that the Iraqi security apparatus is heavy infiltrated by Shia militia who have been accused of running sectarian death squads.

And in what should make further unpalatable reading for Bush and Blair, Patey drew a parallel between Iraq and Lebanon, saying that the occupying powers must prevent Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's militia becoming "a state within a state, as Hezbollah has done in Lebanon".


In this issue


War and terrorism

Israel out of Lebanon now!

Afghanistan - NATO troops face a resurgent Taliban

Iraq - a country splitting along sectarian lines

Huge protest against the invasion of Lebanon

Police given licence to terrorise


Socialist Party NHS campaign

Fighting to defend the health service


Socialist Party campaigns

Young = exploited

Tommy Sheridan's victory over News of the World

Sinking under a debt mountain


Socialist Party workplace news

DWP: Action gets results

Lincs firefighters fight cuts

Inspiring film of GAMA struggle


 

Home   |   The Socialist 10 August 2006   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Iraq:

triangleThem & Us

trianglePower and terror

triangleFast news

triangleConsequences of 9/11: a world turned upside down

triangleIraq war: Labour's lie machine

triangleBlair Must Go

US:

triangleClegg's text message plans make us LOL!

triangleUS embassy protest remembers Trayvon Martin

triangleMillion Hoodies March against racist murders in the US

triangleThe 'Kony 2012' phenomena

Lebanon:

trianglePeace activists murdered by reactionary Israeli army

triangleGaza - end the bloodshed!

triangleLebanon - civil war or rule by sectarian landlords

War:

triangleFilm review: 'Cocaine Unwrapped'

triangleReview: We must look - the photographs of Don McCullin

triangleSalford Socialist Party: Report from Socialist Party congress

George Bush:

triangleProtest at Bush

triangleNorth Korea's nuclear test ratchets up regional tensions