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Iraq
Iraq PM, US envoy pledge harmony after tension
2006-10-28
Iraq's prime minister and the U.S. ambassador declared common goals on Friday after days of public wrangling that raised new questions about Iraq policy before next month's U.S. congressional elections. In a joint statement after a meeting with U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said his government had "timelines" for political developments, employing the word at the heart of the debate.

Iraqi officials say Maliki was angered this week when Khalilzad seemed to assure impatient American voters the Iraqi leader was following a U.S.-backed timetable of performance "benchmarks", and they insisted any "timelines" were a purely Iraqi initiative and did not commit Maliki to action.
Bush told a White House news conference Iraqi leaders had agreed to a "schedule" and reminded Maliki that his patience was "not unlimited" and his support for the prime minister conditional on him making "tough decisions".
Nonetheless, the statement may ease electoral pressure on U.S. President George W. Bush and his officials, who were left struggling to explain their exit strategy from Iraq after Maliki denied he was working to a schedule and sharply criticised U.S. security policy, saying he could do better if given more leeway.

"The Iraqi government has made clear the issues that must be resolved with timelines for them to take positive steps forward on behalf of the Iraqi people," it said. "The United States fully supports their goals and will help make them a success."

Washington is anxious for Maliki, a Shi'ite, to crack down on Shi'ite militia death squads blamed for much of the killing. Khalilzad had told a news conference on Tuesday that Iraqi leaders had "committed themselves to a timeline for making ... decisions". Maliki responded two days later that "we do not believe in a timetable and no one will impose one on us". Bush told a White House news conference Iraqi leaders had agreed to a "schedule" and reminded Maliki that his patience was "not unlimited" and his support for the prime minister conditional on him making "tough decisions".
Posted by:Fred

#8  Welcome, cajunbelle! Always glad to have another Rantburg lady join the conversation -- it's good for our gentlemen to wonder whether or not they're actually outnumbered, and if so by how much. It makes their dreams so much more interesting. ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife   2006-10-28 23:35  

#7  Glad to finally contribute - been a huge fan for years!
Posted by: cajunbelle   2006-10-28 23:25  

#6  That's a better, clarifying, view of the real Maliki / Shia Block.

Pretty, ain't it?

Thanks for the link, cajunbelle. :-)
Posted by: .com   2006-10-28 22:08  

#5  Aide: Iraqi leader using U.S. angst
Oops--link:

://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&u=/ap/20061029/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_061028155130
Posted by: cajunbelle   2006-10-28 22:04  

#4  What's up with this? Good grief...

Aide: Iraqi leader using U.S. angst

Posted by: cajunbelle   2006-10-28 22:01  

#3  Hang on there, Mike. I'm thinking you're mistaken.

It is my firm opinion that Maliki would not be displeased one iota if we left today - public mutterings aside.

He and his block (DAWA, SCIRI, et al) are majority Shia fully under the spell and pay of the Mad Mullahs and will simply drop the poorly-maintained pretenses and go medieval on the Sunnis if we are not around. They have made the Interior Ministry, they who control the police, into an official Death Squad and Militia support center. If you were around during Jaafari's reign, when Jabr controlled the IM, you would have read about him preventing the activation of the police who had successfully completed training under the Germans and US. He held them out - so his IM Death Squads could operate without hindrance. Hell, Jabr even ran a torture facility, a real one, go figure, huh? Maliki taking over for Jaafari - and Jabr moving over to the Finance Ministry - a sweet thing to get him out of the headlines but maintain the influence of one of the architects of the current mess - merely put a new face on the same game, IMHO.

Please point out my errors and I'll be happy to modify accordingly.
Posted by: .com   2006-10-28 16:12  

#2  .com, one thing to keep in mind: if Maliki has been watching CNN and reading the mainstream US press, he's seeing story after story about how the Democrats are about to take over Congress. It's no secret that Speaker Pelosi and Majority Leader Murtha and Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Lamont and the rest of the Donks are all set to do to Prime Minister Maliki and Iraq what they did to President Thieu and South Vietnam, and to Prime Minister Nol and Cambodia, a generation ago. If I were him, I'd be watching my back, and maybe looking for a way to cut a deal with the other side if it comes down to that, too.
Posted by: Mike   2006-10-28 15:46  

#1  Maliki's goals, via DAWA, SCIRI, and Qom, do not intersect with ours. End of story.
Posted by: .com   2006-10-28 00:41  

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