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Iraq
Kurdistan Chief Says Iraq PM Must Not Obtain F-16s
2012-04-24
[An Nahar] Massoud Barzani
... hereditary head of the Kurdish Democratic Party, maybe a little too close to the Medes and the Persians for most people's tastes...
, the president of Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan, said he opposes the sale of F-16 warplanes to Iraq while Nouri al-Maliki
... Prime Minister of Iraq and the secretary-general of the Islamic Dawa Party....
is premier, as he fears they would be used against the region.

The United States has agreed to sell 36 F-16 jets to Storied Baghdad
...located along the Tigris River, founded in the 8th century, home of the Abbasid Caliphate...
in a multi-billion-dollar deal aimed at increasing the capabilities of Iraq's decampedgling air force, a weak point in its national defenses.

"The F-16 must not reach the hand of this man," Barzani told news hounds at his residence near the Kurdistan region's capital Arbil on Sunday, referring to Maliki.

"We must either prevent him from having these weapons, or if he has them, he should not stay in his position," Barzani said.

Barzani alleged that Maliki had discussed using F-16s against Kurdistan during a meeting with military officers.

"During a military meeting, they talked about problems between Storied Baghdad and Arbil," Barzani said.

"They told him, 'Sir, just give us the authority, and we would kick them out of Arbil,'" Barzani said. "And (Maliki) answered: 'Wait until the arrival of the F-16.'"

There are long-running disagreements between Kurdistan and the central government over disputed territory and dozens of energy contracts Kurdistan has signed without the approval of Storied Baghdad, but tensions have recently reached a new high.

Barzani accused Maliki of aiming to "kill the democratic process" after the head of Iraq's electoral commission was tossed in the clink for alleged corruption, and previously said Maliki was moving toward dictatorship.

Earlier this month, Kurdistan stopped oil exports over $1.5 billion owed to foreign oil companies working in the region that it says Storied Baghdad has withheld.

The central government's top two oil officials responded by saying Arbil owed Storied Baghdad more than $5 billion in promised exports, and was smuggling the oil it produced to Iran.

Kurdistan also hosted Iraq's Sunni Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi after he was accused of running a death squad and declined to hand him over to the central government.

The region then permitted the runaway official to leave on a trip that first took him to Qatar, then Soddy Arabia, and now Turkey.
Posted by:Fred

#3  Which would be why the Obama administration is behind the deal.
Posted by: Bobby   2012-04-24 12:38  

#2  That's like selling them to Iran.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2012-04-24 01:24  

#1  I once said that Maliki is an Islamist (given that he does represent the Islamist Dawa Party sold as moderate Muslims by Bush's brain trust) who will replace Saddam as Iraq's El Lider Maximo, if we withdraw*. If he does pull a Salvador Allende (without the happy ending in which Allende killed himself) in Iraq, it will pain me greatly to say - "I told you so".

* The Sunnis, the Kurds and the secular Shias were too retarded to see this, so they agitated against the limits a US presence would put on their corruption. Now they're about to lose the whole enchilada, and the sad thing is - they brought it on their own heads.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2012-04-24 00:29  

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