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Iraq
Downward spiral: Bloodshed in Iraq
2013-06-04
[Dawn] THE past few weeks have been incredibly bloody for Iraq, as fears resurface of a return to the sectarian carnage that was unleashed in 2006. The UN says over 1,000 people have been killed in the country in May while April (over 700 deaths) was not much better. Iraqis -- both Shia and Sunni -- have died on a near daily basis as hard boyz have bombed mosques, markets and neighbourhoods, with civilians targeted along with security forces. The violence has sectarian overtones as many minority Sunnis feel Nouri al-Maliki
... Prime Minister of Iraq and the secretary-general of the Islamic Dawa Party....
's Shia-led government has been ruling with a heavy hand. Al Qaeda and other bad boy groups have stepped in to exploit communal differences; sectarian passions were already running high due to the civil war in neighbouring Syria.

Contemporary Iraq's situation is the legacy of America's experiment in regime change. After the US invaded in 2003, various types of krazed killer outfits sprang up as the Iraqi state collapsed with the fall of Saddam Hussein. Al Qaeda's Iraqi affiliate has emerged as probably the deadliest of them all, while there is also a working relationship between the bad boy group's Iraqi and Syrian wings. What is more, a confessional, Leb-like system with power divided between the dominant religious and ethnic players has failed to work in Iraq. This shows that even the most well-intentioned system imposed from the outside will not function for long. All efforts must be made to prevent Iraq's disintegration. A failed state will only add to Iraqis' miseries, and give more space to jihadi elements. The Iraqi government should concentrate on two areas; it needs to make increased efforts to reconcile with all of the country's religious and ethnic communities so that the democratic process can continue. Secondly, it must take firm action against Al Qaeda and other faceless myrmidons who seek to use Iraqi soil to destabilise the region. A divided, ethnically and religiously fractured Iraq is an unwelcome prospect and if not contained, the country's internal sectarian unrest can flow beyond its borders.
Posted by:Fred

#10  when we got to Baghdad we should have just said "stick-m-up"
Posted by: irishrageboy   2013-06-04 18:03  

#9  the ME as a whole might be better off if all these tribes with flags could devolve to just plain tribes.

Hear, hear!
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2013-06-04 14:55  

#8  He can't. The Uzbek Patent Trolls would sue him.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2013-06-04 14:48  

#7  "Obama would rather swallow battery acid"

When can he start? >:-(
Posted by: Barbara   2013-06-04 14:09  

#6  All efforts must be made to prevent Iraq's disintegration

To me this comes under the heading of unwarranted assumption. I think that the ME as a whole might be better off if all these tribes with flags could devolve to just plain tribes.
Posted by: AlanC   2013-06-04 13:42  

#5  Hey, it's on them. They wish to remain "stuck on stupid", their choice. No longer our concern. Stay the fok out of it, and events in Syria as well.
Posted by: Besoeker   2013-06-04 11:24  

#4  I love how a columnist in Pakistan gives advice to Iraq that, "... it needs to make increased efforts to reconcile with all of the country's religious and ethnic communities..."
Posted by: lord garth   2013-06-04 11:20  

#3  Iraq = "bad war"
AFG = "good war"

How many times did we hear it ?
Posted by: Besoeker   2013-06-04 11:14  

#2  If he hadn't cut n run, he would have had to admit that George Bush did something right...And Obama would rather swallow battery acid.
Posted by: Frozen Al   2013-06-04 10:57  

#1  guess Obama shouldn't have cut n run
Posted by: Mikey Hunt   2013-06-04 02:04  

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