This is just like Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Bush drew it up on the blackboard. Success Neo-Con Style.
Iraq-Iran Ties Grow Stronger As Iraq Rises From The Ashes
Posted: 07/14/2012 9:23 am Updated: 07/15/2012 2:30 pm
WASHINGTON — In the run-up to the war in Iraq, neoconservative hawks in and out of the Bush administration promised that the U.S. invasion would quickly transform that country into a strong ally, a model Arab democracy and a major oil producer that would lower world prices, even while paying for its own reconstruction.
“A new regime in Iraq would serve as a dramatic and inspiring example of freedom for other nations in the region,” President George W. Bush told a crowd at the American Enterprise Institute in 2003, a few weeks before he launched the attack.
Ten bloody and grueling years later, Iraq is finally emerging from its ruins and establishing itself as a geopolitical player in the Middle East — but not the way the neocons envisioned.
Though technically a democracy, Iraq’s floundering government has degenerated into a tottering quasi-dictatorship. The costs of the war (more than $800 billion) and reconstruction (more than $50 billion) have been staggeringly high. And while Iraq is finally producing oil at pre-war levels, it is trying its best to drive oil prices as high as possible.
Most disturbing to many American foreign policy experts, however, is Iraq’s extremely close relationship with Iran. Today, the country that was formerly Iran’s deadliest rival is its strongest ally.
“These are the wonderful consequences of our intervention — and the brilliance of it really is mindboggling,” said Chas Freeman, a Middle East scholar and critic of the neoconservatives. “The extent to which Iraq has become an active collaborator with Iran … is really very striking.”
The U.S. is leading an intense international effort to pressure Iran to rein in its nuclear program. In January, the European Union agreed to join the U.S. embargo on Iranian oil, which went into effect this month.
Rather than help the U.S. in these endeavors, however, Iraq is doing quite the opposite. Iraq has been critical of the U.S. sanctions against Iran, and some fear it will help its neighbor avoid the penalty’s sting by ferrying goods across their shared border.
Another top Obama administration goal in the Middle East is to push Bashar al-Assad’s oppressive regime out of Syria. “For the sake of the Syrian people, the time has come for President Assad to step aside,” President Barack Obama said last August.
But again, Iraq is working at cross-purposes to the U.S., decrying efforts to oust Assad and letting Iran use its airspace to ship weapons to Assad’s government.
In fact, some Middle East scholars predict the rise of a Shiite Iran-Iraq-Syria axis, which could challenge Saudi Arabia and other Sunni Persian Gulf states for control of the region.
WANING U.S. INFLUENCE
Neoconservatives with the Bush administration imagined that post-invasion Iraq would serve as a staging ground for American military power in the region. The U.S. built about a dozen huge air bases, at a cost of around $2.4 billion, complete with long landing strips, massive fortifications and all the comforts of home. They clearly meant to stay.
They also intended to retain U.S. influence. The gargantuan U.S. embassy in Baghdad — a heavily fortified compound the size of Vatican City — is by far the largest the world has ever seen, and, at a cost of nearly three quarters of a billion dollars to build, the most expensive.
But even before the end of George Bush’s presidency, the Iraqis insisted on setting a deadline for the departure of U.S. troops. And when Obama met that deadline in late 2011, the Department of Defense also had to turn over to the Iraqis all of those elaborate military bases.
The State Department has finally acknowledged that it needs to downsize its diplomatic presence in Iraq. Brett McGurk — whose nomination to be the next U.S. ambassador to Baghdad was derailed by the release of some racy emails — spoke bluntly in his confirmation hearing in June.
“Quite frankly, our presence in Iraq right now is too large,” he said. “There’s no proportionality also between our size and our influence. In fact, we spend a lot of diplomatic capital simply to sustain our presence.”
The primary beneficiary of this colossal loss of U.S. influence in Iraq has been Iran.
The two countries share a long and sometimes tortured history. Their strongest bond comes from populations that are largely members of the Shia branch of Islam, rather than the Sunni branch, which is more common in the other Arab countries. The Shia clerics who are so influential in both countries frequently travel back and forth between the two, as well as sharing similar backgrounds and often being related by blood.
But the two countries’ ethnic divisions — Iranians are Persian, while most Iraqis are Arab — and their fierce nationalism were exploited by Saddam Hussein, a Sunni, who turned Iraq into a bulwark against Iran, even going so far as to launch an eight-year war against Iran in 1980 that cost the lives of as many as a million soldiers.
When the U.S. toppled Saddam and purged his party’s loyalists from the government and the military, Iran stepped in, providing support for both the Shia leaders working with the U.S. to form a new government and for the Shia militias that were fighting against the U.S. during its occupation.
Iraq’s current prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, is particularly dependent on Iran because of the political, religious and commercial influence it has exerted in his favor — most recently in June, when Maliki’s ruling coalition nearly fell apart yet again.
To the extent that the internal political struggle in the Middle East is fundamentally between Shiite Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia, it’s clear to the Saudis where the Iraqis’ allegiance lies. “He’s an Iranian agent,” Saudi King Abdullah said of Maliki in a March 2009 conversation with U.S. officials documented in a cable obtained by Wikileaks.
Maliki has “opened the door for Iranian influence in Iraq” since taking power, the king said.
Maliki still has some incentives to keep the relationship with the U.S. from going entirely cold. The State Department is still planning to spend nearly $5 billion in fiscal year 2013 on Iraq, half of it on maintaining its embassy. Iraq will also need the U.S.’s help operating the 36 heavily armed F-16s they recently bought, and it has designs on buying other modern weaponry as well.
But Maliki and other Iraqi leaders “understand that the U.S. will come and the U.S. will go,” said Jamsheed Choksy, a professor of Iranian studies at Indiana University.
“People in the region know they can’t count on the U.S. in the long term,” he said. “If you’re a Shia politician, you need Iran.”
THE COIN OF THE REALM
Iraqi oil production is booming, at long last making it a major world supplier again. All that additional oil on the market is widely seen as being a blow to Iran, because it will help fill any shortfall caused by a boycott of Iranian oil.
But short of limiting its own production, Iraq is backing Iran as much as it can in the oil area as well.
Historically, there has been a split in the oil producer group OPEC between price hawks like Venezuela and Algeria, who want to drive the cost of oil as high as possible, and Gulf states like Saudi Arabia, who want to keep prices moderate.
At the most recent OPEC meeting, Iraq used its new clout to try to drive the prices up — siding with Iran against the Saudis. It also backed a proposal that OPEC officially protest the new sanctions against Iran.
Both attempts failed, but some observers think Iraq could help Iran defy the sanctions in other ways.
“It remains to be seen whether the U.S. has enough leverage in Iraq to prevent Iraq from serving as a conduit for Iran for oil,” Choksy said.
“They could, if they wanted to — and they would never publicize this — take Iranian oil across the border in tanker trucks, mix it with Iraqi oil, and send it out into the market as Iraqi oil,” said Gary Sick, senior research scholar at Columbia University’s Middle East Institute. (Iran recently did just that for Syria, when Syria faced an embargo of its oil exports but needed the money.)
Iraq’s vast, unpatrolled border with Iran could also be a major conduit for illicit goods, making other sanctions ineffective.
FRIENDSHIP HAS ITS LIMITS
As significant as the alliance between Iraq and Iran is, however, it also might not last.
“Iran is far better off today with Iraq than it ever was with Saddam — there’s no comparison; but that doesn’t mean that Iraq is a client state and takes its orders from Iran,” Sick said.
“You have a government [in Baghdad] whose worldview is generally aligned with that of Tehran,” said Michael Eisenstadt, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. But he said Iraqi leaders are adamantly opposed to the sort of clerical rule they see in Iran.
“Iran cannot dictate to Iraq,” said Reidar Visser, a research fellow at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs who runs an Iraqi politics website. “Iraqi Shiites still see their interests as being quite distinct from Iranian Shiites.”
Sick thinks the Iran-Iraq alliance could fracture over oil, especially if the embargo hurts Iran badly. “Iran’s national interest would be to take oil off the market” in order to send prices up and hurt Western economies, Sick said. “But Iraq is really getting ready to play the oil game. I see this as a potential clash of direct national interests.”
The neoconservatives, meanwhile, continue to hold out hope. Over at the new headquarters of the Foreign Policy Initiative, executive director Jamie Fly says “it’s not clear yet” where Iraq will end up.
“I don’t think it’s a complete perversion of what was promised,” he said. “I think it’s probably a mixed bag at this point, in terms of how Iraq has developed as a regional player.”
Fly also blamed many of Iraq’s failings on the Obama administration’s troop pullout. “The problem is that the current administration has dropped the ball, and we’ve undermined our own ability to help ensure that Iraq stays on a positive trajectory,” he said.
“My concern about some of the Iranian influence and the role that Iraq may or may not be playing vis-à-vis Syria is in large part because we don’t have a military presence there anymore, and that has weakened our hand and limited our ability to make sure that they don’t get drawn further into Tehran’s orbit,” Fly said.
Predicting what’s next in Iraq is next to impossible. In virtually no scenario, however, do things turn out how the neocons intended.
“Whatever [the war] was about, which was never entirely explained, it hasn’t worked out terribly well,” said Freeman, “and in fact Iraq continues to evolve in ways that are, if not fatal to American interests, certainly negative.”








Steve Hogan says:
News flash! The US government is incompetent. The mental giants in Washington are clueless. Everything they do is a royal cluster-fuck. Their track record is abysmal. Why anyone would place their trust in these morons defies description.
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20th July 2012 at 10:49 pm
Ron says:
So remind me why we went to Iraq? oil?oh some tyrant who was ok when he was our tyrant.
Afganistan?terrorist training in the desert? oil? maybe to make some military suppliers rich.
And the coming Iran war well do what for us?increase vaseline sales? Oh Obama well own this war.We well be lucky if my predictions of him as a future dictator come true.
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20th July 2012 at 11:13 pm
Ceasar says:
Interview with Bush:
Q: Why did you invade Iraq?
A: I don’t like this Saddam guy trying to kill my old man and giving me the middle finger.
Q: Come on, give me the real answer.
A: My gang thought we can take over the entire Middle East and Persian Gulf region. This is the key to making a ton on money. We are Americans – we love money.
Q: So what gives you the right to invade a sovereign state simply because you wanted to?
A: We are the U.S.A., a God-blessed country with the right to do anything we pleased. Besides, I needed to find an excuse to let the Fed print a couple of trillion dollars to pump up the economy.
Q: Do you know when was the last time a country did what you did? Nazi Germany in 1939.
A: Yes. But I am the good guy and God assured me that I will get away with it.
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20th July 2012 at 1:58 am
TeresaE says:
bwwaaaaahahaaaaahaaaaaaa.
There are a lot of people that need to be told “see, I told you so.” Bastards telling me I wanted the terro rists to win because I thought the Iraq quagmire was the ultimate bullshit, aggressive, empire building war move.
Those damned unintended consequences.
You would think people could see this. Apparently, you would be wrong.
WE are the ter rorists. WE are being attacked because WE are the terr orists.
And we may someday be held to account just like the Germans, innocent citizens to high-leaders, were.
I should have gone into psychiatry. The human mind’s ability to justify is a sight to see.
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20th July 2012 at 4:16 pm
Muck About says:
I call bullshit
on the whole thing. Iraq and Irwrong may cooperate in pricing for 5 minutes but other than that they hate each others guts.
Doesn’t anyone remember the horrific war fought for 8 years between these two idiot countries? You can bet your ass no one who lives there has.
Iraq is Shiite Muslim. Call them dumbshits # 1. Iran is Sunni. Call them dumbshits #2.
Sunni and Shiite mouselimbs do not mix. They each try to slit each others throats the first chance they get because they both are the only true Muslim religion and consequently, the other one is good only for worm food.
That’s why Sunni suicide bombers are forever (and I mean forever) blowing themselves up in every Shiite religious site, Shiite pilgrimage and Shiite mosque they can. Of course it works the other way as well..
No, there is not and will not be any “long term” cooperation between Iran and Iraq.
MA
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20th July 2012 at 5:16 pm
SAH says:
I generally agree with Muck Re: Iran/Iraq cooperation over the long term. Left to their own devises, they hate each other. I dare you to call a Persian “Arab” or to confuse their Indo-European language of Farsi with Arabic.
I think the point is, “the enemy of my enemy is my friend”. We’ve pissed off Iraq, Iran, Syria, Afghanistan, Pakistan… We pretty much have systematically pissed off the Shia religious world as well as pissing off the entire geographic regions of West Asia and the Persian Gulf. There is valid cause for blow back. Whatever ethnic and historical squabbles Iraq and Iran have, those will be put aside for as along as they have a common enemy (us) farting around over there. And of course, we are in bed with Israel and the Saudis… So we also get the benefit of “the friend of my enemy is my enemy” strategy. The Saudis and Israelis would both throw us under the bus in a heartbeat, but we will be their lapdogs regardless, and be hated by everyone else in the region for it.
We are fucked in the Middle East. We did it to ourselves. If we just stayed out of the region and it’s 3500+ year ongoing conflict, tribal warfare, blood feuds and bickering, the US wouldn’t even be registering on these countries radars. They are obsessed with fighting and killing eachother, but we went over there and wanted to be the center of attention in the Mid East and now we are.
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20th July 2012 at 10:28 am
SAH says:
BTW – US policy under Bush and Obama makes perfect sense: it’s all about their Dads.
Bush2 continuing action against Iraq started by Bush1.
Obama coming out against the Shia, seeing as both his Kenyan bioDad and Indonesian stepDad were Muslims from heavily-Sunni-majoritied countries.
Why 2 Presidents from “opposite sides” can have the exact same foreign policy objectives is easy to understand. It’s all about chickenhawk shits with Daddy issues. They really are Sociopaths, playing out their personal character problems and childhood traumas in other people’s lives and blood and money. They are the very definition of sick.
“Someone call Dr Ron Paul please!!!”
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20th July 2012 at 10:51 am