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‘US opened Pandora’s box in Iraq, regional sectarian violence almost impossible to stop now’

“Everyone in Iraq must be terrified that the situation in Syria is spilling over into Iraq” Bambery said as Tuesday’s attacks in the country kill over 40, a day after over 70 people were murdered, escalating fears of all-out sectarian war between minority Sunnis and majority Shiites. In the biggest incident on Tuesday, a car bomb exploded near a Sunni mosque in Baghdad killing 11 people and injuring 21. In a separate incident, a bomb outside a cafe in southern Baghdad killed six more and wounded 18. A decade after the hanging of Saddam Hussein, Iraq is bitterly divided between the Sunnis, Kurds and Shiites and with no power-sharing deal insight, violence is again on the rise. “It is based on the decision by the Americans when they occupied Iraq to separate Iraq off into these three areas,” Bambery told the viewers. It is also being fueled by the Syrian conflict where predominantly Sunni insurgents are fighting President Assad. Another Syrian neighbor, Lebanon is seeing Shiite Hezbollah forces fighting alongside Assad’s troops, a minority Shiite-linked Alawite sect. Overall it is estimated by the UN that over 700 people died in Iraq in April, a number Bambery warns will only rise as “we have now seen an alliance of al-Qaeda elements in Syria and al-Qaeda elements in Iraq, who are involved in sectarian violence in both countries.”RT: The Sunni demand for more independence, is it a realistic goal?Chris Bambery: I think it is realistic given the Kurds in the North have effectively separated from the rest of Iraq. But I think this is unfortunate decision. It is based on the decision by the Americans when they occupied Iraq to separate Iraq off into these three areas. Iraq has been a unified country for a long time. And yet doing so based on the sectarian headcount by dividing the country up, particularly be excluding the Sunni from having any control of the oil fields was a recipe of the sectarian conflict. And that’s what we’ve seen. But what is adding spice to that is the question of what is happening across the border in Syria, because we are seeing an alliance between al-Qaeda elements in Syria and Sunni Salafists in Iraq – they’ve united – and have been involved in these attacks. And I think everyone in Iraq must be terrified that the situation in Syria is spilling over into Iraq. Indeed across the region we are seeing a possibility of further tension, a possibility of it spilling over in Lebanon. This sectarian violence which is terrible in Iraq is becoming very intertwined with what is going on in Syria with almost an open border between the two countries there.  RT:  Would handing more self-rule do anything to stop the violence?  CB: I don’t think it would stop the violence. I don’t think the people carrying sectarian attacks particularly the targeting of Shia are motivated by the issue of creating an autonomous region for the essentially majority of Sunni population. They are motivated by sectarianism, let’s be honest about this. Even if they were granted the autonomy inside Iraq, they are going to use that as continuation for that kind of sectarian killings. As I said they are spurred on by what is happening in Syria, which is increasingly a sectarian conflict, my answer is no- that would not stop sectarian killings. I think, unfortunately they are only likely to get worse.RT:  Where would the line be in allowing more freedom to self-govern and the country’s disintegration?  CB: Yes, the country is disintegrating. As I say, Americans have to take the blame for that because of the system they imposed in Iraq, giving independence to Kurds in the North, who of course were allies with them against Saddam Hussein, and then they are suggesting they would split the Shia alliance in the rest of Iraq and that opened up a Pandora’s box, which really is almost impossible to stop now. But this is not going to stop sectarian violence. I think people across the world should be absolutely clear the responsibility for that does lie on Americans and what they did in 2003 and the subsequent occupation of that county.RT: What about Syria – is it heading in the same direction? CB: That must be the fear. Because I say there is almost an open border between Syria and Iraq. There are many refugees from Syria inside Iraq and we have now seen an alliance of al-Qaeda elements in Syria and al-Qaeda elements in Iraq, who are involved in sectarian violence in both countries. We have Iraqis fighting along with Free Syrian Army and Islamists inside Syria. So the possibly because of this, in fact I would say it is spreading – and  increasing the sectarian campaign in Iraq is becoming deeply connected to that inside Syria.  Geography of instability is spreading and that threatens to destabilize elsewhere in the Middle East, particularly Lebanon.RT: With Lebanon’s Hezbollah now involved in Syria – how much will this influx of military manpower going to shift momentum in the fighting?CB: I think the fighting has been in impasse for some time. Neither side is capable of producing decisive victory. Whether Hezbollah is battle-training fighters, battle training against Israelis can shift the balance, let’s see. But let’s be clear as well there is intervention from the other side. It is clear, everyone and their dogs knows, the Saudis, the Qataris pouring arms, the Americans are providing training and if Hezbollah increases its intervention on the side  of the Assad regime, I think that it is likely that they are pushing for Western intervention. Some of the governments in America and Britain seem quite keen on increasing, arming the rebels inside Syria and proving other means. So, I think we are seeing very dangerous time and I think when the moment comes to the question about Syria, one is very important, I think, the decision to exclude Iran from next week’s conference in Geneva on the possibility of political solution is profoundly mistaken, because there can be no agreement between the various powers in the world over the question of Syria with no Iran at the table. Read More

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Violence in Iraq hits deadliest level in five years

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Iraq in first vote since US troop withdrawal 20/04/2013 13:45 CET
Kerry asks Iraq to close its airspace to Iran 25/03/2013 03:16 CET

The United Nations estimates that 700 people were killed in Iraq in April – the highest figure in almost five years.

Tensions between Iraq’s Sunni minority and Shi’ites, who lead the government, have reached their highest level since US troops pulled out in December 2011.

At least 20 people were killed by a series of car bombings in the capital, Baghdad on May 20.

Police say the eight blasts mainly targeted Shi’ite neighbourhoods. Scores of people were injured.

In Basra, a predominantly Shi’ite city in the south, at least 14 people were killed by two car bombs – also on May 20.

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Iraq: Baghdad and Basra hit by car bomb attacks

China’s prime minister has pledged to build trust and cooperation during his visit to India. Li Keqiang’s first foreign trip since taking office comes just weeks after a military standoff between the Asian giants on their ill-defined border in the Himalayan mountains. Talks

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Deadly bombings hit Baghdad

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Iraq in first vote since US troop withdrawal 20/04/2013 13:45 CET
Kerry asks Iraq to close its airspace to Iran 25/03/2013 03:16 CET
Blasts across Baghdad in Shi’ite muslim areas 17/02/2013 16:34 CET
Attacks in Baghdad leave 17 dead 22/01/2013 17:34 CET
Millions of pilgrims mark religious festival of… 03/01/2013 14:35 CET

A car bomb exploded in Sadr, a Shiite neighbourhood of the Iraqi capital Baghdad, killing at least five people.

More than a dozen people were wounded by the blast, which struck a bus and a taxi rank.

Abu Ali, whose house was hit, said: “I wasn’t at home, but I heard an explosion, so I came back here and was told that my children were in hospital. You can see the destruction.”

The May 16 bombing in Sadr followed a wave of attacks on May 15 that killed more than 30 people.

No-one has claimed responsibility for the blasts.

The violence comes amid growing tensions between Iraq’s Shiite-led government and the country’s Sunni minority.

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Hey Uncle Sam: Where’s our Red Square parade?

Ever since May 9, 2008, when Moscow brought back rumbling tanks and screeching jets to Red Square for the annual Victory Day celebrations, it has aroused accusations in Western capitals of “flaunting its military might.” The charges are loaded with irony for a glaringly obvious reason: The Russian military, ever since the collapse of the Soviet Union – and aside from a five-day war with neighboring Georgia, who, it must be noted, attacked Russia first – has been parked at home. In the same period of time, however, the Western military junta, known affectionately as NATO, has been circling the planet like a pack of fat vultures looking for its next easy takeout. It seems to require little explanation as to why the Russians take their tanks for a spin around town every May 9th: Russia lost an estimated 26.6 million soldiers and civilians from mid-1941 to 1945, according to the Russian Academy of Sciences. Given the depths of this human tragedy, made more surreal by a simultaneous sense of triumph, Russia has certainly earned the right to hold a military parade once a year without arousing suspicions of gearing up for another shot at empire. Witnessing the Victory Day celebrations in central Moscow for many years, I began to ask myself a question: Why doesn’t America drive its tanks down Main Street each year, say, for Veterans Day? I posed this question to an American friend of mine, and I got the haughty response: “Because America is a democracy.”So according to this fuzzy, feel-good logic, good democracies don’t march their soldiers and showcase their latest missile systems around self-satisfied places like Washington, DC, or Brussels, Belgium, because that would smack of something faintly fascist. Instead, we drive our battle tanks down the main streets of Baghdad, Iraq, and Kabul, Afghanistan, and call this beneficent behavior “democracy building.” Do the denizens of Washington begrudge the residents of Baghdad the lack of an annual military parade? Somehow I doubt it, but Baghdad should begrudge Washington the stench of hypocrisy.Would shutting down Washington for a joyous day of military pomp and parades risk exposing some uncomfortable truths about the present state of our democracy? Would watching tanks and drones buzz through town be a bit like the vampire confronting its horrible reflection in the mirror at midnight? Would such a momentous event as a military parade, coming at a time when the US Military is overstretched across its global empire and the economy remains in tatters, expose the lie of American democracy?Although We the People are said to hold the reins of power, we have no collective control over how much Uncle Sam can spend on weapons, nor any say whatsoever as to where those pricey weapon systems will be used. The worldwide protests that greeted the blatantly illicit invasion of Iraq calmed any exaggerated expectations we may have held out for ‘people power.’ With the Pentagon’s annual price-tag for expenditures approaching the trillion-dollar mark, and military follies continuing at a Napoleonic clip, the loss of our democratic voice is no insignificant footnote.Ron Paul, the perennial presidential candidate the corporate media loves to ignore, summed up US foreign policy during the last debates as such: “We’re under great threat, because we occupy so many countries,” Paul stated bluntly. “We’re in 130 countries. We have 900 bases around the world. We’re going broke.”So isn’t it time for we Americans to be a bit more honest with ourselves? Isn’t it time to shelve the consumer-driven Macy Day parades and embrace our true colors, which is becoming anything but red, white and blue? Isn’t it time we got something more substantial than floats bobbing up and down Madison Avenue every Thanksgiving? Isn’t it time for a full-throttled, white knuckle display of American firepower straight down the throat of Main Street, USA.? Of course it is. The American taxpayer forks over a trillion dollars each year to feed the insatiable appetite of the military-industrial complex, so where’s our military parade? Why should Baghdad and Kabul get all the fireworks?Since confronting the extreme lethality of American democracy with a military parade would push the ship of state uncomfortably close to the rocks of truth, we must settle for candy-coating our consciences into oblivion with other less unsettling displays of American power.Behind the massive curtain in our Land of Oz, we must distract the ‘consumers’ with non-stop Hollywood entertainment, sporting events and a dazzling array of consumer goods to gloss over any discomfort that may come with questions regarding America’s foreign policy prerogatives. So long as Americans keep on shopping, as George W. Bush advised in those harrowing moments of shock and awe that followed the deadliest attacks on the US mainland, our enemies will continue to envy us.But supposing America did come out of the closet in true character with a military parade, we would be confronted with another problem: We don’t have any public space comparable to a Red Square, or even a Tiananmen. Why is that? After all, these massive public places are used for more than showcasing missiles and goose-stepping soldiers. In the off season, these open-air venues give the people a place to assemble, occasionally with purpose, a collective act that is not suffered lightly in America’s Time of Troubles.As long as the American people assemble peacefully in the mall, as opposed to The Mall, it will be business as usual in the United States.Robert Bridge is the author of the book, Midnight in the American Empire, which examines the dangerous consequences of extreme corporate power now prevalent in the US. Read More

Iraq still using James McCormick’s fake bomb detectors at checkpoints

A policeman in Baghdad knows the bomb detector he uses is fake, and will do virtually nothing to save anyone’s life, but he has his orders. “If I were given a mop and told that it detects bombs in cars, I would still do it without any hesitation,” he told AFP, asking not to be…

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Deadly anti-government violence grips Iraq

http://www.youtube.com/v/wQcyCBUw6H8?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Continue reading:  Deadly anti-government violence grips Iraq