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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A60832-2005Jan9.html

In another significant blow to Iraq's upcoming elections, the entire
13-member electoral commission in the volatile province of Anbar, west of
the capital, resigned after being threatened by insurgents, a regional
newspaper reported Sunday...


http://www.alternet.org/waroniraq/20935/
In Good Conscience: A soldier who served with the 320th Military Police
Company at Abu Ghraib speaks out about the atrocities he witnessed


---------------

http://snipurl.com/bx9j

The New York Times
9 January 2005

 Defining Victory Down
    By Maureen Dowd

Washington - The president prides himself on being a pig-headed guy. He is
determined to win in Iraq even if he is not winning in Iraq.

So get ready for a Mohammedan mountain of spin defining victory down. Come
what may - civil war over oil, Iranian-style fatwas du jour or men on
prayer rugs reciting the Koran all day on the Iraqi TV network our own
geniuses created - this administration will call it a triumph.

Even for a White House steeped in hooey, it's a challenge. President Bush
will have to emulate the parsing and prevaricating he disdained in his
predecessor: It depends on what the meaning of the word "win" is.

The president's still got a paper bag over his head, claiming that the
daily horrors out of Iraq reflect just a few soreheads standing in the way
of a glorious democracy, even though his commander of ground forces there
concedes that the areas where more than half of Iraqis live are not secure
enough for them to vote - an acknowledgment that the insurgency is
resilient and growing. It's like saying Montana and North Dakota are safe
to vote, but New York, Philadelphia and L.A. are not. What's a little
disenfranchisement among friends?

"I know it's hard, but it's hard for a reason," Mr. Bush said on Friday, a
day after seven G.I.'s and two marines died. "And the reason it's hard is
because there are a handful of folks who fear freedom." If it's just a
handful, how come it's so hard?

Then the president added: "And I look at the elections as a - as a - you
know, as a - as - as a historical marker for our Iraq policy."

Well, that's clear. Mr. Bush is huddled in his bubble, but he's in a
pickle. The administration that had no plan for what to do with Iraq when
it got it, now has no plan for getting out.

The mood in Washington about our misadventure seemed to grow darker last
week, maybe because lawmakers were back after visiting with their
increasingly worried constituents and - even more alarming - visiting
Iraq, where you still can't drive from the Baghdad airport to the Green
Zone without fearing for your life.

"It's going to be ugly," Joe Biden told Charlie Rose about the election.

The arrogant Bush war council never admits a mistake. Paul Wolfowitz, a
walking mistake, said on Friday he's been asked to remain in the
administration. But the "idealists," as the myopic dunderheads think of
themselves, are obviously worried enough, now that Mr. Bush is safely
re-elected, to let a little reality seep in. Rummy tapped a respected
retired four-star general to go to Iraq this week for an open-ended review
of the entire military meshugas.

Mr. Wolfowitz, who devised the debacle in Iraq, is kept on, while Brent
Scowcroft, Poppy Bush's lieutenant who warned Junior not to go into Iraq,
is pushed out as chairman of the Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board.
That's the backward nature of this beast: Deceive, you're golden; tell the
truth, you're gone.

Mr. Scowcroft was not deterred. Like Banquo's ghost, he clanked around
last week, disputing the president's absurdly sunny forecasts for Iraq,
and noting dryly that this administration had turned the word "realist"
into a "pejorative." He predicted that the elections "have the great
potential for deepening the conflict" by exacerbating the divisions
between Shiite and Sunni Muslims. He worried that there would be "an
incipient civil war," and said the best chance for the U.S. to avoid
anarchy was to turn over the operation to the less inflammatory U.N. or
NATO.

Mr. Scowcroft appeared at the New America Foundation with Zbigniew
Brzezinski, Jimmy Carter's national security adviser, who declared the
Iraq war a moral, political and military failure. If we can't send 500,000
troops, spend $500 billion and agree to resume the draft, then the
conflict should be "terminated," he said, adding that far from the
Jeffersonian democracy Mr. Bush extols, the most we can hope for is a
Shiite-controlled theocracy.

The Iraqi election that was meant to be the solution to the problem - like
the installation of a new Iraqi government and the transfer of sovereignty
and all the other steps that were supposed to make things better - may
actually be making things worse. The election is going to expand the
control of the Shiite theocrats, even beyond what their numbers would
entitle them to have, because of the way the Bush team has set it up and
the danger that if you're a Sunni, the vote you cast may be your last.

It is a lesson never learned: Matters of state and the heart that start
with a lie rarely end well.

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