[The obvious problem with the view, notwithstanding its underlying lofty
ideals, is that it "stand(s) firmly against the brazen meddling of Iran",
also "against the intervention of Gulf regimes and their funding of armed
groups, especially [by] Saudi Arabia and Qatar" while (emphatically)
rejecting "US intervention" as well; yet it "call(s) for a clear
international position to curb the deteriorating situation as well as
regional interference, and to support the people of Iraq".
In what form, and by whom, one just wonders. And support to which section
of "the people of Iraq" - a badly divided "people" for quite a while?
There is just a hint, only a hint, that it stands for united Iraq. Not a
very easy thing under the given circumstances, marked by intense and pretty
much bloody sectarian and ethnic strife.]


 Published on Monday, June 16, 2014 by Jadaliyya
<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/18143/on-recent-events-in-mosul-and-other-cities-in-iraq>
On Recent Events in Mosul and Other Cities in Iraq
by Falah Alwan <http://www.commondreams.org/author/falah-alwan>
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/06/16-3

 Mosul and other cities in Iraq are experiencing dramatic, dangerous, and
fateful changes.

*[ISIS fighters in Iraq. Image from Creative Commons/Google.]*

The media, especially that which is allied with the Iraqi government and
western states, has been focusing on the Islamic State in Iraq and the
Levant/Syria (ISIS) and its control over several Iraqi cities, provoking
its audiences against the militant group. Indeed, ISIS terrorist groupings
do exist among armed groups there and its influence in the recent events is
clear. However, it is also true that Iraqis generally reject ISIS, whether
in the central or southern regions of Iraq or in parts of the country that
are no longer under government control: the so-called "Sunni" areas or the
"Sunni Triangle," a term that intelligence services, particularly the US
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), devised as part of a plan to engineer
sectarianism in Iraq. At the same time, Iraqis generally reject Maliki's
regime and its policies, built as they are on an ethno-sectarian basis.
This is especially the case in urban areas where sectarian discrimination
is most concentrated, wherein the government treats ordinary people as
political enemies.

The fall of several Iraqi cities in the hands of armed groups does not
represent the dreams of the people who live there. Their demands to be rid
of sectarianism are clear and direct. They expressed them through
nonviolent sit-ins, but armed terrorist groups took advantage of this
environment to take power. The people's demands against discrimination and
sectarianism are just and fair, whereas Maliki's policies are reactionary
and discriminatory, and are therefore rejected. In the meantime, ISIS'
control of cities and people poses a serious threat to everyday life and to
society.

Popular demands have morphed into a tool for reactionary forces to divide
up the political pie, from the terrorists of al-Qa'ida, the Baath Party,
and tribal leaders to the Shi'a religious leadership that has called for
open warfare and the Kurdish nationalist forces that have achieved military
and political gains. This all comes at a moment when Iraq has clearly
become divided according to the wills of dominant political forces, whereas
the will of the Iraqi people remains ignored.

Regional forces that benefit from Iraq's disintegration--especially Iran,
Saudi Arabia, and Turkey--operate in their own way to achieve political
gains. All the while the US government--the prime cause of these problems to
begin with--prepares to intervene however it chooses. President Obama has so
far expressed his concern over Iraqi oil twice when talking about recent
events. He has not shown any regard or concern for the fate of two million
people now under the control of ISIS, or for the women who have started
committing suicide in Mosul as a result of ISIS gangs. The working class in
Iraq is the common force that exists across the county, from the north of
Kurdistan to the furthest points south. It is this force whose very
existence and survival depends on the eradication of discrimination and the
unification of the Iraqi people. This is the only force that can end
fragmentation and division.

We reject US intervention and protest President Obama's inappropriate
speech in which he expressed concern over oil and not over people. We also
stand firmly against the brazen meddling of Iran.

We stand against the intervention of Gulf regimes and their funding of
armed groups, especially Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

We reject Nouri al-Maliki's sectarian and reactionary policies.

We also reject armed terrorist gangs and militias' control of Mosul and
other cities. We agree with and support the demands of people in these
cities against discrimination and sectarianism.

Finally, we reject the interference of the religious institution and its
call for indiscriminate warfare.

We aim to stand with those who represent the interests of the people and to
empower them in the face of this dangerous and reactionary attack. We call
for a clear international position to curb the deteriorating situation as
well as regional interference, and to support the people of Iraq.

Falah Alwan
 Federation of Workers' Councils and Unions in Iraq

*This statement originally appeared on Jadaliyya in Arabic and Ali Issa
translated it into English. *
Copyright 2014 Jadaliyya

Falah Alwan is President of the Federation of Workers Councils and Unions
in Iraq

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