“Opposed by Everyone in the World Who Was NOT Bought Off, the Illegal Invasion 
of Iraq Was Undertaken for Many Reasons — the Imminent Replacement of the 
DOLLAR by the EURO as the World's Primary Currency, the Tempting Lure of 
Untapped Oil Reserves, the Desire to Consolidate US / Israeli MILITARY HEGEMONY 
Over a Strategically Vital Region — But the Most Important Reason was to 
Further Obscure QUESTIONS About the Awesome DECEPTION Staged by the US Govt 
that has Come to be Known as 9/11.“ -  John Kaminski
  Al-Maliki Tells Aides US Benchmark Deadline is June 30 or His Ouster Possible 
  
  The Associated Press
  Published: March 13, 2007
  http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/03/13/africa/ME-GEN-Iraq-Oil.php?page=1
   
  BAGHDAD: Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki fears the Americans will withdraw 
support for his government — effectively ousting him — if parliament does not 
pass a draft oil law by the end of June, close associates of the Iraqi leader 
told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
   
  The legislature has not even taken up the draft measure for a fair 
distribution of the nation's oil wealth — only one of several U.S. benchmarks 
that are now seen by al-Maliki, a hardline Shiite, as key to continued American 
support for his troubled government.
   
  Beyond that, the al-Maliki associates told AP, American officials have 
informed the prime minister they want an Iraqi government in place by year's 
end that would be acceptable to Iraq's Sunni Arab neighbors, particularly Saudi 
Arabia, Jordan and Egypt. "They have said it must be secular and inclusive," 
one al-Maliki associate said.
   
  To that end, al-Maliki made an unannounced visit Tuesday to Ramadi, the Sunni 
insurgent stronghold, to meet with tribal leaders, the provincial governor and 
security chiefs in a bid to signal his willingness for reconciliation to end 
the bitter and bloody sectarian war that has riven Iraq for more than a year. 
For its part, the U.S. military is speaking with great optimism about its 
efforts to turn Sunnis in volatile Anbar province away from the insurgency and 
its al-Qaida in Iraq allies.
   
  Compounding al-Maliki's fears about a withdrawal of American support were 
visits to Saudi Arabia by two key political figures in an admitted bid to win 
support for a major Iraqi political realignment. Saudi Arabia is a major U.S. 
ally and oil supplier.
   
  Former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, a Shiite, arrived in the Saudi capital 
Tuesday. Masoud Barzani, leader of Iraq's largely autonomous Kurdish region, 
flew in a day earlier. Most Kurds are Sunni Muslims.
   
  "Allawi is there to enlist support for a new political front that rises above 
sectarian structures now in place," the former prime minister's spokesman Izzat 
al-Shahbandar told AP. Barzani spokesman Abdul-Khaleq Zanganah said the two had 
met in Kurdistan before traveling to Saudi Arabia for talks on forming a 
"national front to take over for the political bloc now supporting al-Maliki."
   
  It appears certain that the United States was informed about the Allawi and 
Barzani opening to the Saudis, who are deeply concerned that al-Maliki could 
become a puppet of Iran, the Shiite theocracy on Iraq's eastern border. Tehran 
is seen as a threat to stability among the long-standing Sunni regimes 
throughout most of the Arab world and deeply at odds with the United States 
over Iran's nuclear program and policy toward Israel.
   
  Washington has been reported to be working more closely with Sunni Arab 
governments to encourage them to take a greater role in Iraq, particularly in 
reining in the Sunni insurgency that has killed thousands of U.S. soldiers and 
tens of thousands more Iraqi Shiites. Washington was believed to be trying to 
win support for its mission in Iraq among the country's Arab neighbors by 
assuring a greater future role for the Sunni minority that ran the country 
until the U.S. invasion ousted Saddam Hussein.
   
  One al-Maliki confidant said the Americans in Baghdad had voiced displeasure 
with the prime minister's government even though he has managed so far to blunt 
major resistance from the Mahdi Army, the Shiite militia, to the joint 
U.S.-Iraqi security operation in the capital and its environs. The militia is 
the military wing of the political organization run by anti-American Shiite 
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose political backing secured the premiership for 
al-Maliki.
   
  "They have said they are frustrated that he has done nothing to oust the 
Sadrists, that the oil law has not moved forward, that there is no genuine 
effort on reconciliation and no movement on new regional elections," said the 
official on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the 
information.
   
  Passage of the oil law, which seeks a fair distribution of revenues among all 
Iraq's sectarian and ethnic groups, has become a major issue for the United 
States, which had initially counted on financing Iraq's post-invasion 
reconstruction with oil revenues. But the decrepit oil infrastructure and 
violence have left the country producing oil at about the same levels as before 
the war, at best, and those figures are well below production before the first 
Gulf War which resulted in U.N. sanctions against the Iraqi oil industry.
   
  The major Sunni bloc in parliament along with Allawi loyalists in the Shiite 
bloc are openly opposed the draft oil measure as drafted. Al-Maliki also has 
lost the backing of the Shiite Fadila Party, and independent Shiite members are 
split on the bill.
   
  The al-Maliki associates said U.S. officials, who they would not name, had 
told the prime minister that President Bush was committed to the current 
government but that continued White House support depended on positive action 
on all the benchmarks — especially the oil law and sectarian reconciliation — 
by the close of this parliamentary session on June 30.
   
  "Al-Maliki is committed to meeting the deadline because he is convinced he 
would not survive in power without U.S. support," one of the associates said. 
But standing in the way of forward movement is a recalcitrant Cabinet which 
al-Maliki has promised to reshuffle by the end of this week. So far, however, 
he is at loggerheads with the political groupings in parliament which are 
threatening to withdraw their support for the prime minister if he does not 
allow the blocs to name replacements for Cabinet positions.
   
  The impasse amounts effectively to a threat to bring down the government if 
it does what the Americans reportedly are telling al-Maliki he must do to win 
continued U.S. backing.
   
  AB                                                                            
                             [EMAIL PROTECTED]                                  
                                                                    "For to us 
will be their return; then it will be for us to call them to account." (Holy 
Quran 88:25-26)

 
---------------------------------
Don't get soaked.  Take a quick peek at the forecast 
 with theYahoo! Search weather shortcut.

Reply via email to