From: "Sid Shniad" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/simonjenkins

The Guardian   November 19 2008

The errors of Iraq are being repeated - and magnified

Simon Jenkins
The Guardian: November 19 2008

The awful prospect is of Obama and Brown, no fans of the 2003 invasion,
blundering on in a more perilous war: Afghanistan

This has to be the beginning of the end. The UN mandate for the western
occupation of Iraq expires next month, to be replaced by a US-Iraq treaty
about to be ratified by the Iraqi parliament. This sets a limit of three
years on the presence of foreign troops. It is sovereignty for slow
learners.

With radical Mahdists demanding an immediate withdrawal, the treaty will
hold only if honoured. Accordingly, it plans an end to ground operations
next year, when British troops will anyway be leaving. Barack Obama is most
unlikely to backtrack on the timetable.

Britain and now the US are both led by men whose heart was never in this
war, and want only to get out with some dignity intact. The much oversold
"surge" has offered such a screen. War fever has given way to war weariness.
Nobody has a clue what will happen next in Iraq, and ever fewer care.

The wreckage will probably be the same patchwork of feuding provinces and
sheikhdoms as was always going to follow Saddam Hussein's downfall, with
each arguing over the spoils of the country's phenomenal oil wealth.

Iraq will be divided between the Kurdish north, the Sunni west and the Shia
and pro-Iranian rest, the lines of confederation being decided by the
resolution of militia power on the ground. The country will not be
pro-democracy, pro-western, pro-Israeli or whatever fantasy seized the
American (and British) neocons in the moment of madness that sparked this
whole ideological escapade. Only when the west has gone will locally
initiated reconstruction be secure. But the scars of 2005-07, when Iraq was
the most hellish place on earth, will remain for a long time.

Never in recent history has a western intervention been so misguided and so
bungled. On Monday the former lord chief justice Lord Bingham savaged the
British government's decision to join the invasion as "a serious violation
of international law", so much so as "passes belief". He castigated its
failure to curb its own and the American abuse of human rights during the
occupation.

He might have added such outrages as the driving of 2 million Iraqis into
exile, the abandonment of Iraqi collaborators, the failure to restore public
services to their condition even under Saddam, the continued "cleansing" of
Christians, and the desecration of heritage sites.

After five years of occupation and £7bn of public money, London's finest
minds joined with those of Washington to reduce what should be one of the
world's richest countries to shambles. Iraq is still an economic and social
basket case compared with its neighbours, Iran, Turkey, Syria and Jordan.

The occupation has vindicated TE Lawrence's view that the imperial mindset
can never comprehend the Arab world. The incompetence in every department
has been so astonishing as to strip the Atlantic powers of practical and
moral claim to be the world's policemen in the 21st century. That is the
true measure of the Bush-Blair legacy.

As things stand there is still no inquiry into the legality of the invasion
and no response from the former attorney general, Lord Goldsmith, to Lord
Bingham's accusation, other than that it all seemed all right on the night.
There is no audit of the billions the war has cost UK taxpayers. There is no
explanation to the families of 176 dead British soldiers as to why they
died, beyond the vacuous claim that they were "fighting terrorism" when they
were not.

The reason not to let Iraq slip un-mourned into history is that the episode
has one last service to perform. It should teach a lesson that foreign
expeditions undertaken in a spirit of jingoist revenge, with a crazed
optimism and no strategic plan, are usually a bad idea.

That lesson could not be more relevant, as the identical error is being made
in Afghanistan and by the same two men who privately or (in Obama's case)
publicly expressed reservations about Iraq. In his last utterance Gordon
Brown himself seemed blind to the parallels, talking as if one more push,
one more hearts-and-minds campaign, should send Johnny foreigner back to the
hills so decent people can walk the streets of London in peace.

The Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, has grown increasingly exasperated with
the blatant failure of Nato to bring security to his country. He is no
fantasist. He knows that he is powerless outside his capital, except where a
genius for wheeler dealing can keep the drug lords in funds and the Taliban
at bay. The Taliban are gaining ground and he is running out of time to
negotiate with their leaders with leverage behind him.

Hence last week's outburst, in which Karzai indicated his determination to
talk with the Taliban and offer safe protection to Kabul for their former
leader, Mullah Omah, for that purpose. Should the Americans object, he
replied that "if I say I want protection for Mullah Omah, the international
community has two choices, remove me or leave".

Meanwhile, a private war is being fought by US special forces against anyone
with a gun in the east of the country, the bombing of Pakistani villages so
capricious and counter-productive as to suggest a lack of all tactical
control. In the south the British have no strategy except to re-enact the
Zulu wars at exorbitant cost in money and lives. The Helmand campaign is
magnificent but mad.

Publicists are being hired to assert that Afghanistan is just fine "in
part", like the curate's egg. The reality is that even Kabul is no longer
safe for foreigners. The conflict is far more intractable than Iraq, since
the staple crop is not oil but opium and since the border with Pakistan is
hopelessly unstable. Throughout history this land has been the theatre of
defeat.

Last month Taliban operating out of Pakistan's North-West Frontier territory
cut the Khyber Pass, a crucial supply link into Kabul, which can be
traversed only in massively armed convoys. This is precisely the trap into
which invading forces have been sucked for a century and a half, be they
British, Russian or now American. As a blunder it ranks with marching on
Moscow. Yet Nato has done it. Nobody reads history.

The error of Afghanistan is far more serious than the error of Iraq. If the
resulting insurgency is now exported to Pakistan, both errors will seem
peccadillos. Pakistan is the sixth largest state in the world, and
nuclear-armed.

The awful prospect is that Obama and Brown may feel too weak to learn from
Iraq and pull back. They will blunder on, not to a clean defeat but to
something far worse, a war of attrition whose poison will spread across a
subcontinent.

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

***

http://www.afriquenligne.fr/news/africa-news/egypt-court-says-aid-must-be-allowed-into-gaza-2008111415989.html

Egypt court says aid must be allowed into Gaza

Cairo, Egypt - Despite an Israeli economic blockade in place to limit
traffic to and from the Gaza Strip, an Egyptian court has ruled that Cairo
must allow humanitarian aid and supplies to enter Gaza via the Rafah Border
Crossing. The Rafah Border Crossing is the small Mediterranean stip of
land's only border to the outside world.

Presently, Egypt has limited humanitarian trucks from entering Gaza as part
of its border crackdown in line with Israeli policies.

The court said the action was in violation of Egyptian law and contradicted
official government policy.

Most humanitarian aid has entered Gaza via Israeli crossings since Hamas
took control of Gaza in 2007.

Egypt has opened the Rafah crossing only a number of times to allow
students, Muslim pilgrims to Mecca, the sick and those with foreign
citizenship to enter Egypt.

The crossing was most recently open from 6-8 November.

Israel argues that the border is a hotspot for terrorist activity and has
demanded Egypt keep it closed.

The Jewish state has only allowed limited supplies to enter Gaza, which has
left a majority of the population reeling from the economic blockade.

***

WHAT: Protest Gaza Siege
WHEN: Today, Monday, Nov. 24, 3:30-6 PM
WHERE: At the Israel Consulate at 6380 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles
                (between Fairfax and La Cienega).



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