Early reports say that 60% of Iraqi's electorate came out for
Saturday's election of provincial councils. The results will be
announced by the end of this week, and only after "weeks" will the
final tally be published. There was a lockdown of the whole country,
in which US troops assisted, with no private automobiles allowed to
run. Given this datum, the breathless newspaper headlines that the
elections came off without any major attacks are an embarrassment. You
can't usefully detonate a car bomb if you can't drive a car.

American corporate media will report the Iraqi provincial elections as
a vindication of the 2003 US invasion of that country, and as a sign
that Iraqis are eager to be like Americans. In places like Sadr City,
the teeming slums of East Baghdad, Many Iraqis voted as a protest
against continued US military presence. Likewise, Sunni
fundamentalists saw the vote as an assertion of Iraqi sovereignty. The
elections come in the wake of the Status of Forces Agreement that
pledges all US troops will be out of the country by 2011, and in the
wake of the election of Barack Obama in the US, who has committed to
having most US troops out in 16 months. The sharp fall in deaths of
civilians and security personnel in January, to 189, is not a sign
that Bush won but rather that the Iraqis have. No point in blowing
things up if the US is leaving anyway, and less reason to resist the
new federal Iraqi government if Sunni Arab elites can rule their own
provinces.

It is not the US presence in Iraq that Iraqis are celebrating in this
election but Washington's imminent departure.
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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