Re: screwing the hegemons

2004-06-08 Thread Chris Doss
Aha

I see the hegemons this evening have already decided to move fast to
revise their text to accept that the troops will be go whenever the
Iraqis even the interim government, request it, as I suggested might
be the end result of the debates.

---
Q: How can there be more than one hegemon?


Re: screwing the hegemons US to leave Najaf and Kufa

2004-06-06 Thread Chris Burford
- Original Message -
From: Chris Burford [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 11:22 PM

 It seems possible that the interim government is quite sophisticated
 and Allawi knows how to balance everything out, including how to use
 Shristani to neutralise Al Sadr's militia.


Yesterday BBC reported that Sistani and Al Sadr have met. No doubt
this had been prepared for some time so it is interesting they both
agreed to a public meeting.

Today BBC reports that the US is pulling back from the holy cities
of Najaf and Kufa to hand over the the Iraqi police (whoever they may
be)

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3777407.stm

It is also reported that Al Sadr has agreed to withdraw his militia
from the cities, but that does not mean disbanding it. It means that
he is prepared to manage an accommodation with Shristani which they
have both given their names to publicly, in order to remove any excuse
for the hegemonic power to withdraw from the heart of the Shia
community.

What will really matter is whether Al Sadr will and can protect the US
troops from mortar attacks and attacks on their convoys, and what his
political price will be for this act of generosity.

The interim government has made a good start in managing negotiations,
no doubt some of them indirect, about the bodies of armed men in a way
favourable
to stability and Iraqi sovereignty.

Chris Burford


Re: screwing the hegemons

2004-06-05 Thread Chris Burford
 The hegemons presumably calculate that abject surrender is best
 achieved as promptly as possible so that the technicalities will not
 be noticed against the backdrop of Bush meeting the Pope.

It is a mark of their defeat that they have to pretend they are not
being screwed. Crude domination is not an option now:] - therefore
they have actively to adopt a tone of noble dignity.

Chris Burford


screwing the hegemons

2004-06-04 Thread Chris Burford
Interesting public debate in the Security Council, with Zebari taking
full advantage of its attention, and other powers like China, France,
Germany and Russia, enjoying keeping the hegemons waiting for
approval. Time is not on Bush's side. Everyone knows that.

While saying that a specific deadline for withdrawal of troops would
not be helpful Zebari emphasised the wording of the resolution should
be strengthened to emphasise full sovereignty for Iraqis - which
sounds like encouragement for an amendment that the hegemonic troops
will leave whenever the Iraqis request it, rather than subject to a
Security Council resolution which the US and UK could veto.

The subtleties of inter-imperialist rivalry these days!

Chris Burford


Re: screwing the hegemons

2004-06-04 Thread soula avramidis
According to an arab intellectual who worked on the ground organising... 'the american appointed government is no more than funeral procession waiting to happen' Chris Burford [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Interesting public debate in the Security Council, with Zebari takingfull advantage of its attention, and other powers like China, France,Germany and Russia, enjoying keeping the hegemons waiting forapproval. Time is not on Bush's side. Everyone knows that.While saying that a specific deadline for withdrawal of troops wouldnot be helpful Zebari emphasised the wording of the resolution shouldbe strengthened to emphasise full sovereignty for Iraqis - whichsounds like encouragement for an amendment that the hegemonic troopswill leave whenever the Iraqis request it, rather than subject to aSecurity Council resolution which the US and UK could veto.The subtleties of inter-imperialist rivalry these days!Chris Burford
Do you Yahoo!?Friends.  Fun. Try the all-new Yahoo! Messenger

Re: screwing the hegemons

2004-06-04 Thread Chris Burford
Aha

I see the hegemons this evening have already decided to move fast to
revise their text to accept that the troops will be go whenever the
Iraqis even the interim government, request it, as I suggested might
be the end result of the debates.

The hegemons presumably calculate that abject surrender is best
achieved as promptly as possible so that the technicalities will not
be noticed against the backdrop of Bush meeting the Pope.

It also undermines the advantage the imperialist rivals get by
spinning out the negotiations, and it moves the power game onto a new
territory altogether.

It seems possible that the interim government is quite sophisticated
and Allawi knows how to balance everything out, including how to use
Shristani to neutralise Al Sadr's militia. Interesting that the
kidnappings stopped as a general policy.

Meanwhile it becomes in the interests of the occupying troops to
retire to barracks, avoid confrontations, and too many convoys, and
try to think of a strategy against mortars.

Indeed the tables may be turned with the intermin government pleading
with them not to leave, in a way that will finally give some political
support to Bush and Blair in covering themselves with their domestic
electorates. The other pay off would be if it manages to turn military
hegemony once again into financial dominance, if in return for staying
in Iraq the interim government will give primacy to a financial
framework in which US interests dominate over those of old Europe.

The fine print of these inter-imperialist skirmishings could get even
finer and harder to analyse. They will include hazy terms for debt
forgiveness - there are technical terms like odious I think. It
will also depend on how contracts get awarded.

The interim government will minimise the hegemons bargaining power the
faster it achieves on the ground compromises with local militias.
Llocal militias in turn may be persuaded to compromise if this allows
the interim government apparently to  accelerate statements distancing
themselves from the occupyers.

It is just possible then that as almost all sides want the occupying
troops out as rapidly as possible, things will stabilise punctuated
only by terrorist activity that finds it difficult to find a target
that will strengthen its position with general Iraqi opinion.

All right, highly speculative, but the last speculations were not wide
of the mark. What I am basing these thoughts on to be explicit is 1)
calculation of the shifting balance of power and how others may see it
2) respect for the intelligence and resilience of Iraqi people.

Chris Burford

- Original Message -
From: Chris Burford [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 8:14 AM
Subject: [PEN-L] screwing the hegemons


 Interesting public debate in the Security Council, with Zebari
taking
 full advantage of its attention, and other powers like China,
France,
 Germany and Russia, enjoying keeping the hegemons waiting for
 approval. Time is not on Bush's side. Everyone knows that.

 While saying that a specific deadline for withdrawal of troops would
 not be helpful Zebari emphasised the wording of the resolution
should
 be strengthened to emphasise full sovereignty for Iraqis - which
 sounds like encouragement for an amendment that the hegemonic troops
 will leave whenever the Iraqis request it, rather than subject to a
 Security Council resolution which the US and UK could veto.

 The subtleties of inter-imperialist rivalry these days!

 Chris Burford