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WAR WITH IRAN CANCELLED?

Comment by Larry Ross, December 24, 2005


Wouldn't it be nice if the Bush Administration got the message that their stooges lost the Iraq election and the U.S. obeyed the democratic will of the Iraq people and went home. I hope that Robert Scheer is right in his analysis - that the U.S. will abandon the grandiose neocon plan for dominating the middle east, claim victory in the Iraq war, and go home.
Although his analysis is excellent, and contains vitally important information which may be suppressed by the corporate media in NZ, UK, USA and Australia, I fear his conclusions about U.S. withdrawal are wrong.

The U.S. has invested hundreds of billions of dollars in a totally criminal enterprise - one of the greatest cons in history.

It demonstrates the power of an unscrupulous Administration, harnessing the various propaganda apparatus of the state and a co-operative media willing to join in deceiving the public and the world.


The U.S. has built permanent military bases with a view to dominate the area and expand the Iraq war to Iran and Syria and perhaps other states in the area. Also, Bush hates losing. If he abandon's the neocon plan, he'll be losing big time.
I really don't think the U.S. will give up their huge investment and ambitions and be leaving Iraq any time soon. A civil war situation - between the Shiites and Sunnis - may be contributed to by U.S. actions - and may become one of the excuses Bush uses to continue wage war in Iraq and continue the neocon middle east plan. I hope I'm wrong, but I think the worst is still to come.


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Iran's Victory Revealed in Iraq Election

By Robert Scheer, AlterNet, December 21, 2005


For the Bush White House, the good news from Iraq just never stops. But the joy that President Bush has expressed over the country's latest election, though more restrained than his infamous "Mission Accomplished" speech, will similarly come back to haunt him.

Soon after Bush spoke of the Iraqi election as "a landmark day in the history of liberty," early returns representing 90 percent of the ballots cast in the Iraq election established that the clear winners were Shiite and Sunni religious parties not the least bit interested in Western-style democracy or individual freedom -- including such extremists as Muqtada al-Sadr, whose fanatical followers have fought pitched battles with U.S. troops.The silver lining, of course, is that the election did see broad participation, if not particularly clean execution. And because all of the leading parties say they want the United States to leave on a clear and public time line, this should provide adequate cover for a staged but complete withdrawal from a sovereign country that we had no right to invade in the first place.

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