Withdrawal of US Forces is the Key to Resolving Iraq Issue

7-26-08, 10:26 am



Original source: Akahata (Japan)

US-Iraq talks on concluding an agreement on the status of US forces in Iraq are stalled. The Bush administration has tried hard to force Iraq to accept its terms. But the Iraqi people are strongly opposed to the agreement because it would bring about additional difficulties for Iraq.

With the United States unable to find an exit to from the Iraq War, the agreement is intended to make it possible to wage a long-term war by perpetuating the stationing of US forces in Iraq.

In Iraq, even Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who the Bush administration counts on, is asking the United States to set a time frame for the pullout of its forces from Iraq. Thus, virtually all political forces in Iraq are urging the United States to withdraw its forces.

Indefinite occupation

The UN Security Council resolution that is considered to be the basis for the present US military presence in Iraq will expire at the end of this year. The US is pressing Iraq to sign the status of forces agreement that would take the place of the UN Security Council Resolution.

The agreement will give US forces the freedom of operations, including the detention of Iraqis, and provide US forces with 58 sites to be used for their stationing as well as the control of Iraqi airspace.

Contrary to the US administration’s public relations emphasizing that it will be an agreement between sovereign nations, the agreement will keep Iraq under US occupation and even turn Iraq into a stepping-stone for US interventionist wars against other countries.

In June, thirty-one members of the majority group of Iraq’s parliament sent a letter to the US Congress saying that they firmly reject any agreement with the U.S. that does not provide a set time frame requiring the US occupation forces to withdraw completely from Iraq.

In negotiations with Maliki, who knows that Iraqi people are strongly opposed to the agreement, the United States have been compelled to make some concessions to give up on the demand that private security company personnel be granted immunity from prosecution. However, with the United States firmly refusing to present a set time frame for the withdrawal, the agreement goes against Iraq’s call for the restoration of sovereignty.

Prime Minister Maliki’s reluctance shocked the United States because he had been considered compliant. On July 7, Maliki for the first time suggested that a time frame for the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq must be decided before anything else. It is believed that he stated this with a general election for the Iraqi parliament in 2009 in mind. Maliki called on the United States to exchange notes concerning the present situations since it is difficult to conclude a long-term SOFA at this time.

Though details of bilateral negotiations are not clear, the initial US plan to complete the SOFA deal by the end of July will suffer a setback. Observers are expecting that the bilateral agreement will be a “stopgap measure” in order to fill the vacuum that would be created after the expiration of the UN Security Council resolution and that negotiations with Iraq will be left to the next US administration.

All this shows that an immediate withdrawal of US troops, invading forces, is the key to solving problems faced by Iraq.

Withdraw Self-Defense Forces from Iraq

One of the members of the Iraqi parliament who visited the United States with a letter signed by fellow members stated that a SOFA should not be concluded while Iraq is held at gunpoint by foreign troops stationed in Iraq. The lawmaker also insisted that the presence of US forces constitutes an obstacle to the national reconciliation of Iraq, the main issue today for the country.

The Japanese government is exploring the possibility of signing with Iraq a SOFA with Iraq in order to continue dispatching the Air Self-Defense Force to meet US requests. Further dispatch of the ASDF will only hamper peace in Iraq. The task now is for Japan to end its subservience to US policies and to withdraw the SDF immediately from Iraq.

From Akahata (Japan)