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Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Kathleen Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Battered By Change, Iraq May Prefer Sameness
by Kathleen Parker
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Suddenly, the U.S. economy has edged out Iraq as the most consuming issue for American voters. Not so for Iraqis.

Who wins the presidential election is of paramount importance to a nation finally approaching a semblance of normalcy. For some, regime change in America is not necessarily a welcome proposition.

Among those concerned about what might happen should Democrats prevail is Sami al-Askari, a senior Shiite member of parliament and close adviser to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

Askari, who serves on parliament's foreign relations committee, has been outspoken in his criticism of the U.S. presence in Iraq. Nonetheless, this week he took a strong position favoring John McCain over Barack Obama. In an unpublished opinion article he wrote -- and sent to me by way of a mutual friend and Iraqi journalist -- Askari said that "Iraqis are better off with Republicans." (The Maliki government is officially neutral in the U.S. race, Askari told me in an e-mail.)

Askari's endorsement of McCain comes just three months after the Iraqi was critical of certain conditions proposed under the pending U.S.-Iraq status-of-forces agreement. The United States and Iraq began work on the long-term security agreement after Baghdad asked the United Nations not to renew the resolution that allowed U.S. and other multinational troops to enter Iraq in 2003.

This past June, Askari told The Washington Post:

"The Americans are making demands that would lead to the colonization of Iraq. If we can't reach a fair agreement, many people think we should say 'Goodbye, U.S. troops. We don't need you here anymore.'"

As the presidential election draws near -- and partly in response to Obama's selection of Joe Biden as his running mate -- Askari apparently has softened his rhetoric on the U.S. presence.

He still favors withdrawal of U.S. forces by the end of 2011, as proposed in the security treaty. And he figures that the deadline will be honored by whoever wins, if only for the sake of the 2012 American elections.

But changing now from a Republican to a Democratic administration would be problematic, he says -- not least because Obama has said the U.S. Congress should be involved in any status-of-forces agreement with Iraq.

Askari also expressed concern about Biden's 2007 plan to divide Iraq into three semi-autonomous regions -- Kurdish, Shiite and Sunni -- with a central government in Baghdad. He called the Biden plan "the essence of a nightmare feared by Iraqis."

"Not that any of Biden's proposals will take effect, as the socio-political reality in Iraq is undividable," he continued. "But Iraqis will pay dearly until Biden and his camp are convinced that his 'theory' is inapplicable in Iraq."

Biden, whose son Beau deploys to Iraq Oct. 3, proposed his plan when circumstances in Iraq were less stable than they are now. But as recently as this month, he has said that his plan is essentially becoming reality as each region becomes more autonomous. Continued...

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About The Author
Kathleen Parker is a syndicated columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.
 
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The Parker Problem
What are we going to do about Parker? Parker is with us and then she is against us like some deranged junkie. There is no way to predict when she is going to go nuts on us. I emailed her a few times in the past and was shocked at her strange, mean responses that have lead me to believe this is a very unstable person.

The Parker Problem is a problem because Parker is supposed to be a conservative. Liberal newspaper editors find her to be what Mona Charen calls a "useful idiot". Only Parker is no fool. Parker is doing what is best for Parker.

Parker will at unpredictable times turns on us agaain and stab us in the back to get headlines for herself and ingratiate herself to the liberal newspaper editors who run her op-ed instead of Thomas Sowell or Charen. The Parker Problem undermines the cause.

The Parker Problem will continue to be a problem until we cut the strings.

Its time to say goodbye. Kathleen Parker. You do not speak for us.

You are the weakest link.

Good bye.

An Important Factor
Excellent reporting with "makes a difference" argumentation. This is potentially as huge as our current financial woes--if not much bigger.

But our entire strategy vis-a-vis Islamic extremists seems to me misguided. Once we are energy independent--and this is starting to happen, thank God--we will have more ability to persuade the Muslims that we are not out to get them and their cherished lands, traditions and way of life. We can and should, for starters, evacuate the Arabian Peninsula. This will help us; it will help the Muslims; I think in this operation Israel too can become more secure than it is at present.

In any event, I've become much more America First! since 9/11 and these two extremely antagonizing wars. We need to be making friends, not more enemies by the day.

For this reason, I'm more open to an argument by Ron Paul or Pat Buchanan or any other so-called "isolationist." The fact is, 9/11's root cause is our presence, as Ron Paul put it, "over there."
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