Opinion | Editorials

Can we have our country back, please?

The continued existence of the US and its allies on Iraqi soil is under intense scrutiny.

  • Gulf News
  • Published: 00:06 June 15, 2008
  • Gulf News

It was inevitable there would come a time when Iraq-US relations would change. While it cannot be said they have soured, they are definitely on the turn, like milk that is left in the sun too long. And the reasons for the change were always there for everyone to see - the continued US presence on Iraqi territory.

The very existence of the US and its allies on Iraqi soil has all along been questionable. The US and the UK say that under UN resolutions passed by the Security Council they had the right to protect Iraq against terrorists and insurgents following the defeat of Saddam Hussain.

Opponents argue that the original UN resolutions did not provide adequately for the entry and continued presence of allied forces in Iraq. Although much of that argument is in the past, sadly it still affects the present and the future of Iraq.

The US wants to continue in Iraq past the end of 2008, when it should officially go. Last November, US President George W. Bush and Iraqi President Nouri Al Maliki agreed in principle to sign a Status of Forces Agreement (Sofa) which would allow US forces to stay in Iraq 'indefinitely'.

Such a proposed agreement has been met with great hostility by a number of Iraqis, not least the controversial cleric Moqtada Al Sadr, who has already stated his 60,000-strong Mahdi army would fight the US if it continued staying in Iraq.

With the time for signing the agreement between the US and Iraq drawing ever nearer, the realisation has come upon Al Maliki that he may be giving up too much to the US and relinquishing certain sovereign rights which would be unacceptable to the government and the people.

Consequently, as things stand the issue remains unsolved and has dim prospects of any success as presently phrased.


Opinion Editor's choice
  • Keep meddlers out of Egypt
    Egyptians must reject foreign meddling
    By Tariq Ramadan, 
Special to Gulf News

    Presidential election may turn out to be less a new chapter in a democratic future than an old chapter complete with a stage-managed outcome

  • Liberals surrender gains to Islamists
    Moderates may gift Egypt to Islamists
    By Linda S. Heard, 
Special to Gulf News

    Liberals cannot afford to sit at home or in cafes watching queues lengthen outside polling stations. They must quit complaining and vote with their feet

  • Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki
    Is Al Maliki serious about democracy and more words?
    By Mohammad Akef Jamal, 
Special to Gulf News

    He is pushing towards a military showdown with the Kurds at a time when they are stronger than ever before

Speak Your Mind

Do people make sacrifices just to make money?