April 6, 2005

MOVING RIGHT ALONG:

Desert Democrats of Mesopotamia (Tony Blankley, April 6, 2005, Townhall)

There will be a Sunni Speaker of the National Assembly, a Kurdish president, a Shia prime minister, and Sunni and Shia vice presidents. The Foreign Affairs ministry will go to a Kurd, the Defense Ministry to a Sunni, and Oil, Interior and Finance Ministries to the Shia. "They are still juggling with the names (of the ministers)," said the Dawa Party spokesman. "In the coming week, we will hear more about the names of the strong candidates."

Various other tricky controversies have been resolved or partially resolved. The Kurdish peshmerga militias, which have been the more or less independent military arm of the Kurdish faction, will be considered part of the Iraqi armed forces, "but will be commanded and deployed by the Kurdish regional government," according to the report in the Times.

On the all important matter of who gets what oil revenues, the different factions agreed "in principle" that oil revenues will be distributed evenly among all Iraqis "with special attention going to communities that were deprived under Saddam, such as the Kurds, Marsh Arabs and Shiites of southern Iraq." They have not yet agreed on the exact numbers, and one can see rich ground for vigorous debate.

For instance, while the Kurds have unambiguously been severely discriminated against and had oil resources taken from them (and murdered in vast numbers) by the Hussein regime, economically, they were able to build a thriving economy in the last years of that regime under the protection of the Anglo-American no-fly zone. Doubtlessly the Kurds will base their claims on what has been wrongly taken from them. Others may argue for revenue distribution based on current economic conditions.

One of the other great disputes seems to have been largely resolved, at least to the extent that they have agreed on the mechanism for resolving it. The Hussein regime had expelled thousands of Kurds from their historic, oil-rich city of Kirkuk. The current tentative agreement calls for the repatriation of Kurds expelled from the city and "redrawing the administrative boundaries of the governate to its 1968 borders." That was the year that Saddam annexed pieces of Kirkuk to other, Sunni, governing units.

After all these human movements are completed, there will be regional referenda to determine whether they wish to be administered by Baghdad or the regional Kurdish authorities.

These would be very impressive negotiations for a mature democracy.


Funny how the better things go in Iraq the less of a story it is, eh?

Posted by Orrin Judd at April 6, 2005 12:00 AM
Comments

Unless the media can tie one or the other parties to a car bomb, it is not newsworthy. Let's see how they report peace . . . zzzzz.

Posted by: Fred Jacobsen (San Fran) at April 6, 2005 2:34 AM

And how are things going in Afghanistan -- apparently well, since we are getting no news.

Posted by: jd watson at April 6, 2005 4:35 AM

It's less of a story because of who's in the White House -- the big media outlets were oohing and aahing and cooing like babies about the wonderfulness of post-Milsovec Kosovo in the late 1990s.

Had a Republican been in 1600 Pennsyvania Ave. at the time, we would have heard far more about destabilization of the region due to the break-up of the former Yugoslavia, whether or not the Macedonians and Greeks would get into a battle over territorial claims and seen multi-part series abot the plight of the ethnic Muslim refugees, etc. All of those topics were out there under Clinton, but all were also Page A-23 stories for the most part in the papers, and not even worthy of mentioning on the bottom-of-the-screen crawl on television.

Posted by: John at April 6, 2005 9:17 AM

jd:

Ah, but there was news from Afghanistan this morning! A helicopter crashed and 5 servicemen were killed.

Posted by: Rick T. at April 6, 2005 9:22 AM

Imagine the fun our pomo media could have had with our own Founding Fathers.

Posted by: ghostcat at April 6, 2005 1:40 PM
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