And after one year of sovereignty, it still has a government that requires foreign troops to remian in power.
Some soverignty.
From Democratic Underground
Dated June 29, 2004
Iraqi Sovereignty Doesn't Pass the Duck Test
By Jack Rabbit
There is a saying that if something walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, then it's a duck. This is sometimes called the duck test. Monday, two days ahead of schedule, Iraq was declared a sovereign state. It doesn't pass the duck test . . . .
Under the UN resolution passed June 8 by a 15-0 vote of the Security Council, a multinational force will remain in Iraq. While the resolution throughout calls the force multinational, the fact is that 85% of the foreign troops in Iraq are American. This is unlikely to change. Mr. Bush has been unable to persuade skeptical European leaders to allow a wider participation of NATO forces other than some unspecified commitments for equipment and training for Iraqi security forces.
The resolution notes that the force is there "at the request of the incoming Interim Government of Iraq," which was chosen by the Iraqi Governing Council, which was in turn chosen by the US-dominated Coalition Provisional Authority, which was dissolved with the transfer. Iraq will have enough sovereignty to ask foreign troops to leave. However, the interim government of Prime Iyad Allawi is unlikely to do that. Meanwhile, the multinational force, which is mostly American, "shall have the authority to take all necessary measures to contribute to the maintenance of security and stability in Iraq."
Prime Minister Allawi became the Bush administration's choice to lead Iraq after self-proclaimed exile leader and convicted embezzler Ahmed Chalabi lost the credibility and favor he never deserved in the first place. Allawi, a former Baathist, has close ties to the CIA and is believed to be the author of the absurd story about Saddam's ability to launch weapons of mass destruction 45 minutes after giving the order. While an improvement over Chalabi, he can only be seen to be one put in place by a foreign power for the purpose of requesting that foreign troops remain in Iraq.
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