Jump to content

Keystone Kondi's Kurdish Kaper -- is Condi dumber than George or doesshe just act that way so she wo


Guest Kickin' Ass and Takin' Names

Recommended Posts

Guest Kickin' Ass and Takin' Names

Keystone Kondi's Kurdish Kaper

by Jeff Huber

Fri Dec 21, 2007 at 06:03:11 AM PST

Condoleezza Rice, Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science and 66th

United States Secretary of State, arrived unannounced in the oil rich

Iraqi city of Kirkuk on Tuesday, just after Turkey's attacks on

Kurdish targets in northern Iraq, to do what she does best: step into

a bad situation and make it worse.

 

Jeff Huber's diary :: ::

Keystone Kop-out

 

Kurdish regional President Massud Barzani refused to meet with her

because the U.S. had assisted the Turks. Regional Prime Minister

Nechirvan Barzani (Massud's nephew) said, "It is unacceptable that the

United States, in charge of monitoring our airspace, authorized Turkey

to bomb our villages."

 

Pentagon officials, preferring more passive language to describe

America's role in the strikes, said that the U.S. had "deconflicted"

the airspace over northern Iraq for the Turks. That sounds eerily

similar to the way Dick Cheney deconflicted the airspace over Lebanon

for Israel two summers ago.

 

An unnamed "American military officer" said that, "Nothing the Turks

have done to date should be considered a surprise," and that while

"we've shared information" with the Turks, "the decision to pursue

military options is theirs." The New York Times granted the quoted

officer anonymity because he was "discussing actions of a sovereign

ally," which is the NYT's lamest excuse to date for allowing a

faceless administration official to use it as a propaganda platform.

 

Nabi Sensoy, Turkey's ambassador to the U.S., said the air strikes

against the Kurds were the result of real-time, actionable

intelligence provided by the Americans.

 

Real-time actionable intelligence isn't something you casually "share"

with an allied chum over cocktails at the embassy. It's something

your command and control people aggressively monitor and pass to your

ally's forces as they execute an operation. That doesn't happen

spontaneously, either; it requires significant prior planning.

Further, you don't "deconflict" an ally's strike aircraft into your

controlled airspace unless you know just what in the wide world of

sports they're up to.

 

And it looks like the order to play along with the Turkish strikes

came from the top of the U.S. chain of command. Ambassador Sensoy

claimed the strikes and follow on ground incursion operations were

"tangible results" of talks in Washington last month between Turkish

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Mr. Bush, during which Mr.

Bush promised the U.S. would do everything it could to help Turkey

counter the threat presented by the Kurdistan Workers Party, known as

the PKK.

 

Kondi Inkognizance

 

While everyone knows the strikes on the PKK were a U.S. certified

operation, Condi had the bald temerity to pretend otherwise and

caution Turkey that, "No one should do anything that threatens to

destabilize the north."

 

But the Turks aren't interested in pretense. Ambassador Sensoy said,

"This is not a once and for all operation... The ultimate target is the

elimination of the PKK operation." Prime Minister Erdogan, speaking

from Turkey's capital of Ankara, seconded that sentiment with: "From

now on, our security forces will continue to do whatever is

necessary."

 

It sounds like Condi's got a lot more cautioning to do. She'll also

have to smooth some ruffled feathers, something she's not the best

choice for doing since she sold Lebanon down the river during the 2006

Israeli/Hezbollah conflict.

 

We knew about the Turkish ops, and gave them the go ahead, but,

apparently, we didn't tell our pals in the Iraqi government about

it.

 

Iraqi officials condemned the Turkish raids, saying they added "insult

to injury" and calling them "a cruel attack to Iraqi sovereignty."

 

Our sovereign ally Turkey said it had a right to strike the PKK in

northern Iraq because its presence there threatens Turkey's

sovereignty.

 

Poor Condi. Torn between two sovereigns. At least she had the good

sense not to point out that nothing constitutes a crueler attack on a

nation's sovereignty than occupying it with an armed force, and that

nothing threatens a nation's sovereignty more than having to ask

America's permission to protect its sovereignty.

 

She did, however, manage to insult Kirkuk's municipal officials before

she left, lecturing them on how grateful they should be for America's

help. "I look forward to talk with you about how the PRTs (provincial

reconstruction teams) are helping to bring prosperity, creating jobs

and bringing political reconciliation," she told them.

 

Great. Caesar's. Ghost.

 

I'm not sure what stuns me more: that our Secretary of State actually

said that to a hostile audience, or that she might actually have

thought saying it was a world-class piece of international diplomacy.

How much do we have to pay Doctor Ditz to resign, jump on her broom,

and go back to teaching political science at Stanford?

 

Komik Karma Koda

 

Here's one last theater of the absurd wrinkle in the U.S./Iraq/Turkey

relations saga.

 

Ambassador Sensoy says that the Unites States has promised--presumably

during the meeting between Bush and Prime Minister Erdogan--to

investigate charges that U.S. weapons have fallen into the hands of

the PKK.

 

Would it not be a kolossal kick in the kranium to discover the PKK is

killing Kurds with some of the 190,000 Kalishnikov rifles and pistols

U.S. military commander in Iraq David Petraeus lost track of in 2004

and '05 when he was handing them out like Hershey bars to Iraqi

security force trainees?

 

I'd love to hear what Condi would have to say about that. Something

klever, no doubt.

 

#

 

Commander Jeff Huber, U.S. Navy (Retired) writes from Virginia Beach,

Virginia. Jeff's novel Bathtub Admirals (Kunati Books) will be

available April 1, 2008.

 

 

 

 

http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2007/12/21/85912/847/986/425147

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 0
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Popular Days

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...