Here at home, opinion polls have for years shown that two-thirds of Americans oppose the war in Iraq. Opposition to a continued presence has also been building in Congress, always the most lagging indicator. On July 22, Congresswoman Barbara Lee and 94 other representatives sent a letter to President Obama urging him to bring all U.S. troops and military contractors home by the end of this year and she is introducing a bill that would cut off funding.
As for the Iraqi opinion, anti-U.S. cleric and politician Moqtada al-Sadr put out a statement on August 3 saying that any foreign solider remaining in his country after 2011 would "be treated as an unjust invader and should be opposed with military resistance." We'll mark him down as a "no thanks." According to Al-Iraqiya TV, meanwhile, 2.5 million of al-Sadr's compatriot s have signed a petition calling for U.S. troops to get out.
"We want them to leave, even before the end of this year," Youseff Ahmad, a tribal sheik from the Iraqi town of Al Rufait, recently told one reporter . "They've destroyed us. They've only brought killing and disaster." Ahmad spoke after having just witnessed U.S. troops' "training" and "support" mission in action, the consequence of which was "a shootout involving bullets, grenades and American Apache helicopters that left the tribal Sheik and two others dead, and several wounded, including two young girls."
Even top members of the Iraqi government are saying no thanks, even if their more powerful colleagues are toeing the U.S. line. On Sunday, Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi said that a continued American military presence in Iraq would be "a problem, not a solution," adding that training could be done by other countries at a cheaper price.
American officials acknowledge that al-Hashemi is speaking for the bulk of his fellow countrymen, with U.S. diplomats telling The New York Times that their own polling shows a "majority of Iraqis have a negative view of the American role in Iraq."
No wonder Nouri al-Maliki and his thuggish cronies, fearful their power to torture and suppress political opponents will evaporate without U.S. support, aren't willing to let average Iraqis have a say in their country's future. The question is: will Americans, who support a complete withdrawal and want to bring the war dollars home , ever get a say in the future of their country? Tell President Obama to stick to his promises and bring the troops home.
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