My nominee for the silliest comment on the Iraqi provincial elections comes from -- no surprise here -- former UN Ambassador John Bolton. After praising the elections as a vindication of the "surge" and characterizing them as a setback for Iran, Bolton warned that the elections will not "put an end to Iran's ambitions. Tehran appears to believe that its influence in the region is expanding and that its neighbors and the United States have failed to respond effectively. This belief is unsurprising, given the Obama administration’s acquiescent attitude toward Tehran."

Let me get this straight. Obama has been in office for about two weeks, and Iran has already drawn the lesson from that brief period that "its influence is expanding." Has Bolton forgotten about the Bush administration, whose mishandling of Mideast policy failed to slow Iran's nuclear program and strengthened Iran's position in the Gulf, in Lebanon, and possibly in Gaza as well? The neoconservatives who ran our Mideast policy couldn’t have done more to help Iran if they had been on Tehran's payroll.

Better get used to Bolton's line of argument, because we are going to hear it over and over and over. As the new administration wrestles with the mess that Bush & Co. bequeathed them, neoconservative stalwarts will be rewriting history at every opportunity. They will try to portray our position on January 21, 2009, as basically sound, pin every subsequent bit of bad news on Obama, and hope we all forget who we got us into this situation. I have no doubt that Obama and his team will make some mistakes of their own -- and I'll be happy to criticize them when they do -- but let's not forget who dealt them the hand they are being forced to play now.

My take on the elections? They contain some encouraging signs but also some disturbing features, notably the growing accusations of fraud and the fact that exceptional measures had to be taken to prevent violent disruptions. A substantial number of Iraqis seem to be rallying around more secular parties and around Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in particular, which may make it easier for the United States to stick to the withdrawal timetable agreed to in the Status of Forces agreement signed last November. (Don't forget that a majority of Iraqis want us out either immediately or soon, and Maliki's toughminded handling of the SOFA negotiations probably boosted his popularity, even among some Sunnis.) Maliki's Dawa Party and his main coalition partners (the Supreme Islamic Council of Iraq) aren't going to be Tehran's lackeys, but as Juan Cole points out (directly contradicting Bolton’s claims), both groups have good relations with Tehran and are viewed much more favorably by Tehran than Saddam ever was.

One aspect of the results give me pause. Iraq's voters appear to have endorsed parties who favor a strong central state, as opposed to those who might favor greater regional autonomy. On the one hand, a unified Iraq is in the U.S. interest, and we want a central government that is strong enough to maintain order after U.S. forces withdraw. But on the other hand, the stronger the central government becomes, the more that the contending groups will want to control it and greater the potential for trouble with Iraq's Kurds, who still want autonomy if not independence. If Iraq's Sunni population thinks it is getting shut out of power again, then prospects for genuine political reconciliation will remain bleak and renewed violence is likely after we are gone. And that has been the $64,000 question ever since the idea of invading Iraq was first proposed: What is the political formula by which Iraq will be governed now that Saddam's brutal dictatorship is gone?

Chris Hondros/Getty Images

 
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GRAND SEN-OR

6:33 AM ET

February 6, 2009

Stephen, you don't worry about..

Iraqis seem to be rallying around more secular parties and around Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in particular, which may make it easier for the United States to stick to the withdrawal

Stephen! don't worry about non-secular parties as the US made sure that Iraq's Constitution is something like the US secular all the way up and down allowing no rights of making and implementing laws to any SPEE but the secularists only.

BTW, I call this type of mono-law systems secularo-fascist systems, doesn't matter what is the content of their laws.
It is a theoretical concept.

Who won the election?!
Who cares?
If I put in front of you one constitution (one law, one state, one this , one that) there is not much choice there for you to talk about who will win : a donkey or an elephant who else;->

Same for Iran. Do you know what, if your SATFP had "constitution of a State" as a serious term, then you could soundly argue saying:

"A better path is to emphasise on the articles of constitutions that the United States and Iran do have in common"

If you leave aside your fobia about constitutions and bother to read the Iranian constitution, you would discover many, many articles matching to the US';->

For a start both are mono-law. A very strong resemblance, you wouldn't expect;->

Grand Sen~or

 

DAVID IN DC

8:57 PM ET

February 5, 2009

My nominee

My nominee for silliest comment on the Iraqi elections is, no surprise here, the author of this blog for this blog entry.

The issue in question is - Does Iran believe they are in a stronger position with Obama now than they were with Bush?

Walt's argument seems to be that Bush and the neocons messed things up, so really, how could the Iranians think their position could be any better with Obama? I contend that this is a logical fallacy, and furthermore that the Iranians do indeed think their position has strengthened.

US President Barack Obama's offer to talk to Iran shows that America's policy of "domination" has failed, the government spokesman said on Saturday.
"This request means Western ideology has become passive, that capitalist thought and the system of domination have failed," Gholam Hossein Elham was quoted as saying by the Mehr news agency.

"Negotiation is secondary, the main issue is that there is no way but for (the United States) to change," he added.

After nearly three decades of severed ties, Obama said shortly after taking office this month that he is willing to extend a diplomatic hand to Tehran if the Islamic republic is ready to "unclench its fist".

In response, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad launched a fresh tirade against the United States, demanding an apology for its "crimes" against Iran and saying he expected "deep and fundamental" change from Obama.

http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=CNG.073ba2ee2f1f00668848a4655420fedc.411&show_article=1

 

BLUE13326

2:37 AM ET

February 6, 2009

Yes, logic is not his strong

Yes, logic is not his strong suit.

The fact that North Korea is about to launch a missile capable of hitting the US, that Russia is moving to reassert dominance over Central Asia, that Iran launches its first satellite right in the first few weeks after Obama takes over and Bush leaves, it's all just a coincidence, not evidence that our enemies don't take our new president seriously.

Just last week an Indian minister on a televised interview compared Obama to a dog, saying in trying to solve the Kashmir problem, he was 'barking up the wrong tree.' We're in such a better position in the world with a weak president lacking in resolve (except when attacking his domestic foes); break out the wine spritzers!

 

FULANA

6:01 AM ET

February 6, 2009

How do you know that North

How do you know that North Korea is about to launch a missile "capable of hitting the U.S.?" Not even North Korea knows how far the missile will go...isn't that the point of testing?
And why shouldn't Iran launch satellites? How many do we have already? Didn't some minister in Israel say that the invasion in Gaza was practice for the invasion of Iran?
Most of the world is hoping for the best from our new president and that he takes us in a totally different direction from where Bush took us. Most Americans are hoping for change too, that's why we elected him. Since it's only been 2 weeks, I think we should cut him some slack, especially since he has a lot of cleaning up to do after the mess Bush and the neo-con's have left behind.
Scare-mongering does not help.

 

DAVID IN DC

1:25 PM ET

February 6, 2009

re: How do you know...

The signs do point to N. Korea readying a long range missile test. Then there is this (article from Feb 1):

SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea warned Sunday that South Korea's confrontational policies may trigger a war on the divided peninsula, a message coming two days after the communist country vowed to abandon all peace agreements with its southern neighbor....

This appears to be one of Biden's predicted "global tests" for Obama. The talk of abandoning the peace agreements started a week after Obama took office.

I don't know what signals Obama has given/not given N. Korea. This could be just a straight up provocation to see how Obama will react. On the other hand, the Iranians have received signals from the administration - the "unclenched fist" talk, the speech to Muslims on al Arabiya, etc - and are reacting directly to them.

I'd have to think that it is an accepted principle in IR, especially when dealing with aggressive regimes, that it is not uncommon for good faith concessions/compromises to be interpreted as weakness. So while I don't necessarily disagree with Obama's actions, it seems pretty obvious how Iran might believe it is in a better position as a result.

I also wish Obama the best and do not envy him his choices, but I have to disagree with your implication that people should not voice their concerns about the course they believe he is taking.

 

KADHI

1:39 PM ET

February 6, 2009

Perhaps the most galling

Perhaps the most galling point in this misguided post is the claim that an Indian minister compared Obama to a dog. The expression 'barking up the wrong tree' is a common English expression which means that something is not where you are looking for it. It in no way implies that the person barking up the wrong tree is comparable to a dog and should thus be held in low estimation.

Moreover, the actions of the powers you mention have taken months and years of preparation all begun under the Bush administration. The implication of your post is that were a Bush or McCain type figure in power these countries would have shelved their plans which seems patently untrue.

 

COURTNEYME109

1:08 AM ET

February 6, 2009

Neocons rewriting history?

Coming from a proponent of realpolitik/isolationism like Dr Walt - who knows quite a bit about rewriting events historical or au currant - is risibly rich!

 

PARVUS

4:34 AM ET

February 6, 2009

A neocon??....

Walt just can't get his facts straight, beginning with the fact that Bolton is not a neoconservative. Unless, of course, you think that anyone who is a hawk is automatically a neocon--even if they've been a conservative Republican since the Goldwater days and were close politically to Jesse Helms.

 

...

5:46 AM ET

February 6, 2009

bolton is a joke.. a really

bolton is a joke.. a really bad joke...

 

DVANATTA

8:50 PM ET

February 7, 2009

centralized govt in Iraq

Steve, you've overlooked the obvious reason for wanting a centralized government. The largest employer in Iraq is the government -- all the bragging about job creation by the current folks is new government jobs. Ministers control most of the patronage. So the PM wants to control his ministries more closely, and the ministers want more control over governate administrations.

flame for the administrators: having been an FP subscriber since the mag started, and a user of the electronic site forever, why did I have to create a new account just to leave a blog comment, in the course of which I was unsubscribed and resubscribed to the newsletter? And why did I have to hunt around the site for 10 minutes before figuring out that I had to do all of that to leave a minor comment? This new site isn't ready for prime time yet.

 

Stephen M. Walt is the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international relations at Harvard University.

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