Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki Backs Obama Troop Exit Plan

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First Posted: 07-19-08 09:33 AM   |   Updated: 07-27-08 05:12 AM

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Al Maliki

***UPDATE*** 7/20, 11:50pm ET A spokesman for al-Maliki has said the Prime Minister's comments were "mistranslated", but Der Spiegel is standing by its story:

Maliki was quick to back away from an outright endorsement of Obama, saying "who they choose as their president is the Americans' business." But he then went on to say: "But it's the business of Iraqis to say what they want. And that's where the people and the government are in general agreement: The tenure of the coalition troops in Iraq should be limited."


A Baghdad government spokesman, Ali al-Dabbagh, said in a statement that SPIEGEL had "misunderstood and mistranslated" the Iraqi prime minister, but didn't point to where the misunderstanding or mistranslation might have occurred. Al-Dabbagh said Maliki's comments "should not be understood as support to any US presidential candidates." The statement was sent out by the press desk of the US-led Multinational Force in Iraq.

A number of media outlets likewise professed to being confused by the statement from Maliki's office. The New York Times pointed out that al-Dabbagh's statement "did not address a specific error." CBS likewise expressed disbelief pointing out that Maliki mentions a timeframe for withdrawal three times in the interview and then asks, "how likely is it that SPIEGEL mistranslated three separate comments? Matthew Yglesias, a blogger for the Atlantic Monthly, was astonished by "how little effort was made" to make the Baghdad denial convincing. And the influential blog IraqSlogger also pointed out the lack of specifics in the government statement.

SPIEGEL sticks to its version of the conversation.

The New York Times reports that US Embassy Officials contacted Maliki's office to "explain" how the Prime Minister's comments were being interpreted:

The interview prompted immediate concern from the Bush administration, which called to seek clarification from Mr. Maliki's office, American officials said.


Scott M. Stanzel, a White House spokesman with President Bush at his ranch in Crawford, Tex., said that embassy officials explained to the Iraqis how the interview in Der Spiegel was being interpreted, given that it came just a day after the two governments announced an agreement over American troops.

"The Iraqis were not aware and wanted to correct it," he said.

The Washington Post confirms that the tepid retraction came after a call from Embassy officials:

The statement by an aide to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki calling his remarks in Der Spiegel "misinterpreted and mistranslated" followed a call to the prime minister's office from U.S. government officials in Iraq.
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***EARLIER***

From Reuters:

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki told a German magazine he supported prospective U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama's proposal that U.S. troops should leave Iraq within 16 months.

In an interview with Der Spiegel released on Saturday, Maliki said he wanted U.S. troops to withdraw from Iraq as soon as possible.

"U.S. presidential candidate Barack Obama talks about 16 months. That, we think, would be the right timeframe for a withdrawal, with the possibility of slight changes."

It is the first time he has backed the withdrawal timetable put forward by Obama.

Dr. Susan Rice, senior national security advisor to the Obama Campaign, issued this statement in response to al-Maliki's declaration of support:

Senator Obama welcomes Prime Minister Maliki's support for a 16 month timeline for the redeployment of U.S combat brigades. This presents an important opportunity to transition to Iraqi responsibility, while restoring our military and increasing our commitment to finish the fight in Afghanistan.

Joe Klein, writing on the Time Magazine website, said that Maliki's position is a bad omen for the McCain campaign:

In short, what Maliki is saying is: Please leave, as soon as possible. He may be saying this for local, political reasons, in the runup to the regional Iraqi elections, but he's saying it.


In the U.S., this is all bad news for the McCain campaign. Yes, McCain was right about the Surge, but that is a small, tactical truth too complicated to be understood by most Americans. Maliki Endorses Obama Withdrawal Plan is a headline everyone can understand. Maliki is also endorsing another position favored by Obama and opposed by McCain: no long-term (100 year) bases.

With this happening in the same week that the Bush Administration not only has agreed to sit down with the Iranians but also (and even more significant) is exploring the possibility of establishing a U.S. diplomatic Interests Section in Tehran, another of McCain's foreign policy pillars--the nonrecognition of Iran--seems to be cratering as well.

It will be interesting to see how McCain responds to all this. But it does seem that real events in the real world are endorsing Obama's foreign policy vision, not McCain's.

Josh Marshall writes, "In a stroke, I think, al Maliki has cut McCain off at the knees in a way I'm not sure his campaign strategy can recover from." Tom Hayden calls it a "stunning diplomatic breakthrough."

Marc Ambinder at The Atlantic declares Maliki's move a possible game-changer:

This could be one of those unexpected events that forever changes the way the world perceives an issue. Iraq's Prime Minister agrees with Obama, and there's no wiggle room or fudge factor. This puts John McCain in an extremely precarious spot: what's left to argue? to argue against Maliki would be to predicate that Iraqi sovereignty at this point means nothing. Obviously, our national interests aren't equivalent to Iraq's, but... Malik isn't listening to the generals on the ground...but the "hasn't been to Iraq" line doesn't work here.


So how will the McCain campaign respond?

Update: McCain campaign finally releases a statement:

ARLINGTON, VA -- Today, McCain 2008 Senior Foreign Policy Advisor Randy Scheunemann issued the following statement:


"The difference between John McCain and Barack Obama is that Barack Obama advocates an unconditional withdrawal that ignores the facts on the ground and the advice of our top military commanders. John McCain believes withdrawal must be based on conditions on the ground. Prime Minister Maliki has repeatedly affirmed the same view, and did so again today. Timing is not as important as whether we leave with victory and honor, which is of no apparent concern to Barack Obama. The fundamental truth remains that Senator McCain was right about the surge and Senator Obama was wrong. We would not be in the position to discuss a responsible withdrawal today if Senator Obama's views had prevailed."


***UPDATE*** 7/20, 11:50pm ET A spokesman for al-Maliki has said the Prime Minister's comments were "mistranslated", but Der Spiegel is standing by its story: Maliki was quick to back away from an ou...
***UPDATE*** 7/20, 11:50pm ET A spokesman for al-Maliki has said the Prime Minister's comments were "mistranslated", but Der Spiegel is standing by its story: Maliki was quick to back away from an ou...
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- AnnieinOR I'm a Fan of AnnieinOR 24 fans permalink

I'd be afraid of water-boarding too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 PM on 07/21/2008
- soundfury I'm a Fan of soundfury 13 fans permalink

Either you're with us or your against us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 07/21/2008
- FirstShirt I'm a Fan of FirstShirt 63 fans permalink

And yet, :

CNN's National Poll of Polls


Barack Obama 47%

John McCain 41%

Can't even beat the old codger with 52 mil a month.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 PM on 07/21/2008
- FirstShirt I'm a Fan of FirstShirt 63 fans permalink

There goes that numbered Swiss account. Better wait for the election, Al.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:47 PM on 07/21/2008
- aaronr2000 I'm a Fan of aaronr2000 8 fans permalink
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Bill Maher nailed this a long time ago when General Petraeus testified before Congress that 1. The surge is working, 2. we shouldn't pull out of Iraq anytime soon and 3. his words are his own. Bill said that Bush has this interesting scam going. First he puts words into his stooges' mouths, and then he quotes them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 PM on 07/21/2008

Bush and Co can try and spin this whichever way the chose but the message from Iraq President is pretty clear, GO HOME.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:32 PM on 07/21/2008

There's no place like home!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:06 PM on 07/21/2008
- Wingit I'm a Fan of Wingit 8 fans permalink

Cancel the plans for the world's largest "embassy" in Iraq. Maliki clearly wants no part of the U.S. takeover of his country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 PM on 07/21/2008

Too bad it's already built. Maybe the remaining 130,000 Blackwater mercenaries could convert it to a Super-Walmart.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 PM on 07/21/2008
- Mogamboguru I'm a Fan of Mogamboguru 320 fans permalink
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The Iranians will gladly take it over, once the US-diplomats will have moved out there.

But only after the embassy's electrical wiring has been scaled up from US-american to iranian standard..­.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 07/21/2008
- soundfury I'm a Fan of soundfury 13 fans permalink

Don't worry that too shall be. It's part of the conversion process.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 PM on 07/21/2008

This admnistration does not want to leave Iraq. The whole purpose of the invasion was to stay in Iraq indefinitely. I expect that Bush and Cheney will parade in Baghdad yelling, "Hell No, We won't Go!!"

Anybody yet find out any park in Iraq named after Bush, as Richard Perle predicted?

This whole Iraq business speaks volumes of how some Americans (re:Bush and friends) perceive the character of foreigners. They expected we would be received as liberators, they expected grateful Iraqis would hand over their country to us, they expected the Iraqis would equate our self-interest with their self-interest.

Come to find out that the Iraqis have a mind of their own, a pride of their country of their own which they love, and and independence of self-interest that this administration did not expect.

Wait for the neo con complaint of Iraqi ungratefulness, on Fox News, Limbaugh, Hannity and O'Reilly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 07/21/2008
- Quotidien I'm a Fan of Quotidien 6 fans permalink
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I think that phone conversation went something like this:

Bush: hey Maliki, what the heck you doin', buddy? Don't give any kudos to that Obama fella. Yer makin' us look bad.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 07/21/2008
- paixa3 I'm a Fan of paixa3 23 fans permalink

Stuff the sociopath in the white house. He can go to hell.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 PM on 07/21/2008
- Grannysue I'm a Fan of Grannysue 131 fans permalink
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So the WH will tell the Iraqi government what to say, when to say it, how to say it and to read from the script! Fine, anything they say we will reverse to get the real story. What a bunch of idiots our government has working in the WH. They look like the bafoons they are, I'm sure McNuts was on the phone five minutes after the story broke that Maliki supported Obama's timeline, stating "Hey, what the hell is going on, doesn't this guy know I'm the one who's suppose to win?". Sorry McNuts, too late, your toast!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 PM on 07/21/2008

Me thinks W and WcCain need to look up the definition of "sovereign". Of course, that kind of info would've been nice to know prior to illegally invading Iraq in the first place...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:21 PM on 07/21/2008
- BhunduBoy I'm a Fan of BhunduBoy 5 fans permalink

Iraq is a US occupied nation, as your argument accurately concludes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 PM on 07/21/2008
- Vinca I'm a Fan of Vinca 6 fans permalink

This admin is trying to say there's was a language misunderstanding, THERE WASN'T < THIS WAR IS BANKRUPTING AMERICA> Nothing will happen until Obama starts withdrawing troops in 2009, THEN OUR SOLDIERS CAN COME HOME TO THEIR FAMILIES

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 07/21/2008
- TheRebel82 I'm a Fan of TheRebel82 3 fans permalink

Ohhh...The Bush lackies got BUSTED! Bwahahahaha! Maliki does support Obama's withdrawal plan and you NEO-CON goofs are so screwed!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:19 PM on 07/21/2008
- carlgt1 I'm a Fan of carlgt1 12 fans permalink

Amazing -- once again RepugliKKKans are caught red-handed lying & cheating the American people in their zeal for revisionist history!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:13 PM on 07/21/2008

Just in from CENTCOM - Statement from Lt. Col. Boots O'Deground. "Due to the success of the surge and Baathist rehabilitation, alonmg with the continuing unreliability of translators serving Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki, all further statements from the Iraqi government are inoperative unless issued by new Iraqi government spokesman, Baghdad Bob." Approved for release 21/7/08 Maj. General Timeline.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 PM on 07/21/2008
- hunterjond I'm a Fan of hunterjond 2 fans permalink
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This may finally be the final rationalization for the war falling into the dustbin of history. First WMD, then regime change, the fight them there rather than fight them here, then stay until there's a stable democracy, able to defend itself and be a partner in the war on terror, then the last, although only tacitly admitted to, permanent forward military bases to project US military power in the region to protect oil and threaten Iran in order to discourage their nuclear ambitions. Well, surprise, surprise, the Iraqi goverment actually has to listen to its people and say no to permanent US bases and to demand a "time horizon" for US troops to leave. Funny when a democracy actually responds to the desires of its citizens. We should try that sometime.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 PM on 07/21/2008
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