Saif al-Arab
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We must draw differences between such policies, when speaking of Maliki vs Abadi policies we are talking about the strategic level. The executions that happen on a small scale are operational level and will not be reason for IS support given that they specifically target the enemy, not random civillians as many IS apologists try to tell. The ERU unit which recently was shown in a documentary torturing/executing IS elements is lead by a Sunni, I think you saw the video. All of this is no issue, the military is closely aligned to the US military and they will be working together for the next decade to come. They've also grown and will continue to grow under partial supervision of the US, in one way this safeguards them from the political corruption given that there's a powerful external force keeping overwatch on the development.
That cannot be said for all other branches of the system, corruption I would like to point out remains very high. The state is weak, I don't think there was much corruption under Saddam. As for the land grabbing Kurds, we agree on this. Nationalism wise, I unfortunately don't find too many in Iraq who share my belief; my belief was common in the 80's and early 90's, then religion made its entry into people's ideology.
As you said, it seems to be going well on the military level which is what i'm most interested in. I'm aware that it requires a combined effort on all fronts to achieve lasting victory and progression of the country. But what can you do when your top leaders are trash?
One should take a look at Hoshyar Zebari's tweets on Twitter, he was a minister in Iraq for over 10 years or something? You can clearly see his pro Kurd, Iraq hatred in his tweets. Such trash should be dealt with as during the old days. Abadi has done good but remains a weak leader, I know that there's a danger in wanting a strong leader given that they often turn out to be dictators.
Which is alpha and omega actually. A combined effort that is. As long as that is lacking no everlasting progress can occur. If it occurs it will always be sporadic and prone to destruction due to the weak fundament.
I don't even consider tiny "KRG" as Iraq. The only thing that matters is the disputed territories if we are talking about land. "KRG" is nothing more than a burden for Iraq. The only thing that needs to be guaranteed is future downstream water flow from al-Furat and Dijlah which also involves Turkey.
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/iraq/2015-08-23/rivers-babylon
http://www.thetower.org/article/iraq-has-another-big-problem-water-and-is-thirsty-for-answers/
http://jpinyu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/The-Water-Crisis-in-Syria-and-Iraq.pdf
Another catastrophic problem for Iraq's society, economy and future is the role of Iran which every Iraqi patriot is well aware of and understands is a major threat.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/15/world/middleeast/iran-iraq-iranian-power.html
BTW the video that I talked about will have consequences for the perpetrators according to the Iraqi army itself. Remains to be seen but I am happy that the people in power (at least some of them) can see that this was not the way to go.
http://www.thebaghdadpost.com/en/story/14369/Iraq-investigating-Mosul-cliff-killing-video
https://www.alaraby.co.uk/english/n...laims-of-horrific-cliff-top-killing-by-troops
BTW, don't worry, I won't waste my time discussing internal Iraqi and Arab affairs with Iranians or other foreigners here so I won't derail the thread. Well-informed Iraqis and Iraqi patriots and nationalists share similar views to mine regardless of sect.
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