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Obama Finds He Can’t Put Iraq War Behind Him

New York Times Original article ›

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How the Obama administration's policies in Syria, Iraq and towards Iran, have increased sectarian and religious conflict, and have pushed back democracy and economic development in the Middle East

06/10/2014

By allowing reckless intervention by Putin's Russia in Syria, and by its policies in the Middle East after the Arab Spring, the Obama administration has starved the hopes of an entire region heavily oriented towards a young demographic for participatory democracy and economic development, leaving it to descend into religious conflict, and then into sectarian conflict.

Grouped Articles

Sunni Militants Drive Iraqi Army Out of Mosul

New York Times 06/10/2014

Mosul Falls to ISIS, Endangering Iraq’s Democracy

New York Times 06/11/2014

U.S. Scrambles to Help Iraq Fight Off Militants as Baghdad Is Threatened

New York Times 06/12/2014

Veterans Watch as Gains Their Friends Died for Are Erased by Insurgents

New York Times 06/13/2014

Obama Finds He Can’t Put Iraq War Behind Him

New York Times 06/13/2014

Iraqi Shiite Cleric Issues Call to Arms

New York Times 06/13/2014

Spillover effects for Iraq, Turkey, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and the U.S. from the civil war in Syria- Sept-Nov. 2012 and by 2014

05/21/2011

The Syrian civil war is spilling over into Iraq. Iraq is unable to protect its airspace from being used by Iran to ship supplies to the Assad regime, or to prevent Turkey's warplanes from using Iraqi airspace to attack Kurdish separatists. There is also a danger of a Sunni-Shiite conflict being exacerabated by former Sunni insurgents in Iraq joining up with Sunni refugees from Syria. The Maliki government in Iraq is moving closer to Iran as the Syrian civil war escalates and brings Sunnis together against the Assad regime. Turkey is also seeing the effects of a flow of refugees on its border with Syria. The Obama administration has been slow to respond to the rapidly developing situation as it concentrates on a complete withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq with the lack of agreement on a residual U.S. troop presence. This leaves the U.S. less than the minimum leverage that is needed just as the sectarian divisions are worsening, after years of investing resources in the region. With the EU countries focussed on economic problems, and the Obama administration's lack of active support for the Free Syria movement, the broader involvement of Iran, Iraq, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Russia in the region, the situation is likely to lead to an international crisis without U.S. leadership.

Grouped Articles

More Help for Syrian Rebels

New York Times 04/22/2013

Clashes Carry Worries of a New Civil War

New York Times 04/28/2013

‘Beyond War,’ by David Rohde

New York Times 05/03/2013

Pentagon Plans for the Worst in Syria

Wall Street Journal 05/07/2013

What if the U.S. doesn’t intervene in Syria? - The Washington Post

Washington Post 05/09/2013

Why did Mr. Obama overrule his advisers on Syria? - The Washington Post

Washington Post 05/09/2013

A weak military in Iraq in 2014-2015, split by sectarian divisions and poorly equipped and trained- in the period following U.S. withdrawal

04/28/2014

The failure of Nouri Maliki to bring together Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds. Sunnis see the Maliki government's anti-terrorist effort as ethnic cleanising, the U.S. is wary of the Maliki government and has refrained from supplying the military, the college setup by the U.S. to train officers remains vacant after the U.S. withdrawal at Maliki's insistence. The militants ISIS organization draws from trained officers in the old Iraqi military before the invasion and Sunni militants in Syria. This threatens the ability of the government to maintain peace in the country and creates risks for Iraqi oil supplies and revenues.

Grouped Articles

Fledgling Iraqi Military Is Outmatched on Battlefield

Wall Street Journal 04/28/2014

Sunni Militants Drive Iraqi Army Out of Mosul

New York Times 06/10/2014

Iraqi, U.S. Forces Trade Barbs Over Failures

Wall Street Journal 06/12/2014

Mosul Falls to ISIS, Endangering Iraq’s Democracy

New York Times 06/11/2014

U.S. Said to Rebuff Iraqi Request to Strike Militants

New York Times 06/11/2014

Sunni Fighters Gain as They Battle 2 Governments, and Other Rebels

New York Times 06/11/2014

Iraq and the need for sectarian unity after American withdrawal in 2011

12/15/2011

Grouped Articles

Iraq's Vote Looks Set to Deepen, Not Heal, Rifts

Wall Street Journal 04/19/2013

Clashes Carry Worries of a New Civil War

New York Times 04/28/2013

Sectarian Attacks Return With a Roar to Iraq, Rattling a Capital Already on Edge

New York Times 08/17/2013

Surge in Iraqi Violence Reunites Maliki and Obama

New York Times 11/01/2013

In Climate of Growing Fear, Iraqis Flee to Safer Ground

Wall Street Journal 01/02/2014

We Iraqis Need Equality, Not Apaches

Wall Street Journal 01/14/2014

The Iraq War- Looking Back

01/05/2009

The U.S. withdrawal from Iraq in 2011 and a look back at the long war and the uncertain road ahead.

Grouped Articles

U.S. Said to Rebuff Iraqi Request to Strike Militants

New York Times 06/11/2014

Obama Finds He Can’t Put Iraq War Behind Him

New York Times 06/13/2014

Diplomatic Note Promises Immunity From Iraqi Law for U.S. Advisory Troops

New York Times 06/23/2014

Iraq’s Military Seen as Unlikely to Turn the Tide

New York Times 06/22/2014

Relief Over U.S. Exit From Iraq Fades as Reality Overtakes Hope

New York Times 06/22/2014

Long War Transforms Military

Wall Street Journal 10/22/2011


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