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IPS Correspondent Gareth Porter talks to Real News.

The U.S. military establishment believed they could easily pressure President Obama to back down on his pledge to withdraw troops from Iraq within 16 months. Having found Obama unconvinced by their argument, they have now launched a campaign in Washington to blame Obama's withdrawal policy for any future instability in Iraq.

U.S.: "War Comes Home" with Ft. Hood Shootings
By Dahr Jamail
PHOENIX, Arizona - While investigators probe for a motive behind the mass shooting at the Fort Hood military base in Texas Thursday, in which an army psychiatrist is suspected of killing 13 people, military personnel at the base are in shock as the incident "brings the war home".
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RIGHTS-US: Lawsuit Probes Role of Psychologists in Terror War
By William Fisher
NEW YORK - The state board responsible for licensing - and disciplining - psychologists in Louisiana is accused of turning a blind eye to serious allegations of abuse against one of its members, including complicity in beatings, religious and sexual humiliation, rape threats and painful body positions during his service as a senior advisor on interrogations for the U.S. military in Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib.
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IRAQ: U.S. Diplomatic Adviser's Troubling Role in Oil Politics
Analysis by Helena Cobban*
WASHINGTON - In 2003, U.S. diplomatist Peter Galbraith resigned at the end of a distinguished, 24-year government career. Over the years that followed, he worked as a contract-based adviser to leaders in Iraq's Kurdish community, while also arguing passionately in public media that Iraq's Kurds should be given maximum independence from Baghdad - including full control over any new sources of oil.
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IRAQ: Stormy Times as U.S. Withdraws
Analysis by Helena Cobban
WASHINGTON - Political violence in Iraq killed 456 Iraqis in August, the highest monthly death toll since July 2008. And with the U.S. showing no sign it plans to reverse the troop withdrawal that is now well underway, numerous struggles for power are shaping up inside Iraq.
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RIGHTS-US: CIA Probe Should Go Farther, Groups Say
By William Fisher
NEW YORK - Attorney General Eric Holder's decision Monday to investigate whether interrogators from the Central Intelligence Agency or its contractors violated any federal laws in applying "enhanced interrogation techniques" to detainees in U.S. custody overseas triggered immediate criticism from human rights advocates and appeared to widen the partisan divide between Republicans and Democrats.
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RIGHTS-US: Justice to Probe Detainee Abuses
By William Fisher
NEW YORK - The issue of detainee interrogation and abuse – lately eclipsed by the debate over U.S. health care reform – bubbled back to the surface Monday in a number of headline-making developments.
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BOOKS-US: Soldiers Who Just Say No
By Jon Letman
KAUAI, Hawaii - Six months into Barack Obama's presidency, the U.S. public's display of antiwar sentiment has faded to barely a whisper.
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IRAQ: Shi’a Unity Deal Explodes U.S. Proxy War Myth
Analysis by Gareth Porter*
WASHINGTON - The agreement announced Monday between Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and a Shi’a resistance group called the "League of the Righteous" (Asa'ib al-Haq) formally ended the group’s armed opposition to the regime in return for the release of its leader and eight other Shi’a detainees. This deals a final blow to the U.S. military’s narrative of an Iranian "proxy war" in Iraq.
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IRAQ: Chance of a Breakthrough With the Kurds?
Analysis by Mohammed A. Salih
WASHINGTON - A recent meeting between Iraq’s Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and Kurdish President Massoud Barzani appears to be a crucial step in lowering tensions in the country, but it has also prompted questions as to whether the two leaders can put an end to their differences.
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MIDEAST: As U.S. Winds Down, Iraq Tilts Toward Iran
By Ali Gharib
NEW YORK - A raid by Iraqi security forces on a camp of Iranian dissidents is widely seen as a sign that Iraqi authorities are establishing their independence as the U.S. occupation winds down – and tilting instead towards Iran.
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US-IRAQ: Al-Maliki Dons Mantle of Seasoned Statesman
Analysis by Mohammed A. Salih
WASHINGTON - His visit to the U.S. this week was meant to be a show of statesmanship, much different than when he was in Washington last time.
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MIDEAST: Turkey Gets Boost from Pipeline Politics
Analysis by Helena Cobban*
WASHINGTON - The political geography of the modern Middle East has been affected for one hundred years by the appetite of westerners and other outsiders for the region's hydrocarbons.
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MIGRATION: U.S. to Admit Palestinian Refugees from Iraq
By Marina Litvinsky
WASHINGTON - Approximately 1,350 Palestinian refugees from Iraq are being considered for resettlement in the U.S. after being referred to the U.S. Refugee Admissions Programme by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
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US-IRAQ: Kurds Caught Up in Biden's Diplomatic Offensive
Analysis by Mohammed A. Salih
WASHINGTON - The indefinite postponement of a referendum on Iraqi Kurdistan's controversial draft constitution just days after a visit by U.S. Vice President Joe Biden has given rise to speculation that Washington may have played a role in the delay.
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POLITICS: Behind Detainee Release, a U.S.-Iraqi Conflict on Iran
Analysis by Gareth Porter*
WASHINGTON - The release Friday of five Iranians held by the U.S. military in Iraq for two and a half years highlights the long-simmering conflict between the U.S. and Iraqi views of Iranian policy in Iraq and of the role of its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) there.
MORE >>
 

RIGHTS: New Charges Added to Blackwater Lawsuit
By William Fisher
NEW YORK - New charges filed against private security contractor Blackwater accuse the company of murder, destruction of audio and videotaped evidence, distribution of controlled substances, tax evasion, child prostitution, and weapons smuggling.
MORE >>
 

 

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Unlike most other international news media, who report on Iraq from inside the heavily-fortified Green Zone in Baghdad, IPS's Iraqi correspondents spread across the country to bring you some of the boldest reporting about this war-torn nation. To this IPS adds incisive coverage from the international centres of power where the future of Iraq is being moulded.
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The Winter Soldier
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News in RSS
MIDEAST: Lessons from the Karine A -Déjà Vu All Over Again
MIDEAST: Abbas Produces a Dubious Twist
POLITICS: U.N. Affirms Israeli-Hamas War Crimes Report
US-SYRIA: Diplomatic Thaw Just Penetrating the Surface
RIGHTS: Palestinian Women Suffer as Israel Violates CEDAW
MIDEAST: Peace Plan May Yet Survive New Twists
U.S.: Congress Out of Step with Public on Intl Law?
Q&A: 'This Calm Will Not Last'
RIGHTS-US: Another Legal Setback for Arar Torture Case
U.S.: Obama's Outreach to Muslim World Teetering
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News in RSS
POLITICS: Thai-Cambodia Diplomatic Row Bares Decades-Long Rift
SRI LANKA: Colombo’s Diplomatic Sparring Games with EU, U.S.
CLIMATE CHANGE-US: Too Little, Too Late for Copenhagen?
HONDURAS: Unilateral "Unity Government" Announced; Deal "Dead"
RIGHTS-NICARAGUA: Mudslinging Match Between Gov't, Activists
MIDEAST: Lessons from the Karine A -Déjà Vu All Over Again
AFRICA: We Are the Government
U.S.: "War Comes Home" with Ft. Hood Shootings
Q&A: Geert Wilders Gets a Big Email Hug
CLIMATE CHANGE: Divide Before You Add
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