Rally ‘Round The Flag
by dday
This may be a little thing, but signs that a war where Americans are still dying is intractable doesn’t seem to me to be that little.
Officials in Iraq’s mostly Sunni Muslim Anbar province are refusing to raise Iraq’s new national flag, which the parliament approved earlier this week.
“The new flag is done for a foreign agenda and we won’t raise it,” said Ali Hatem al Suleiman, a leading member of the U.S.-backed Anbar Awakening Council, “If they want to force us to raise it, we will leave the yard for them to fight al Qaida.”
Why have the Sunnis in Anbar turned against the Iraqi flag?
A slim minority of parliamentarians approved the new flag, which doesn’t have Saddam Hussein’s handwriting or the three stars that represented his Sunni-dominated Baath Party.
It was rushed through parliament before a pan-Arab parliament meeting that’s planned for March in Irbil, in the Kurdish north, because the Kurdish Regional Government prohibits flying Iraq’s Saddam-era flag. The Kurds consider that flag a symbol of Saddam’s oppression.
Only 165 of the Iraqi parliament’s 275 lawmakers were present Tuesday, and only 110 voted for the new red, white and black flag with “Allahu Akbar” (“God is great”) in Kufic script, the ancient calligraphy developed in Mesopotamia.
You have a “country” which can’t even be united under something as symbolic as the same flag. Somehow the Administration still believes that steps are being taken toward reconciliation. And this is not just a Sunni-Shi’a thing:
Many Iraqis, including some lawmakers who rejected the flag, were angered at what they considered a change to the flag in order to please the Kurdish north and its president, Massoud Barzani.
“We don’t want to handle the problem of the Kurdistan region by causing problems with other regions that might refuse the new flag,” said Nassar al Rubaie, the head of radical Shiite Muslim cleric Muqtada al Sadr’s bloc in parliament, who voted against the new flag.
The country cannot be brought together under the same banner; at least, not in the fashion that has been attempted thus far.
Meanwhile, the over-under on sentences about Iraq in the State of the Union tonight is 3.
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