"Today Iraq’s 37 member cabinet approved the proposed SOFA between the U.S. and Iraq by a 27-1 margin. Nine cabinet members were not present for the vote. Right now it looks like the deal will pass the Iraqi Parliament in its current form. So what exactly changes when the new agreement goes into effect on January 1st? After the jump I’ve listed the sections of the agreement that most jumped out at me as being significant changes and what they mean for the U.S. Italicized sections are directly copied from the SOFA. Two sentence summary at the very end."
Read the whole post. Here's the conclusion:
"Article Twenty Five
2. U.S. combat forces will withdraw from all cities, towns, and villages as soon as the Iraqi forces take over the full security responsibility in them. The U.S. withdrawal from these areas shall take place no later than June 30th , 2009
This is the biggie in the timed withdrawal section. I really don’t know what form U.S. operations would take after June 30. Are foot patrols still OK? Only if in conjunction with IPs? Will American troops be reduced to a giant quick reaction force (QRF)? However it turns out, expect a sizable drawdown of troop numbers either around this date or as soon after as it has become verified that this change is not immediately plunging the country into a lower circle of hell. President-elect Obama has said he wants to put more troops in Afghanistan. They have to come from somewhere, and this seems like a good place. The most likely form such a troop shift would take is units that are scheduled for Iraq in the coming months would be re-routed to Afghanistan and units coming home from Iraq simply wouldn’t be replaced.
In Isaac Asimov’s classic Foundation series, there’s a part where they boil down all the diplomatic and legalistic talk from a bunch of mealy-mouthed diplomats into simple coherent statements. Apply that method to this SOFA and you get the following statement:
We’re Iraqi and we actually own and run our own country. Also, tell the American soldiers to quit being dicks.
Iraq got most of what it wanted in this deal. The neo-cons got absolutely nothing they wanted in it. As far as I’m concerned, that’s a win for everybody."
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