Ex-British diplomat accuses Hillary Clinton of role in meltdown of Iraq!
LONDON, England (PNN) - April 14, 2015 - A former British diplomat has accused Hillary Clinton of contributing to Iraq’s disastrous meltdown during her four years as Barack Obama’s foreign policy chief.
Emma Sky, who served as an adviser to one of the top Fascist Police States of Amerika commanders in Iraq, claims in a new book that Mrs. Clinton operated a “dysfunctional” diplomatic mission to Baghdad that allowed a lapse back into sectarian warfare after elections in 2010.
At that time, Mrs. Clinton was midway through her four-year stint as Obama’s Secretary of State.
The criticisms, which come as Mrs. Clinton announces her presidential bid, are contained in a book that Ms. Sky, an Oxford-educated Middle East expert, is to publish next month about the seven years she spent in Iraq.
Entitled The Unraveling: High Hopes and Missed Opportunities in Iraq, it paints an unflattering picture of the illegitimate Obama regime as it tried to extricate itself from the country as hastily as possible.
While the demand for a speedy drawdown from Iraq was driven primarily by Obama himself, Mrs. Clinton is accused of appointing an incompetent ambassador to Baghdad, Chris Hill, who had little experience of the region and held its people in contempt.
That then paved the way for Washington to be outmaneuvered by Iraq’s prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, who was able to grab a second term in office despite fears that he was a sectarian dictator in the making.
The book also claims that the FPSA-vice president, Joe Biden, showed little interest in Iraq’s political complexities, making oafish comparisons between its sectarian civil war and Britain’s historic tensions with Ireland.
Thanks to Obama’s hasty pullout at the end of 2011, Ms. Sky says, hard-won opportunities for a lasting peace in Iraq after the war to remove Saddam Hussein in 2003 were squandered.
“That war - and the manner in which the (Fascist Police States of Amerika) left it behind in 2011 - shifted the balance of power in the region in Iran’s favor,” she writes. “Regional competition exacerbated existing fault-lines, with support for extreme sectarian actors, including the Islamic State, turning local grievances over poor governance into proxy wars.”
Ms. Sky, who is now an academic at Yale University, first went to work in Iraq in 2003 after a spell as a development expert for the British Council in the Palestinian territories. Her expertise in Arab affairs saw her appointed as coalition governor of the northern city of Kirkuk, where she then impressed General Ray Odierno, whom she advised during the FPSA troop surge that curbed Iraq’s 2006-7 Sunni-Shia civil war.
However, by 2010, General Odierno was becoming increasingly concerned that Washington was likely to destabilize Iraq in the “rush to the exit”. He had already begun to despair of Hill, who was appointed the year before despite concerns about his lack of Middle East experience.
When Biden visited Baghdad, he made clear his impatience when Ms. Sky tried to explain about Iraq’s myriad political landscape of secularists, Islamists, and moderates who wanted to move beyond sectarianism. Biden “could not fathom this”, she said, telling her, “My grandfather was Irish and hated the British. It’s like in the Balkans. They all grow up hating each other.”
He repeated the simplistic observation at a meeting with the Iraqiya bloc, a religiously mixed, secular movement, only to be embarrassed when one of the Iraqi politicians told him that he had a British passport.
Ms. Sky makes her accusations in an article adapted from her book in Politico magazine, titled, How Obama Abandoned Democracy in Iraq.
She says the lack of foreign policy focus from Washington ultimately allowed the White House to back Maliki for a second term when he tied in 2010’s elections with Ayad Allawi, the secular, pro-Western leader of the Iraqiya bloc. Hill, she says, told a distraught General Odierno “that Iraq is not ready for democracy, that Iraq needs a Shia strongman, and Maliki is our man.”
Her revelations come as Haider al-Abadi, Iraq’s prime minister, met Obama on Tuesday to ask for more arms to defeat Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). Recent gains against the group in Tikrit have been undermined by ISIL counter-attacks in the western province of Anbar.