Iraq: The mission is not yet accomplished
A woman gives a flower to an Iraqi soldier at an army checkpoint in Basra, Iraq's second-largest city on Tuesday. U.S. troops pulled out of Iraqi cities on Tuesday in the first step toward winding down the American war effort by the end of 2011.
NABIL al-JURANI / Associated PressPublished: Tuesday, June 30, 2009 at 4:16 p.m.
Last Modified: Tuesday, June 30, 2009 at 4:16 p.m.
Recent painful events here demonstrate the challenges ahead.
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Corruption and violence are not relics of an overthrown regime in Iraq that exist behind an imaginary line marked “June 30.” They are threats Iraq must fight every day, now largely on our own.
The good news is that we are off to a promising start. As of mid-June, high-profile violence in Iraq was down nearly 60 percent from its peak — and May’s level of terrorist violence was the lowest since 2003 — largely because of the improved capacity and skills of our 500,000-strong police force.
We are working on more than security. My ministry alone has fired more than 60,000 employees on corruption charges and concerns. In June we announced that more than 40 police officers would face charges after an investigation into prison abuse found that inmates had been incarcerated without warrants and that the rights of other inmates had been violated.
Looking beyond the policing and anti-corruption efforts, ordinary Iraqis will perhaps have the strongest say yet in how their future takes hold. We are already looking well past June 30 to Jan. 30, 2010, the date of our next national elections. Many parties, including my own, will field candidates. But this democratic process is not an end in itself. The mere act of voting does not secure our democracy, for it can easily fall into the hands of separatist or foreign-controlled parties. Each successive election here has been a tug of war for our national survival; perhaps none will be more momentous than 2010.
Our choices are between tribalism and nationalism and everything in between -- parties backed by foreign powers and homegrown grass-roots movements; secularists and Islamists. These choices will set in motion Iraq’s rendezvous with destiny.
Jawad al-Bolani is interior minister of Iraq.
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