"In an exchange with Rep. Ron Paul, Al-Jaberi said that U.S. presence in Iraq is..."

haaaylee

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NOTE::: the video is fucked up right now but will hopefully be fixed soon........... or a new one will come out.



Iraqi Parliamentarian: 70 Percent Of Iraqis Want Withdrawal, Huge U.S. Embassy Not A ‘Positive Signal’



Today, the House held a hearing featuring two members of the Iraqi Parliament in order “to hear their assessment of the proposed U.S.-Iraq Security Agreement,” an agreement proposed by the Bush administration permitting combat forces in Iraq for an unspecified period of time. Iraq is currently seeing “growing and widespread protests…over the scope of the agreement.”

In the hearing, parliamentarians Nadeem Al-Jaberi and Khalaf Al-Ulayyan expressed their support for a timetable for withdrawal of U.S. troops. In an exchange with Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX), Al-Jaberi said that U.S. presence in Iraq is highly unpopular with the public, as roughly 70 percent of Iraqis favor a withdrawal:






PAUL: What percent of the Iraqi people would agree with us leaving under those circumstances?

AL-JABERI: I ask you to perhaps have a referendum, and that will tell you the truth.

PAUL: So you have no idea. You have no idea. Maybe only 5 percent would support us leaving. You have to have an idea.

AL-JABERI: Of course not. The majority of the people of Iraq are with the withdrawal. … Perhaps even about 70 percent.​

Watch it:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4VLXPM0AKKE


Given the Iraqis’ opposition to U.S. forces, Paul asked how the public perceives the 104-acre, $700 million U.S. embassy in Baghdad, which consists of 27 buildings and 3,000 employees. Jaberi ripped its massive scale:

AL-JABERI: It is certainly larger than the diplomatic mission for which it has arrived for. … I mean why do we need 3,000 employees in an embassy in Iraq if we consider it as a diplomatic mission like any other diplomatic mission? From the principle of reciprocity, would it be appropriate for Iraqis to establish a 3,000 employee embassy in Washington? … It [the embassy] certainly would not be a very positive signal to the Iraqi people.​

Al-Jaberi also criticized the enclosed nature of embassy activities, which sits in the heavily-fortified Green Zone: “And yes, there is some procrastination in its relationship with the society, because its relations are limited to the Green Zone.”


Update
Spencer Ackerman notes that al-Ulayyan, when asked about the invasion of Iraq, remarked: "I would prefer if it didn't happen, because it led to the destruction of the country. The U.S. got rid of one person. It put in hundreds of persons that are worse than Saddam Hussein. Unfortunately, now Iran is going into Iraq, and this is under the umbrella of the United States."

Update
Rep. Bill Delahunt (D-MA) also released a letter today from 31 Iraqi legislators "asserting that the proposed [long-term security] agreement is opposed by a majority of the parliament if it does not include a specific timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. military troops."
 
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Man, neocon's just got PWNed real bad. Ron Paul'ed. Old School'd. However you want to say it, Ron Paul was right again and the majority of our government leaders - wrong.
 
That video is quite f'd up!! I only wish our troops were moving out of Iraq as fast as they are in the video. :p
 
Someone in the comments section actually said Ron Paul was out of touch for not getting that they want us out ............:confused:
 
CSPAN online video: rtsp://video1.c-span.org/project/iraq/iraq060408_parliament.rm

RP's questions start 1hr 11min. ;)
 
And his opening statement is at 24:30ish.


Oh Man, i love his response after they announce him as a former candidate.... he laughs. So good.

Can someone do a graphic of that like they did for the ROn Paul look to McCain during the debate?
 
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And his opening statement is at 24:30ish.
His opening statement is AWESOME. :)
Ron Paul is very well spoken, and a great communicator. He is everything a diplomat should be. He makes me proud. :)

Thank you Walter Jones. :)

One last thing,
did you notice how Al-Jaberi and Al-Ulayyan turned and looked at one another as Walter Jones spoke about the war?
 
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Thank you for the C-SPAN video link. I agree that Congressman Paul is an awesome sight to behold when he speaks. (A teensy tad bit frightening, really.)


ETA: I also read the comments over at ThinkProgress.org, and nearly fell off my chair after reading #10's comment about egocentric, insensitive, and out-of-touch Ron Paul deserving a punch in the mouth. Erm, okay... :confused::rolleyes::D:cool:
 
Thank you for the C-SPAN video link. I agree that Congressman Paul is an awesome sight to behold when he speaks. (A teensy tad bit frightening, really.)


ETA: I also read the comments over at ThinkProgress.org, and nearly fell off my chair after reading #10's comment about egocentric, insensitive, and out-of-touch Ron Paul deserving a punch in the mouth. Erm, okay... :confused::rolleyes::D:cool:

...
 
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That was an interesting point about timetables actually stopping violent gangs somewhere around 1h25mn or so. Is anybody archiving this segment?

rtsp://video1.c-span.org/project/iraq/iraq060408_parliament.rm
 
This testimony basically backs up the claim that our strategy in Iraq is completely flawed and that the only chance for positive change in that region is our withdrawel.

This better make the news. I swear, I'll lose it if it doesn't.
 
3 of the most principled people in congress at that hearing: Ron Paul, Jeff Flake, and Walter Jones. America would be such a great country if we had this level of discussion regularly.
 
If someone could make a high res video of Ron's opening statement, and the questions part, and we somehow managed to play that at the national convention, I'm sure it would make some blind McCain followers there think twice...

It will make them realize "wait. Didn't we laugh at this guy for suggesting these things? We may have been wrong all this time..."
 
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