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Checkpoint Baghdad

  • Crocker Disappointed With Progress

    Larry Kaplow | Aug 21, 2007 04:46 PM

     

    Downplaying Expectations? Ambassador Crocker, speaking to Baghdad store owners this past weekend, says just about everyone is unhappy with work on the ‘benchmarks’.
    U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker hasn't yet written the report to Congress he is supposed to give, along with General David Petraeus, in mid-September on the state of Iraq. Things change so quickly here, he said, that "Lord knows" what the landscape will look like by then. But he acknowledged that, as of now, the work on the political "benchmarks" that American leaders demand of Baghdad "has been extremely disappointing, frustrating to all concerned, to us, to Iraqis to the Iraqi leadership itself." The assessment came with the usual explanations Crocker has stated in the past that the problems facing Iraqi leaders are excruciatingly complicated and difficult and that the U.S. continues to support Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. But he also repeats his warning that the support is "not a blank check."

    In the marble-lined palace housing most of the U.S. Embassy staff on Tuesday, around a table with the coffee, bottled water and cookies offered at these briefings, it was unclear exactly why Crocker wanted to hold the briefing, which was scheduled a few days ago. He gave no opening statement before throwing it open to questions that he answered in characteristic modesty--noting when he had doubts or didn't have answers. He likely wants to downplay the emphasis and expectations around the September report. Crocker said that even if the Iraqi government had tackled all the benchmark issues, the country could still be headed in the wrong direction. And even if it tackles none of them, but leaders are talking, bonding and building their capacity for peaceful politics, Iraq could be on the right track.

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