After U.S. Sanctions & Wars Tore Iraq Apart, Can American-Led Strikes Be Expected to Save It?
SINAN ANTOON: I really dont know, and I dont think it matters right now. I mean, the problem is now were dealing with the consequences not just of Malikis politicsof course, primarily his politicsbut everything that has been happening for the last eight years and never really having areally, a vision or a strategy.
And I just want to point out that its important to remember the timing of the U.S. intervention. You know, ISIS took over Mosul and took over all of these villages, and its only when ISIS was close to Erbil, where there is a CIA office and where there are corporate oil interests, that then the United States moved much faster. So, again, please, we always have to repeat that. This has nothing to do with humanitarian issues. Nothing at all. I mean, we, I think, citizens, have to learn after all these years, and especially the last 10 years, that humanitarian issues are notare not the reason why there is any intervention. We always have to look at geopolitics, and maybe, of course, dealing with some opposition or rising voices of criticism in the metropolis.
http://www.democracynow.org/2014/10/2/after_us_sanctions_wars_tore_iraq