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That Sinking Feeling - From The Alchemist

You almost feel sorry for Tom Switzer, the Opinion Editor of Rupert Murdoch's listing, drifting flagship, The Australian, who keeps trying to defend the indefensible. The mood of the nation has changed. Even the 47% who supposedly voted for John Howard, are thrilled to be rid of the bugger. (The Australian misread the landslide right to the end, predicting a "cliffhanger"). Those who are fed up with Howard, are also fed up with Murdoch's lynch mob ­- the self serving fanatics who hate Greens, love wars and suck up to the powerful.

Flagship Murdoch is in a quandary. How do you open up the Opinion page to a wide spectrum of views, without upsetting the hacks at the helm? Those neo-con groupies of Washington bullies, torture and all, who had to be dragged kicking and screaming into an awareness that emissions matter. Tom's lead tongued asses spent a decade pissing on progressives, but now he's trying to argue that the paper has long been paragon of ideological equilibrium. Sure Tom, that's why you published 25 pieces on Why Al Gore is Wrong about Climate Change. And why you are scratching to name any regular dissenters, apart from the official court jester, Phillip Adams.

While it's silly for lefties to pressure The Australian into purging rightwingers; it's deceitful for Tom to pretend his organ has been receptive to radicals. But that's Murdoch World.

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Two victories in a single month. Amid the encircling economic gloom, it's hard to believe we deserve such good news. First, of course, Barack Obama's election win. And now Iraq's unexpected deal with the American government for the occupation to end at last.

Debated by the Iraqi parliament today, the agreement has been virtually ignored in many left-liberal circles as well as by most of the mainstream American media. We are so inured to thinking that the US will always get its way in Iraq, thanks to its enormous investment of troops and treasure, that any potentially contrary development is dismissed. The US has agreed to leave Iraq. "You must be joking," comes the response. "Why would they build 14 mega-bases if they didn't intend to stay for decades?" The US is allowing Iraqi courts jurisdiction over crimes committed by American troops. "Give me a break. You can't believe that," I hear the sneer.

Well, look at the agreement's text. It is remarkable for the number and scope of the concessions that the Iraqi government has managed to get from the Bush administration. They amount to a series of U-turns that spell the complete defeat of the neoconservative plan to turn Iraq into a pro-western ally and a platform from which to project US power across the Middle East.

The title gives the game away - Agreement on the Withdrawal of United States Forces from Iraq and the Organisation of Their Activities during Their Temporary Presence in Iraq. Remember how Bush (and his ally, Gordon Brown) constantly rejected any "artificial timetables" for pulling out the troops. Everything had to be "conditions-based", meaning that no dates could be given in advance since all depended on whether Iraq's own forces were ready to fill the gap. It was an elastic formula that allowed Washington to delay a withdrawal for ever.

That has gone by the board. The agreement stipulates that "all US forces shall withdraw from all Iraqi territory no later than December 31 2011". More remarkably, all combat troops will leave Iraqi towns and villages and go back to base by the end of June next year. Pause for a moment and take that in. Six years and three months after the invasion, Iraqi streets will be a US-free zone again.

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