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Iraq-Jordan
Malaysian PM vows Muslim force for Iraq
2004-07-21
Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said his country was ready to mobilize an international Muslim force to rehabilitate war-torn Iraq. "We are prepared to rally support among the Organisation of the Islamic Conference [OIC] to rebuild Iraq and strengthen its institutions of governance and its economic system," Abdullah said late Monday after talks with US President George W. Bush in the Oval Office. Abdullah, chairman of the 57-member OIC, said the world would risk another failure in nation-building if Iraq was left in the cold at this juncture, rendering the region politically unstable and economically stagnant. "We should no longer stand on the sidelines and merely watch Iraq struggle to find its feet after years of dictatorship and a recent invasion," he said at a dinner in Washington hosted by the US-ASEAN Business Council. Malaysia, for its part, was ready to send a "sizeable" medical team to Iraq and participate in the reconstruction of Iraq, Abdullah said. He warned that if the reconstruction of Iraq failed, the entire Muslim world would blame the US-led invasion for setting off a chain of events that led to sustained misery for ordinary Iraqis and a clash between the West and the Muslim world. Abdullah pointed out that the Muslim world still needed some demonstration of good faith from the US in addressing the root causes of terrorism, in particular the unresolved question of Palestine.
We in turn need some demonstration of good faith from the Muslim world, such as capturing and beheading the jihadis. You first.
He said he suggested and Bush agreed that a "capacity-building" program be undertaken in poor Muslim countries as part of efforts to demonstrate such good faith. Bush said: "We talked about Iraq, and I told him I was pleased with the progress being made in Iraq, and the prime minister had some helpful suggestions. "So, all in all, it's been a very constructive meeting," Bush said.
Posted by:Mark Espinola

#2  There are a lot of people in Iraq who are angry at the decades long hug that the OIC had with Saddam. If the OIC does not make good on their pledge to help Iraq, this anger will get worse.
Posted by: mhw   2004-07-21 10:52:31 AM  

#1  Now that things are going well, Muslim countries want to join in - just to make sure that Iraqi Muslims don't stray too far off the reservation. Of course, there's nothing wrong with PR, and the cordial first official meeting between GWB and Malaysia's new prime minister is definitely a good thing. Of course, Malaysia's also looking to mend fences after Mahathir brought relations with the US to the lowest point in a while.

The irony is that politics aside, Malaysia is one country that has seen significant inroads by American multinationals. On my last visit there, I noticed that American fast food chains are represented in strip malls on the outskirts of town - where in other countries in Asia, they are not particularly commonplace - much like hothouse plants - and mostly located in city centers. American brands and retail outlets are all over the place. And yet the government keeps up a steady drumbeat of anti-Americanism in the government-controlled press, abetted by the slanted newswire items from Reuters, AP and AFP that don't even need editing to achieve the desired effect.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2004-07-21 9:56:03 AM  

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