New Pieces Changing the Iraq Puzzle
Trying to understand our war in Iraq is like trying to put together a jigsaw puzzle when most of the pieces are missing, and the few pieces you have keep changing shape. It's been that way since March, 2003. It will probably be that way until the last U.S. forces leave Iraq.
Here is the most recent piece. Ammar al-Hakim is a top figure in the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (SIIC), one of the two leading Shi'ite parties in the central government. Last week al-Hakim became the first major Shi'ite figure to visit Anbar province, where he met with and praised Sunni leaders.
That's a new piece in the puzzle, but no one knows its shape for sure, much less where it fits. The visit got virtually no coverage in the U.S. media. The few reports that did appear all saw it differently.
Pepe Escobar, the Asia Times correspondent who is usually one step ahead of the journalistic pack, says it's a sign of a broad new Shi'ite - Sunni coalition emerging with one main goal: getting all U.S. troops and bases out of Iraq. "The ultimate nightmare for White House/Pentagon designs on Middle East energy resources," says Escobar, is coming true. And he points to other evidence: Diverse Sunni resistance groups are in serious talks to form a united front. Shi'ite Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani recently "called for the Iraqi parliament to rein in Blackwater et al, and most of all the 'occupation forces.' He has never spoken out in such blunt language before."
"Most interesting is that Ammar al-Hakim [on his visit to Anbar] was flanked by none other than feared Hadi al-Amri, the leader of the Badr Brigades - the SIIC militia trained by Iran's Revolutionary Guards, that in fact comprises the bulk of death squads involved in the avalanche of sectarian killings."
But according to Hamza Hendawi of the Associated Press, there was someone else by al-Hakim's side: "As a sign of Washington's endorsement, Ammar al-Hakim traveled on U.S. military helicopters, and a senior U.S. official, Maj. Gen. Michael D. Barbero of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, attended the meeting." Presumably the Badr Brigades' al-Amri flew on the U.S. helicopter too. A nice chummy group.
Why is the U.S. military coordinating a visit that could (if Pepe Escobar is right) help cement an all-Iraqi anti-U.S. alliance? The puzzle can look quite different, depending on which pieces you see.
Another AP article, published the day before Hendawi's piece, claimed that the al-Hakim visit "struck a note of national unity in Anbar. ... [It] was the latest sign that key Iraqi politicians may be working toward reconciliation independently of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government."
The British Arabic newspaper Al-Quds Al-Arabi (quoted on Uruknet.info) took a similar approach: "This political activity is in the context of efforts to bring together the points of view of the Sunni and Shiite groups in Iraq, in order to realize national reconciliation and bring about agreement for the passage of a number of pieces of legislation in Parliament, starting with the Law on Oil and Gas, and the one on DeBathification in its revised form."
That's just what Washington wants. The Philadelphia Inquirer ran Hendawi's story under the headline: "Rival Iraqi groups forging links and bypassing Maliki; The United States sees such budding relationships as a key part of its strategy." "The U.S. military acknowledges it is urging the grassroots reconciliation," the story said.
But there's another piece that makes this puzzle look rather different. Ammar al-Hakim is not exactly an advocate of strong national government. In fact, he recently "called on Iraqis to work for the creation of self-rule regions across the country. But he cautioned that national unity must be maintained. The idea of breaking up Iraq into self-rule entities has gained traction in Washington." That's from yet another AP article.
Pepe Escobar agrees that al-Hakim is "in favor of 'self-governing regions.' That makes him for many Iraqis a partisan of 'soft partition' -- just like [many] US congressmen." Apparently the U.S. military likes the idea too, at least well enough to lend a Major General and a few helicopters for al-Hakim's outing. Uruknet.info reports that there is a "commonplace Iraqi idea that this is a Washington-backed scheme."
Sunni leaders are wary of the plan, according to these reports, but some are at least willing to talk about it, as long as all the "self-governing regions" are created at once. According to the Arabic newspaper Al-Hayat (again quoted on Uruknet.info) al-Hakim's meetings with Sunni leaders "focused on the importance of declaring a federal [entity] in Sunni west Iraq, at the same time as announcements of a Shiite region in the south and a Kurdish one in the north."
On the Shi'ite side, Muqtada al-Sadr and others have rejected "soft partition" outright. According to Al-Hayat, "Al-Hakim is trying, via this encouraging the Sunnis to form their own region, to meet this resistance, by leaving the Sadr movement, the Fadhila party, the Dawa Party and other opponents, with no alternative but to acquiesce in the reality," which would leave al-Hakim and his party at the top of the Iraqi political pyramid.
If this isn't all complicated enough, there is also the ever-elusive Iran piece. Al-Hakim's SIIC party was created by the Iranians; he and his father lived in Teheran for some twenty years. Pepe Escobar notes that the Iranians are trying to make peace between SIIC and the fiercely anti-occupation Muqtada al-Sadr. He speculates that "Tehran and Tehran-supported SIIC must obviously have seen which way the Shi'ite street wind was blowing, so now we have a new, anti-sectarian, anti-occupation SIIC."
The always acute Michael Schwartz thinks that the U.S. military can also see which way the wind is blowing: "Recent statements by U.S. occupation authorities calling for "soft partition" of Iraq into three mostly autonomous regions may be a response to this new unity between Shia and Sunni. Realizing that the U.S. probably cannot sustain its presence if this new alliance is consolidated and strengthened, they are looking for a 'divide and conquer' strategy that would allow the U.S. to control the three regions separately." The long-term bipartisan goal of the U.S. elite is permanent bases, mainly in the Kurdish area, mainly near the border with Iran. Clinton, Obama, and Edwards have made that clear.
So how do you put all the pieces together? Perhaps the U.S., Iran, and the emerging Iraqi unified front are creating a triangle, each thinking it can use the other two for its own purposes, each waiting for the day it has achieved the upper hand and no longer needs help from the other two. If so, that day may never come. At best, it's a deadly triangle that's bound to entangle all the parties in more years of death and destruction.
Or perhaps there are other pieces that we don't yet see, which would make the whole picture look very different. As always, we have only a few pieces of the puzzle. We can't know for sure what is going on. All we know for sure is that hundreds of billions of our tax dollars are paying for daily slaughter, and whatever aims our government may have now, they have nothing to do with the best interests of the people of Iraq.
Ira Chernus is Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder and author of Monsters To Destroy: The Neoconservative War on Terror and Sin. Email: chernus@colorado.edu
Delicious
Digg
StumbleUpon
Newsvine
Facebook
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
18 Comments so far
Show AllInteresting comments and many are likely to be short term outcomes.
The real goal is corporate takeover of the USA then the world. Our country is almost there with corporate greed being the prime mover in political decisions.
Why am I depressed?
Ed Graham
The familiar refrain I hear in Ira's latest offering is how US policy in occupied Iraq continues to be essentially reactive, while the Bush White House/Pentagon PR machine consistently claims to be successfully shaping and focusing those same chaotic political events.
The first proconsul Jay Garner envisioned keeping the remnants of the Baath bureaucracy and military temporarily intact while building a replacement regime from the local level up. Garner was quickly replaced by Bremer, who abolished the existing army, police and bureaucracy and appointed a provisional central government of pro-Western secular orientation.
Sistani and the Shiites demanded national elections, so there were national elections boycotted by the Sunnis. A cumbersome new constitution was then pressed through with a heavy emphasis on regional autonomy and Shiite-Sunni-Kurdish power sharing in the central government. The "el Salvador option" Shiite death squads begat an even wider Sunni insurgency, with a proliferation of sectarian militia factions, some with non-Iraqi backing.
Sadr leaves the government. Sadr returns. Sadr leaves again.
Scarcely a year ago, Maliki was being openly pressured to disarm all the militia factions as a "benchmark" of success. In comes General Petraeus and the surge. Now the US goes into the business of openly arming militias run by Sunni sheiks in Anbar province, and this heightened warlordism is hailed as a further sign of progress (as redefined).
Sometimes regionalism and fragmentation ("creative chaos", in neo-con terms) is good, sometimes it is bad. If reconciliation between Shiites and Sunnis helps pass a US favored oil law, Americans are supposed to rejoice. But if that same reconciliation leads to rejection of the oil law and possibly even creates a united front calling for US troop withdrawal, then alas the sky is falling in and the whole Middle East is going to hell in a handbasket.
It's all in the eye of the beholder.
Bill from Saginaw
The USA was manipulated by a number of parties into attacking Iraq. Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer explain it quite clearly in their book. Contrary to Greenspans claim that the attack/occupation was for oil, it appears oil was only the payoff the real prize was quite different.
Marc Lynch in his Abu Aardvark blog has an informative post about the visit of Amar al-Hakim to Anbar province. He makes the case that the visit was an 'utter failure' because he could not interest the Sunnis in the federalism (soft partition) plan that he was promoting. The link:
http://abuaardvark.typepad.com/abuaardvark/2007/10/hakims-visit-to.html
Far from gaining control of the oil resources, the belatedly recognized but always obvious motivation for this war, we are going to be forced to hand them over to a government and nation (perhaps more than one) hostile to us. Instead of eliminating terrorists, we are causing them to proliferate. Stalin and Mao were evil, but at least they were competent. This administration and its congressional, ecclesiatical and popular supporters are intellectually and morally bankrupt, and so are we as a nation unless we immediately, clearly, explicitly and overwhelmingly make it clear to the Barons of the Beltway that things must change drastically and rapidly.
the intrigue would do well
for the next Robert Ludlum--
where are you??
ken
The US is not getting what it wants from the Maliki government. But they can't just trade him in for a new puppet. If the US is trying to strike a deal with a broad coalition outside the government, the plan is probably to force Maliki to accept some kind power-sharing agreement with them. The world will be told that this is only way to have peace. Part of the deal will be to get the oil law passed and to have some kind of long-term basing agreement. That's my guess anyway.
Look at London review of Books
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v29/n20/holt01_.html It's the Oil Jim Holt.
Cheney, before got Halliburton interests, was opposed to the Iraq war, http://www.crooksandliars.com/2007/08/13/dick-cheney-explains-why-the-us-shouldnt-invade-iraq-in-1994-...
He benefits from a war with Iraq and Iran through Halliburton and Vanguard interests (check Yahoo Finance). US soldiers are suckers sacrificing their lives for the Iraqi genocide for the interests of a few. This war is a great crime 4m refugees, over 1m Iraqis dead, 500000 chidlren dead from sanctions and radioactive weapons causing an epidemic of cancers and malformations. In the name of God!
Abe Lincoln
"Both [North and South] read the same Bible and pray to the same God, and each invokes His aid against the other. … The prayers of both could not be answered. That of neither has been answered fully. The Almighty has His own purposes. … [T]hat He gives to both North and South this terrible war as the woe due to those by whom the offense came, shall we discern therein any departure from those divine attributes which the believers in a living God always ascribe to Him?"
ttp://www.thepeoplesvoice.org:80/cgi-bin/blogs/voices.php/2007/10/17/p20352)
Hakim is yet another bought off pawn that prattles the US line - and will soon be yet another extremely rich exile on US taxpayer money or another dead sheik with millions in a swiss bank account for his many kin.
What this foo doesn't recognize is that that oil is mainly in Kurdish and Shia areas. The plan for dividing was bought (as usual) by impatient oil companies (and yes - Western not US - which is why France is all of a sudden our bestest friend (due to Total Corp. getting a share ). But as we have seen in our own country the price of betraying your own people and your own country is always right if you keep adding enough zeros.
Regarding the sudden unity - I do see the hand of Iran in here - and if not them some other wise counsel. If the US is going to go around the ENTIRE world talking about how 'sovereign' and 'democratic' and 'legitimate' the Iraqi government is-- someone would surely love to provke a little mischief if not stunned bewilderment --- when the Iraqi "leasders" actually call out the propaganda.
This started with Blackwater - but is really a not so subtle ploy of repealing many of the US placed laws (such as no prosecution for private agencies). If successful - which it seems to be -in terms of it galvanizing Iraqis of all stripes to rally to this 'elected' puppet government- it may have unintended consequences. This lays the groundwork for repudiating many other laws and for a subsequent governmenteven the oil legislation itself- so there is a LOT of subtext here. What may have started out as a ploy to rally around the planted government in order to legitmize the impending Iraqi Oil legislation may morph into a unified cry to expedite the withdrawal of US forces.
The heavy handed attack on Sadr City was not (I suspect) due to a renegade group of militia but rather the US using time tested dictatorial heavy handedness to emphasize that any resistance will AGAIN be met with fearful slaughter that would make the Burmese generals positively glow with envy.
The PKK whch dons US flak jackets , rocket launchers, and weapons is a clever move to rally Kurds in Turkey and cause further instability . This would give US the PERFECT place for global hegemony as recognized by Constantine centuries ago. I doubt that these recent raids would have occured spontaneously - especially in view of the fact that the ONLY people chosen by the US in all leadership positions of the Iraqi government are basically Kurdish. How this plays out is already seen by Turkey refusing to attack the PKK despite extreme provacation and slowly disengaging themselves as a US ally. Note- the rapidity with which the uilteral ceasefire was called by the Iraqi Kurds/government. Slow escalation, infiltration of turkish kurds to increase discontent and arming the newest version of the 'contras' will (according to the US plan) eventually lead to disintegration of already fractured northern border of Turkey -where Azerbijian, Circassians, Georgia sits ready to become tomorrows Kosova/Albania/Serbia.
All these moves are made with the sole intention of continuing instability and perhaps even fomenting instability to perpetrate a 'rational' for staying in Iraq for the next decade or when all the oil runs out - which ever is first. Lastly - should anyone think differently - as we already know from many sources the US has done an outstanding job of guarding the pipelies and oil fields and they ARE getting a lot of free oil that no one is talking about- some estimate over 100 BILLION dollars worth at the least.
plaza Toro
Other oil companies besides American ones are slavering over their anticipated "Production Sharing Agreements". I believe British Petroleum is one of them. Actually, the term should be "major oil companies", and most of them are Western in origin. Russia may be on the list, too.
Even if by some fluke the Iraqis passed the PSA oil legislation tomorrow, no company could begin work until Iraq is peaceful. It's easy to blow up projects and pipelines when there's ongoing violence in a country...
Correction - it is not "Western" oil companies. It is "US" oil companies! It is a bit like Cheney yesterday saying that the "international community" would not countenance Iran getting nuclear weapons. Crap!!! The United States is calling the shots here. Since when is the US the "international community"? Why don't the Americans accept responsibility for their transgressions and bullying rather than attributing what the US wants/has done to the "international community"?
Amid the chaos of civil war and utter devastation from the US invasion, no one can even begin to see all of the pieces, and all the actors are making stabs in the dark. Sooner or later though, a momentum will build by coalescing groups that will determine Iraq's long-term future. Only a complete ignoramus or fool would confidently predict what that could be at this point or whether the US government will be a part of it.
of course, the hardest piece for us ordinary folk to put on the table, but the one which throws the greatest light on any situation graced by our rulers, is the latter's absolute depravity.
Leighton
Yes, the Bushies do want their oil buddies to get those contracts to develop Iraq's oil fields, PSAs, but that isn't a sure thing at all unless all of Iraq agrees. And even Maliki, who's hanging on by a thread, has said Iraq won't accept permanent military bases on their soil, and they're demanding that Blackwater get out. So we'll have to see what happens.
There's another piece of the puzzle. This morning, Turkey was sending tanks and military supplies to the border of Iraq for a military offensive into northern Iraq to pursue Kurdish fighters hiding there. This is a response to an incursion into Turkey yesterday by Kurdish rebels who want to drive out the government in the eastern part of Turkey to help create an Independent Kurdish state overlapping the borders of Iran, Iraq, and Turkey:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/21/AR2007102100172.html
So the puzzle pieces keep shifting and keeping the US in turmoil there.
Why don't Shia and Sunni incorporate into a for profit corporation with equal, non-transferable shares for each citizen so it can compete with other oil companies for the best deal instead of letting these invade and loot their country? Though it's owned by their oligarchy, Aramco doesn't have that problem.
If the Shia and Sunni unite they may be able to keep all of their oil revenue. If they remain divided they may lose 40% to 60% of their oil revenue to western oil barons.
If the Shia and Sunni unite they may be able to take oil revenue in euros which is a relatively stable currency. If they remain divided they may lose 40% to 60% of the value as the dollar continues to plunge.
The Iraqis have a simple choice. Unite with each other and join the community of forward-moving nations, or remain divided and be dragged by the USA into the quicksand.
You are correct, anney, but it is still the Buseviks' goal to secure the oil for the international oil companies and keep a large force there forever.
Nothing good will take place as long as US troops are present.
An international peace-keeping force might be able to bring about an end to chaos, permitting the Iraqis to work out their political problems, but the US will never let that happen.
The Iraqis must work this out themselves, and until there is a strong national leader whom most Iraqis want or at least benefit under, there certainly will be conflicts. I can see that myself, given human nature. The sooner US troops are out of there, the sooner the country will find its own leadership and be stabilized after working out these factions' interests.