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Catch 22 in Iraq
Why American Troops Can't Go Home
Every week or so, the Department of Defense conducts a video-conference press briefing for reporters in Washington, featuring an on-the-ground officer in Iraq. On November 15th, that briefing was with Col. Jeffrey Bannister, commander of the Second Brigade of the Second Infantry Division. He was chosen because of his unit's successful application of surge tactics in three mainly Shia districts in eastern Baghdad. He had, among other things, set up several outposts in these districts offering a 24-hour American military presence; he had also made generous use of transportable concrete walls meant to separate and partition neighborhoods, and had established numerous checkpoints to prevent unauthorized entry or exit from these communities.
As Col. Bannister summed up the situation:
"We have been effective, and we've seen violence significantly reduced as our Iraqi security forces have taken a larger role in all aspects of operations, and we are starting to see harmony between Sunni and Shi'a alike."
The briefing seemed uneventful -- very much a reflection of the ongoing mood of the moment among American commanders in Iraq -- and received no significant media coverage. However, there was news lurking in an answer Col. Bannister gave to a question from AP reporter Pauline Jelinek (about arming volunteer local citizens to patrol their neighborhoods), even if it passed unnoticed. The colonel made a remarkable reference to an unexplained "five-year plan" that, he indicated, was guiding his actions. Here was his answer in full:
"I mean, right now we're focused just on security augmentation [by the volunteers] and growing them to be Iraqi police because that is where the gap is that we're trying to help fill capacity for in the Iraqi security forces. The army and the national police, I mean, they're fine. The Iraqi police is -- you know, the five-year plan has -- you know, it's doubling in size. ... [We expect to have] 4,000 Iraqi police on our side over the five-year plan.
"So that's kind of what we're doing. We're helping on security now, growing them into IP [Iraqi police].... They'll have 650 slots that I fill in March, and over the five-year period we'll grow up to another 2,500 or 3,500.
Most astonishing in his comments is the least astonishing word in our language: "the." Colonel Bannister refers repeatedly to "the five-year plan," assuming his audience understands that there is indeed a master plan for his unit -- and for the American occupation -- mandating a slow, many-year buildup of neighborhood-protection forces into full fledged police units. This, in turn, is all part of an even larger plan for the conduct of the occupation.
Included in this implicit understanding is the further assumption that Col. Bannister's unit, or some future replacement unit, will be occupying these areas of eastern Baghdad for that five-year period until that 4,000 man police force is finally fully developed.
Staying the Course, Any Course
A recent Washington Post political cartoon by Tom Toles captured the irony and tragedy of this "five-year plan." A big sign on the White House lawn has the message "We can't leave Iraq because it's going..." and a workman is adjusting a dial from "Badly" to "Well."
This cartoon raises the relevant question: If things are "going well" in Iraq, then why aren't American troops being withdrawn? This is a point raised persuasively by Robert Dreyfuss in a recent Tomdispatch post in which he argues that the decline in three major forms of violence (car bombs, death-squad executions, and roadside IEDs) should be the occasion for a reduction, and then withdrawal, of the American military presence. But, as Dreyfuss notes, the Bush administration has no intention of organizing such a withdrawal; nor, it seems, does the Democratic Party leadership -- as indicated by their refusal to withhold funding for the war, and by the promises of the leading presidential candidates to maintain significant levels of American troops in Iraq, at least through any first term in office.
The question that emerges is why stay this course? If violence has been reduced by more than 50%, why not begin to withdraw significant numbers of troops in preparation for a complete withdrawal? The answer can be stated simply: A reduction in the violence does not mean that things are "going well," only that they are going "less badly."
You can tell things can't be going well if your best-case plan is for an armed occupation force to remain in a major Baghdad community for the next five years. It means that the underlying causes of disorder are not being addressed. You can tell things are not going well if five more years are needed to train and activate a local police force, when police training takes about six months. (Consider this an indication that the recruits exhibit loyalties and goals that run contrary to those of the American military.) You can tell things are not going well when communities have to be surrounded by cement walls and checkpoints that naturally disrupt normal life, including work, school, and daily shopping. These are all signs that escalating discontent and protest may require new suppressive actions in the not-so-distant future.
The American military is well aware of this. They keep reminding us that the present decline in violence may be temporary, nothing more than a brief window of opportunity that could be used to resolve some of the "political problems" facing Iraq before the violence can be reinvigorated. The current surge -- even "the five year plan" -- is not designed to solve Iraq's problems, just to hold down the violence while others, in theory, act.
What Does the Bush Administration Want in Iraq?
What are the political problems that require resolution? The typical mainstream media version of these problems makes them out to be uniquely Iraqi in nature. They stem -- so the story goes -- from deeply engrained friction among Shiites, Sunnis, and Kurds, frustrating all efforts to resolve matters like the distribution of political power and oil revenues. In this version, the Americans are (usually inept) mediators in Iraqi disputes and are fated to remain in Iraq only because the Bush administration has little choice but to establish relatively peaceful and equitable solutions to these disputes before seriously considering leaving.
By now, however, most of us realize that there is much more to the American purpose in Iraq than a commitment to an elected government in Baghdad that could peacefully resolve sectarian tensions. The rhetoric of the Bush administration and its chief democratic opponents (most notably Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama) is increasingly laced with references -- to quote Clinton -- to "vital national security interests" in the Middle East that will require a continuing "military as well as political mission." In Iraq, leading Washington politicians of both parties agree on the necessity of establishing a friendly government that will welcome the presence of a "residual" American military force, oppose Iran's regional aspirations, and prevent the country from becoming "a petri dish for insurgents."
Let's be clear about those "vital national security interests." America's vital interests in the Middle East derive from the region's status as the world's principle source of oil. President Jimmy Carter enunciated exactly this principle back in 1980 when he promulgated the Carter Doctrine, stating that the U.S. was willing to use "any means necessary, including military force," to maintain access to supplies of Middle Eastern oil sufficient to keep the global economy running smoothly. All subsequent presidents have reiterated, amplified, and acted on this principle.
The Bush administration, in applying the Carter Doctrine, was faced with the need to access increasing amounts of Middle Eastern oil in light of constantly escalating world energy consumption. In 2001, Vice-President Dick Cheney's Energy Task Force responded to this challenge by designating Iraq as the linchpin in a general plan to double Middle Eastern oil production in the following years. It was reasonable, task force members decided, to hope for a genuine spurt in production in Iraq, whose oil industry had remained essentially stagnant (or worse) from 1980 to that moment. By ousting the backward-looking regime of Saddam Hussein and transferring the further development, production, and distribution of Iraq's bounteous oil reserves to multinational oil companies, they would assure the introduction of modern methods of production, ample investment capital, and an aggressive urge to increase output. Indeed, after removing Saddam via invasion in 2003, the Bush administration has made repeated (if so far unsuccessful) efforts to implement this plan.
The desire for such an endpoint has hardly disappeared. It became increasingly clear, however, that successful implementation of such plans would, at best, take many years, and that the maintenance of a powerful American political and military presence within Iraq was a necessary prerequisite to everything else. Since sustaining such a presence was itself a major problem, however, it also became clear that America's plans depended on dislodging powerful forces entrenched in all levels of Iraqi society -- from public opinion to elected leaders to the insurgency itself.
American ambitions -- far more than sectarian tensions -- constitute the irresolvable core of Iraq's political problems. The overwhelming majority of Iraqis oppose the occupation. They wish the Americans gone and a regime in place in Baghdad that is not an American ally. (This is true whether you are considering the Shiite majority or the Sunni minority.) As for a "residual" American military presence, the Iraqi Parliament recently passed a resolution demanding that the UN mandate for a U.S. occupation be rescinded.
Even the issue of terrorism is controversial. The American propensity to label as "terrorist" all violent opposition to the occupation means that most Iraqis (57% in August 2007), when asked, support terrorism as defined by the occupiers, since majorities in both the Sunni and Shia communities endorse using violent means to expel the Americans. Hillary Clinton's ambition that the U.S. must prevent Iraq from becoming a "petri dish for insurgency" (like the President's stated fear that the country could become the center of an al-Qaedan "caliphate") will require the forcible suppression of most resistance to the American presence.
As for opposition to Iran, 60% of Iraqi citizens are Shiites, who have strong historic, religious, and economic ties to Iran, and who favor friendly relations with their neighbor. Even Prime Minister Maliki -- the Bush administration's staunchest ally -- has repeatedly strengthened political, economic, and even military ties with Iran, causing numerous confrontations with American diplomats and military officials. As long as the Shia dominate national politics, they will oppose the American demand that Iraq support the United States campaign to isolate and control Iran. If the U.S. insists on an ally in its anti-Iran campaign, it must find a way in the next few years to alter these loyalties, as well as Sunni loyalties to the insurgency.
Finally there is that unresolved question of developing Iraqi oil reserves. For four years, Iraqis of all sectarian and political persuasions have (successfully) resisted American attempts to activate the plan first developed by Cheney's Energy Task Force. They have wielded sabotage of pipelines, strikes by oil workers, and parliamentary maneuvering, among other acts. The vast majority of the population -- including a large minority of Kurds and both the Sunni and Shia insurgencies -- believes that Iraqi oil should be tightly controlled by the government and therefore support every effort -- including in many cases violent resistance -- to prevent the activation of any American plan to transfer control of significant aspects of the Iraqi energy industry to foreign companies. Implementation of the U.S. oil proposal therefore will require the long-term suppression of violent and non-violent local resistance, as well as strenuous maneuvering at all levels of government.
Foreigners (Americans Excepted) Not Welcome
This multidimensional opposition to American goals cannot be defeated simply by diplomatic maneuvering or negotiations between Washington and the still largely powerless government inside Baghdad's Green Zone. The Bush administration has repeatedly gained the support of Prime Minister Maliki and his cabinet for one or another of its crucial goals -- most recently for the public announcement that the two governments had agreed that the U.S. would maintain a "long-term troop presence" inside Iraq. Such an embrace is never enough, since the opposition operates at so many levels, and ultimately reaches deep into local communities, where violent and nonviolent resistance results in the sabotage of oil production, attacks on the government for its support of the U.S. presence, and direct attacks on American troops.
Nor can the pursuit of these goals be transferred -- any time soon -- to an American-trained Iraqi army and police force. All previous attempts at such a transfer have yielded Iraqi units that were reluctant to fight for U.S. goals and could not be trusted unsupervised in the field. The "five year plan" Colonel Bannister mentioned is an acknowledgement that training an Iraqi force that truly supports an American presence and would actively enforce American inspired policies is a distant hope. It would depend on the transformation of Iraqi political attitudes as well as of civic and government institutions that currently resist U.S. demands. It would involve a genuine, successful pacification of the country. In this context, a decline in the fighting and violence in Iraq, both against the Americans and between embittered Iraqi communities, is indeed only a first step.
So surge "success" doesn't mean withdrawal -- yes, some troops will come home slowly -- but the rest will have to embed themselves in Iraqi communities for the long haul. This situation was summarized well by Captain Jon Brooks, the commander of Joint Security Station Thrasher in Western Baghdad, one of the small outposts that represent the front lines of the surge strategy. When asked by New Yorker reporter Jon Lee Anderson how long he thought the U.S. would remain in Iraq, he replied, "I'm not just blowing smoke up your ass, but it really depends on what the U.S. civilian-controlled government decides its goals are and what it tells the military to do."
As long as that government is determined to install a friendly, anti-Iranian regime in Baghdad, one that is hostile to "foreigners," including all jihadists, but welcomes an ongoing American military presence as well as multinational development of Iraqi oil, the American armed forces aren't going anywhere, not for a long, long time; and no relative lull in the fighting -- temporary or not -- will change that reality. This is the Catch-22 of Bush administration policy in Iraq. The worse things go, the more our military is needed; the better they go, the more our military is needed.
Michael Schwartz, professor of sociology at Stony Brook University, has written extensively on popular protest and insurgency. Among other books, he has written Radical Protest and Social Structure (with Beth Mintz). His work on Iraq has appeared on numerous Internet sites, including Tomdispatch, Asia Times, Mother Jones, and ZNET. His forthcoming Tomdispatch book, War Without End: The Iraq Debacle in Context, will be published in the spring by Haymarket. His email address is Ms42@optonline.net.
Copyright 2007 Michael Schwartz
Comments
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24 Comments so far
Show AllEngland sent it's troops to Iraq almost a hundred years ago - 80,000 are still there.
Those oily sands are very sticky.
"What Does the Bush Administration Want in Iraq?"
Full control of the fertile crescent's resources. The rest is Bushit.
You know, even from a greedy, imperialist point of view, PNAC-BushCo could have done better. To the extent we have a "national interest" in Iraq, it involves
1. Ensuring safe US access to oil
2. Having the ability to deny other powers access to oil
3. Restoring and upgrading Iraq's infrastructure to increase its oil export capacity, and
4. Get American companies in dominant profit position in both the equipment upgrade and the oil extraction
they could have at least gotten #1 and 3 by seeking an accommodation with Saddam Hussein and getting the UN sanctions lifted, and maybe #4 as well. As for #2, well what's a navy for, after all? By invading, failing to keep order and provoking an insurgency we scotched #1 and 3, which kind of makes #2 and 4 pointless. Bush's problem was introducing other goals that didn't mix with an ideal imperialism:
1. Validate the Rumsfeld doctrine of winning wars with highly mobile but minimal and inexpensive ground forces
2. Promoting privatization, both as to the U.S. forces themselves and as to Iraq's state sector, regardless of its effects on the occupation
3. Putting foreign policy in the hands of the Defense Department, which is like letting your gun tell you where to point it
For successful imperialist aggressors, check out Otto von Bismarck, Disraeli and James K Polk.
"By now, however, most of us realize that there is much more to the American purpose in Iraq than a commitment to an elected government in Baghdad that could peacefully resolve sectarian tensions."
By now? Have you been sleeping for the last 7 years? It was clear from the outset that we were going to stay there until every oil field in the ME was pumped dry.
Or did you really by into that 9/11-Saddam-9/11-Saddam-9/11-Saddam-9/11-Saddam-9/11-Saddam-9/11-Saddam-9/11-Saddam-9/11-Saddam-nonsense?
I can't know the mind of President Bush, but I often wonder if his grand vision for Iraq has not only been oil, but a very large permanent pro-western force in the Middle East that is not Jewish Israel, is not tied to a King and religious extremism like Saudi Arabia, and one that (because Sunni and Shia and Kurds never really agree on religion) simply is economically prodded to evolve toward the Western secular with less and less (down to a target of zero) influence in the government there from any flavor of Islam at all.
That vision, if it is his vision, requires decades (or perhaps generations) to accomplish, and might explain his actions. If that is the vision, though, I also wonder if we wouldn't have been just as well off to admit it from the outset.
Schwartz is 100% correct to say the Iraqi Holocaust is the direct result of longstanding US policy--The Carter Doctrine. I would go father back in time and say the Open Door policy is the foundation. In the middle is Keynan's dicta that the US must continue its disproportionate consumption of global natural resources as a prerequesite for maintaining the US gov's post-WW2 position of dominance. Thus the Catch-22: "The worse things go, the more our military is needed; the better they go, the more our military is needed."
Clearly, the US military is the "swamp" needing draining, which leads us into a discussion of how to drain it. This understanding allows us to see the important overaching service the "War on Terror" performs, as anyone suggesting the military be reduced will be slammed as being "soft on terror" just as being called "soft on communism" was used during the Cold War. In order to drain the swamp, this tool of the reactionaries must be destroyed.
What does America want? It wants to protect Israel.
Hoa binh
"...simply is economically prodded to evolve toward the Western secular with less and less (down to a target of zero) influence in the government there from any flavor of Islam at all...That vision, if it is his vision, requires decades (or perhaps generations) to accomplish..."
This would be a progressive goal, and would require no military intervention at all. However, it is unlikely that this is Bush's vision. His vision is more in concert with "…no flavor of Islam at all, instead with a strong flavor of *his* Christianity." Unfortunately, for Bush and Co. *they* are more fundamentalist than *his* people, and see the Iraq war as: 1) a grab for resources, and 2) a Christian assault on their religion.
The vision ought to be to remove any flavor of *religion* from the political process, or alternatively push religion to evolve. Guns can accomplish neither approach, only a slow process of progression can.
Knowing somebody's mind is impossible, but if Bush's vision for the middle east were such as generously outlined by Daniel David, he would have had no problem selling it to several other Western countries. Neither does this policy jibe with Bush's grandstanding, sabre-rattling and the immediate profit mongering of his cronies. Nor, indeed, with his ceaseless attempts at «transferring the further development, production, and distribution of Iraq's bounteous oil reserves to multinational oil companies.» Nice try, though.
Eduardo Villagrán
All of us seem to agree that it was evident from the beginning to anyone who can chew gum and walk at the same time should be able to understand that OIL was the reason we invaded and now occupy Iraq.
But I think that Cheney and Bush were so convinced that the U.S. could walk into Iraq with flowers thrown at the heroes feet that they thought this military adventure would solve a lot of problems.
1. oil for the future
2. To present a model of Middle East style "Democracy" for the other countries in the Gulf (code word - Muslims)
3. To have military bases in the Middle East outside of Saudi Arabia to protect the supply of oil. Saudi Arabia was becoming more and more an unreliable place park our aircraft. Certainly we couldn't launch a troop invasion in the Middle East from Saudi Arabia. Also having control of the lake of oil under Iraq would assure Saudi Arabia's acquiesce in being a reliable swing producer and help resist the denomination of oil in a currency or basket of currencies other than the U.S. dollar in the OPEC member Nations.
Bush/Cheney and fellow conspirators are not fools, they were just ignorant of what the Middle East is like and apparently remain so. Matter of fact they were willing to gamble the farm that their vision was correct. They were wrong and now they are willing to do and say anything to put the square peg in the round hole.
Daniel David: I can't know the mind of President Bush...
Bush is an idiot. The only things on his mind are making money giving speeches after office, and "what's for dinner?".
It's the oil, but it is to keep it in the ground and the price high. Just imagine describing the war as a great success, as Cheny has often described it. He's a corrupt oilman in the vice-president's office. This is what causes concern when considering Iran. If the neo-cons who brought us $100 dollar oil, with the iraq war are your hero's, just wait until the iran invasion and oil pushes toward #500 dollars. This will be an enormous success for a Texas Oilman.
Daniel David wrote: I can't know the mind of President Bush...
Look into a cheap telescope from the wrong end.
I think you are 'misunderestimating' Mr Bush... Make speeches? You have to be kidding... I laugh every time he opens his mouth. If he was incontinent and publically soiled himself at least you could pity him.
"Daniel David wrote: I can't know the mind of President Bush…"
A pity he can't make the same honest admission about the Democrats he constantly touts as the panacea for all of our problems.
Lobo Gris
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,,2161205,00.html
It isn't Bush, that insane simpleton takes orders from those who put him in his position of power. Any orders he gives, anything he says, have been well prepared speeches for him to voice.
The war in Iraq went as planned ___ for the first few months, up until the MISSION ACCOMPLISHED banner was strung up. Now that the war has evolved into a total disaster, there is no easy way out and the initial goals of having the oil, having a 'peaceful force' and a monstrous embassy established in Iraq, are only to be had by maintaing a military presence and playing the war game by ear on a month to month basis, 'hoping' their five year plan will succeed. ___ It won't.
The 'plan' is a bankrupting patchwork of stupidity that is destroying our army and ruining our economy. The powers who be who started this mess have two choices. Either continue to attempt to win the goals they originally believed were easily obtainable, or pull out in disgrace. Those are the two options available, and so far they are sticking with the first one.
It will destroy this nation and do so, because some powerful, yet ignorant idiots, thought they knew how to plan a war and win it. MacNamarra and Kissinger types, playing war games, while wearing rose tinted glasses, sitting on a pile of money and gazing at the sunset.___Catch 22 it is.
Hi KEM -- It's also known as a:
_ A __ C U S T E R __ D E C I S I O N _
Namaste … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … Mahatma Gandhi … … … … … … … … … …
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world »
« There is enough to meet everybody's need, but there is not enough to meet everybody's greed »
If you looked out your window and saw the Beagle boys pull up to your neighbor's house while they were away and start loading their furniture into a U-Haul van, you might easily get the idea that your neighbor was being robbed, even if the Beagle boys insisted they were there to clean the carpets. I don't know why we have to be continually reminded that we are in the Middle East to steal oil that doesn't belong to us. We can see that with our own eyes, as can the Iraqis. Unlike the Iraqis, we really don't wish to see ourselves as common thieves, and so we are easily hypnotized into thinking we are liberators or democratizers or Santa Claus. And so somebody has to keep pointing out the window, saying it over and over again: It's the oil. It's the oil.
That's a great analogy NSPIRE.
And Custer was a hell of a lot smarter about war than Rumsfeld, Cheney, Bush and the power brokers who got us into this incredible mess.
then they havent attacked Iran yet and it looks as if they will do that too. ~ Out the gate in 08 ~
If current trends continue indefinitely, at some point the amount of petroleum that our military has used and will use in the future to conquer and occuppy Iraq will equal the amount of petroleum in Iraq's oil fields. Go figure.
Never thought about that Badgersouth, but I do believe you may very well be correct. The war did not progress as planned and Colin Powell warned Bush it would not and Powell was replaced when his grim words were published by Bob Woodward.
I can see, like, the General er-uhh...Banister, is like almost as articulate as our Commander in Chief like.
Oil and Israel. An Iraqi holocaust has been perpetrated by the Americans to satisfy those two entities; nearly 4000 Americans are also dead. I agree with the author, the US is well and truly stuck in the sands of Iraq but it's not only about oil. American politicians are subsidized by the Israel lobby and will never do what's good for the American people.