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Iraq Calm on the Surface, Simmering Beneath
WASHINGTON - With the head of the occupying forces in Iraq, Gen. David Petraeus, and U.S. ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker delivering a progress report to Congress this week, Iraq has been thrust back into the U.S. public consciousness, along with all the political divisions the issue engenders.
What the George W. Bush administration hails as a "success" has indeed yielded a marked drop in violence, with civilian deaths down by half. However, the U.S. occupation's larger counter-insurgency strategy -- often identified as the "surge" but going well beyond the escalated troops numbers that refers to -- fails to address the very Iraqi political reconciliation it is meant to bring about, many observers say.
The myth of the "calm" -- a scant 600 innocent lives ended violently in a month -- in Iraq was shattered two weeks ago when an intra-Shia power struggle turned bloody, exposing Bush's strategy as a mere band-aid covering up the festering wounds of Iraqi societal strife.
"That's essentially where we are right now. Violence is down on the surface, but a lot is boiling underneath," Michael Ware, a correspondent for CNN who reports extensively from inside Iraq, said at a forum on Iraq at the Centre for American Progress last week.
While Bush claims that his Iraq policy is not beholden to public opinion polls in the U.S., it is increasingly difficult to view the respective aspects of the U.S. strategy as doing anything more than reducing violence now to quell domestic dissent against the war at the cost of deferring further strife until a new administration takes power in Washington next January -- giving Bush political cover to disown more widespread fighting that could destabilise what little order has been imposed since the aftermath of Iraq's invasion in 2003.
The recent violence, when Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki ordered Iraqi troops to confront factions of anti-U.S. Shia cleric Moqtada al Sadr's Mahdi Army militia with U.S. air support, in fact reveals further divides and puts on ready display the dissolution of what was a delicately and loosely unified Shia political bloc.
While the control of the so-called "special groups" of the Mahdi Army assaulted by the national government are considered by Petraeus and the administration to be rogue, criminal elements of the cleric's militia, the large-scale operations are a sign of factionalised Shia infighting between Maliki and Sadr -- evidenced by the fact that negotiations, through the Iranians, between Sadr and envoys of the two ruling-coalition Shia parties, including Maliki's Dawa party, finally brought the hostilities to an end.
But Shia power struggles are the lesser of the buried sectarian tensions that loom large over the future of a peaceful Iraq. Head-butting persists between the ruling majority Shia sect and Sunni groups being brought into the fold by the U.S. army, which are perhaps the most delicate arrangements of the surge strategy -- and amongst the most important in reducing the levels of violence.
The Sunni insurgency, former supporters of deposed Iraqi president Saddam Hussein, had initially resisted U.S. occupation by any means necessary, including an alliance with al Qaeda in Iraq. They initially feared that the previously oppressed Shia majority would vanquish them once empowered by the U.S., and so boycotted initial elections.
A dialogue with the U.S. in 2004 fell apart because the Sunnis refused to deal with the Shia-dominated national government. As the Sunnis apparently became fed up with al Qaeda creating difficult situations in their territories, and unable to combat that group, Shia militias, and the U.S. concurrently, they formed groups called Sahwa -- or awakening in Arabic -- which were then approached by the U.S. to become part of its surge.
But in a potent example of how the U.S. strategy solidifies rifts between Sunnis and Shias, the central government in Baghdad was left completely out of the incorporation of the Sahwa into the U.S.'s counter-insurgency tactic.
"An agreement was found between America and Sunni insurgents on pretty much the terms that were originally offered," said Ware. "As even the Multi-National Forces' [the official name of the U.S.-led occupying forces] spokesman Maj. Gen. Kevin Bergner openly admits, it's a bilateral arrangement. The Iraqi government was not made party to this."
The deal took 90,000 insurgents off the battlefield and put them on the U.S. military's payroll -- to the tune of 300 dollars a month -- in order for them to take a role in providing security against al Qaeda in their local areas.
"The fundamental problem in Iraq was the militias," said journalist Nir Rosen, speaking at the same event. "The Americans have now created more militias, or at least backed them and allowed them to arm themselves and control territory. Obviously, that is a very frightening scenario."
Part of the deal with the U.S. military was a promise that eventually the Sahwa would be given a chance to participate in both national and provincial governance, and take a more leading role in official Iraqi security forces -- until now made up mostly of former Shia militiamen.
Those changes have been frustratingly slow to come for many Sunnis. They already view the central government with great scepticism, deriding Iraqi Arab Shias as Iranians or Iranian surrogates -- playing on racial tensions between ethnic Arabs and Iranians, who are also Shia.
The Sahwa have yet to gain any significant official political power -- having to wait for provincial elections slated for October, but which are likely to be delayed -- and they remain on the U.S. dole, not the Iraqi government's, because Iraqi security forces have failed to incorporate them in significant ways.
"For the most part the Iraqi government is not allowing the Awakening groups to join and the Awakening groups are very upset about that," said Rosen, who spends extensive time in Iraq with the Sahwa groups. "They complain that when they try to join, they are harassed and treated as prisoners, as suspects."
Frustration of that sort leaves the "successes" of the U.S. strategy constantly teetering on the brink of devolution into violence that could precipitate a civil war. For the first three years or so of the occupation, the U.S. failed to provide the security that could prevent the fragmentation of Iraqi society -- leaving ethnically-cleansed neighbourhoods and a situation with the potential to be worse than any sectarian bloodshed seen since the chaotic early years after the fall of Baghdad.
"The situation is incredibly unstable. Any sort of spark can renew massive violence. But this time there is nowhere to run to," said Rosen. "Jordan and Syria have closed their borders to refugees. Eleven of Iraq's 18 governors have closed their borders to the internally displaced because they're just overwhelmed."
"So when fighting starts again, people won't have anywhere to escape to -- they'll be stuck in their walled areas," he said.
© 2008 Inter Press Service



17 Comments so far
Show AllThe Bush Administration has been a NIGHTMARE! Bad for the US, bad for IRAQ and bad for the world. Not elected, but appointed in 2000 and illegally put in again in 2004 - WHAT A DISASTER!
The Congressmen should have questioned Michael Ware instead. At least he's not trying to put lipstick on a pig.
Even Cheney said in 92 that it would be a disaster to invade Iraq. What happened to change his mind????? Anyone with a brain knew it was going to be a disaster. When you take several religious sects all in the same religion that are bitterly opposed to the other and sworn enemies. No good is ever going to come from it. I can't imagine what ever lead our Administration to think it would????? The only hope for Iraq is another dictator like Saddam. That will hold the country together with terror. It's a sad fact of life. So where was the point in taking him out in the first place. Pure ignorance!
...another simmering pol pot:
Israel has said it will not allow a UN official appointed to investigate Israeli human rights abuses to enter the country or Palestinian territories. (BBC)
Bear in mind that it is only our politicians who are able to facilitate the printing of money that pays the military people and contractors to be in Iraq. If there is a political down-ramping of that funny-money funding, the Iraqis are likely to better arise to solving their own internal disputes. Not until.
So vote for the guy who told you all along that the whole U.S. invasion was a blunder. He was right--rhymes with "plunder" (of your dollar) too.
As long as we are pumping money into the Iraqi government...such as it is...and paying their people....arming their people....there is no reason for them to step up and run their own affairs...and we all know what happens when WE try to run things...
Things won't settle down until we are out of there.
Less violence....just means there are fewer gunfights on the ground...doesn't mean we aren't dropping bombs on them and keeping the level of hositility up...
I doubt if someone dropped bombs on me, I would sit back quietly and not defend myself...even I agreed with the bomber...
Get out of there and let these people put their lives back together.
It is hard to criticize Sadam for killing people...when we are doing the same thing...plus more...to these people...pot calling the kettle black...
Why would Sahwa wish to join something as ephemeral as the Iraq government? They're getting 300 bucks a day and 90,000 weapons to protect Sunni interests when all hell breaks loose. Sounds like a good deal to me.
We have little idea what has been SOWED (in our names), nor
What we'll be REAPing for decades to come.
The repressed emotion and rage, once let out of bottle, will be Earth transforming
IF we as a people don't come out against the criminals
running this hideously wicked criminal enterprise,
THEN we know who will eventually be PAYING for the just deserts
Namaste
The supporters of this disastrous regime are hiding out in deep denial waiting to blame Bu$h the inferior's successor for failing in this glorious war. The fact that it was an illegal occupation doomed to fail like every other occupation will not be accepted by the believers in military industrial world domination.
Blame Bush if you like, but its the moron voters who helped him steal two elections that bear most blame. They have more blood on their hands more than this inept zealot, who abuses are by no means limited to this ill conceived war. Don't forget the five Supreme court justices who betrayed their oath by placing politics ahead of honor by planting him in office; nor many of our legislators who have betrayed our trust by tolerating these unprecedented abuses.
Iraq can't run it's own affairs because the middle educated class are mostly in Syria, what is left in Iraq are the uneducated masses with religion and guns. The policy of the Bush gang was to break up the country to make it into a weak leaderless entity where hatred between factions is allowed to foster thus making their task easier. Divide and rule is as old as the hills but still works.
Iran of course poses a very big problem in that it can support factions friendly to their own people and that is why Bush and Co. need to try and bring it to heel.
Petraeus' brilliant strategy: paying off the insurgents. We should have known he was up to something. One thing we Americans have to offer: money. He couldn't give up American lives, didn't have more troops, and there really wasn't a counter-insurgency strategy. But we can pay them off.
Unfortunately, we can't keep paying for long, but I guess they just need to get through the election. Then its somebody else's problem. What a way to run a war! Patraeus is buying American lives because it isn't worth spending them and he has no other way to save them. The military's only other option is rebellion, and they can't quite make themselves do that. They are undercutting Bush at every opportunity, but even that strategy isn't working fast enough. Incredible.
Iraq does not need a strongman, it has ceased to exist. Iraq was created by the Brits in its present form to keep it unstable and they made it necessary to have a strongman because they purposely gave rule to a minority. They backed Sadaaam, as did the people at first. What Iraq needed was to have emerged on its own. That's history now because there is no more Iraq.
Iraq is poised to go the way of another portion of the former Ottoman Empire, Yugoslavia. Any cursory examination of the history of the land since Sumerian times will reveal that the area of Iraq has only been unified under a foreign power such as the Persians & Ottomans, among others. The creation of Iraq after World War One was part of the corrupt deal between the U.K. and France to expand their colonial dominions in the Middle East during the carve-up of the Ottoman corpse. It was an artificial state created to supply the West with oil. It is not surprising that now the house of cards is collapsing. What remains to be seen is what state the various players are in when the US leaves and if any of the neighbors (like Turkey and Iran) will involve themselves for their own reasons.
Undeucated masses with religion and guns? Sounds just like the US!
BUT----- Senator John McCain said, "Success is within reach." He must have a very long arm!!!!!!!!!
Ralph Nader was on c-span yesterday and I listened to some of what he had to say. He brought up five different things that Congress could inpeach Bush and Cheney on and he wrote a letter to John Conyers because the Democrates failed to take action when they were elected. Nader said the Dems said it would be too distracting etc. Did Conyers do anything? No. Nader is amazed at their response. Under the Constitution, he said, it is there duty to take a President to task if he is unlawfully breaking laws. To let it go is reprehensible. Maybe Bush and Cheney have something on the Dems. (that's my thinking)
I know that I'm disgusted with the Dems. I did not vote for Bush in 2000 or 2004. I don't know how, after the mess, he created from 2000 to 20004, why they would vote him back in is a mystery to me.
I see McCain is tied with Obama and Hillery is a few points ahead in the polls. After, the last five years of this war, why would anyone elect McCain. They critized Kerry in 2004. They swiftboated him, but John McCain is the Republicans hero now.
I wonder what General Petraeus and Crocker were thinking at the hearings? I wonder if the Senators realized they were being conned again? Maybe they (not all) don't care.
"Success is within reach." He must have a very long arm!!!!!!!!!
NOPE, he's just reaching for his nether regions