Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Biden and the False Iraq War Narrative
In an interview on the PBS NewsHour last Wednesday ,
Joe Biden was unwilling to contradict the official narrative of the
Iraq War that Gen. David Petraeus and the Bush surge had turned Iraq
into a good war after all. That interview serves as a reminder of just
how completely the Democratic Party foreign policy elite has adopted
that narrative.
The
Iraq War story line crafted by the Petraeus and the new
counterinsurgency elite in Washington assures the public that U.S.
military power in Iraq brought about the cooperation of the Sunnis in
Anbar Province, ended sectarian violence in Baghdad and defeated
Iranian-backed Shi’a insurgents.
In
reality, of course, that’s not what happened at all. It's time to review the relevant history and deconstruct the Petraeus narrative which the Obama administration now appears to have adopted.
The
Sunni decision to cooperate in the suppression of al Qaeda in Iraq had
nothing to do with the surge. The main Sunni armed resistance groups
had actually turned against al Qaeda in 2005, when they began trying to
make a deal with the United States to end the war.
At
an Iraqi reconciliation conference in Cairo, November 19-21, 2005,
leaders of the three major Sunni armed groups (one of which was a
coalition of several resistance organization) told U.S. and Arab officials
they were willing to track down al Qaeda leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
and deliver him to Iraqi authorities as part of a negotiated agreement
with the United States. The Sunni insurgent leaders were motivated not
only by hatred of al Qaeda but by the fear that a Shi’a-dominated
government would consolidate power and exclude the Sunnis permanently
unless the United States acted to rebalance its policy in Iraq.
Two months later, U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad actually entered into secret negotiations with the three major Sunni insurgent groups 2006, as later reported by the Sunday Times and confirmed by Khalilzad.
The Sunni leaders even submitted a formal peace proposal to Khalilzad.
They insisted on a “timetable for withdrawal” as part of the deal, but
it was “linked to the timescale necessary to rebuild Iraq’s armed forces
and security services”, according to Sunday Times.
Khalilzad
cut off the negotiations in February 2006, because such an agreement
would have conflicted with a broader strategy of standing up a Shi’a
army to suppress the Sunni insurgency.
The
major Shi’a factions, determined to eliminate any possible threat to
its power from the Sunnis in Baghdad, unleashed death squads, mostly
from the Mahdi Army, in Sunni neighborhoods across the entire city in
2006 and early 2007.
The
result was the defeat of the Sunni insurgents’ political-military bases
in Baghdad, and the transformation of the capital from a mixed
Sunni-Shi’a city into an overwhelmingly Shi’a city, as shown
dramatically in this series of maps, based on U.S. military census data.
As
a result, by late 2006, the Sunni leaders were feeling much more
vulnerable to Shi’a power. Col. Sean McFarland, U.S. Army brigade
commander in Al Anbar province throughout 2006, found
Sunni sheiks expressing “[a] growing concern that the U.S. would leave
Iraq and leave the Sunnis defenseless against Al-Qaeda and
Iranian-supported militias….”
It
was that fear of the Shi’a power that drove local Sunni decisions to
join U.S.-sponsored Sunni neighborhood armed groups in Anbar.
The
sectarian violence in Baghdad began to abate by August 2007, but not
because of additional U.S. troops as the official narrative of the war
suggests. It was because the Shi’a had accomplished their aim of
confining the Sunni population to relatively small enclaves in Baghdad.
That relationship between the achievement of that aim and the reduced
violence was noted by the September 2007 National Intelligence Estimate.
The
main Petraeus conceit about his strategy in Iraq is that it defeated a
Shi’a insurgency that represented an Iranian “proxy war” in Iraq. But
the main premise on which that claim was based -- that Iran was backing “rogue elements”
of Moqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army -- was simply a psywar ploy by Petraeus
and his staff. The objective of the “rogue elements” line was to divide
the Mahdi Army, as military and intelligence officials admitted to pro-war blogger Bill Roggio.
The
official narrative suggested that Iran exerted political influence in
Iraq by supporting armed groups opposing the government. In fact,
however,Iran’s key Iraqi allies had always been the two Shi’a factions
with which the United States was allied against Sadr -- the Supreme
Council of Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and Prime Minister Nuri
al-Maliki’s Dawa Party. They had both gotten Iranian support and
training during the war against Saddam, and the fiercely nationalist
Sadr had criticized SCIRI leaders as Iranian stooges.
The
al-Maliki government had no problem with Iranian training and financial
support of the Mahdi Army in 2006, when the Mahdi Army was eliminating
the Sunni threat from Baghdad. But once it was clear that the Sunnis
had been defeated, the historical conflict between Sadr and the other
Shi’a factions reemerged in spring 2007.
The Iranian interest was to ensure that the Shi’a-dominated government of Iraq consolidated its power. Iran’s “supreme leader” Ali Khamenei told al-Maliki
in August 2007 that Iran would support his taking control of Sadr’s
strongholds. Later that same month, al-Maliki went to Karbala and gave the local police chief “carte blanche”
to attack the Sadrists there. After two days of violence, Sadr
declared a six-month “freeze” on Mahdi Army military operations August
27, 2007.
By late 2007, contrary to the official Iraq legend, the al-Maliki government and the Bush administration were both publicly crediting Iran with pressuring Sadr to agree to the unilateral ceasefire – to the chagrin of Petraeus.
Al-Maliki
launched the attack on Mahdi Army forces in Basrah in March 2008 in the
knowledge that Iran would back him against Sadr. And when it went
badly, he turned to Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the Iranian Islamic
Revolutionary Guard official in charge of day-to-day Iraq policy, to
force a ceasefire on Sadr. Soleimani told Iraqi President Talibani
that Iran supported al-Maliki’s efforts to “dismantle all militias”,
and Sadr agreed to a ceasefire within 24 hours of Iran’s intervention.
So it was Iran’s restraint -- not Petraeus’s counterinsurgency strategy -- that effectively ended the Shi’a insurgent threat.
It
was Soleimani who had presided over the secret April 2006 meeting of
Shi’a leaders that had chosen al-Maliki as Prime Minister, after having
been smuggled into the Green Zone without telling the Americans. And
that was only one of a several trips Soleimani made to the Green Zone over a two-year period without U.S. knowledge.
But
Biden doesn’t want to know this and other historical facts that
contradict the official narrative on Iraq. For the Democratic foreign
policy elite, staying ignorant of the real history of the Iraq War
allows them to believe that deploying U.S. military forces in Muslim
countries can be an effective instrument of U.S. power.
- Posted in


24 Comments so far
Show AllGreat article. Above and beyond the specifics of the battle,
Iraq went from a prosperous, secular Nation ( despite the damage from the Iraq and Iran war,in which the USA was also involved) to being considered on some surveys to be almost the worst Nation on earth to reside in.
No matter how one spins it, causing the deaths of 1 Million people and the displacement of Millions more can never be considered a success story.
GLENN: The simple words of your post represent the ABSOLUTE truth. Thank you.
Excellent article...Petraeus and Biden are two elements of our dangerous and destructive "Warfare State" that sucks needed resources out of our nation, but Petraeus is the more dangerous character as he subverts our democracy and tries to 'box-in' the president over the 'war' in Afghanistan...our nation doesn't need any more political generals.
Truthful article by Dr. Porter. Biden is part of the corrupt, elite and is owned by the MIC and the big banks. And that is why he was given the nickname of Mr. Master card.
I thought he was called "Honest Joe Biden".
he's a proven plagarist.
stole a speech from one-time British Labour Leader Neil Kinnock.
My Iraq war narrative goes this way...(here is where I hang my hat.)
We (The United States Of America) attacked a sovereign state that was of no threat to us. A criminal act of willful aggression that caused the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi citizens......Everything that happened after this event was and is our fault and our fault only.....
What was once the nation state of Iraq remains a mess .... any discussion concerning American military actions resulting in positive outcomes is nothing more than pure horse manure.....
I will note here my that personal narrative concerning that other front in this so-called global war on terror, (A war on a tactic?).....Afghanistan, is similar if not exactly the same...More horse manure....
Thomas Gilbert
To pile on the horse manure of all horse manure, the official conspiracy theory of 9/11.
Of course Biden would want to frame the Iraq war in a more positive light.
He was one of the key players in making it all happen when he was in the Senate. In the build-up to war, the warmongers (Biden included) restricted who could testify before Congress about to what extent Iraq was a threat.
If you didn't see Iraq as an Imminent threat, then Senator Biden did not want your testimony.
In order to be the nominee for vice(as in depraved) president, he made some lame almost-apology for voting in favor of giving Bush his war, but now that he has his chance to feed on the blood more directly, it must be a good thing.
Actually, Biden's current role, as second in fraudulence, was probably his reward for unleashing the dogs.
biden and blair tried to convince clinton to attack Iraq back in the 90's.
In most matters, Biden seems to be a man of great integrity, but he's lost his soul on the question of the Iraq war.
History will find that the Iraq was an enormous atrocity. As others have pointed out, it is simply beyond belief how Americans can view the Iraq War as anything other than a gigantic war crime, with over a million (mostly civilians) killed, more than four million people displaced, and a once prosperous country totally devastated.
And this is nothing new. The US has been doing this kind of thing almost continuously for a century. Just to name a few countries in which we have waged illegal and immoral destructive wars: the Congo, Chile, Guyana, Indonesia, Laos, Cambodia, Viet Nam, Guatemala, Nicaragua, etc., etc., etc.
America has uncounted amounts of blood on its hands.
(see, among others, William Blum's book, Killing Hope. It will literally make one sick. Or, read Imperial Cruise)
Jim Shea
"Jim Shea"
Integrity does not come in degrees. You either have it or you do not.
Biden is not a man of integrity. He is a shill for Wall Street and the Pentagon.
In most matters, Biden seems to be a man of great integrity, but he's lost his soul on the question of the Iraq war.
Come again? Most matters. Integrity. Joe Biden?
It's a tangent, but speaking of "Biden" and "integrity", here's another apparent exception to "most matters":
I finally got around to watching the documentary "Waco: The Rules of Engagement". The documentary makes extensive use of excerpts from the Congressional "fact-finding" hearings convened after the debacle.
At first, I was so caught up in the Waco story that I forgot that the incident was a political hot potato, and that the hearings were a platform in which the Republicans were attacking Janet Reno and the Democratic (mal)administration, with the Democrats striving to justify the debacle and downplay law enforcement's own criminal handling of the crisis.
Ironically, the Republicans do a pretty good job of picking apart all of the FBI and ATF madness and badness that drove the operation. It's the Democrats who are the scoundrels affecting High Dudgeon and Moral Outrage that anyone would "blame" law enforcement and Reno's Justice Department instead of buying into the Official Story scapegoating Koresh as a madman who brought about his own violent death and the deaths of innocent women, children, and ATF agents.
Chuck Schumer is most thoroughly revealed as a snide, devious total shit, but Joe Biden has a prominent cameo towards the end in which he pompously bloviates his self-serving and time-serving Righteous Indignation at critics of the law enforcement authorities.
If you have ANY doubts what evil scum these creeps are, watch this documentary and reconsider.
Since so much here is accurate, I have to wonder how a warmonger like Biden could have made so good an impression.
For the most of this presidency, Biden has been silent unlike the previous administration where Dick Cheney was the obvious man behind the curtain pulling W's strings. But what's to be surprised about Biden? He voted in favor of the war even after giving a few wishy washy speeches in the Senate and on TV and then rambling about "winning the peace" and planning for a graceful exit which he never had or will have any intention of putting forth. Joe Biden is just a "Gomer Pyle" version of Dick Cheney.
The war in Iraq can never be over because the Shites, Sunnis and Kurds will never agree to divide the oil wealth fairly.
Biden is a shallow shill for the administration without a clue as to what winning a war is all about.
He has the audacity of Blair and I'm surprised he hasn't gotten an egg bath yet.
Michael Scheuer, 22-year veteran of the CIA and former head analyst at the CIA’s bin Laden unit, discusses the mostly-unknown motivation for 9/11: bin Laden’s 1996 fatwa, the U.S. media’s Israel bias that prevents them from explaining the link between terrorism and foreign policy, the 14 missed chances to kill bin Laden from 1998 to 2001 including the Tora Bora escape, why Gen. Petaeus’s political ambition and Obama’s face-saving guarantee that the failed Afghan War will muddle on, Pakistan’s anger about India’s role in rebuilding Afghanistan, the history of failed civilian governments in Pakistan, the centrally connected operations of al Qaeda offshoots, the U.S. folly of pitting Christian Ethiopia against Islamic Somalia to effect regime change, how terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi could have been killed before the 2003 Iraq invasion instead of in 2006 and why U.S. energy dependence means paying for gasoline with the blood of soldiers.
These wars should not have happened, the attack on 9/11 could have been stopped, and lots of high level Americans with real intelligence information keep trying to tell America, that our governments actions brought the terrorism on ourselves, but we Americans are too high and mighty for truth.
Truthiness is so much more comforting to our world view of superiority. My whites are whiter, and my narrative is better than the truth. But don't dare call it a myth, you conspiracy freak.
"...to hate them and fear them....and accept it all bravely...with god on my side..."
A nice, concise summary of the factional plays in Iraq, and the US imperium's willful misrepresentation of such. One for the files, for future reference.
STOP PRESS:
Anti Blair protests in Dublin have been SO successful! It seems that Blair chose Dublin in order to test the water for his book signing in London. That has now been canceled, under fears of massive protests. He granted an interview to Fox New's counterpart in the UK, "The Sun".
"FORMER prime minister Tony Blair has cancelled a high-profile signing of his new book because of planned protests, he said today."
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3126541/Blair-cancels-book-signing.html
Blair actually describes himself as "progressive". Why then, would he choose a right wing newspaper owned by Rupert Murdoch like "The Sun", to be the one to give an interview.
Blair chose "The Sun" for pretty much the same narrow partisan tactical showmanship concerns that caused candidate Barack Obama to give a lengthy one-on-one interview to a right wing Faux News pundit shortly before the 2008 election. During that interview, Obama finally caved in to the Karl Rove/McCain campaign narrative and conceded that General Petraeus's surge in Iraq had indeed been a big "success." Self proclaimed "progressive centrists" like Tony Blair and Barack Obama periodically throw a bone like this to Rupert Murdoch's media megaphone to temporarily blunt the propaganda attacks and ingratiate themselves a bit to the large bloc of newspaper readers and true believer TV viewers who consider Fox fake journalism infotainment to actually constitute fair and balanced reporting.
This is what now passes for clever two-party politics on both sides of the Atlantic. Hold your friends close, and your enemies closer, yadayadayada. Toss Reverend Jeremiah Wright under the bus, and share the pulpit with Rick Warren instead. Marginalize those upstarts within your base who don't toe the party line with avengence, but forgive thine enemies. Reach out across the aisle and legitimize even polarizing political figures like Alan Simpson and George W. Bush from time to time, just to show those independent and conservative voters out there that you're not, heaven forbid, a left wing ideologue.
The long term problem, of course, is that when successful Labor politicians like Tony Blair or a Democrat like Barack Obama plays this media framing game, it results in bad public policy and even in revisionist history, publicly blessed with a bipartisan veneer.
And you can bet your sweet ass that the hand of friendship so extended will surely get bitten and bitten hard, whenever the timing will make it hurt the most.
Glad to see the Brits still taking to the streets over the Iraq War lies exposed in the Downing Street memos. Little George is keeping a fairly low profile stateside so far, but once the statute of limitations has run out and the political winds shift just a bit, he'll be back on the public scene grinning from ear to ear.
Bill from Saginaw
This is dense reading. After plowing through a couple of times, and reviewing the Biden interview, I’m not convinced that Biden has “adopted the narrative” that “that Gen. David Petraeus and the Bush surge had turned [the Iraq war] into a good war.” But there’s no doubt in my mind that Biden is simply a politician trying to put the most politically advantageous spin on the facts.
While it’s difficult to make sense of the intricate relationships and ploys of the many players in Iraq, the fundamental fact, not alluded to by Fisk in this article, is that Bush/Cheney started a war on false pretenses. No matter how effectively the surge and General Petraeus may have tamped down the deadly chaos following the invasion, the crime was committed on March 20, 2003, when U.S. forces began dismantling a relatively stable and prosperous Iraq. For the administration(s) to take credit for improvements as a result of “the surge” is like a murderer taking credit for cleaning up the scene of the crime.