Bush's Deadly Dance with Islamic Theocrats
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Robert Dreyfuss
by Tom Engelhardt and
Robert Dreyfuss
During his
embattled summer vacation in Crawford, Texas, George Bush managed
to launch a
new promotional ditty for his war in Iraq: "As Iraqis stand
up, we will stand down." Since then there has been much commentary
from the administration, from military officials, and from the media
on the question of how successfully the Iraqi military is actually
"standing up." (Not especially successfully is the usual answer.)
There has, however, been scarcely any serious discussion about what
that new Iraqi army, heavily infiltrated by Shiite and Kurdish militiamen
from the ruling parties in the Iraqi government, is actually going
to stand up for. And yet this is an important question.
Only recently,
for instance, American forces uncovered some striking evidence of
what our new Iraq has increasingly come to look like. In a bunker
in Baghdad they discovered a detention and torture center run by
the Interior Ministry, itself headed by Bayan Jabr, a senior member
of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq. SCIRI
is the main Shiite religious party in the government and has a 20,000-man
strong militia, the Badr Organization. While the bunker's discovery
caused an uproar here (and in Iraq), it is but the tip of the iceberg.
In some sense, it is not even a new story.
For well over
a year now, Human Rights Watch has been cataloguing Interior Ministry
abuses and warning about a human rights catastrophe unraveling in
"our" Iraq. Last July, Peter
Beaumont of the British Observer revealed that the Shiite
religious/political powers-that-be had set up not one detention-and-torture
center but a whole "ghost network" of them in some cases, he
gave locations – in Baghdad and other Iraqi cities, partly financed
by British
and American funds originally intended for the rebuilding of
the police force. In these centers, torture methods "resurrected
from the time of Saddam" were being used; and the centers, in turn,
were connected to paramilitary commando units (and police units)
basically kidnapping and death squads being run by the Interior
Ministry as well as by the Shiite religious parties. Such units
are increasingly engaged in a war of revenge with Sunni insurgents
and in an ever growing campaign of assassinations,
summary executions,
and disappearances in Sunni neighborhoods which months ago reached
"epidemic
levels." Human rights organizations in the country have hundreds
of cases of disappearances on their lists as well as assassinations,
torture of every sort, and an endless raft of human rights violations.
When asked
about these practices by the
Washington Post's Ellen Knickmeyer, Abdul Aziz Hakim,
head of SCIRI, responded with complaints that the Bush administration
wasn't letting his men act aggressively enough. The United States,
he insisted, "is tying Iraq's hands in the fight against insurgents"
oddly enough the very (tortured) image Vice President Dick
Cheney recently used in opposing Senator John McCain's anti-torture
amendment in the Senate. (The amendment, he said, "would
bind the president's hands in wartime.")
This week,
just as Saddam Hussein went back into court, a new voice was added
to the discussion about the "collapse of human rights in Iraq"
that of Iyad
Allawi, the former Iraqi Prime Minister in the American-sponsored
Interim Government. Running for office again in the upcoming elections,
he accused the Iraqi government essentially the Shiite religious
parties of sponsoring "human rights abuses in Iraq [that] are
now as bad as they were under Saddam Hussein and are even in danger
of eclipsing his record." He told the Observer's Beaumont
that "the brutality of elements in the new security forces rivals
that of Saddam's secret police," and added, "We are even witnessing
Sharia courts based on Islamic law that are trying people and executing
them." The former American favorite "now has so little faith in
the rule of law that he had instructed his own bodyguards to fire
on any police car that attempted to approach his headquarters without
prior notice, following the implication of police units in many
of the abuses."
All this,
by the way, from a man, who was the head of an exile organization,
the Iraqi National Accord, which, according to a little noted June
2004 front-page article in
the New York Times, planted car bombs and other explosives
in Baghdad in the 1990s in an attempt to destabilize Saddam's regime
and did so under the "direction" of the CIA.
Robert Dreyfuss
has a particularly vivid way of catching the strange dilemma George
Bush's war has left us in today. American forces in Iraq, he writes
below, are now "the Praetorian Guard" for a radical right-wing Iraqi
theocratic government in Baghdad, one deeply indebted to that full
member of the "axis of evil," Iran. Dreyfuss is the author of a
remarkable new book, The
Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist
Islam. It's a striking history of how, for the last half
century, successive American administrations have bedded down with
right-wing Islamic movements. James
Norton, former Middle East editor for the Christian Science
Monitor, recently called the book "a chronicle of mistakes made,
opportunities lost, and lessons most vividly not learned. It's also
the story of the historical error that has come to define U.S. foreign
policy in the Muslim world: the Machiavellian use of political Islam
as a sword and shield against communism and Arab nationalism… Devil's
Game records the long and sordid history of right-wing and hard-line
elements in the U.S. government finding common cause with fundamentalist
groups in the Middle East… By feeding the monster of militant Islamism
to fulfill short-term goals, Dreyfuss argues, the United States
helped unleash the most challenging foreign policy crisis of the
new millennium" It is a must read. In the meantime, consider his
latest take on the Bush administration and the Islamic right. ~ Tom
Political
Islam vs. Democracy
The Bush
Administration's Deadly Waltz with Shiite Theocrats in Iraq and
Muslim Brotherhood Fanatics in Syria, Egypt, and Elsewhere
by Robert
Dreyfuss
Nearly three
years into the war in Iraq, the Bush administration tells us that
it wasn't about weapons of mass destruction or Iraqi ties to Al
Qaeda, but about America's holy mission to spread democracy to the
benighted regions of the Middle East. However, postwar Iraq is anything
but a democracy. In fact, if Iraq manages to avoid all-out civil
war, it is likely to end up with a government that is fiercely undemocratic
a Shiite theocratic dictatorship that rules by terror, torture,
and armed might.
What President
Bush has wrought in Iraq is just the latest in a long string of
U.S. efforts to make common cause with the Islamic right. But like
the Sorcerer's Apprentice, the Mickey Mouse character whose naïve
and inexperienced use of magic blows up in his face, American efforts
to play with the forces of political Islam have proved to be dangerous,
volatile, and often uncontrollable.
The problem
goes far beyond the Shiites in Iraq. In the Sunni parts of that
country, the power of Islamism is growing, too and by this I
do not mean the forces associated with Al Qaeda but the radical-right
Muslim Brotherhood, represented there by the Iraqi Islamic Party,
and other manifestations of the Salafi- and Wahhabi-style religious
right. In Egypt, Syria, and elsewhere, the radical religious right
is also gaining strength. Meanwhile; sometimes deliberately, sometimes
by sheer ignorance and incompetence, the Bush administration is
encouraging the spread of political Islam. Were we to "stay the
course," not only Iraq but much of the rest of the Middle East could
fall to the Islamic right.
Does this
mean that Al Qaeda-style fanatics will take power? No. Whether in
the form of Iraq's Shiite theocrats or the Sunni Muslim Brotherhood
in Syria and Egypt, the Islamic right cannot be compared to Al Qaeda.
Yet, just as the U.S. Christian right has its clinic bombers, just
as the Israeli Jewish right spawned the assassin of Yitzhak Rabin
and settler-extremists who kill dozens at Muslim holy sites, the
Islamic right provides ideological support and theological justification
for more extreme (and, yes, terrorist) offspring. Even the Muslim
Brotherhood, an organization with a long history of violence, which
once maintained a covert "secret apparatus" and a paramilitary arm,
has not convincingly renounced its past, nor demonstrated that it
sees democracy as anything more than a tool it can use to seize
power.
Shiite
"Islamofascists" Rule Iraq
The case of
Iraq could not be clearer. In 2002, as Vice President Dick Cheney
pushed the White House and the Pentagon inexorably toward war, it
was increasingly obvious to experienced Iraq hands that post-Saddam
Iraq would be ruled by its restive Shiite majority. It was no less
obvious that the dominant force within that Shiite majority would
be the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, or SCIRI,
and a parallel force associated with Al Dawa (The Islamic Call),
a forty-five year-old Shiite underground terrorist party. From the
mid-1990s on, and especially after 2001, the United States provided
overt and covert assistance to these organizations as part of the
effort to force regime change in Iraq. Like Ahmed Chalabi's Iraqi
National Congress, with which both worked closely and which had
offices in Teheran, SCIRI and Dawa were based in Iran. SCIRI, in
fact, was founded in 1982 by Ayatollah Khomeini and its paramilitary
arm, the Badr Brigade, was trained and armed by Iran's Revolutionary
Guards. Certainly, to the Bush administration, SCIRI and Dawa were
known quantities.
David Phillips,
the former adviser to the State Department's war-planning effort
and author of Losing
Iraq: Inside the Postwar Reconstruction Fiasco, has assured
me that, in the run-up to the war, many of his colleagues were well
aware that SCIRI-type Islamists, not Chalabi, would inherit post-Saddam
Iraq. Other insiders, too, have told me of foreign-policy professionals
and Iraq specialists in the U.S. intelligence community who warned
(to no avail) that SCIRI would be a major force in Iraq after any
invasion. The point is, whether they bothered to pay attention or
not, the Bush-Cheney team was informed, well in advance, that by
toppling Saddam there was a strong possibility they would be installing
a Shiite theocracy.
Today, the
unpleasant reality is that 150,000 U.S. troops, who are dying at
a rate of about 100 a month, are the Praetorian Guard for that radical-right
theocracy. It is a regime that sponsors Shiite-led death squads
carrying out assassinations from Basra (where freelance reporter
Steven Vincent, himself murdered by such a unit, wrote that "hundreds"
of former Baathists, secular leaders, and Sunnis were being killed
every month) to Baghdad. Scores of bodies of Sunnis regularly turn
up shot to death, execution-style.
The latest
revelation is that SCIRI's Badr Brigade, now a 20,000-strong militia,
operated a secret torture prison in Baghdad holding hundreds of
Sunni detainees. There, prisoners had their skin flayed off, electric
shocks applied to their genitals, or power drills driven into their
bones. SCIRI and Al Dawa are the senior partners in an Iraqi government
which has imposed a unilateralist constitution on the country that
elevates the power of the Shiite-dominated provinces and enshrines
their vision of Islam in the body politic. Two weeks ago, during
his visit to Washington, D.C., I asked Adel Abdul Mahdi, a top SCIRI
official and Iraq's deputy president, about the charges of death
squads and brutality. "All of the terrorists are on the other side,"
he sniffed. "What you refer to is a reaction to that."
Perhaps the
ultimate irony of Bush's war on terrorism is this: While the President
asserts that the war in Iraq is the central front in the struggle
against what he describes as "Islamofascism," real "Islamofascists"
are already in power in Baghdad and they are, shamefully, America's
allies.
Of course,
among the Iraqi opposition, too, the Islamic right is growing. The
forces of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's Al Qaeda in Iraq have gained some
limited support from Iraqis, and Zarqawi is using the war in Iraq
to rally support from jihadists throughout the region. More broadly,
the U.S. occupation is pushing ever larger numbers of Sunni Arabs
toward support for Islamists. In Iraq, the Muslim Brotherhood is
represented by the Iraqi Islamic Party (IIP). Although it draws
much of its strength from radicalized Sunnis who hate the occupation,
the IIP has shown itself to be the part of the Sunni opposition
most willing to cooperate with the U.S.-allied Shiite theocrats.
It has, from time to time, taken part in the various interim governments
that the United States has set up in post-war Iraq; and, in October,
the IIP endorsed the ersatz Iraqi constitution, setting itself apart
from the vast majority of Iraq's Sunnis. (For that, its headquarters
in Baghdad was attacked by the resistance, and many of its offices
around the country were blown up or assaulted.) Still, the growth
of the IIP and other similar manifestations of the Islamic right
among Iraq's Sunnis has encouraged some Shiite theocrats to envision
a Sunni-Shiite Islamist partnership in the country. However unlikely
that may be, given the passions that have already been inflamed,
the growth of the radical right among Sunnis cannot possibly be
a good thing for Iraq, for the region, or for U.S. interests.
Syria:
The Muslim Brotherhood Waits
Now, consider
the broader issue of Bush's supposed push for regional democracy.
That effort, it should be noted, is being coordinated under the
know-nothing supervision of none other than Elizabeth Cheney, the
vice president's daughter. She is currently the principal deputy
assistant secretary of state for Near East affairs and is charged
with the task of democracy-building in the "Greater Middle East."
Undeterred
by the failure of the U.S. experiment in installing democracy in
Iraq, next on the chopping block that is, next to receive the
benefits of U.S.-imposed democracy is Syria. That small, oil-poor,
militarily weak state is, at the moment, feeling the full force
of Bush administration pressure. Its army and security forces have
been driven out of Lebanon, at the risk of sparking civil war in
that country again. It has been targeted by the Syrian Accountability
Act (reminiscent of the 1998 Iraq Liberation Act) and hit with related
U.S. economic sanctions. It has been accused, by John Bolton and
other neoconservatives, of maintaining a weapons-of-mass-destruction
program far beyond the very limited chemical arms it probably possesses.
It is accused, by many U.S. officials, including our ambassador
to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, of sponsoring the resistance fighters
in Iraq though there is nearly zero evidence that it is doing
so. Liz Cheney and other top U.S. officials are already meeting
with Chalabi-like Syrian exile leaders to plot "regime change."
As in Iraq,
where Islamic fundamentalist Shiites stepped in to fill the vacuum,
so in Syria the most likely power waiting in the wings to replace
the government of President Bashar Assad is not some group of Syrian
secular democrats and nationalists but Syria's Muslim Brotherhood.
The Brotherhood,
founded in Egypt in 1928, is an underground secret society with
a long history of terrorism and the use of assassination. With financial
and organizational help from Saudi Arabia's Wahhabi establishment,
the Brotherhood has spread to every corner of the Muslim world.
Although it now officially eschews violence, in recent years it
has given succor to, and even spawned, far more radical versions
of itself. One of its chief theoreticians, Sayyid Qutb, created
the theological justification for Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda. Even
today, the Brotherhood and Al Qaeda are at least fellow travelers.
It is far from clear how to draw the line between the Muslim Brotherhood
and other forces of "conservative" political Islam and those associated
with radical-right, violence-prone Islamists. Certainly, many experienced
U.S. diplomats and intelligence officers disagree about where one
stops and the other starts.
Because Syria
with a mostly Sunni population (though, as in Iraq, highly complex
with rich mix of minorities) is a closed society, it is impossible
to say just how powerful the Muslim Brotherhood is there. But with
an exile leadership in London and other cities in Western Europe,
with a network of supporters among the Sunni Arab petit bourgeoisie,
and with power centers in a string of cities from Damascus to Homs,
Hama, and Aleppo, it is widely considered a major player in future
Syrian politics. Recently, the Brotherhood joined with secular intellectuals
and others in an ad hoc, anti-Assad coalition, but the rest of the
coalition has few forces on the ground. Only it has "troops." In
that, this coalition is reminiscent of the one that formed in 1978
to overthrow the Shah of Iran. After the Shah's fall, Ayatollah
Khomeini's gang picked off its erstwhile allies one by one the
communists, the National Front (the remnant of the nationalist forces
associated with Prime Minister Mossadegh in the 1950s), the intellectuals,
and finally the moderate Islamists such as President Abolhassan
Bani-Sadr to establish the authoritarian theocracy that is the
Islamic Republic of Iran.
It cannot
be that the Bush administration is unaware of the power of the Muslim
Brotherhood in Syria. Rather, they evidently simply don't care.
Their enmity for the Assad government is so all-powerful that, as
in Iraq, they evidently are willing to risk an Islamist regime.
How can it be that Mr. War on Terrorism blithely condones one Islamic
extremist regime in Baghdad and courts another in Damascus?
History shows
that there is precedent. In the 1970s and early 1980s, two U.S.
allies Israel and Jordan actively supported the Syrian Muslim
Brotherhood in a bloody civil war against the government of President
Hafez Assad, Bashar's father. The Israeli- and Jordanian-sponsored
terrorists killed hundreds of Syrians, exploded car bombs, and assassinated
Soviet diplomats and military personnel in Syrian cities. All of
this was known to the United States at the time and viewed benignly.
The Syrian civil war came to a brutal end when Rifaat Assad, the
president's brother, led elite units of the military into Hama,
where the Muslim Brotherhood had seized power and where hundreds
of Syrian government officials had been dragged from their offices
and murdered. Rifaat Assad carried out a massive repression in which
many thousands died. Yet the forces of the Brotherhood recovered,
and today the Bush administration seems content to squeeze the brittle
Assad government until it collapses, even if it means that the Muslim
Brotherhood takes power.
Middle
Eastern Dominos?
Aficionados
of the Cold War domino theory often suggested that communism, allowed
to topple a single state, would then be able topple country after
country; that if communism was victorious in South Vietnam, then
Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines and other distant lands would
follow. That may have been silly, but in the Middle East a domino
theory might actually have some application. At the very least,
it is important to understand that the Muslim Brotherhood is a supranational
force, not simply a country-by-country phenomenon. From Algeria
to Pakistan, its leaders know each other, talk to each other, and
work together. In addition, the virulent force of religious fanaticism,
fed by anger, bitterness, and despair, knows no national boundaries.
Egypt, the
anchor of the Arab world and by far its most populous country, is
threatened with a Muslim Brotherhood-style regime. Virtually all
observers of Egyptian politics agree that the Muslim Brotherhood
is the chief opposition party in Egypt. Mere prudence suggests that
the United States should not press Egypt too hard for democracy
and free elections, given how difficult it is to transition from
an authoritarian state to a democratic one. Moreover, it is arguably
none of America's business what sort of government Egypt has. The
very idea that democracy is the antidote for terrorism has been
proven false, most authoritatively by F. Gregory Gause in his essay,
"Can Democracy Stop Terrorism?" in the September/October issue of
Foreign Affairs magazine.
Yet the Bush
administration is pushing hard for its brand of democracy. Two weeks
ago, at a regional forum in the Gulf, Egyptian officials bluntly
rebuffed the imperial U.S. Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice,
who seemed stunned that the government in Cairo did not want meddlers
from the National Endowment for Democracy, USAID, and other agencies
pouring money into Egyptian opposition groups. President Mubarak,
a long-time American ally, was considered indispensable by a succession
of administrations during the Cold War. A fierce anti-communist
who kept the peace with Israel and helped the United States in its
anti-Soviet war in Afghanistan in the 1980s, and again in the 1991
Gulf War, is now regularly denounced as a dictator by the likes
of Newt Gingrich and Richard Perle.
Because of
Egypt's history as an ally, no Bush administration official (and
not even many neocons) dare say that they want "regime change" in
Cairo, but that is precisely what they do want, and many of them
may be willing to risk the creation of a Muslim Brotherhood-style
regime to get it. Reuel Marc Gerecht, a leading neoconservative
strategist and former CIA officer who is now a fellow at the American
Enterprise Institute, wrote the following in his book The
Islamic Paradox, comparing Ayatollah Khomeini favorably
to Mubarak:
"Khomeini
submitted the idea of an Islamic republic to an up-or-down popular
vote in 1979, and regular elections with some element of competition
are morally essential to the regime's conception of its own legitimacy,
something not at all the case with President Husni Mubarak's dictatorship
in Egypt. … Anti-Americanism is the common denominator of the Arab
states with ‘pro-American' dictators. By comparison, Iran is a profoundly
pro-American country."
True, Mubarak
rigs Egyptian elections, but in recent parliamentary elections,
the Muslim Brotherhood still showed tremendous strength. With a
third round of elections still to go, it is on track to win up to
a quarter of the seats in the new national assembly. Gerecht isn't
worried: "It is certainly possible," he writes, "that fundamentalists,
if they gained power in Egypt, would try to end representative government.
… But the United States would still be better off with this alternative
than with a secular dictatorship."
In the 1950s,
British intelligence and the CIA worked with the Muslim Brothers
against Gamal Abdel Nasser, the founder of modern Arab nationalism.
Said Ramadan, the son-in-law of Muslim Brotherhood founder Hassan
al-Banna, who set up the organization's global nerve center in Geneva,
Switzerland, was a CIA agent. Twice, in 1954 and in 1965, the Brotherhood
tried to assassinate Nasser. From this period to the present, the
Brotherhood has received financial support from the ultra-right
Saudi establishment.
A Formula
for Endless War in the Middle East
Iraq, Syria,
and Egypt are not the only places threatened by fundamentalism.
In recent Palestinian elections, Hamas the official branch of
the Muslim Brotherhood there has shown remarkable strength, threatening
to undo the Palestinian Authority's accomplishments and wreck any
chance of a Palestinian-Israeli accord. Ironically, a great deal
of Hamas' present power exists only because of the support offered
its founders by the Israeli military authorities in decades past.
From the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza in 1967 well
into the 1980s, Israel supported the growth of Hamas-style Islamism
as a counterweight to the nationalists in the Palestine Liberation
Organization. Ahmed Yassin, Hamas' founder, was backed by Israel
during those years, as his followers clashed with PLO supporters
in Gaza and the West Bank. Too late, Israel recognized that it had
created a monster and began to wage war on Hamas, including assassinating
Yassin.
From Israel
and Palestine to Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and beyond in Algeria, Sudan,
the Gulf states, Pakistan, and even Saudi Arabia the region is
beset by Islamist movements. The right way to combat this upsurge
is not through military action or a Bush administration-style Global
War on Terrorism. That, as many observers have pointed out, is likely
to further fuel the growth of such movements, not subdue them.
Only
if the temperature is lowered throughout the region might the momentum
of the Islamic right be slowed and, someday, reversed. Unfortunately,
the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq have raised that temperature
to the boiling point. So has the long-term American military build-up
in the Persian Gulf and Central Asia. So have the proclamations
from President Bush & Co. about a nonsensical "World War IV" against
"Islamofascism." So has the Israeli policy of expanding settlements
and building a giant barrier that virtually annexes huge swaths
of the West Bank for Greater Israel. All of these policies cause
Islamist sympathies to grow and out of them bubble recruits not
only for organizations like the Muslim Brotherhood, but for Al Qaeda-style
terrorist groups.
The
Bush administration has put into operation an utterly paradoxical
and self-defeating strategy. First, its policies inflame the region,
feeding the growth of political Islam and its extremist as well
as terrorist offshoots. Then, as in Iraq and as seems to
be the case in Syria and Egypt it seeks "regime change" in
countries where it knows that the chief opposition and likely inheritor
of power will be the Muslim Brotherhood or its ilk. This is a formula
for endless war in the region.
November
30, 2005
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture. Robert Dreyfuss is the author of
Devil's
Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam.
He covers national security for Rolling Stone and writes frequently
for The American Prospect, Mother Jones, and the Nation. He is also
a regular contributor to TomPaine.com, the Huffington Post, and
other sites, and writes the blog, "The
Dreyfuss Report," at his web
site.
Copyright
© 2005 Robert Dreyfuss
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Engelhardt Archives
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