A Small War Guaranteed To Damage a Superpower
by
Patrick Cockburn and Tom Engelhardt
by Patrick Cockburn and
Tom Engelhardt
DIGG THIS
What the
Bush Administration Has Wrought in Iraq
At 3 a.m.
on January 11, 2007 a fleet of American helicopters made a sudden
swoop on the long-established Iranian liaison office in the city
of Arbil in northern Iraq. Their mission was to capture two senior
Iranian security officials, Mohammed Jafari, the deputy head of
the Iranian National Security Council, and General Minojahar Frouzanda,
the head of intelligence of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards. What
made the American raid so extraordinary is that both men were in
Iraq at the official invitation of the Iraqi President Jalal Talabani,
who held talks with them at his lakeside headquarters at Dokan in
eastern Kurdistan. The Iranians had then asked to see Massoud Barzani,
the president of the Kurdistan Regional Government, in the Kurdish
capital Arbil. There was nothing covert about the meeting which
was featured on Kurdish television.
In the event
the U.S. attack failed. It was only able to net five junior Iranian
officials at the liaison office that had existed in Arbil for years,
issuing travel documents, and which was being upgraded to a consular
office by the Iraqi Foreign Ministry in Baghdad. The Kurdish leaders
were understandably furious asking why, without a word to them,
their close allies, the Americans, had tried to abduct two important
foreign officials who were in Iraq at the request of the Iraqi president.
Kurdish troops had almost opened fire on the American troops. At
the very least, the raid showed a contempt for Iraqi sovereignty
which the U.S. was supposedly defending. It was three months before
officials in Washington admitted that they had tried and failed
to capture Jafari and General Frouzanda. The U.S. State Department
and Iraqi government argued for the release of the five officials
as relative minnows, but Vice-President Cheney's office insisted
fiercely that they should be held.
If Iran had
undertaken a similar venture by, for example, trying to kidnap the
deputy head of the CIA when he was on an official visit to Pakistan
or Afghanistan, then Washington might have considered the attempt
a reason for going to war. In the event, the US assault on Arbil
attracted bemused attention inside and outside Iraq for only a few
days before it was buried by news of the torrent of violence in
the rest of Iraq. The U.S. understandably did not reveal the seniority
of its real targets or that they had escaped.
Multiplying
Enemies
The Arbil
raid is significant because it was the first visible sign of a string
of highly significant American policy decisions announced by President
George W. Bush in an address to the nation broadcast in the U.S.
a few hours earlier on January 10. There have been so many spurious
turning points in the war such as the capture of Saddam Hussein
in 2003, the handover of sovereignty to an Iraqi government in 2004,
or the elections of 2005 that truly critical moments are
obscured or underrated.
The true importance
of Bush's words took time to sink in. In the months prior to his
speech, the U.S. seemed to be feeling its way towards an end to
the war. The Republicans had lost control of both houses of Congress
in the November 2006 elections, an unexpectedly heavy defeat blamed
on the Iraq war. Soon afterwards, the bipartisan Iraqi Study Group
of senior Republicans and Democrats, led by James Baker and Lee
Hamilton, spelled out the extent of American failure thus far, arguing
for a reduced U.S. military commitment and suggesting negotiations
with Iran and Syria.
President
Bush did the exact opposite of what the Baker-Hamilton report had
proposed. He identified Iran and Syria as America's prime enemies
in Iraq, stating: "These two regimes are allowing terrorists and
insurgents to use their territory to move in and out of Iraq." Instead
of reducing the American commitment, Bush pledged to send 20,000
extra troops to Iraq to try to secure Baghdad. In other words, the
U.S. was going to respond to its lack of success in the conflict
by escalating both the war in Iraq and America's confrontation with
Iran in the Middle East as a whole. The invasion of 2003 had destabilized
the whole region; now Bush was about to deepen that instability.
The raid on
Arbil showed that the new policies were not just rhetoric. Iraqis
were quicker than the rest of the world to pick up on what was happening.
"People are saying that Bush's speech means that the occupation
is going to go on a long time," the Iraqi political scientist Ghassan
Attiyah told me soon after the President had stopped speaking. Although
the new U.S. security plan for Baghdad, which began on February
14th, was sold as a temporary "surge" in troop numbers, it was evident
that the reinforcements were there to stay.
In April,
the Pentagon announced that it was increasing Army tours in Iraq
from 12 to 15 months. Without anybody paying much attention, American
officials stopped talking about training Iraqi army troops as a
main priority. This was an important shift in emphasis. Training
and equipping Iraqi troops to replace American soldiers so
they could be withdrawn from Iraq had been the cornerstone
of U.S. military planning since 2005. Now, the policy was being
quietly downgraded, though not abandoned altogether.
Could the
new strategy succeed? It seemed very unlikely. The U.S. had failed
to pacify Iraq between 2003 and 2007. Now, with much of the American
public openly disillusioned with the war, Bush was to try for victory
once again. Common sense suggested that he needed to reduce the
number of America's enemies inside and outside Iraq, but his new
strategy was only going to increase them.
The U.S. Army
was to go on fighting the five-million-strong Sunni community, as
it had been doing since the capture of Baghdad. The Sunni demand
for a timetable for U.S. withdrawal was not being met. At the same
time, the U.S. was going to deal more aggressively with the 17 million
Shias in Iraq. It would contest the control over much of Baghdad
and southern Iraq of the Mehdi Army, the powerful militia led by
the nationalist Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who is regarded with
cult-like devotion by many Shia Iraqis. Not content with this, Washington
was also more openly going to confront Iran, the most powerful of
Iraq's neighbors.
As with so
many U.S. policies under Bush, the new strategy made sense in terms
of American domestic politics, but in Iraq seemed a recipe for disaster.
Iran was easy to demonize in the U.S., just as Saddam Hussein had
been blamed four years earlier for everything wrong in Iraq and
the Middle East. The New York Times, which had once uncritically
repeated White House claims that Saddam possessed weapons of mass
destruction, now ran articles on its front page saying that Iran
was exporting sophisticated roadside bombs to Iraq that were killing
American soldiers. There was no reference to the embarrassing discoveries
of workshops making just such bombs in Baghdad and Basra. Above
all, the Bush administration was determined to put off the day
at least until after the Presidential election in 2008 when
it had to admit that the U.S. had failed in Iraq.
A Security
Plan Lacking Security
I was in Baghdad
soon after Bush had spoken. I had never known it to be so bad. My
driver had to take a serpentine route from the airport, driving
along the main highway, then suddenly doing a U-turn to dart down
an alleyway. He was trying to avoid checkpoints that might be manned
by Police Commandos in their mottled uniforms who often acted as
Shia death squads. The journey to the al-Hamra Hotel in Jadriyah,
a district built in a loop of the Tigris river, took three times
as long as normal. In the following days, I could see Mehdi Army
checkpoints, civilians with guns and a car slewed across the road,
operating almost within sight of the heavily guarded July 14 Bridge
that leads to the Green Zone.
The extent
of the military failure over the previous three-and-a-half years
was extraordinary. The foreign media never quite made clear how
little territory the U.S. and the Iraqi army fully controlled
even in the heart of Baghdad. It was astonishing, in early 2007,
to look out from the north-facing windows in the Hamra and see columns
of black smoke billowing up from Haifa Street on the other side
of the Tigris river. This is a two-mile-long militant Sunni corridor
less than a mile from the northern end of the Green Zone. Since
the early days of the fighting, the U.S. Army, supported by Iraqi
army troops, had been unsuccessfully trying to drive out the insurgents
who ruled it.
Sometimes,
U.S. commanders persuaded themselves (and embedded journalists)
that they were making progress. On this occasion, I looked up and
read a long, optimistic article about Haifa Street in an American
paper, claiming there were signs that "the tide was turning on Iraq's
street of fear." It was no longer an arrow pointing at the heart
of the Green Zone; rebel leaders had been arrested or killed; large
weapons caches had been discovered; insurgent attacks were less
intense and less frequent; Iraqi troops were at last being effectively
deployed. Having finished reading the piece, I was reflecting on
whether or not the U.S. military and its local allies were at last
achieving something on Haifa Street when I glanced at the piece
and realized, with a groan, that it was dated March 2005, almost
two years earlier.
American commanders
often genuinely believed that they were in command of towns and
cities which Iraqis, including the local police, told me were dominated
by Sunni insurgents or Shia militia. On one occasion in early 2007,
senior U.S. and Iraqi officers were giving a video press conference
from Diyala, a much fought over province northeast of Baghdad, confidently
claiming that they were winning the fight against the Sunni rebels.
Even as they were speaking an insurgent squad attacked and captured
the mayor's office in Baquba, the capital of Diyala. It only withdrew
after blowing up the building and kidnapping the mayor. The government
announced that it was dismissing 1,500 policemen in Diyala because
of their repeated failure to resist the insurgents. When I checked
with a police commander a few months later he said threw up his
hands in disgust and said that not a single policeman had been fired.
The addition,
promised by Bush, of five extra brigades to the U.S. forces in Baghdad
made, at least at first, some difference to security in the capital.
The number of bodies of people tortured, shot in the head, and dumped
in the street, went down from the horrific levels of late 2006.
These death-squad killings were mostly of Sunni and were the work
of the Mehdi Army or of army and police units collaborating with
them.
A few days
before the security plan began, Muqtada al-Sadr stood down his militiamen,
telling them to dump their arms and move out of Baghdad. He was
intent on avoiding direct military confrontation with the U.S. reinforcements.
But while the Shia were killing fewer Sunni, the Sunni insurgents
were still slaughtering Shia civilians with massive suicide bombs,
often vehicle-borne, targeting crowded market places. These did
not stop and improved security measures made little difference.
On February 3, a truck delivering vegetables blew up in the Shia-Kurdish
Sadriya quarter in central Baghdad killing 135 people and wounding
305. Ten weeks later, long after the Security Plan had been launched,
another vehicle bomb blew up in the same market, killing 127 people
and wounding 148. Not surprisingly, local people jeered and threw
stones at American and Iraqi soldiers who turned up after the explosion.
The main failing of the security plan for ordinary Iraqis, many
of whom had initially welcomed it, was simply that it did not deliver
security for them or their families.
Who Rules
Iraq?
There was
a central lesson of four years of war which Bush and Tony Blair
never seemed to take on board, though it was obvious to anybody
living in Iraq: the occupation was unpopular and becoming more so
by the day. Anti-American guerrillas and militiamen always had enough
water to swim in. The only community in Iraq that fully supported
the U.S. presence was the Kurds and Kurdistan was not occupied.
It is this
lack of political support that has so far doomed all U.S. political
and military actions in Iraq. It makes the country very different
from Afghanistan where foreign troops are far more welcome. Opinion
polls consistently show this trend. A comprehensive Iraqi survey
has been conducted by ABC News, USAToday, the BBC, and ARD annually
over the last three years. Its findings illuminate the most important
trends in Iraqi politics. They show that, by March 2007, no less
than 78% of Iraqis opposed the presence of U.S. forces, compared
to 65% in November 2005 and 51% in February 2004. In the latter
year, only 17% of the population thought that violence against U.S.
forces was acceptable, while by 2007 the figure had risen to 51%.
This pool of people sympathetic to Sunni insurgents and Shia militias
was so large as to make it difficult to control and impossible to
eliminate them.
Again and
again, assassinations and bombs showed that the Iraqi army and police
were thoroughly infiltrated by militants from all sides. Nowhere
was safe. Some incidents are well known. In April 2007, a suicide
bomber blew himself up in the café of the Iraqi parliament in its
heavily defended building in the Green Zone. The bomber had somehow
circumvented seven or eight layers of security. Earlier, on March
23, the deputy prime minister, Salam al-Zubaie, was badly injured
by a bomber who got close to him with the connivance of his bodyguards.
There were
lesser unknown incidents indicative of the divided loyalties of
the security forces. On March 6, militants from the Islamic State
of Iraq movement of which al Qaida in Iraq is part
stormed Badoush prison northwest of Mosul. In the biggest jailbreak
since 2003, they freed 68 prisoners of whom 57 were foreign. Of
the 1,200 guards at the prison, 400500 were on duty at the
time, but did nothing to stop the Islamic militants breaking in
or the prisoners breaking out. Some American soldiers see that the
problem is not about a few infiltrators. "Any Iraqi officer who
hasn't been assassinated or targeted for assassination is giving
information or support to the insurgents," one US marine was quoted
as saying. "Any Iraqi officer who isn't in bed with the insurgents
is already dead."
Some problems
facing the U.S. and Britain in Iraq have not changed since Saddam
Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990. Getting rid of the Iraqi leader
was far easier than finding a successor regime that would not be
more dangerous to American interests. It is a dilemma still unresolved
more than four years into the occupation.
A prime reason
why the U.S. supported Saddam Hussein during his war with Iran in
198088 is that it did not want a Shia clerical regime, possibly
sympathetic to America's enemies in Tehran, to come to power in
Iraq. It was the same motive that stopped President Bush senior
pushing on to Baghdad and overthrowing Saddam after defeating the
Iraqi army in Kuwait in 1991. After 2003, Washington was in the
same quandary: If elections were held, the Shia, comprising 60%
of the population that had been long excluded from power, were bound
to win.
The nightmare
for Washington was to find that it had conquered Iraq only to install
black-turbaned clerics in power in Baghdad, as they already were
in Tehran. At first, the U.S. tried to postpone elections, claiming
that a census had to be held. It was only on the insistence of the
Shia Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani that two elections were held
in 2005, in which the Shia religious parties triumphed. Washington
has never been comfortable with these Shia-Kurdish governments.
It demanded that they try to reconcile with the Sunni though
exactly how Shia and Kurdish leaders are supposed to do this, given
that the main Sunni demand is a timetable for an American withdrawal,
has never been clear.
For their
part, the Shia, have become increasingly suspicious that the U.S.
and Britain do not intend to relinquish real control over security
to the elected Iraqi government. There were many examples of this.
For instance, in the Middle East the most important force underpinning
every government is the intelligence service. In theory (as I explain
in my book, The
Occupation: War and Resistance in Iraq), the Iraqi government
should get its information from the Iraqi National Intelligence
Service (INIS) that was established in 2004 by the US-run Coalition
Provisional Authority. But a peculiarity of the INIS is that its
budget is not provided by the Iraqi Finance Ministry but by the
CIA.
Over the next
three years, they paid $3 billion to fund its activities. During
this time it was run by General Mohammed Shahwani, who had been
the central figure in a CIA-run coup in 1996 against Saddam Hussein
that had failed disastrously. For long periods he was even banned
from attending Iraqi cabinet meetings. A former Iraqi cabinet minister,
who was a member of the country's National Security Council, complained
to me that "we only get information that the CIA wants us to hear."
Iraqis did not fail to spot the extent to which the power of their
elected government was being trimmed. The poll cited above showed
that by Spring 2007 only 34% of Iraqis thought their country was
being run by their own government; 59% believed the U.S. was in
control. The Iraqi government had been robbed of legitimacy in the
eyes of its own people.
Destabilizing
Iraq
In the course
of 2006 and 2007, Baghdad disintegrated into a dozen hostile cities
at war with each other. There were fewer and fewer mixed Sunni and
Shia neighborhoods. Terror engulfed the city like a poisonous cloud.
There was a lot to be frightened of: Sunni insurgent groups; the
Shia militias, Mehdi Army, and the Badr Organization; police and
police commandos; the Iraqi army and the Americans. One day I received
an e-mail message from an old friend. He wrote: "Yesterday the cousin
of my stepbrother (as you know, my father married twice) was killed
by Badr troops three days after he was arrested. His body was found
in the trash in al-Shula district. He was one of three other people
who were killed after heavy torture. They did nothing, but they
are Sunni people among the huge numbers of Shia people in the General
Factory for Cotton in al-Khadamiyah where they were working. His
family couldn't recognize his face [and only knew it was him] because
of the wart on his arm."
Most of my
Iraqi friends had fled Iraq for Jordan or Syria or, when they could
get a visa, Western Europe. Soon, I could not enter the coffee shop
of The Four Seasons, the hotel where I usually stayed in the Jordanian
capital of Amman, without seeing several Iraqis I knew sitting at
other tables. These were the better-off. The poor often had to chose
between staying in jobs where they were at risk, becoming permanently
unemployed, or taking flight. I was in contact with a Sunni family
called al-Mashadani who lived in the west Baghdad district of Hurriya.
It was under attack by Shia militiamen. Khalid, the father, worked
as mechanic in the railway station. He was forced to leave his job
when the repair yard was taken over by Shia militiamen. He stayed
away and asked a Shia fellow worker to pick up his salary. This
worked until the Shia militias found out what was happening and
threatened to kill any Shia who passed on the salary of a Sunni.
Khalid was
forced to leave for Syria where he found work. He left behind his
wife, Nadia, and four children, the eldest of whom was eight years
old. Living with them in the house was Nadia's sister, Sarah, whose
husband had been an ordinary guard at the Oil Ministry building.
He was killed by the resistance who considered that his job made
him a collaborator with the government. On December 25, 2006, this
whole family group was told by the Shia militia to get out of their
house immediately without taking any possessions or be killed. They
fled into the night and sat beside the road until a charitable minibus
driver picked them up. Eventually, they found refuge in a school.
Nadia recalled that "we stayed 29 days in a dark and damp room and
we couldn't go out of it when the students were studying." Her husband
in Syria offered to return, but she told him to stay because the
family could not afford for him to lose his job.
Nadia blames
the Americans for the sectarian civil war that had engulfed her
family. She says: "We were living together, Sunni and Shia, and
there was no sign of sectarian differences between us in Iraq until
the Americans came and encouraged sectarianism and let in foreign
terrorists." Many Iraqis similarly see sectarianism as the work
of the Americans. This is not entirely fair. Sectarian differences
in Iraq were deeper under Saddam Hussein and his predecessors than
many Iraqis now admit. But in one important respect, foreign occupation
did encourage and deepen sectarianism. Previously a Sunni might
feel differently from a Shia but still feel they were both Iraqis.
Iraqi nationalism did exist, though Sunni and Shia defined it differently.
But the Sunnis fought the U.S. occupation, unlike the Shia who were
prepared to cooperate with it. After 2003, the Sunni saw the Shia
who took a job as a policeman as not only a member of a different
community, but as a traitor to his country. Sectarian and national
antipathies combined to produce a lethal brew.
The war in
Iraq that started in 2003 has now lasted longer than the First World
War. Militarily, the conflicts could not be more different. The
scale of the fighting in Iraq is far below anything seen in 191418,
but the political significance of the Iraq war has been enormous.
America blithely invaded Iraq to overthrow Saddam Hussein to show
its great political and military strength. Instead it demonstrated
its weakness. The vastly expensive U.S. war machine failed to defeat
a limited number of Sunni Arab guerrillas. International leaders
such as Tony Blair who confidently allied themselves to Washington
at the start of the war, convinced that they were betting on a winner,
are either discredited or out of power.
At times,
President Bush seemed intent on finding out how much damage could
be done to the U.S. by the conflict in Iraq. He did so by believing
a high proportion of his own propaganda about the resistance to
the occupation being limited in scale and inspired from outside
the country. By 2007, the administration was even claiming that
the fervently anti-Iranian Sunni insurgents were being equipped
by Iran. It was a repeat performance of U.S, assertions four years
earlier that Saddam Hussein was backing al-Qaeda. In this fantasy
world, constructed to impress American voters, in which failures
were sold as successes, it was impossible to devise sensible policies.
The U.S. occupation
has destabilized Iraq and the Middle East. Stability will not return
until the occupation has ended. The Iraqi government, penned into
the Green Zone, has become tainted in the eyes of Iraqis by reliance
on a foreign power. Even when it tries to be independent, it seldom
escapes the culture of dependency in which its members live. Much
of what has gone wrong has more to do with the U.S. than Iraq. The
weaknesses of its government and army have been exposed. Iraq has
joined the list of small wars as France found in Algeria
in the 1950s and the Soviet Union in Afghanistan in the 1980s
that inflict extraordinary damage on their occupiers.
Baghdad-Arbil
April 2007
Patrick
Cockburn, Iraq Dismantled
by Tom Engelhardt
Patrick Cockburn
has been hailed by Sidney Blumenthal in Salon as "one of
the most accurate and intrepid journalists in Iraq." And that's
hardly praise enough, given what the man has done. The Middle Eastern
correspondent for the British newspaper The Independent,
he's been on the spot from the moment when, in February 2003, he
secretly crossed the Tigris River into Iraq just before the Bush
administration launched its invasion.
Here, for
instance, is a typical
striking passage of his, written in May 2003, just weeks after Baghdad
fell. If you read it then, you hardly needed the massive retrospective
volumes like Thomas Rick's Fiasco
that took years to come out:
"[T]he
civilian leadership of the Pentagon… are uniquely reckless, arrogant
and ill informed about Iraq. At the end of last year [Deputy Secretary
of Defense Paul] Wolfowitz was happily saying that he thought the
Iraqi reaction to the capture of Baghdad would be much like the
entry of the U.S. Army into Paris in 1944. He also apparently believed
that Ahmed Chalabi…, then as now one of the most unpopular men in
Iraq, would be the Iraqi Charles de Gaulle.
"These past
mistakes matter because the situation in Iraq could easily become
much worse. Iraqis realize that Saddam may have gone but that
the United States does not have real control of the country. Last
week, just as a[n] emissary [from head of the U.S. occupation
Paul Bremer] was telling academics at Mustansiriyah, the ancient
university in the heart of Baghdad, who should be purged from
their staff, several gunmen, never identified, drove up and calmly
shot dead the deputy dean."
How much worse
it's become can be measured by the two suicide bombs that went off
at
the same university a month apart early in 2007, killing not
a single deputy dean but more than 100 (mostly female) students.
Or it can
be measured by this telling little tidbit
written in October 2003: "The most amazing achievement of six months
of American occupation has been that it has even provoked nostalgia
in parts of Iraq for Saddam. In Baiji, protesters were holding up
his picture and chanting: ‘With our blood and with our spirit we
will die for you Saddam.' Who would have believed this when his
statue was toppled just six months ago?"
Or by this
description, written in
the same month, which offers a vivid sense of why an insurgency
really took off in that country:
"US
soldiers driving bulldozers, with jazz blaring from loudspeakers,
have uprooted ancient groves of date palms as well as orange and
lemon trees in central Iraq as part of a new policy of collective
punishment of farmers who do not give information about guerrillas
attacking US troops… Asked how much his lost orchard was worth,
Nusayef Jassim said in a distraught voice: 'It is as if someone
cut off my hands and you asked me how much my hands were worth.'"
Or by this
singular
detail from June 2004 that caught the essence of the lawlessness
the U.S. occupation let loose: "Kidnap is now so common [that] new
words have been added to Iraqi thieves' slang. A kidnap victim is
called al-tali or the sheep."
Or this summary
of the situation in May 2004, one year after Bush's "Mission Accomplished"
speech: "Saddam should not have been a hard act to follow. After
30 years of disastrous wars, Iraqis wanted a quiet life. All the
Americans really needed to do was to get the relatively efficient
Iraqi administration up and running again. Instead, they let the
government dissolve, and have never successfully resurrected it.
It has been one of the most extraordinary failures in history."
Last September,
typically, Cockburn travelled
on his own to dangerous Diyala Province just as the fighting there
was heating to a boil. He summed up the situation parenthetically,
as well as symbolically, when he commented that Diyala was not a
place "to make a mistake in map reading."
Cockburn should
gather in awards for guts, nerve, understanding, and just plain
great war reporting. Before heading back to Iraq yet again, he put
his years of reporting and observation together in an already classic
book, The
Occupation: War and Resistance in Iraq, which no political
library should be without. The preceding essay that he just wrote
in Baghdad will be the introduction to the paperback edition of
that book, when released this fall and special thanks go
to his publisher, Verso, for letting this site post it.
May
9, 2007
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, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Middle East correspondent for the British newspaper
The Independent, Patrick Cockburn was awarded the 2005 Martha
Gellhorn prize for war reporting. His book on his years covering
the war in Iraq, The
Occupation: War and Resistance in Iraq (Verso) was a finalist
for the National Book Critics Circle Award for non-fiction. This
essay will be the new introduction to the paperback edition of that
book, due this fall.
Copyright
© 2007 Patrick Cockburn
Tom
Engelhardt Archives
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