Why Bush Won't Leave Iraq
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Michael Schwartz
by Tom Engelhardt
and Michael Schwartz
DIGG THIS
Whoa, let's
hold those surging horses in check a moment. Violence has lessened
in Iraq. That seems to be a fact of the last two months and,
for the Iraqis, a positive one, obviously. What to make of the "good
news" from Iraq is another matter entirely, one made harder to assess
by the chorus of self-congratulation from war supporters and Bush
administration officials and allies, as well as by the heavy spin
being put on events and reported in the media, relatively
uncritically.
An exception
was Damien Cave of the New
York Times, who had a revealing piece on a big story of
recent weeks: The return of refugee Baghdadis from among
the two million or more Iraqis who had fled to Syria and other countries
to the capital. This has been heavily touted as evidence
of surge "success" in restoring security in Baghdad, of a genuine
turn-around in the war situation. In fact, according to Cave, the
trickle of returnees, which had actually been lessening recently,
has been heavily "massaged by politics. Returnees have essentially
become a currency of progress."
Those relatively
modest returnee numbers turn out to include anyone who crossed the
Syrian border heading east, including suspected insurgents and Iraqi
employees of the New York Times on their way back from visits
to relatives in exile in Syria. According to a UN survey of 110
families returning, "46 percent were leaving [Syria] because they
could not afford to stay; 25 percent said they fell victim to a
stricter Syrian visa policy; and only 14 percent said they were
returning because they had heard about improved security." And that's
but one warning sign on the nature of the story under the story.
A recent Pew
Research Center poll of American reporters who have been working
in Iraq finds that "[n]early 90 percent of U.S. journalists in Iraq
say much of Baghdad is still too dangerous to visit" and many believe
that "coverage has painted too rosy a picture of the conflict."
In an on-line
chat, the reliable Thomas Ricks of the Washington Post
(and author of the bestselling book Fiasco),
just back from Baghdad himself, offered his own set of caveats about
the situation. He suggested that, in addition to the surge of U.S.
troops into the capital's neighborhoods, some combination of other
factors may help explain the lessening violence, including the fact
that "some Sunni neighborhoods are walled off, and other Sunni areas
have been ethnically cleansed. In addition, the Shiite death squads,
in addition to killing a lot of innocents, also killed some of the
car bomb guys, I am told." Of the dozens of American officers he
interviewed, none were declaring success. "[T]o a man, they were
enormously frustrated by what they see as the foot-dragging of the
Baghdad government." And he points out that violence in Baghdad
"is only back down to the 2005 level which to my mind is
kind of like moving from the eighth circle of hell to the fifth."
In 2005, or early 2006, of course, such levels were considered catastrophic.
Robert Parry
of Consortium
News points out that, while "good news" dominated front pages
here, "the darker side" of "success" has "generally been shoved
into brief stories deep inside the newspapers." He adds that "the
harsh repression surrounding the ‘surge' has drawn far less U.S.
press attention," even as "Iraq steadily has been transformed into
a more efficient police state than dictator Saddam Hussein could
have ever imagined."
Jim Lobe of
Interpress Service interviewed
surge "skeptics" who "argue that the strategy's ‘ground-up' approach
to pacification buying off local insurgent and tribal groups
with money and other support may have set the stage for a
much bigger and more violent civil war or partition, particularly
as U.S. forces begin drawing down from their current high of about
175,000 beginning as early as next month."
Michael Schwartz,
a Tomdispatch regular on Iraq these last years, takes up this changing
post-surge landscape and what exactly it may mean for the Iraqis
and for us. ~ Tom
Catch
22 in Iraq: Why American Troops Can't Go Home
By Michael
Schwartz
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 American's 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 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.
November
30, 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 blog is The
Notion. Michael Schwartz [send
him mail], 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.
Copyright
© 2007 Michael Schwartz
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