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Turning the Corner in Iraq – Yet Again
by
Leon Hadar
by Leon Hadar
For several
months – actually, since the US invasion of Iraq – neoconservative
propagandists have been trying to counter-spin the depressing reality
in Mesopotamia that we've been watching on television by celebrating
several "tipping points" that were supposed to mark the
victory of freedom in Baghdad: The bringing down of Saddam Hussein's
statue in Baghdad; the capture of the Iraqi dictator (remember the
intrusive examination of his mouth and beard?) and the killing of
his sons; the "handover of sovereignty" to a provisional
Iraqi government; the parliamentary election on Jan 30 and the voters
happily waving their purple fingers; the recent adoption of an Iraqi
constitution and the start of Saddam's trial.
In a way, each
image of a "turning point" should have affirmed the broader
story of what American leaders promised would be a war of liberation
to unseat a brutal dictator and free his imprisoned people, who
would respond with gratitude and friendship, allowing American troops
to return very quickly home (well, let's forget about those missing
weapons of mass-destruction).
But each time,
the celebrated turning-the-corner image dissolved into thin air.
As reality started biting, it became difficult to fit the "pseudo
events" into the storyline promoted by the neocons.
But not to
worry. We may be turning the corner in Iraq, once again. Indeed,
the Bush administration's spin-meisters are already marketing last
week's parliamentary election in Iraq – and in particular, the large
turn out by the Arab-Sunnis – as another "defining moment"
in Iraq's march towards democracy and the spread of freedom all
over the Middle East. They are promising us that in the aftermath
of the election, a – Yes! Yes! Yes! – "tipping point"
will be reached at any moment in Baghdad, and that it will mark
the defeat of the anti-American insurgency and the triumph of American
values and interests in Iraq.
US Parallel
In fact, US
President George W Bush has suggested, in a speech that he made
on the same day that the Iraqis went to the polls, that the problems
Iraq is confronting today are comparable to the troubles the United
States had while establishing its own constitutional government.
It's not that
Mr. Bush compared Iraq's Grand Ayatollah Sistani, the leading figure
behind the Shi'ite political renaissance in that country to American
Founding Father Thomas Jefferson. But in the address in Philadelphia,
the historic birthplace of American democracy, Mr. Bush invoked
the image of America's own Founding Fathers in support of Iraq's
new political leaders, recalling that the US did not produce a constitution
that could win ratification until years after the American Revolution
and that the document itself did not solve all the new nation's
political problems.
The eight years
from the end of the Revolutionary War to the election of a constitutional
government were a time of disorder and upheaval. "Our founders
faced many difficult challenges, they made mistakes, they learned
from their experiences and they adjusted their approach," Mr.
Bush said.
Unfortunately,
the attempt by Mr. Bush and his aides to draw a historical analogy
between the American Revolution and the current political turmoil
and violence in Iraq is a misleading, if not contrived, exercise.
If I had the
time, I could have written a book entitled One Thousand Reasons
and One Reason why Iraq is Not the United States. But here is The
One Reason: The American Revolution grew out of an authentic national
struggle for independence against a foreign power and in support
of political rights and was not a political process choreographed
by an outside foreign power and conducted under occupation.
If anything,
one can make the argument that the ousting of Saddam Hussein helped
set in motion a civil war, the kind that the US ended up experiencing
in 1861 with the start of the horrific war between the North and
the South.
This time,
Iraq's Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims may or may not play the parts of
America's northerners and southerners (although it's not clear how
the Kurds fit into this historical analogy; the civil war in the
former Yugoslavia seems more appropriate in this case).
It's not surprising,
therefore, that Mr. Bush and his aides have taken great care to
emphasize that last week's election demonstrated that Sunni participation
in the Iraqi political process was growing, with Sunni coalitions
running in Thursday's election and millions of ordinary Sunnis seeing
that their boycott of last January's vote may have been counterproductive.
If the January election proved to be a triumph, not of American-style
liberty, but of the victory of Shi'ite identity and Kurdish nationalism
over the Sunnis, the new election reflects the attempt by the Sunnis
to add a political dimension to their effort to assert their power
through the continuing violent insurgency. That is not very different
from what the Shi'ites and the Kurds have been doing. They have
gone to the polls to bring to power the representatives of their
ethnic and religious groups, while at the same time members of their
Shi'ite and Kurdish militias are gradually taking control of the
"Iraqi" security forces which use violence to suppress
the Sunni rebellion.
Side-effect
Moreover, one
shouldn't be surprised to hear one of Iran's leading political figures
and its former president, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, describe the
parliamentary election in Iraq as a political victory for Iran.
Former CIA
Middle East and terrorism analyst Larry Johnson expects that the
Shi'ites would use the outcome of the election to consolidate their
power in Baghdad, purge the defense ministry of Sunni influence,
attack Sunni enclaves and strengthen ties with Iran. "The ultimate
irony here is that we are enabling the Shi'ites, who are heavily
backed by Iran, to consolidate their power in contrast to our policy
of the previous 20 years, when we backed Saddam to contain the spread
of the Islamic extremism supported and spread by Teheran,"
he said. "We are the midwife of a new Shi'ite state."
"If the
bloodlust takes hold, we will just have to remind ourselves what
a wonderful thing democracy is, particularly when a majority decides
to act in what it perceives as its own best interest," Mr.
Johnson added. "Power to the people."
In fact, we
can already witness the effects of the American crusade for democracy
in other parts of the Arab Middle East: In Egypt, the anti-Western
(and non-democratic) Muslim Brotherhood have increased their presence
in the Egyptian parliament following the recent elections there,
while the radical anti-Israeli Hamas organization has won control
of several major towns in the West Bank in the local elections there
and is expected to win at least 40 per cent of the vote in the coming
parliamentary vote.
At the same
time, even Israeli officials, who are not great fans of Syrian President
Bishar Assad, have warned the Americans that their drive towards
"regime change" in Damascus could end up bringing to power
radical anti-American (and anti-Israeli) Islamic groups.
It
would be interesting to see how the democracy crusaders in Washington
would spin that point when it tips.
December
21, 2005
Leon
Hadar [send him mail] is
Washington correspondent for the Business
Times of Singapore and the author of Sandstorm:
Policy Failure in the Middle East (Palgrave Macmillan). Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2005 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved. Reprinted
with permission of the author.
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