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The
Ever Elusive 'Tipping Point' in Iraq
by
Leon Hadar
by Leon Hadar
For a day or
two after the killing of terrorist gang leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
I was fantasizing that US President George W Bush and his aides
were finally getting smart when it came to Iraq.
A few hours
after the Jordanian-born head of al-Qaeda in Iraq was killed in
a US air strike, a cool, non-smirking and somewhat subdued Mr. Bush
showed up at the White House's Rose Garden to address the press.
No "Mission Accomplished" banner was displayed in the
background.
And while hailing
the death of Iraq's top terrorist as well as the belated confirmation
of the last three members of the Iraqi Cabinet, Mr. Bush actually
made a few cautionary comments, warning for example that "we
can expect the terrorists and insurgents to carry on without (Zarqawi)"
and "the sectarian violence to continue."
I suppose we
needed to thank God... I mean, Karl Rove for what seemed to be,
for a change, a strategy of lowering expectations in Iraq. Indeed,
for three years, since Mr. Bush declared from the deck of an aircraft
carrier that America had accomplished its mission in Iraq, the administration's
spin doctors with the help of neoconservative propagandists have
been trying to counter-spin the depressing reality that we have
been watching on television by celebrating the many "tipping
points" that were supposed to herald the dawn of democracy,
peace and prosperity in Mesopotamia. I almost lost count of how
many times we were "turning the corner" in Baghdad.
So here is
a brief reminder for those of you who suffer from short-term memory
loss: 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 first
parliamentary elections with the voters happily waving their purple
fingers; the adoption of an Iraqi Constitution and the start of
Saddam's trial; the second parliamentary elections in which a larger
number of Arab-Sunnis had voted; and more recently, the formation
of the new government in Baghdad led by the supposedly "tough"
and "competent" Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki.
And now comes
the killing of Zarqawi the "evil doer" and the filling
of the three remaining Cabinet positions, including the defense
and national security posts by Arab-Sunnis formerly affiliated with
the Ba'ath regime.
All these tide-turning
moments have failed to turn the tide in Iraq, where the real reality
is very different from the media events being choreographed in the
Green Zone of Baghdad, where the huge political and military American
contingency is based, and where PM Maliki, the members of his Cabinet
and the elected lawmakers reside and work, stepping occasionally
outside into the Real Iraq – as opposed to the Green Zone's Virtual
Iraq – under the tight protection of US security guards.
In the Real
Iraq, the violence instigated by a mix of Sunni jihadists, former
Ba'athists, Shi'ite militias and criminal gangs is continuing uninterrupted.
Millions of Iraqis live in fear and without jobs and electricity
in a country with one of the world's largest oil reserves, and whose
economy has yet to experience the level of growth of the Saddam
years.
Discouraging
reality
With the coming
to power of Shi'ite political parties in Baghdad and the provinces,
women have experienced a major challenge to their rights, while
members of secular professional classes, including the cosmopolitan
Christian community, have been fleeing the country, to countries
including authoritarian Syria.
Most analysts
agree that the country is already experiencing what could be described
a low-level civil war that could explode any day into a full-blown
one.
Against the
backdrop of this discouraging reality, it is not clear how Zarqawi's
killing or the appointment of a new Cabinet – events that at best
have some symbolic significance – are going to make a big difference.
In fact, as
Mr. Bush suggested in his appearance in the Rose Garden, it is quite
possible that the violence is going to increase in the coming days
and weeks. Unfortunately, Mr. Bush and his aides, after the initial
and very brief demonstration of good sense, could not resist the
temptation to once again produce another publicity stunt à la "Mission
Accomplished" with the US President making a dramatic landing
in Virtual Iraq to do a few "photo-ops" with the new Iraqi
PM and to proclaim that Zarqawi's death and the new Iraqi Cabinet
mean that "freedom has achieved a great victory in the heart
of the Middle East."
The problem
that Mr. Bush is facing in Iraq – the point that never seems to
tip – has to do with the entire faulty strategy that led to the
invasion of Iraq. When it comes to civil and international wars,
their "tipping point," the one that marks the victory
of one side over the other, is actually the outcome of a process
consisting of three stages.
First, one
side is being crushed on the battlefield and is unable to fight
anymore. Then the defeated party raises the white flag. And finally,
the losing side "embraces defeat" and agrees to accept
the political terms imposed by the winner.
In Iraq, the
United States was able to crush one element, Saddam and his military,
representing the interests of the Arab-Sunni minority. But the Arab-Sunnis
have never raised the white flag and have certainly not embraced
defeat. At the same time, the power in Iraq shifted to a coalition
led by the Arab-Shi'ite religious political parties who see themselves
– and not the Americans – as the victorious party and are unwilling
to accept the political terms dictated by the US. And in the middle
are a divided group of Kurdish nationalists who have allied themselves
with the Americans on a conditional ad-hoc basis.
Groups'
interests
If anything,
from the perspectives of the Arab-Shi'ites in Baghdad and their
co-religionists in Teheran and the Iraqi Kurds, the "tipping
point" has already occurred with the collapse of Saddam and
the Sunni-led Ba'ath regime.
Now these two
groups are ready for the next campaign to advance their own respective
interests – and not that of the Americans. The Shi'ites hope to
consolidate their power in Baghdad, a process that could involve
struggles among the various Shi'ite militias, and would do very
little to advance US interests or values, unless the strengthening
of Iran's power in the Persian Gulf and the establishment of a quasi-theocracy
in parts of Iraq can be spun as triumph for "freedom."
Similarly,
the Kurds are interested in strengthening the foundations of their
autonomy, cleansing their area from Arab-Sunnis and pressing forward
for political independence for the Kurds in Turkey, Iraq and Syria,
a process that would run contrary to US interests in the region.
In that event, another pseudo-event will be staged in the Green
Zone in Baghdad and in Washington to persuade us once again that
the tide is turning, the point is tipping, and the mission – was
or is or will be – accomplished.
June
17, 2006
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
© 2006 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved. Reprinted
with permission of the author.
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