Lighting the Fuse
by
Jim Lobe
Retired
Gen. Anthony Zinni began warning that ousting Saddam Hussein, let
alone invading Iraq, risked destabilizing the entire Middle East
back in 1998, when he led U.S. Central Command and testified against
the Iraq Liberation Act that made "regime change" official
US policy.
And
just six months before the actual invasion last March, in October
2002, he told the annual Fletcher Conference on National Security
Strategy, "we are about to do something that will ignite a fuse
in this region that we will rue the day we ever started."
While
President George W. Bush tried hard to project a sense of confidence
and control concerning Iraq and the larger Middle East in his State
of the Union Address on Tuesday, a careful look at the news this
week suggested that Zinni's fears were not unfounded.
Talk
of possible civil war in Iraq finally reached the front pages of
US newspapers, while reports that at least some elements of the
administration are pushing for military action against Hezbollah
in Lebanon and targets in Syria surfaced for the first time since
last summer.
At
the same time, by omitting any reference to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict in his speech, Bush indicated he has no intention of seriously
pressing either party toward a cease-fire, let alone peace talks
designed to meet the goal of the "roadmap": securing Palestinian
statehood by next year.
In
other words, the outlook for the region between the eastern Mediterranean
and Iran 10 months after US troops launched their drive from Kuwait
to Iraq is for more possibly a lot more turbulence.
Long
before this week, demands by Iraqi Kurds for virtually total autonomy,
including the retention of their own "pesh merga" force,
in a new, federal Iraq have been drawing grim warnings from neighboring
Turkey, Iran and Syria which all have large and restive Kurdish
populations.
But
last week's rejection by Iraq's most powerful Shiite cleric,
Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani of a US plan to transfer
sovereignty to a transitional government that will not be directly
elected by the Iraqi people, has brought home the message that whatever
progress Washington is making in suppressing the insurgency in the
"Sunni Triangle" of central Iraq could very quickly be
overwhelmed by the lack of a credible political strategy.
"CIA
officers in Iraq are warning that the country may be on a path to
civil war," was the lead sentence in a
front-page article in the Philadelphia Inquirer
Thursday.
The
article, written by veteran Knight-Ridder reporters who have consistently
led the mainstream media in uncovering secrets the Bush administration
would rather not have exposed, quoted senior US officials as saying
that failure to satisfy demands for direct elections could spark
an uprising by much of the heretofore friendly Shi'a population,
who make up 60 percent or more of Iraq's 24 million people.
That
message was underscored by the mobilization of hundreds of thousands
of Shiites in protest demonstrations over the past week a
display of discipline and organization that clearly surprised the
administration.
If
the Shi'a turn against the U.S.-led coalition, "this would
be like losing the Buddhists in Vietnam," Anthony Cordesman,
a Mideast expert at the conservative Center for Strategic and International
Studies (CSIS) here, told the Financial Times Friday, referring
to the US war against the Asian country in the 1960s and '70s.
"It
would mean losing the war."
However
unattractive that option seems, holding the direct elections Sistani
is demanding which almost certainly would bring a Shi'a-dominated
government to power is also considered distinctly dangerous.
"We
can't simply walk away and let the Shi'a dictate the shape of the
new government," warned John Hamre, deputy defense secretary
under Bush's predecessor Bill Clinton, earlier this week, "because
that will likely unleash a civil war in Iraq."
Hamre,
who as CSIS' president led an independent task force to Iraq last
August to review the situation at Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld's
behest, described the administration as "caught in a box."
A
box with more than a few sharp edges, too. Sistani and his followers
have made clear that they, as well as the Sunnis, strongly oppose
a federal system that would give Kurds the autonomy they seek, particularly
if the northerners were to claim oil-rich Kirkuk as theirs.
Deadly
clashes between the pesh merga and Turkomen and Arab residents in
Kirkuk and parts of the northern Sunni Triangle have been a constant,
albeit under-reported, feature of the landscape for months, but
they might only be a warm-up to a much bigger struggle, unless the
administration prevails on the Kurds to stand down.
The
fact that Washington has permitted the pesh merga to retain its
arms has not helped matters.
Meanwhile,
tensions between Shi'as and Sunnis, who have dominated Iraqi governments
since independence, have mounted steadily since Dec. 9, when three
Sunnis were killed in an explosion at a Baghdad mosque.
While
Washington says it agrees with Sistani that direct elections are
best, it insists there is not enough time to hold them before the
scheduled Jun. 30 turnover, a date that was decided more out of
concern for Bush's reelection campaign than by a commitment to build
viable democratic institutions in Iraq.
If
the complicated "caucus" system that Washington proposed
in November will not work, the administration appears poised to
back the creation of an enlarged Iraqi Governing Council (IGC) as
the transitional government, although there is no agreement on how
its members would be chosen.
Washington
hopes that Sistani, who has indicated he will abide by the recommendations
of U.N. experts as to how to proceed, will be willing to deal.
In
this context, the administration appears increasingly frantic about
involving the United Nations, which plans to send a team to Iraq
to assess the situation next week.
While
it hopes the world body can devise an agreement that will keep all
parties calm and its transition timetable on track, Washington also
clearly sees it as a convenient scapegoat if things go bad.
Not
content with the mounting signs of civil war in Iraq, however, the
Pentagon, presumably with the help of Vice President Dick Cheney's
office, was
reported this week by Jane's Intelligence Digest to be
drawing up plans for carrying out raids on Hezbollah targets in
Lebanon and Syria, in what would be a notable expansion of Bush's
"war on terror."
Some
of the same personnel who worked in the Pentagon's Office of Special
Plans (OSP), which reviewed intelligence for evidence allegedly
linking Saddam to the al-Qaeda terrorist group and weapons of mass
destruction (WMD) programs before the Iraq invasion, have reportedly
been working on a similar effort regarding Syria.
David
Warmer, a neo-conservative who has long advocated destabilizing
Damascus through Lebanon and Iraq, joined Cheney's staff as his
Mideast adviser last September.
An
administration ally, Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Pat
Roberts, also suggested this week that Iraq's alleged WMD stockpiles
were transported to Syria before the war.
Most
observers here believe the administration is unlikely to authorize
such operations before the November presidential elections, if only
because it would fuel voter concerns and Democratic charges that
the president's conduct of the "war on terror" has been
reckless and far too costly in blood, treasure and alliances.
They
suggest the reports are being deliberately circulated to intimidate
Syria's Assad regime into complying with a series of US demands,
including cutting off aid to Hezbollah and Palestinian groups.
Jane's
noted, however, that US attacks against Hezbollah in Lebanon could
well destabilize that country only a decade after its last civil
war.
January
26, 2004
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2004 Inter Press Service
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