Can there be any question that, since the invasion
of 2003, Iraq has been unraveling? And here's the curious thing: Despite a
lack of decent information and analysis on crucial aspects of the Iraqi catastrophe,
despite the way much of the Iraq story fell off newspaper front pages and out
of the TV news in the last year, despite so many reports on the "success" of
the president's surge strategy, Americans sense this perfectly well. In the
latest Washington
Post/ABC News poll, 56 percent of Americans "say the United States
should withdraw its military forces to avoid further casualties" and this has,
as the Post notes, been a majority position since January 2007, the
month that the surge was first announced. Imagine what might happen if the
American public knew more about the actual state of affairs in Iraq and of
thinking in Washington. So, here, in an attempt to unravel the situation in
ever-unraveling Iraq are 12 answers to questions which should be asked far
more often in this country:
1. Yes, the war has morphed into the U.S. military's worst Iraq nightmare:
Few now remember, but before George W. Bush launched the invasion of Iraq in
March 2003, top administration and Pentagon officials had a single overriding
nightmare not chemical, but urban, warfare. Saddam Hussein, they feared,
would lure American forces into "Fortress
Baghdad," as Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld labeled it. There, they
would find themselves fighting
block by block, especially in the warren of streets that make up the Iraqi
capital's poorest districts.
When American forces actually entered Baghdad in early April 2003, however,
even Saddam's vaunted Republican Guard units had put away their weapons and
gone home. It took five years but, as of now, American troops are indeed fighting
in the warren of streets in Sadr City, the Shi'ite slum of two and a half million
in eastern Baghdad largely controlled by Moqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia.
The U.S. military, in fact, recently experienced its worst
week of 2008 in terms of casualties, mainly in and around Baghdad. So,
mission accomplished the worst fear of 2003 has now been realized.
2. No, there was never an exit strategy from Iraq because the Bush administration
never intended to leave and still doesn't: Critics of the war have regularly
gone after the Bush administration for its lack of planning, including its
lack of an "exit strategy." In this, they miss the point. The Bush administration
arrived in Iraq with four mega-bases on
the drawing boards. These were meant to undergird a future American garrisoning
of that country and were to house at least 30,000 American troops, as well
as U.S. air power, for the indefinite future. The term used for such places
wasn't "permanent base," but the more charming and euphemistic "enduring camp."
(In fact, as we
learned recently, the Bush administration refuses to define any American
base on foreign soil anywhere on the planet, including ones in Japan for over
60 years, as permanent.) Those four monster bases in Iraq (and many others)
were soon being built
at the cost of multibillions and are, even today, being significantly
upgraded. In October 2007, for instance, National Public Radio's defense
correspondent Guy Raz visited Balad Air Base, north of Baghdad, which houses
about 40,000 American troops, contractors, and Defense Department civilian
employees, and described
it as "one giant construction project, with new roads, sidewalks, and structures
going up across this 16-square-mile fortress in the center of Iraq, all with
an eye toward the next few decades."
These mega-bases, like "Camp
Cupcake" (al-Asad Air Base), nicknamed for its amenities, are small town-sized
with massive facilities, including PXs, fast-food outlets, and the latest in
communications. They have largely been ignored by the American media and so
have played no part in the debate about Iraq in this country, but they are
the most striking on-the-ground evidence of the plans of an administration
that simply never expected to leave. To this day, despite the endless talk
about drawdowns and withdrawals, that hasn't changed. In fact, the latest news
about secret
negotiations for a future Status of Forces Agreement on the American presence
in that country indicates that U.S. officials are calling for "an open-ended
military presence" and "no limits on numbers of U.S. forces, the weapons they
are able to deploy, their legal status or powers over Iraqi citizens, going
far beyond long-term U.S. security agreements with other countries."
3. Yes, the United States is still occupying Iraq (just not particularly
effectively): In June
2004, the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), then ruling the country,
officially turned over "sovereignty" to an Iraqi government largely housed
in the American-controlled Green Zone in Baghdad and the occupation officially
ended. However, the day before the head of the CPA, L.
Paul Bremer III, slipped out of the country without fanfare, he signed,
among other degrees, Order
17, which became (and, remarkably enough, remains) the law of the land.
It is still a document worth reading as it essentially granted to all occupying
forces and allied private companies what, in the era of colonialism, used to
be called "extraterritoriality" the freedom not to be in any way subject
to Iraqi law or jurisdiction, ever. And so the occupation ended without ever
actually ending. With 160,000 troops still in Iraq, not to speak of an unknown
number of hired guns and private security contractors, the U.S. continues to
occupy the country, whatever the legalities might be (including a UN mandate
and the claim that we are part of a "coalition"). The only catch is this: As
of now, the U.S. is simply the most technologically sophisticated and potentially
destructive of Iraq's proliferating militias and outside the fortified Green
Zone in Baghdad, it is capable of controlling only the ground that its troops
actually occupy at any moment.
4. Yes, the war was about oil: Oil was hardly mentioned in the mainstream
media or by the administration before the invasion was launched. The president,
when he spoke of Iraq's vast
petroleum reserves at all, piously referred to them as the sacred "patrimony
of the people of Iraq." But an administration of former energy execs with
a national security adviser who once sat on the board of Chevron and had a
double-hulled
oil tanker, the Condoleezza Rice, named after her (until she took office),
and a vice president who was especially
aware of the globe's potentially limited energy supplies certainly had
oil reserves and energy flows on the brain. They knew, in Deputy Secretary
of Defense Paul Wolfowitz's apt phrase,
that Iraq was afloat on "a sea of oil" and that it sat strategically in the
midst of the oil heartlands of the planet.
It wasn't a mistake that, in 2001, Vice President Dick Cheney's semi-secret
Energy Task Force set itself the "task" of opening up the energy sectors of
various Middle Eastern countries to "foreign investment"; or that it scrutinized
"a detailed map of Iraq's oil fields, together with the (non-American) oil
companies scheduled to develop them"; or that, according to the New Yorker's
Jane Mayer, the National Security Council directed
its staff "to cooperate fully with the Energy Task Force as it considered the
'melding' of two seemingly unrelated areas of policy: 'the review of operational
policies towards rogue states,' such as Iraq, and 'actions regarding the capture
of new and existing oil and gas fields'"; or that the only American troops
ordered to guard buildings in Iraq, after Baghdad fell, were sent to the Oil
Ministry (and the Interior Ministry, which housed Saddam Hussein's dreaded
secret police); or that the first "reconstruction" contract was issued
to Cheney's former firm, Halliburton, for "emergency repairs" to those patrimonial
oil fields. Once in charge in Baghdad, as sociologist Michael Schwartz has
made
clear, the administration immediately began guiding recalcitrant Iraqis
toward denationalizing and opening up their oil industry, as well as bringing
in the big boys.
Though rampant insecurity has kept the Western oil giants on the sidelines,
the American-shaped "Iraqi" oil law quickly became a "benchmark" of "progress"
in Washington and remains a constant source of prodding and advice from American
officials in Baghdad. Former Federal Reserve chief Alan Greenspan put the oil
matter simply and straightforwardly in his memoir in 2007: "I am saddened,"
he wrote, "that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone
knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil." In other words, in a variation on
the old Bill Clinton campaign mantra: It's the oil, stupid. Greenspan was,
unsurprisingly, roundly
assaulted for the obvious naiveté of his statement, from which,
when it proved inconvenient, he quickly retreated. But if this administration
hadn't had oil on the brain in 2002-2003, given the importance of Iraq's
reserves, Congress should have impeached the president and vice president for
that.
5. No, our new embassy in Baghdad is not an "embassy": When, for more
than three-quarters of a billion dollars, you construct a complex regularly
described as "Vatican-sized" of at least 20 "blast-resistant" buildings on
104 acres of prime Baghdad real estate, with "fortified working space" and
a staff of at least 1,000 (plus several thousand guards, cooks, and general
factotums), when you deeply embunker it, equip it with its own electricity
and water systems, its own anti-missile defense system, its own PX, and its
own indoor and outdoor basketball courts, volleyball court, and indoor Olympic-size
swimming pool, among other things, you haven't built an "embassy" at all. What
you've constructed in the heart of the heart of another country is more
than a citadel, even if it falls short of a city-state. It is, at a minimum,
a monument to Bush administration dreams of domination in Iraq and in what
its adherents once liked to call "the Greater Middle East."
Just about ready to
open, after the normal
construction mishaps in Iraq, it will constitute the living definition
of diplomatic overkill. It will, according to a Senate estimate, now cost Americans
$1.2
billion a year just to be "represented" in Iraq. The "embassy" is, in fact,
the largest headquarters on the planet for the running of an occupation. Functionally,
it is also another well-fortified enduring camp with the amenities of home.
Tell that to the Shi'ite militiamen now mortaring
the Green Zone as if it were
enemy-occupied territory.
6. No, the Iraqi government is not a government: The government of
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has next
to no presence in Iraq beyond the Green Zone; it delivers next to no services;
it has next to no ability to spend its own oil money, reconstruct the country,
or do much of anything else, and it most certainly does not hold a monopoly
on the instruments of violence. It has no control over the provinces of northern
Iraq which operate as a near-independent Kurdish state. Non-Kurdish Iraqi troops
are not even allowed on its territory. Maliki's government cannot control the
largely Sunni provinces of the country, where its officials are regularly termed
"the Iranians" (a reference to the heavily Shi'ite government's closeness to
neighboring Iran) and are considered the equivalent of representatives of a
foreign occupying power; and it does not control the Shi'ite south, where power
is fragmented among the militias of ISCI (the Badr Organization), Moqtada al-Sadr's
Mahdi Army, and the armed adherents of the Fadhila Party, a Sadrist offshoot,
among others.
In Afghanistan, President Hamid Karzai has been derisively nicknamed "the
mayor of Kabul" for his government's lack of control over much territory outside
the national capital. It would be a step forward for Maliki if he were nicknamed
"the mayor of Baghdad." Right now, his troops, heavily backed by American forces,
are fighting for some modest control over Shi'ite cities (or parts of cities)
from Basra to Baghdad.
7. No, the surge is not over: Two weeks ago, amid much hoopla, Gen.
David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker spent two days before Congress discussing
the president's surge strategy in Iraq and whether it has been a "success."
But that surge the ground one in which an extra 30,000-plus American troops
were siphoned into Baghdad and, to a lesser extent, adjoining provinces, was
by then already so over. In fact, all but about 10,000 of those troops will
be home by the end of July, not because the president has had any urge for
a drawdown, but, as Fred Kaplan of Slate.com wrote
recently, "because of simple math. The five extra combat brigades, which
were deployed to Iraq with the surge, each have 15-month tours of duty; the
15 months will be up in July
and the U.S. Army and Marines have no
combat brigades ready to replace them."
On the other hand, in all those days of yak, neither the general with so
much more "martial
bling" on his chest than any victorious
World War II commander, nor the white-haired ambassador uttered a word
about the surge that is ongoing the air surge that began
in mid-2007 and has yet to end. Explain it as you will, but, with rare exceptions,
American reporters in Iraq generally don't look up or more of them would have
noticed that the extra air units surged into that country and the region in
the last year are now being
brought to bear over Iraq's cities. Today, as fighting goes on in Sadr
City, American helicopters and Hellfire-missile armed Predator
drones reportedly circle overhead almost constantly and air strikes of
various kinds on city neighborhoods are on the rise. Yet the air surge in Iraq
remains unacknowledged here and so is not a subject for discussion, debate,
or consideration when it comes to our future in Iraq.
8. No, the Iraqi army will never "stand up": It can't. It's not a
national army. It's not that Iraqis can't fight or fight bravely. Ask the
Sunni insurgents. Ask the Mahdi Army militia of Moqtada al-Sadr. It's not that
Iraqis are incapable of functioning in a national army. In the bitter Iran-Iraq
War of 1980-88, Iraqi Shi'ite as well as Sunni conscripts, led by a largely
Sunni officer corps, fought Iranian troops fiercely in battle after pitched
battle. But from Fallujah
in 2004 to today, Iraqi
army (and police) units, wheeled into battle (often at the behest of the Americans),
have regularly broken and run, or abandoned their posts, or gone over to the
other side, or, at the very least, fought poorly. In the recent offensive launched
by the Maliki government in Basra, military and police units up against a single
resistant militia, the Mahdi Army, deserted in sizable numbers, while other
units, when not backed by the Americans, gave poor showings. At least 1,300
troops and police (including 37 senior police officers) were recently "fired"
by Maliki for dereliction of duty, while two top commanders were removed
as well.
Though American training began in 2004 and, by 2005, the president was regularly
talking about us "standing down" as soon as the Iraqi army "stood up," as Charles
Hanley of the Associated Press points
out, "Year by year, the goal of deploying a capable, freestanding Iraqi
army has seemed to always slip further into the future." He adds, "In the latest
shift, the Pentagon's new quarterly status report quietly drops any prediction
of when local units will take over security responsibility for Iraq. Last year's
reports had forecast a transition in 2008." According to Hanley, the chief
American trainer of Iraqi forces, Lt. Gen. James Dubik, now estimates that
the military will not be able to guard the country's borders effectively until
2018.
No wonder. The "Iraqi military" is not in any real sense a national military
at all. Its troops generally lack heavy weaponry, and it has neither a real
air force nor a real
navy. Its command structures are integrated into the command structure
of the U.S. military, while the U.S. Air Force and the U.S. Navy are the real
Iraqi air force and navy. It is reliant on the U.S. military for much of its
logistics and resupply, even after an investment of $22 billion by the American
taxpayer. It represents a non-government, is riddled with recruits from Shi'ite
militias (especially the Badr brigades), and is riven about who its enemy is
(or enemies are) and why. It cannot be a "national" army because it has, in
essence, nothing to stand up for.
You can count on one thing, as long as we are "training" and "advising" the
Iraqi military, however many years down the line, you will read comments like
this one from an American platoon sergeant, after an Iraqi front-line unit
abandoned its positions in the ongoing battle for control of parts of Sadr
City: "It bugs the hell out of me. We don't see any progress being made at
all. We hear these guys in firefights. We know if we are not up there helping
these guys out we are making very little progress."
9. No, the U.S. military does not stand between Iraq and fragmentation:
The U.S. invasion and the Bush administration's initial occupation policies
decisively smashed Iraq's fragile "national" sense of self. Since then, the
Bush administration, a motor for chaos and fragmentation, has destroyed the
national (if dictatorial) government, allowed the capital and much of the country
(as well as its true
patrimony of ancient historical objects and sites) to be looted, disbanded
the Iraqi military, and deconstructed
the national economy. Ever since, whatever the administration rhetoric, the
U.S. has only presided over the further fragmentation of the country. Its military,
in fact, employs a specific policy of urban fragmentation in which it regularly
builds
enormous concrete walls around neighborhoods, supposedly for "security" and
"reconstruction," that actually cut them off from their social and economic
surroundings. And, of course, Iraq has in these years been fragmented in other
staggering ways with an estimated
four-plus million Iraqis driven into exile abroad or turned into internal refugees.
According to Pepe
Escobar of the Asia Times, there are now at least 28 different militias
in the country. The longer the U.S. remains even somewhat in control, the greater
the possibility of further fragmentation. Initially, the fragmentation was
sectarian into Kurdish, Sunni, and Shia regions, but each of those regions
has its own potentially hostile parts and so its points of future conflict
and further fragmentation. If the U.S. military spent the early years of its
occupation fighting a Sunni insurgency in the name of a largely Shi'ite (and
Kurdish) government, it is now fighting a Shi'ite militia, while paying and
arming former Sunni insurgents, relabeled "Sons of Iraq." Iran is also clearly
sending arms into a country that is, in any case, awash in weaponry. Without
a real national government, Iraq has descended into a welter of militia-controlled
neighborhoods, city states, and provincial or regional semi-governments. Despite
all the talk of American-supported "reconciliation," Juan Cole described
the present situation well at his Informed Comment blog: "Maybe the U.S. in
Iraq is not the little boy with his finger in the dike. Maybe we are workers
with jackhammers instructed to make the hole in the dike much more huge."
10. No, the U.S. military does not stand between Iraq and civil war:
As with fragmentation, the U.S. military's presence has, in fact, been a motor
for civil war in that country. The invasion and subsequent chaos, as well as
punitive acts against the Sunni minority, allowed Sunni extremists, some of
whom took the name "al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia," to establish themselves as a
force in the country for the first time. Later, U.S. military operations in
both Sunni and Shi'ite areas regularly repressed local militias almost the
only forces capable of bringing some semblance of security to urban neighborhoods
opening the way for the most extreme members of the other community (Sunni
suicide or car bombers and Shi'ite death squads) to attack. It's worth remembering
that it was in
the surge months of 2007, when all those extra American troops hit Baghdad
neighborhoods, that many of the city's mixed or Sunni neighborhoods were most
definitively "cleansed" by death squads, producing a 75-80
percent Shi'ite capital. Iraq is now embroiled in what Juan Cole has termed
"three
civil wars," two of which (in the south and the north) are largely beyond
the reach of limited American ground forces and all of which could become far
worse. The still low-level struggle between Kurds and Arabs (with the Turks
hovering nearby) for the oil-rich city of Kirkuk in the north may be the true
explosion point to come. The U.S. military sits precariously atop this mess,
at best putting off to the future aspects of the present civil-war landscape,
but more likely intensifying it.
11. No, al-Qaeda will not control Iraq if we leave (and neither will Iran):
The latest figures tell the story. Of 658 suicide bombings globally in 2007
(more than double those of any year in the last quarter century), 542, according
to the Washington Post's Robin Wright, took place in occupied Iraq
or Afghanistan, mainly Iraq. In other words, the American occupation of that
land has been a motor for acts of terrorism (as occupations will be). There
was no al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia before the invasion and Iraq was no Afghanistan.
The occupation under whatever name will continue to create "terrorists," no
matter how many times the administration claims that "al-Qaeda" is on the run.
With the departure of U.S. troops, it's clear that homegrown Sunni extremists
(and the small number of foreign jihadists who work with them), already a minority
of a minority, will more than meet their match in facing the Sunni mainstream.
The Sunni Awakening Movement came into existence, in part, to deal with such
self-destructive extremism (and its fantasies of a Taliban-style society) before
the Americans even noticed that it was happening. When the Americans leave,
"al-Qaeda" (and whatever other groups the Bush administration subsumes under
that catchall title) will undoubtedly lose much of their raison d'être
or simply
be crushed.
As for Iran, the moment the Bush administration finally agreed to a popular
democratic vote in occupied Iraq, it ensured one thing that the Shi'ite majority
would take control, which in practice meant religio-political parties that,
throughout the Saddam Hussein years, had generally been close to, or in exile
in, Iran. Everything the Bush administration has done since has only ensured
the growth of Iranian influence among Shi'ite groups. This is surely meant by
the Iranians as, in part, a threat/trump card, should the Bush administration
launch an attack on that country. After all, crucial U.S. resupply lines from
Kuwait run through areas near Iran and would assumedly be relatively easy to
disrupt.
Without the U.S. military in Iraq, there can be no question that the Iranians
would have real influence over the Shi'ite (and probably Kurdish) parts of the
country. But that influence would have its distinct limits. If Iran overplayed
its hand even in a rump Shi'ite Iraq, it would soon enough find itself facing
some version of the situation that now confronts the Americans. As Robert Dreyfuss
wrote
in the Nation recently, "[D]espite Iran's enormous influence in Iraq,
most Iraqis even most Iraqi Shi'ites are not pro-Iran. On the contrary,
underneath the ruling alliance in Baghdad, there is a fierce undercurrent of
Arab nationalism in Iraq that opposes both the U.S. occupation and Iran's support
for religious parties in Iraq." The al-Qaedan and Iranian "threats" are, at
one and the same time, bogeymen, used by the Bush administration to scare Americans
who might favor withdrawal and, paradoxically, realities that a continued military
presence only encourages.
12. Yes, some Americans were right about Iraq from the beginning (and
not the pundits, either): One of the strangest aspects of the recent fifth
anniversary (as of every other anniversary) of the invasion of Iraq was the
newspaper print space reserved for those Bush administration officials
and other war supporters who were dead wrong in 2002-2003 on an endless host
of Iraq-related topics. Many of them were given ample opportunity to offer
their views on past failures, the "success" of the surge, future withdrawals
or drawdowns, and the responsibilities of a future U.S. president in Iraq.
Noticeably missing were representatives of the group of Americans who happened
to have been right from the get-go. In our country, of course, it often doesn't
pay to be right. (It's seen as a sign of weakness or plain dumb luck.) I'm
speaking, in this case, of the millions of people who poured into the streets
to demonstrate against the coming invasion with an efflorescence
of placards that said things too simpleminded (as endless pundits assured American
news readers at the time) to take seriously like "No Blood for Oil," "Don't
Trade Lives for Oil," or ""How did USA's oil get under Iraq's sand?" At the
time, it seemed clear to most reporters, commentators, and op-ed writers that
these sign-carriers represented a crew of well-meaning know-nothings and the
fact that their collective fears proved all too prescient still can't save
them from that conclusion. So, in their very rightness, they were largely forgotten.
Now, as has been true for some time, a majority
of Americans, another obvious bunch of know-nothings, are deluded enough to
favor bringing all U.S. troops out of Iraq at a reasonable pace and
relatively soon. (More than 60 percent of them also believe
"that the conflict is not integral to the success of U.S. anti-terrorism efforts.")
If, on the other hand, a poll were taken of pundits and the inside-the-Beltway
intelligentsia (not to speak of the officials of the Bush administration),
the number of them who would want a total withdrawal from Iraq (or even see
that as a reasonable goal) would undoubtedly descend near the vanishing point.
When it comes to American imperial interests, most of them know better, just
as so many of them did before the war began. Even advisers to candidates who
theoretically want out of Iraq are hinting
that a full-scale withdrawal is hardly the proper way to go.
So let me ask you a question (and you answer it): Given all of the above,
given the record thus far, who is likely to be right?
Copyright 2008 Tom Engelhardt