More than seven weeks ago, US media attention
on Iraq peaked as Gen. David Petraeus and Ambassador to Iraq Ray Crocker delivered
their much anticipated evaluation of the George W. Bush administration's "surge
strategy" before Congress.
By most official and media accounts, security in Baghdad and in surrounding
provinces has improved markedly since then, with US commanders attributing much
of the decline in violence to successes in driving al-Qaeda in Iraq and other
Sunni extremist groups from Baghdad. Iraqis are said to be experiencing some
sense of normalcy after being victimized by the kidnappings, bombings, and wholesale
slaughter that marked the last few years.
Then, armed bands of Shi'ite and Sunni gunmen roamed the streets, seizing people
at illegal checkpoints and dumping bodies by the dozens. But the picture that
is emerging today is one of improved security and slight hints of optimism,
unimaginable more than a year ago.
The recent developments out of Iraq give some credibility to the oft-fictional
"good news" diet fed by the White House to US citizens. The muscular
argot of neoconservative idealism has crumbled under the weight of reality
Bush's "Mission Accomplished" speech, Vice President Dick Cheney's
pronouncement that the insurgency was in its "last throes," Rumsfeld's
"pocket of dead-enders" so it should come as no surprise that the
newest "good news" out of Iraq is falling, for the moment, on incredulous
ears.
While there may be a reduction in violence in Iraq, opposition to the war in
the US public is at an all-time high, with 68 percent of those polled in opposition,
according to a CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll released last week.
"Forget the briefings from generals, the intelligence evaluations and
the Pentagon status reports. There is a handy indicator for whether the war
in Iraq is going well its relative absence from the front pages,"
wrote Richard Lowry, editor of the conservative biweekly National Review.
The drop in deaths relating to violence is indisputable. Last December, 2,172
Iraqi civilians died violently, according to figures compiled by the Associated
Press (the US military does not "do body counts" of Iraqis, General
Tommy Franks, who directed the Iraq invasion, has said).
Following a spike in June, AP reports, violence in the capital has ebbed. Nationwide
civilian deaths dropped from 1,791 in August to 878 in September and 750 in
October. As of Sunday, 189 Iraqi civilians had died violently in November.
US military deaths have also fallen significantly, although the 852 US
servicemen killed thus far makes 2007 the deadliest year of the war for US
troops. In addition, the US military says rocket and mortar attacks nationwide
have fallen to their lowest level since February 2006. In Baghdad, such attacks
rose from 139 in January to 224 in June before falling to 53 last month.
Last week, the commander of US troops in Baghdad, Maj. Gen. Joseph Fil, said
bombings and killings had been declining steadily since a spike last June and
"it continues to come down every month".
And there are hints of optimism coming from the Iraqi government, following
a tense month that included the scandal concerning the US security contractor
Blackwater and the impending Turkish invasion of the Kurdish north.
On Sunday, Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said terrorist acts in Baghdad
had declined by 77 percent this year. "We are all realizing now that what
Baghdad was seeing every day dead bodies in the streets and morgues
is ebbing remarkably," he told reporters. Recent developments suggest "that
sectarianism intended as a gate of evil and fire in Iraq is now closed,"
the prime minister said.
But some analysts question the rush to make declarative statements about perceived
"surge" successes, in large part because the US-led strategy is
seen as a way to generate political breathing room to promote reconciliation
among Iraq's disparate political factions.
"So much of the Iraq debate has now turned into exactly what we once promised
to avoid: political arguments about body counts, while completely ignoring the
political dimension which the Petraeus counterinsurgency manual recognized as
so crucial," wrote Marc Lynch, a Middle East specialist at George Washington
University, on his widely read blog, abuaardvark.com.
"Even worse, it seems like the US is committing the cardinal sin of once
again falling victim to our own propaganda, believing our own spin, and substituting
domestic public opinion management for hard thought about where we're heading.
The relatively uncritical approach to the good news narratives now coming out
of Iraq is eerily reminiscent of so many earlier periods of 'good news from
Iraq.'"
During an Oct. 30 House Appropriations Committee hearing regarding a recent
Government Accountability Office study that found that overall attacks in Iraq
have declined, director of international affairs and trade, Joseph A. Christoff
told the committee that the GAO's figures do "not tak[e] into consideration
the fact that there might be fewer attacks [on civilians] because you have ethnically
cleansed neighborhoods."
The US successes have not come through pure military force alone. Part of
the Patreaus strategy involves reaching out to the disenfranchised political
actors who have fought the US as part of the insurgency.
It wasn't too long ago that US forces viewed cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and his
Mahdi Army as one of the main obstacles to Iraqi security. Since declaring a
cease-fire with US troops in August, Sadr's fighters lave lain low, and Newsweek
reports that US commanders, who have publicly "applauded" the move,
have made attempts to reach out to Sadr's deputies, some of whom have met with
Petreaus.
In the provinces, the US is encouraging tribal and other Sunnis to form regional
associations, such as al-Sahwa (the Awakening) to counter al-Qaeda and ostensibly
build support for the Maliki government. Tribesmen and former insurgents who
join are paid 600 dollars a month to fight al-Qaeda, and US forces have recruited
thousands of men, who are given uniforms and paid 300 dollars a month to act
as guards in the neighborhood, according to the BBC. These are referred to as
Concerned Local Citizens.
While the strategy has played out well on paper, the tactics of reconciliation
are not without their consequences. The new alliances are comprised of political
actors who, until fairly recently, fought US troops, and there remains the
concern that, by allying with Sunni insurgent groups to fight al-Qaeda, the
US is unwittingly arming groups for possible sectarian conflicts in the future.
A recent Guardian newspaper profile on one of the US-sponsored "Ameriya
Knights," Abu Abed, is illuminating. Abed is one of a new breed of Sunni
warlords who are being paid by the US to fight al-Qaeda in Iraq. While he is
crucial to the US strategy, his methods summary beatings and imprisonments
exhibit all the signs of petty criminality.
"The Americans lost hope with an Iraqi government that is both sectarian
and dominated by militias, so they are paying for locals to fight al-Qaeda.
It will create a series of warlords," said a senior Sunni sheikh, according
to the report.
"It's like someone who brought cats to fight rats, found himself with
too many cats and brought dogs to fight the cats. Now they need elephants."
(Inter Press Service)