Halfway through the implementation of U.S. President
George W. Bush's "surge" strategy to enhance security in Baghdad and
Iraq's predominantly Sunni Muslim al-Anbar province, evidence that it is turning
the tide nationwide is hard to come by.
While civilian deaths in the Iraqi capital have fallen from the high levels
before the surge was launched two months ago, the five horrific bombings that
killed nearly 200 people in mainly Shi'ite areas of Baghdad Wednesday marked one
of the highest daily tolls since the U.S. invasion more than four years ago.
They also followed last week's attack in the heart of the U.S.-controlled Green
Zone when a suicide bomber blew himself up in the Iraq Parliament's cafeteria,
killing one lawmaker and seven other people.
Moreover, the increasingly frequent bombings, many of which have been followed
by spontaneous popular demonstrations against U.S. troops and Iraqi security
forces, have sparked fears that Shi'ite militias, which have been relatively inactive
since Bush announced the surge in January, may re-emerge to exact revenge against
the Sunni population.
Those fears were compounded by the withdrawal from the government of Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki earlier this week of six cabinet ministers loyal to
Moqtada al-Sadr, whose Mahdi militia, by far the largest paramilitary group
in Iraq, is believed to have been responsible for much of the death-squad activity
against Baghdad's Sunni residents before the surge.
Indeed, 25 bodies, all showing signs of torture and summary execution, were
found on Baghdad's streets Wednesday, adding to mounting evidence over the past
two weeks that Shi'ite militias have begun taking revenge.
In addition, what advances have been made on the security front have not been
matched by progress achieving national reconciliation, a point noted even by
U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates after visiting Baghdad this week.
Constitutional amendments and other legislation designed to reassure Sunnis
about their place in a post-Ba'athist Iraq that were supposed to have been approved
last year have made virtually no headway. "I believe that faster progress
can be made in the political reconciliation process," noted Gates in a
speech to the Chamber of Commerce in Cairo Wednesday.
The surge strategy, which calls for the addition of some 30,000 U.S. troops
to the 140,000 marines and soldiers already deployed in Iraq as of February,
is based on the assumption that securing Baghdad was essential for preventing
an all-out sectarian war between Sunni insurgents and Shi'ite militias and creating
the political space necessary to reconcile the two sects.
The plan called for almost all of the additional troops, as well as thousands
more Iraqi soldiers and police, to patrol neighborhoods in the capital to guarantee
security and even begin to reverse the "ethnic cleansing" that over
the past year or so transformed many mixed districts into segregated enclaves
dominated by armed groups of one sect or the other. About half of the new troops
have been deployed so far.
The plan has registered some successes, according to the Bush administration
and its supporters, although they concede that a final judgment cannot be rendered
until the surge reaches its peak in June or July. Not only has death-squad activity
in Baghdad remained below pre-surge levels, but several hundred families who
had been forced to leave their homes in mixed areas have returned, according
to the Pentagon.
"Right now, the signs are more hopeful than they have been in many months,"
according to Frederick Kagan, a military historian at the neoconservative American
Enterprise Institute (AEI), this week, echoing similar statements by other champions
of the surge, notably Republican Senator John McCain, as well as Bush himself.
Writing in the conservative Weekly Standard, Kagan also pointed to recent
reports that Sunni tribes in al-Anbar, the other focus of the surge, have increasingly
turned against al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI), the Islamist extremist group which Washington
says is responsible for most of the recent anti-Shi'ite violence, including
the recent car bombings.
But even if the surge makes further progress in Baghdad – a possibility that
depends on the prevention of a new escalation of sectarian violence in the wake
of the most recent bombings – developments outside the capital could still
overwhelm it.
Even as the death toll in Baghdad has diminished over the last two months compared
to late 2006, casualties among civilians and soldiers alike have risen about
10 percent over the same period, according to a recent military report.
Violence has been particularly intense in the north. Tal Afar, which had been
pacified last year by a counterinsurgency effort that has been cited as a model
for the surge strategy, suffered the war's single deadliest attack last month
when a suicide truck bombing killed 152 people in a predominantly Shi'ite area.
The bombing set off revenge killings of some 70 Sunni civilians by Shi'ite militia
and police.
Sectarian violence and attacks on U.S. forces have also become so intense over
the past two months in Diyala province, northeast of Baghdad, that U.S. commanders
felt compelled in March to divert hundreds of soldiers from elsewhere in the
country.
"While violence against Iraqis is down in some Baghdad neighborhoods where
we have 'surged' forces, it is up dramatically in the belt ringing Baghdad,"
noted Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman Joseph Biden last week. "Essentially,
when we squeeze the water balloon in one place, it bulges somewhere else."
Southern Iraq, especially in oil-rich Basra province, has also become increasingly
violent as a result of an intra-Shi'ite conflict between Sadr's forces and its
rivals, particularly the Badr Brigade of the Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and another armed party, Fadhila.
The violence there not only threatens to further weaken the Maliki government
and the Shi'ite coalition on which it is based, but could, if it deteriorates further,
threaten key oil-export infrastructure that is essential to keeping Iraq's tattered
economy afloat.
Tensions and violence are also on the rise in the other major oil-producing
region of Iraq, Kirkuk, which Kurdish leaders hope to bring under their control
as a result of a referendum that is bitterly opposed by the city's Arab and
Turkmen residents but which, according to the constitution, is supposed to take
place before the end of this year.
"If the referendum is held later this year over the objections of the
other communities, the civil war is very likely to spread to Kirkuk and the
Kurdish region," according to a report issued Thursday by the International
Crisis Group (ICG), which accused Washington of ignoring the looming crisis
there due to its preoccupation with Baghdad.
Washington's failure so far to persuade the Kurds to postpone the referendum
has also added to growing tensions with neighboring Turkey, a NATO ally of the
U.S., which has sent several high-level delegations to Washington in recent
weeks to express its concern over both Kirkuk and the failure of Kurdistan's
authorities to prevent cross-border raids by Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) guerrillas
against Turkish targets.
Last week, Turkey's top military commander, General Yaser Buyukanit, called
publicly for his forces to be permitted to take military action against the
PKK in northern Iraq, a possibility that observers here see as increasingly
likely and one that could embroil Iraq's one peaceful region in a major new
conflict. "Of bad news in Iraq, it seems there is no end," wrote a
Washington Post columnist this week with respect to the looming crisis
between Turkey and the Kurds.
(Inter Press Service)