Despite the recent surge of attention to the
U.S.-Iraqi negotiations over an agreement to keep U.S. troops in Iraq for years
into the future, the resulting agreement or lack of agreement is likely to
have little actual impact on the occupation. The negotiations are being conducted
by representatives of President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki
– neither of whom actually wants the U.S. troops to leave (Maliki's government
would not likely survive the withdrawal of U.S. troops, and Bush remains committed
to permanent U.S. control of Iraq, its oil, and its strategic location for
U.S. military bases).
But both Bush and Maliki face political and electoral pressures to posture
as if they do want a timetable for troop withdrawal. As a result, most of the
negotiations seem to have focused less on substantive disagreements between
the two sides, and more on finding language that disguises the reality of continued
occupation and U.S. domination, with politically acceptable language extolling
Iraqi sovereignty.
The negotiations are officially aimed at producing a bilateral agreement between
the United States and the U.S. occupation-backed Iraqi government that would
set the terms for how U.S. and "coalition" troops would continue to occupy
and wage war in Iraq. The urgency surrounding the negotiations is based on
the looming expiration of the current United Nations mandate for the so-called
"multinational force" (diplo-speak for the U.S.-led occupation) on Dec. 31,
2008. The goal is to create an agreement between Washington and Baghdad that
would replace that mandate. Even the New York Times agrees
that if there is no agreement in place after Dec. 31, and the Security Council
has not extended the mandate, the U.S. troops occupying Iraq would have no
legal basis for their presence; legally, they would have to be pulled back
to their bases and quickly withdrawn from the country.
In fact, it's quite unlikely that any new bilateral agreement, or any extension
of the UN mandate, will have any real impact on the fighting. The U.S. invaded
Iraq illegally; it's unlikely that the government would end its occupation
because of a technicality like acknowledged illegality. And those forces fighting
against the U.S.-led occupation, both the resistance forces targeting the U.S.
occupation alone and those extremists also committing terrorist acts against
Iraqi civilians, are unlikely to stop fighting because of a new or renewed
legal document; they are fighting against a hated foreign occupation, and will
likely continue to do so regardless of diplomatic niceties.
It should be noted that so far the actual content of the agreement remains
unclear. No version, either in Arabic or English, has been released, though
Arabic drafts have been leaked, and informal
English translations are all that are available. So, if the devil is in
the details, the devil remains hidden.
Congress and Parliament
The agreement hasn't been submitted to Iraq's
parliament, as its constitution requires, and has not been submitted to the
Senate for ratification, as the U.S. Constitution requires. In fact, on the
Iraqi side, even leaders of Maliki's own party have distanced themselves from
the agreement, while other political leaders, most notably Shi'ite cleric Moqtada
al-Sadr (who called a Baghdad protest
of tens of thousands over the weekend) oppose it altogether. It appears that
secular, nationalist, and Sunni forces remain largely skeptical. Iran opposes
the agreement. Only the main Kurdish parties, Washington's closest allies,
have apparently endorsed its terms. And most Iraqis, other than Maliki's supporters,
are looking to better possibilities from a new post-Bush U.S. president.
The Bush administration has similarly refused to engage Congress, claiming
that the agreement is "merely" an ordinary status of forces agreement (SOFA),
similar to agreements the U.S. has with Germany or Japan. But of course there's
no war being fought by U.S. troops in those countries. In Congress there is
strong opposition to the agreement, but it's primarily focused on the exclusion
of congressional input and approval rather than the substance of the terms.
However, if the agreement fails, it would mean official recognition by governments,
inter-governmental institutions, and other international diplomatic entities
of the illegality of the U.S. occupation. That would constitute a huge advance
for global antiwar forces, including here in the U.S. So challenging the legitimacy
of any new agreement is a continuing obligation.
Time Horizon
Article 25 of the draft agreement describes "withdrawal
of U.S. forces from Iraq," and the first paragraph states that "the U.S. forces
shall withdraw from Iraqi territories no later than December 31, 2011." Later
in the same article, there are references to "combat troops" being withdrawn
from Iraqi cities and regrouped in U.S. bases by June 2009, but the initial
commitment to the Dec. 31, 2011, withdrawal doesn't specify "combat" troops.
It appears this was likely one of the demands of the Iraqi government, aware
that the Iraqi parliament, let alone the population, would certainly reject
the kind of partial withdrawal, of "combat troops" only, that is being defined
as ending the war in U.S. electoral discourse.
But the existence of that text doesn't indicate a serious U.S. commitment
to a timetable for full withdrawal of all troops, even by the end of 2011.
Paragraph 5 of the same article explicitly authorizes the Iraqi government
to request U.S. forces to remain in Iraq – for "the purposes of training and
support of the Iraqi security forces." Such "support" of the U.S.-trained,
U.S.-armed, and still U.S.-dependent Iraqi military could in practice mean
any military action the Pentagon wants to carry out. Paragraph 5 goes on to
say that "the Iraqi government might ask for an extension of paragraph 1 of
this article" – an extension of the 2011 withdrawal deadline.
So the whole idea of a deadline is a politically driven fraud. It's not coincidental
that when the Bush administration appeared to give in on the once-rejected
idea of a timeline, the actual description was that of a "time horizon" – very
beautiful, perhaps, but you could never get there.
There are similar wiggle-word descriptions of how U.S. troops would have to
get approval from the military Iraqi in a joint coordination committee for
military operations. As to the detention of Iraqis, U.S. troops are required
to hand over detainees to the Iraqi authorities within 24 hours – unless the
detention "was based on an Iraqi decision in accordance with Iraqi law."
U.S. Military Immunity
As to the hot-button issue of immunity vs. accountability
for U.S. troops committing crimes against Iraqis, immunity largely wins the
day. There does seem to be a claim of Iraqi sovereign control over U.S. contractors
who commit crimes against civilians – according to Article 12, "Iraq has the
primary legal jurisdiction over contractors with the U.S. and their employees."
We'll see how Blackwater and other mercenary companies deal with that. But
as to U.S. troops, the U.S. maintains "primary legal jurisdiction over U.S.
armed forces members and civilian members." Iraq's government can now brag
to its people that it will have "primary legal jurisdiction over armed forces
members and civilian members in cases of major and intentional crimes" that
occur outside of U.S. bases and "while troops are off duty." But how convenient
– U.S. troops essentially never leave their bases except for military activities,
and several paragraphs later the text gives the U.S. the explicit right to
determine whether the troops involved were off-duty or not.
U.S. bases also remain unchallenged. The U.S. is to submit a list of all "installations
and areas used by the U.S. forces" for the purpose of "being reviewed and agreed
upon by both sides" by June 30, 2009. There are references to the U.S. returning
to the Iraqi government military bases "that were constructed, remodeled, or
modified under this agreement," but no reference to bases that pre-date the
agreement or may not be among the "installations and areas agreed upon."
The text is replete with references to Iraq's sovereignty, respect for the
Iraqi constitution and laws, etc. But there is no enforcement capacity and
given the unequal balance of power between the two sides, there is little doubt
that those references are designed to placate Iraq's overwhelmingly anti-occupation
population, and even much of the parliament.
Oil
The agreement does nothing to end or even curtail
U.S. efforts to control Iraqi oil. It states the U.S. will continue its current
role in "protection arrangements" for Iraq's oil and gas production "and their
revenue." Given Bush's signing
statement two weeks ago rejecting Congress' law
requiring an end to U.S. efforts to control Iraq's oil, such continuation remains
very dangerous.
So What Is Likely to Happen?
It's very unlikely that the Iraqi parliament,
veering between skepticism and outright rejection of the agreement, will come
to accept it in the next two months. It is certainly possible that Prime Minister
Maliki will simply assert, as he has before, that his government doesn't need
parliamentary approval; but with important provincial elections looming in
Iraq early in 2009, that's probably a recipe for political suicide.
In the United States, Bush faces a similar problem. Rejecting claims that
their approval isn't required, Congress is beginning to react – primarily by
demanding a say in the process. Some members are targeting the idea of U.S.
forces ever being held accountable in the Iraqi judicial system, despite the
clear reality that the text itself provides a myriad of ways to prevent such
an occurrence.
There's already a move in Congress, led by Rep. Bill Delahunt (D-Mass.), to
challenge the legitimacy of the exclusion of Congress from approval of the
agreement, but urging the Security Council to extend the UN mandate after Dec.
31 instead. This would mean repeating the common tactic of using the UN to
provide political, and in this case legal, cover for illegal U.S. actions –
potentially even for war crimes that may be committed by U.S. troops following
illegal orders.
If the Dec. 31 expiration of the UN mandate looms closer, and the U.S.-Iraq
agreement is not accepted by both sides, and Bush and Maliki fail to win political
support for their claim that congressional/parliamentary approval is not necessary,
three possibilities are likely:
An effort to win Security Council agreement for a short-term extension of
the mandate.
A Bush-Maliki "handshake" agreement to maintain the status quo for three
or six months, perhaps longer, the equivalent of Congress' frequent "continuing
resolutions" that maintain current funding and activity levels.
Agreement by Congress and the Iraqi parliament to accept a shorter-term and
perhaps stripped-down version of the agreement, essentially endorsing a "handshake"
agreement between the governments.
So What Does the Peace Movement Do?
The Dec. 31, 2008, expiration of the UN mandate
should lead to an immediate recognition of the illegality of the U.S. occupation.
That acknowledged illegality should be seen as an opportunity to implement
the clear will of the Iraqi people and a majority of the American people. The
result should be immediate steps to return all U.S. troops to their bases,
and begin the process of immediate withdrawal of not only combat troops but
also U.S.-paid non-Iraqi contractors, and closure of the U.S. bases.
Although much of the nation's attention is captive to the current elections,
there's an immediate need for a strong response against the latest round of
negotiations that includes:
Opposing any U.S.-Iraq agreement to maintain the U.S. occupation, whether
it's for one month or three years.
Opposing any such agreement being negotiated or signed without U.S. congressional
and Iraqi parliamentary approval.
Rejecting interim measures designed to continue the occupation.
Standing against any Security Council decision to extend the current mandate
authorizing the U.S.-led occupation in Iraq; we call on the United Nations
to stand with global civil society in defense of international law and its
own charter, to oppose the continuing occupation of Iraq.
Reprinted courtesy of Foreign Policy in
Focus.