The threat by the government of Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki earlier this month to reject the U.S.-Iraq status
of forces and strategic framework agreements was prompted in part by U.S. demands
for access to bases that were unacceptable to a highly nationalistic Iraqi
population.
But an equally important factor in the apparent rejection of the agreements
by Iraqi Shi'ite leaders is the absence of a U.S. security guarantee against
foreign aggression in the U.S. proposal.
That issue loomed very large for Iraqi Shi'ite officials who have long been
nervous about whether the United States is firmly committed to supporting the
survival of the Shi'ite-dominated regime in Iraq from plots by Sunni Arab states
and Turkey to restore Sunni rule in the country.
The Maliki regime had demanded that U.S. President George W. Bush include
a commitment in the statement principles they signed last November. The text
of the statement included a U.S. pledge to "provide security assurances
to the Iraqi Government to deter any external aggression and to ensure the
integrity of Iraq's territory."
But the March 7 U.S. draft of the agreement stated only that "the U.S.
and Iraq are to consult immediately whenever the territorial integrity or political
independence of Iraq is threatened."
This commitment only to consult was clearly unacceptable to the Maliki regime.
While visiting Jordan June 13, Maliki himself referred to the abandonment by
the U.S. of its previous commitment to defending the Iraqi government against
"foreign aggression" as "a clear point of disagreement."
The Bush administration has explained the absence of such a security commitment
as related to the fact that it would have required that the agreements be submitted
to the U.S. Senate something the administration wished to avoid.
From the perspective of the Maliki regime and the Shi'ite political parties
supporting it, however, that refusal has a broader and more sinister significance.
Iraqi Shi'ites interpreted it against a background of Bush administration efforts
to prevent the Shi'ite regime from consolidating power and the possibility
of U.S. collaboration with Sunni Arab regimes to try to overthrow the regime
because of its ties with Iran.
A common factor in this history of the "Sunni option" in Bush administration
policy is the role of former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi.
The March 7 U.S. draft of the framework agreement antagonized Shi'ite political
leaders and alarmed Iran by using language that seemed clearly intended to
give the United States both access to military bases without time limits and
the freedom to use them to attack Iran.
But the most worrisome feature of the draft to Iraqi Shi'ite officials appears
to have been the absence of a commitment to defend Iraq from foreign aggression,
which had been one of the principles in the outline of the strategic framework
signed by Maliki and Bush in November.
It was a high priority for Shi'ite political leaders because of their concern
about a possible plot by Sunni Arab regimes in the region and Turkey to overthrow
the Shi'ite regime by supporting the Sunni armed groups within the country.
Fears within the Baghdad regime about such a plot spiked in early June 2007
after an international meeting in Egypt had attacked the Baghdad regime. The
Kurdish President of Iraq Jalal Talabani, a longtime ally of Iran, publicly
accused Arab states of "conniving" against the Maliki regime.
What most alarmed officials of the regime was the attendance at the meeting
by former Iraqi prime minister Iyad Allawi, who has long been regarded as the
favorite of the Bush administration.
Allawi, a secular Shi'ite who had been a Ba'ath Party activist during the Saddam
Hussein regime, was handpicked by U.S. officials to become interim prime minister
from mid-2004 to May 2005.
The Iraqi regime saw signs that the United States was again promoting Allawi
around the time of the Egyptian conference. Prime Minister al-Maliki told CBS
News correspondent Lara Logan in May 2007 that he was watching the Iraqi army
"very closely" because "those still loyal to the previous regime
may start planning coups."
For Shi'ite leaders, the episode recalled the period in late 2005 and early
2006 when the Bush administration shifted from reliance on the Shi'ites as allies
against the Sunni insurgency to one of toying with a peace with the Sunnis
in order to check the power of Shi'ites who were viewed as far too close to
Iran.
U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, a Sunni Muslim of Afghan descent, initiated
a policy aimed at denying the Shi'ite regime control over police and internal
security organizations. In November 2005, Khalilzad began hinting strongly
at a shift toward a "Sunni strategy." The U.S. embassy, which had
previously tolerated death squad activities and secret detention and torture
of Sunnis by the Shi'ite Badr Corps, decided to confront Prime Minister Ibrahim
al-Jaafari publicly over torture houses being run by Shi'ite officials of the
Ministry of Interior.
Khalilzad then announced that he was prepared to meet with insurgent leaders
and wanted to "deal with their legitimate concerns," and began referring
to the Sunni insurgents as "nationalists" rather than "anti-Iraqi
forces." Khalilzad then began a series of secret meetings with the insurgents,
brokered by none other than the former Ba'athist Iyad Allawi.
Khalilzad openly criticized the sectarian nature of the Shi'ite parties who
were in power and made no secret of the U.S. hope that Allawi would get enough
votes to play power broker in forming a new government. Even after Allawi's
list did badly in the December elections, Khalilzad repeated his insistence
that sectarian Shi'ites would not be allowed to control the interior ministry.
In the end, however, the U.S. embassy could not prevent the Shi'ite regime
from consolidating power.
The U.S. had assuaged Shi'ite suspicions by agreeing in principle to defend
the Iraqi government against foreign aggression. The March 7 U.S. draft, however,
appears to have triggered a shift toward greater distance from the United States,
which implies a move closer to Iran.
The first open expression of criticism of the U.S. draft came from Maliki's
own Dawa Party at the end of May. Two senior legislators in Maliki's party,
Ali al-Adeeb and Haider al-Abadi, gave interviews May 31 in which they complained
about U.S. demands for "a free hand" to arrest Iraqis and carry out
military operations, authority for more than 50 long-term military bases, and
insistence on control over Iraqi airspace as well as legal immunity for U.S.
troops, contractors, and private security guards.
The Bush administration reacted by blaming Iran for the Shi'ite attack on
the agreement. The New York Times quoted a U.S. official as accusing
Iran of "orchestrating a disinformation campaign to undermine the negotiations,"
saying, "This is Iran's playbook."
Iran clear took advantage of the consternation of its Shi'ite allies in Baghdad
to the March 7 U.S. draft. But the impetus for the Maliki regime's shift came
from the Iraqi Shi'ite sense of vulnerability to threats from its Sunni neighbors
and the equivocal position of the United States on the issue of a Shi'ite Iraq.
Regardless of the outcome of the negotiations on the U.S.-Iraq agreement,
the more fundamental impact of that equivocal U.S. position is to nudge the
Maliki regime significantly closer to Iran, which can be counted on to provide
unequivocal support against the Sunni regional alliance.
(Inter Press Service)