Another
"Historic Day" Looms in Iraq
Chris Toensing
January 28,
2005
(Chris Toensing
is editor of Middle East Report.)
Yet another
“historic day” will dawn in war-weary Iraq on January 30. As interim
prime minister Iyad Allawi told Iraqi television viewers, “For
almost the first time since the creation of Iraq, Iraqis will
participate in choosing their representatives in complete freedom.”
Not to be outdone, President George W. Bush used the first news
conference of his second term to herald the “grand moment in Iraqi
history” that the world will witness when Iraqis go to the polls.
The US-sponsored
state-building process in Iraq has seen a succession of days pronounced
historic by the Bush administration and its favored Iraqi politicians.
The capture of Saddam Hussein on December 16, 2003 was to have
scotched the snake of the Iraqi insurgency. The promulgation of
the Transitional Administrative Law on March 8, 2004 was to have
supplied Iraq with a “draft constitution” respected as such by
the population. The “handover of sovereignty” on June 28, 2004
was to have reassured Iraqis about the long-term intentions of
the occupying superpower, and, again, diminished the ferocity
of the insurgency. In all cases, the expectations attached to
these “historic days” had more to do with managing Iraqi and American
public opinion than with political realities.
The national
elections scheduled for January 30 are indeed a watershed moment
for Iraq, and the palpable enthusiasm of prospective Iraqi voters
in the face of equally palpable physical danger is not to be dismissed.
Yet ambient assumptions about the significance of the contests
are facile and faith-based. For the rhetorical purposes of the
White House, the elections are an end in themselves, another “firmly
planted flag of liberty” left on a “forward march of freedom”
routed through Kabul, Ramallah and -- perhaps -- parts unknown.
On the ground in Iraq, the elections will influence but not decide
the crucial debates swirling around the country’s political future,
chiefly the shape of the permanent constitution and the duration
of the US-led occupation.
NO PEACE,
NO PROBLEM
Confident
of their eventual success, US officials and outside supporters
of the US project in Iraq stick to the narrative of “historic
days.” They remind critics and skeptics that while no landmark
in the state-building process has ushered in the promised peace
and stability, neither has the process been derailed. The January
30 elections will proceed, despite multiple calls for postponement,
as stipulated by the Transitional Administrative Law and UN Security
Council Resolution 1546. Several prominent Iraqi politicians who
had called for delaying the polls, notably the leaders of the
two major Kurdish parties and Adnan Pachachi, foreign minister
in the government overthrown by the 1968 Baathist coup, threw
their hats into the ring once they realized that Bush and Allawi
were determined to hold the elections on schedule. The interim
president, Ghazi al-Yawir, Allawi’s defense minister, Hazem Shaalan,
and the Iraqi ambassador to the UN have all suggested delays,
only to be overruled.
US confidence
about Iraq reflects the Bush foreign policy team’s belief in the
self-evident moral force of US “leadership” and their colder calculation
that where the US leads, most weaker parties will follow. At a
Brookings Institution forum on January 25, neo-conservative pundit
William Kristol expressed this mindset best when he noted, a bit
smugly, that in Afghanistan, Palestine and Iraq elections are
happening because those territories are occupied.
THE DISENFRANCHISED
The US-sponsored
process has indeed continued apace, but the end of the process
is not necessarily a secure and stable Iraq. In their zeal to
remake the Iraqi political order, particularly with the blanket
de-Baathification policy, the US and its Iraqi proxies effectively
disenfranchised swathes of the urban, mostly secular professional
and managerial classes who worked in the old Iraqi state. Charges
of nepotism and sectarian, ethnic or tribal hiring bias have dogged
the rebuilding of the ministries since the handover of “sovereignty.”
The US set the stage for these suspicions by agreeing with its
Iraqi proxies to allocate seats in the Iraqi Governing Council
and cabinet in the interim government according to a strict sectarian-ethnic
calculus.
Meanwhile,
with their ham-fisted counter-insurgency tactics, the US and its
allies added fuel to the flames by severely alienating a large
percentage of the Sunni Arab population. Beginning with the coinage
of the term “Sunni triangle” to describe the initial stronghold
of the insurgency, the US has steadily convinced Sunni Arabs who
have no relation to the rebellion that they are the enemy. “They’ve
equated Sunnis with terrorists,” one Sunni Arab in Baghdad told
the Washington Times. “Under Saddam, one of out 1,000 Iraqis
was a salafi. Now it’s 100 out of 1,000, all because of the Americans.”
The Bush administration has never grasped the import of the indiscriminate
detentions of thousands of Iraqis -- many of them picked up in
sweeps through the “Sunni triangle” -- that exploded into global
consciousness with the Abu Ghraib prison torture scandal. The
International Red Cross estimated that 70-90 percent of the detainees
were innocent of any involvement in the insurgency. As January
30 approaches, Abu Ghraib is reportedly full once more, again
as a result of sweeps in predominantly Sunni Arab areas.
Because their
community has borne the brunt of the war after the “major combat,”
Sunni Arab figures have been most visible in their denunciation
of the January 30 exercise as illegitimate. The Iraqi Islamic
Party, whose leader served in the Iraqi Governing Council when
Paul Bremer was US proconsul, has called for a boycott. Another
important Islamist grouping, the Muslim Scholars’ Board, has done
the same, along with some small independent nationalist parties.
The boycotters have resisted pressure to reverse their stance,
with Harith al-Dhari, head of the Muslim Scholars’ Board, rebuffing
the personal overtures of US Ambassador John Negroponte.
The boycott
calls appear to be effective. Only 32 percent of Sunni Arab respondents
in a survey run by the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence
and Research (INR) in mid-December 2004 said they were “very likely”
to vote. A slightly more recent poll conducted by the Washington-based
International Republican Institute put the number at “nearly 50
percent,” but no one expects the Sunni Arab turnout to be close
to the 80 percent rate predicted in predominantly Shiite Arab
and Kurdish areas. The threat of election-day violence is a major
reason for the difference, but not the only one: the INR poll
found that just 12 percent of Sunni Arab respondents believe the
elections will be “completely free and fair,” as opposed to 52
percent of the Arab Shia.
RISKY BET
Dhari and
other Muslim Scholars’ Board leaders are always quick to point
to their loose coalition with Shiite clerics and secular nationalist
groupings to bolster their nationalist credentials. The election
results may shed some light on the strength of these claims, though
it will likely be impossible to know if it was fear, an anti-occupation
boycott, doubts about the fairness of the election or all of the
above that kept voters away. The stock line of Bush and Allawi
that the specter of election-day violence threatens to depress
turnout in “only four of 18 provinces” is misleading, at best.
As intelligence data analyzed for the New York Times shows,
it is Baghdad -- Iraq’s sprawling, populous capital -- where the
most “insurgent attacks” occurred in the 30 days ending January
22. The heavily Sunni Arab province of Salah al-Din north of Baghdad
has seen the second highest number of attacks, but the incidents
have been spread throughout the country. Two thirds of Iraqis
live in a district that has witnessed an attack over the past
month. These numbers illustrate why the persistent description
of the “Sunni triangle” as “the heart of the insurgency” has alienated
many Sunni Arabs.
The
boycotters’ strategy hinges on their bet that the US-backed political
transition will founder on the rocks of Iraqi hostility to occupation
and frustrated Iraqi yearning for normalcy. A poll commissioned
by the outgoing Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) in mid-May
2004 found 1 percent of respondents who felt that “coalition forces”
were the factor that “contributed most to their security.” Fifty-five
percent said they would feel safer if the US-led forces left.
Those numbers help to explain why the election boycotters -- despite
the potential costs to their political fortunes -- chose to dissociate
themselves from an election process partly designed by the occupying
power. Any Iraqi government brought to power through such a process,
they feel, cannot escape the taint of association with the occupier.
The new government will also inherit the nagging shortages of
jobs, electricity, fuel and pure water, and the overabundance
of violent crime, that have afflicted Iraqi cities since the fall
of Saddam Hussein’s regime. These factors also appear to have
pushed Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who commands a following
among the poor and working-class Shia of East Baghdad, to issue
this statement: “I personally will stay away [from the elections]
until the occupiers stay away from them, and until our beloved
Sunnis participate in them. Otherwise they will lack legitimacy
and democracy.”
Given the
enormous toll in Iraqi lives exacted by insurgent attacks, however,
the boycotters’ and abstainers’ bet is risky. The May 2004 CPA
poll finding 55 percent of Iraqis effectively blaming the US occupation
for the country’s lack of security did not find a majority calling
for an immediate withdrawal of US troops. Attitudes toward the
occupation retain this seeming schizophrenia, because of deep
popular distrust of the motivations of ancien regime and
salafi elements in the insurgency, not to mention revulsion at
some of the guerrillas’ tactics.
Time will
tell if the boycotters calculated correctly that the new Iraqi
government will soon lose the confidence of the people and that,
in the long run, their non-participation will win them the reputation
they seek as the genuine nationalist opposition. The Iraqi Islamist
Party has hedged its bets by leaving its slate of candidates on
the ballot, and Sadrist candidates have not withdrawn their names,
either. It is clear, however, that the differential degrees of
trust in the elections reflect a sectarian rift in the country.
The US-backed state-building process has already widened this
divide. The elections could widen the gap further, particularly
if the boycotters were wrong about the new government’s popular
support.
INFLATED
ISLAMIST STRENGTH?
Sectarian
politics, or more accurately perceptions thereof, are the biggest
reason why the outcome of the elections is in fact crucial for
Iraq’s future. For the majority Shiite Arab population, the elections
are an opportunity to dominate the assembly that will fill the
ministries and appoint a committee to draft the permanent constitution.
Most Western commentary assumes that the 228-member list of the
United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), put together by a committee linked
to Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, will emerge with a majority of
seats. While Sistani has not explicitly endorsed the list, he
has issued a fatwa (religious injunction) instructing all Iraqis
that voting is a religious duty, and those who assume that Shiites
will vote solely along sectarian lines put two and two together.
The corollary assumption is that a UIA victory will empower the
Shiite religious parties, the Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq and Da‘wa, whose delegates would then seek
to enshrine Islam as the sole source of legislation under the
permanent constitution or bow to the wishes of Tehran about Iraqi
foreign policy. Neither assumption is necessarily warranted.
Rampant insecurity,
together with the Sunni Arab and nationalist boycott, certainly
favors the chances of the UIA to win big. But the Arab Shia may
surprise observers with their electoral preferences. Local candidates
unaffiliated with the UIA may capitalize on long-standing ambivalence
toward the formerly exiled religious parties in towns like Basra,
Dhi Qar, Kut and even Najaf. In particular, the Supreme Council
for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and its Badr Brigades
are regarded by many Shia as too close to Iran. In Basra, as Anthony
Shadid reported in the January 25 Washington Post, residents
are disaffected after over a year of SCIRI government. The Islamists
have been no better at restoring basic services on the municipal
level than the US Army Corps of Engineers and Bechtel at the national
level.
The religious
parties’ true strength has been inflated in the eyes of observers
by dint of their proximity to power. Local politicians and the
secular lists of Allawi, Iraqi Communist Party head Hamid Majid
Musa and others could mount a strong challenge to the UIA, in
majority-Shiite and mixed areas alike, on election day. Commentators
will be tempted to portray a good showing for Allawi’s list as
evidence that Iraqis prefer a strongman, but it would just as
credibly be evidence that secular-minded urbanites, of all religions,
dislike the Islamists. Even though Allawi’s slate is exile-dominated,
many urban dwellers who suffered through the sanctions decade
only to be “de-Baathified” after the invasion may consider the
interim prime minister the least of the evils on offer.
STRATEGIC
DILEMMAS
Adding the
probable 15-20 percent vote for the Kurdish parties’ list to the
split Shiite vote produces a diverse National Assembly and cabinet
-- one whose strategic dilemmas will be quite similar to those
Allawi has faced. Should the UIA get its hoped-for sweep, whether
due to low urban turnout or because secular Shiite voters are
persuaded by its pledge not to appoint clerics to ministerial
posts, it will probably gravitate toward pragmatism in power.
Already one
salient difference between Allawi and the UIA leadership has evaporated.
The interim prime minister is portrayed as Negroponte’s puppet
when he issues statements to the effect that a US troop withdrawal
would be “both reckless and dangerous.” But in the week before
the elections, the UIA quietly changed the second plank in its
platform from “setting a timetable for the withdrawal of multinational
forces from Iraq” to “the Iraq we want is capable of protecting
its borders and security without depending on foreign forces.”
To date, the US has built in Iraq a fragile state whose stewards
are afraid they cannot survive in power without an American praetorian
guard. The US military, which recently announced operational plans
to maintain well over 100,000 soldiers in Iraq through the end
of 2006, shares their trepidation.
Indeed, the
Bush administration has dimmed the sunny predictions of 2004 that
the elections will dampen the ongoing guerrilla war. Though true
believers inside and outside the administration continue to insist
that the US faces an “anti-Iraqi insurgency, not an anti-American
one,” the reality is more complex. Ancien regime and salafi
elements swim in a sea of nationalism, anger at maltreatment by
US forces and profound alienation from the post-Saddam political
order, as well as joblessness and the breakdown of basic law and
order. In themselves, the January 30 elections offer no solution
to this political crisis.
Nor do they
bridge the sectarian divide exacerbated by the guerrillas’ execution-style
killings of mostly Shiite police recruits and the corresponding
Shiite quiet during the devastating US assault on Falluja in November
2004. To the extent that “successful” elections are presented
as a victory for the Arab Shia at the expense of Sunni Arab, Islamist
and nationalist abstainers, the contests could inflame rather
than heal sectarian tensions, with a resented US occupying force
right in the middle
CORRECTION:
The e-mail version of this article wrongly implied that Bush and
Allawi said voting would be safe in only four Iraqi provinces.
They said it would be safe in 14.