Study group shows why US must leave
Chris Toensing
The
Mountain Mail (12/14/06)
Minuteman Media
It is time for the United States to
leave Iraq.
Not because the consequences of withdrawal
won't be dire for Iraq, but because these consequences are occurring
anyway, in slow motion. Civil war and chaos already envelop the
country, both conditions are getting worse and the United States
is powerless to arrest the downward spiral.
Slowly, but too slowly for those who
will die unnecessarily in the meantime, this somber reality is dawning
on Washington. The report of the vaunted Baker-Hamilton commission,
released December 6, offers a blunt diagnosis of multiple problems
besetting the Bush administration Mesopotamian misadventure.
The Iraqi army that is supposed to
"stand up" before the United States "stands down?"
It is uncertain "whether they will carry out missions on behalf
of national goals instead of a sectarian agenda." The new Iraqi
police? They "cannot control crime, and they routinely engage
in sectarian violence."
Police and the army, in fact, are too
infiltrated by the militias of communal parties to be considered
national institutions. They are, in essence, combatants in the multi-sided
civil war.
Iraq is a far more violent place than
the American media can tell us. Giving the lie to years of right-wing
fulmination about a false drumbeat of bad news, the Baker-Hamilton
report finds "on one day in July 2006 there were 93 attacks
or significant acts of violence reported. Yet a careful review of
the reports for that single day brought to light 1,100 acts of violence."
Meanwhile, those Iraqi civilians who
haven't yet fled to neighboring countries are falling victim to
rampant criminality that flourishes in a failing state.
The Baker-Hamilton commission observes
that sectarian-ethnic divisions among Iraqi politicians lie at the
heart of this horrendous mess, and indeed, since shortly after the
fall of Saddam Hussein, these politicians have been playing a zero-sum
game. The Kurdish parties looking out for Kurdish interests, the
Shiite religious parties guarding Shiite Arab gains, and so on.
Being devotees of bipartisan consensus
- that shiny object of establishment worship - and heeding White
House instructions to "look forward, not backward," the
commissioners neglected to note the US role in dividing the Iraqi
polity.
It was L. Paul Bremer, Mr. Bush's erstwhile
proconsul in Baghdad, who assigned seats in the first two interim
Iraqi governments according to communal affiliation.
It was Bremer's ham-handed measures
and the indiscriminate US counter-insurgency sweeps in the "Sunni
triangle" in 2003 that helped convince the bulk of Sunni Arabs
they, too, had to organize along communal lines.
Finally, the US presence in Iraq is
itself a driver of internecine fighting. Part of the reason for
the heavily Sunni Arab insurgency hostility to the Iraqi government
is its refusal to demand a timetable for withdrawal of Mr. Bush's
"coalition of the willing," which many Iraqis (not all
of them Sunnis) reject as unwanted foreign presence.
Although US troops cannot halt the
civil war ravaging Iraq, and although they are not consciously enlisted
in it, they are not mere bystanders. In backing the Iraqi government,
the United States has taken sides.
Yet Washington cannot simply correct
its numerous errors of governance in Iraq because it no longer calls
the shots. The democratically elected Iraqi government does - at
least nominally - but this government's dominant factions are the
main beneficiaries of the sectarian-ethnic calculus underlying post-Saddam
Iraqi politics.
They will not seek real national reconciliation
voluntarily, and in any case, zero-sum logic dictates they arm themselves
for a stepped-up confrontation instead.
An expeditious US withdrawal will not
automatically bring peace to Iraq; indeed, the civil war might spread.
But neither can the United States stop the meltdown its policies
helped start.
The scenarios of which stay-the-coursers
have warned - civil war and lawlessness - are already stark features
of the "new Iraq." There is no reason to believe keeping
US soldiers there any longer will make them disappear.
---
Chris Toensing is editor of Middle
East Report , a publication of the Middle East Research and
Information Project (www.merip.org) in Washington, D.C. Distributed
by MinutemanMedia.org.
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