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The Iraqi Civil War Bush and the Media Don't Tell You About

By Raed Jarrar, Foreign Policy in Focus. Posted March 24, 2008.


The Iraqi-Iraqi conflict is similar to the U.S. civil war: Iraqis who are want a centralized government are fighting against those favor secession.
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While the majority of Iraqis know that the current Sunni-Shiites tension did not exist before 2003, no one can deny that after five years of U.S. occupation, sectarian tension is now a reality. Sectarianism is another disaster that was brought to Iraq by the war and occupation of Iraq.

The U.S.-led invasion did not only destroy the Baath political regime, it also annihilated the entire public sector including education, health care, food rations, social security, and the armed forces. The Iraqi public sector was a great example of how millions of Iraqis: Arabs and Kurds, Sunnis and Shiites, Muslims and Christians, religious and secular, all worked together in running the country. The myth that the former Iraqi government was a "Sunni-led dictatorship" was created by the U.S. government. Even the Iraqi political regime was not "Sunni-led," let alone the rest of the public sector. A good way to debunk this fairy tale is through a close look at the famous deck of cards of the 55 most wanted Iraqi leaders. The cards had the pictures of Saddam, his two sons, and the rest of the political leadership which most Iraqis would recognize as the heads of the political regime. What is noteworthy is that 36 of the 55 were Shiites. In fact, the two vice presidents were a Christian and a Shiites Kurd.

Sometimes I feel like Iraqis and Americans are analyzing two different wars happening in two different countries. In one narrative, there is a civil war based on ancient sectarian hatred where a U.S. withdrawal will cause the sky to fall. In the other, there is a country struggling under occupation to get its independence back where the occupation is not welcomed and it is causing political, not sectarian, splits and violence.

According to the Iraqi mainstream narrative, the foreign occupation is the major reason and cause for violence and destruction. Foreign intervention is not only destroying Iraq's infrastructure, but it is also splitting Iraq's formerly integrated society. In addition, Iraqis are fighting among each other over fundamental questions about the future of their country, but the central conflict is not between Sunnis and Shiites, it is between Iraqi separatists and nationalists. Unlike other countries in the region such as Lebanon, the Iraqi sectarian tension is still reversible, because it just started five years ago. More importantly, it isn't main driver fueling the Iraqi-Iraqi conflict. This "hidden" conflict is between separatists and nationalists.

The "Hidden" Conflict: Separatists vs. Nationalists

Loosely speaking, separatists favor a "soft partition" of Iraq into at least three zones with strong regional governments, similar to the semiautonomous Kurdish "state" in Northern Iraq; they are thriving on foreign intervention (Iranian, U.S. or other powers' influence); they favor privatizing Iraq's massive energy reserves and ceding substantial control of the country's oil sector to regional authorities. Nationalists reject any foreign interference in Iraq's affairs and they favor a strong technocratic central government in Baghdad that is not based on sectarian voting blocs. They favor centralized control over the development of Iraq's oil and gas reserves while keeping them nationalized.

This Iraqi-Iraqi conflict is in many ways similar to the U.S. civil war: Iraqis who are for keeping a central government are fighting against other Iraqis who want to secede. But the major difference is that the United States was not under a foreign occupation that was destroying nationalists and funding and training separatists. Numerous polls that were conducted over the past few years in Iraq show that a majority of Iraqis from all different backgrounds tend to be more nationalist than separatist. A majority of the population are for a complete U.S. withdrawal, for keeping a strong central government in Baghdad, and against privatizing and decentralizing Iraq's natural resources.

More surprisingly to U.S. audiences, this nationalist-separatist conflict is apparent inside the Iraqi government itself. The Iraqi executive branch (the cabinet and the presidency) are completely controlled by separatists (including Shiitess, Sunnis, Kurds, seculars and others). But the legislative branch (the parliament) is controlled by nationalists (including Sunnis, Shiitess, seculars, Christians, Yazidis, etc.) who enjoy a small but crucially important majority.

The last couple of years witnessed numerous examples of how the Bush administration systematically took the side of separatists in the Iraqi executive branch against nationalists in the elected legislative branch, repeatedly bypassing the Iraqi parliament. In each of these cases, there was the potential for reaching compromises that would have satisfied both nationalists and separatists. However, the aggressive support of the U.S. government for the separatist executive branch against the parliament has made it impossible for Iraqis to settle their differences.

Understanding these nuances of the Iraqi-Iraqi conflict reveals how the war is a political struggle that will end as soon as the U.S. withdraws, not a religious war that will intensify after Iraqis take their country back. The United States is not playing the role of a peace-keeping force, or a convener of reconciliation. It is seen by a majority of Iraqis as one side of the conflict and will never be a part of the solution.

How to Help

On this side of the ocean, the U.S. government has managed to convince large portions of the "right" that the war and occupation of Iraq is "good for our safety" because it's better to "fight the terrorists overseas so we do not have to face them here at home." Simultaneously, the government managed to manipulate many people on the "left" into believing that a U.S. withdrawal would cause unprecedented bloodshed. "The invasion was not a good idea" some would say, "but now that we are there, let's fix it before we leave."

From an Iraqi perspective, both groups promote interventionist foreign policies that have no respect for sovereignty, independence, or international law. On the one hand, the best way to guarantee that no al-Qaeda or other extremist organizations will exist in Iraq is to let Iraqis rule the country by themselves. They have been living in Iraq and ruling it for the last thousands of years, and unlike the occupation authorities, they have been successful in protecting Iraq from the intervention of foreign countries and organizations.

While many Iraqis appreciate the sense of responsibility to fix what the U.S. invasion has broken in Iraq, and it has broken a lot, prolonging the occupation is only making the situation worse. There are other appropriate venues to support Iraqis after the last U.S. soldier and the last mercenary leave Iraq. This might include paying compensation, the same way Iraq has been compensating Kuwait and its people for the last 17 years through the United Nations Compensation Committee.

The best way to help Iraqis is to end the occupation of their country and to believe in their right and capacity for self-rule and self-determination. Setting a timetable for a complete withdrawal is the first step to help Iraqis begin the long process of reconciliation and reconstruction.

The 21st Invader

Unfortunately, the two ruling parties in D.C. are not planning to leave Iraq any time soon. The Republicans are openly speaking about leaving troops indefinitely, while the Democrats want to start withdrawing "combat" troops soon but they have three exceptions that could maintain up to 75,000 troops indefinitely in Iraq. These three exceptions are: training the Iraqi military forces, counter-terrorism operations, and protecting the U.S. embassy in Baghdad.

Turning the current occupation into half or one-quarter of an occupation will not change anything on the ground in Iraq. Pulling out some of the troops and leaving some exceptions indefinitely is not a new strategy, it is a continuation of decades old military interventionism that will likely reduce some of the violence but it will keep the Iraqi people from starting the political, social, and economic reconciliation that is sorely needed.

Last November marked the 1245th anniversary of the construction of modern Baghdad by the Abbasid caliph Al-Mansur. During the last 13 centuries, Baghdad had been attacked and occupied 20 times before the U.S. army became its 21st foreign invader. Robert Fisk noted in one of his articles that in 1920 David Lloyd George, the prime minister of Britain, was facing similar calls for a military withdrawal. "Is it not for the benefit of the people of that country that it should be governed so as to enable them to develop this land which has been withered and shriveled up by oppression? What would happen if we withdrew?" Lloyd George would not abandon Iraq to "anarchy and confusion". The time is different now, but the politics of the invaders still sound the same.

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Raed Jarrar is Iraq Consultant to the American Friends Service Committee. He blogs at Raed in the Middle.

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Manufactured Insurgency in Iraq
Posted by: Adler Berriman Seal on Mar 24, 2008 2:37 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anybody with his eyes open has seen this coming ever since the invasion of Iraq. It is according to plan, not "despite best efforts". Manufactured Insurgency in Iraq

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Manufactured Insurgency in Iraq Posted by: Adler Berriman Seal
Ideals
Posted by: ot on Mar 24, 2008 4:14 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The Iraqi public sector was a great example of how millions of Iraqis: Arabs and Kurds, Sunnis and Shiites, Muslims and Christians, religious and secular, all worked together in running the country."

How noble. And to think that all it took was a brutal and tyrannical dictatorship. Hmmm..., state enforced multiculturalism, no less.

Remember that key point ye starry-eyed liberals before seeing in this former Iraqi Utopia the recipe for this ideal in the U.S.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Ideals Posted by: particle
» Yeah no kidding! Posted by: democracynowiniraq
» RE: Yeah no kidding! Posted by: particle
» RE: Yeah no kidding! Posted by: democracynowiniraq
» RE: Yeah no kidding! Posted by: particle
» RE: Yeah no kidding! Posted by: democracynowiniraq
» RE: Yeah no kidding! Posted by: particle
» DNII you are such an asswipe Posted by: leafsong1
» I WOULD report you leafsong1 Posted by: democracynowiniraq
» ot = TROLL ALERT! Posted by: Quannah
» RE: ot = TROLL ALERT! Posted by: democracynowiniraq
» RE: ot = TROLL ALERT! Posted by: Quannah
U.S. agenda remains control of oil via the hydrocarbon law
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Mar 24, 2008 5:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Note to Iraqis: The U.S. government doesn't give a damn about what happens to you. A centralized government that answers to the U.S. is fine. Separatist governments that answer to the U.S. are also fine. Whoever promises to deliver up control of Iraqi oil, whether they be centralists or separatists, will get U.S. support.

The hydrocarbon law is a bad joke, but has been trumpeted in the U.S. press as the most wonderful thing ever. For example, Christopher Hitchens, in Microsoft's SLATE

It's a not-so-simple agreement that gives control of Iraqi oil to a number of appointed bodies, which will include ExxonMobile and ChevronTexaco representatives. They'll get to make key decisions about contracts and production. It was written by an "economic consulting firm" called BearingPoint.

"In July 2003, USAID awarded BearingPoint a $9 million initial award to facilitate Iraq's economic recovery. According to USAID, the contract, which can be renewed annually for a maximum of two more years, is worth $79,583,885. The contract was bid on by 10 companies with existing indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity contracts, according to USAID. Under the contract, BearingPoint will support the provisional government's efforts to facilitate Iraq's regional and international economic integration, stimulate trade, increase employment, and create a competitive private sector, according to USAID. BearingPoint will examine Iraq's current laws and policies regulating trade, commerce and investment and provide support to the central bank and the ministries of finance, trade, commerce and industry."

The larger economic agenda is total privatization of all of Iraq - telecommunications, water, electricity, agriculture and petroleum. The profits will all go to U.S. corporations, and the Iraqis will continue under occupied nation status until all the oil is extracted, some 20-30 years from now. That's the agenda being pushed by Bush, Cheney, Halliburton, ExxonMobil, Chevron, and their Wall Street controllers in corporate finance - the same banks that are also heavily invested in weapons manufacturers, telecoms, pharmaceuticals, etc.

So, excuse us - we need to remake your country from the bottom up, so first we're going to bomb your water and electricity systems (but not your oil pipelines - those we'll need), then we'll invade, then we'll destroy your public services sector and replace it with privatized services, which you will pay for with your oil. What a deal, huh? We'll throw in a permanent military occupation that tortures and insults Iraqis on a daily basis, just to keep things "peaceful". And don't even think about closing our embassy, or we'll bomb you again. Just give us the oil, and everything will be okay - or you can have some more depleted uranium.

I suppose we can all be happy that Bush's Hitlerian agenda of aggressive warfare in the Middle East hasn't expanded the way they originally wanted it to - if it had, the U.S. would already have invaded Syria and Iran.

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» Hitlerian?? Posted by: democracynowiniraq
» RE: Hitlerian?? Posted by: particle
» RE: Hitlerian?? Posted by: democracynowiniraq
Sunni-led dictatorship???
Posted by: goodscarrier on Mar 24, 2008 5:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The myth that the former Iraqi government was a "Sunni-led dictatorship" was created by the U.S. government.

Huh?

Who asserted that?

Are you not muddying the water?

What's true is the history of al-Dawa.

Pls focus on facts and write about that.

E.g.:

1) Iraq's Risk In Its War. By ERIC DAVIS. NYT, Aug 7, 1981. [snip]

The major Shiite organizations are Al Dawa al Islamiya and the the [sic] Mujahedeen. Al Dawa, which was formed in the late 1960's, is estimated to have 5000 members. This estimate came just before the execution of Al Dawa's titular leader, Ayatollah Baqir al-Sadr, his sister and eight leading Shiite clergy on April 19, 1980 ....

Al Dawa is large given the Government's repression of Shiite movements, the execution of Ayatollah as-sadr and his followers was a serious blow.

Al Dawa was always tarnished in the eyes of many Iraqis by its links to the Shah of Iran.

2) Iraq's Hussein; Arab who smote the Persians is riding high on the victory. By ALAN COWELL. The Gazette. Oct 9, 1988. [snip]

When Iraq's Shiites showed signs of restiveness at the beginning of the war with the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's revolutionary Shia state, President Hussein moved quickly and brutally to deal with them. He responded to an assassination attempt on Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz by executing Mohammad Bakr al-Sadr, one of the nation's most prominent Shiite clerics and the leader of the pro-Khomeini Al Daawa Party, and his sister Amina bint al-Huda.

"Membership of the Shiite-based Al Daawa Party was made retroactively punishable by death," wrote two experts on the region, Shahram Chubin and Charles Tripp, in their recent book, Iran and Iraq at War (Westview). "Thousands of Shia in Najaf, Karbala and Al-Thawra township in Baghdad were arrested; and a campaign was initiated to expel from Iraq any Iraqi who had even the remotest connection with Iran, by birth, marriage or name."


3) The Man Who Would Be Feared. By YOUSSEF IBRAHIM. NYT, Jul 29, 1990. [snip]

A few years ago, Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz was asked why his Government was so ruthless with its adversaries - executing, for example, all the leaders of the Iraqi Islamic fundamentalist movement known as Al Daawa, or the Call. Mr. Aziz paused and then said, ''It is because we don't have the time.'' The Baath party, he said, was modernizing Iraq and unifying a tribal country divided along religious and ethnic lines. Unlike Europe, he said, Iraq could not afford a freewheeling democratic exercise; ''reactionary forces,'' he said, might drag the nation back into religious fundamentalism. It is for that reason, Mr. Hussein and Mr. Aziz have argued, that Iraq went to war against Iran in 1980.

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as planned.......................
Posted by: Forrest on Mar 24, 2008 6:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Richard Perle (author of the 1996 strategy paper, "A Clean Break", and the other neo-cons knew exactly how to de-construct a country. Using the time tested "divide and conquer" strategy they
first "take-out" the dictator, sit back and let ethnic cleansing happen, and then proceed with their objective of protecting Kurdish oil (Kirkuk to Haifa pipeline). That is why Anbar province and the American bases at H1, H2, and H3 are so important.

See the British Jane's Intelligence Digest Report at:
http://www.janes.com/security/international
_security/news/fr/fr030416_1_n.shtml

Oil from Iraq : An Israeli pipedream?

"All of this lends weight to the theory that Bush's war is part of a masterplan to reshape the Middle East to serve Israel's interests. Haaretz quoted Paritzky as saying that the pipeline project is economically justifiable because it would dramatically reduce Israel's energy bill."

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Will someone plese read, and explain, this article
Posted by: kentigereyes@yahoo.com on Mar 24, 2008 6:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to the despicably evil "w"/DICKY regime and all the jerk politicians and citizens that support it. This regime is not only destroying the United States of Arrogance but everything it touches. I offer a simple solution. #1. Bring the damn troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan NOW!, TODAY!, IMMEDIATELY!!!!!!! #2. Remove the regime from power in the USA and put the true "axis of evil"(george"johnWayne"bush, DICKY, DONNY, KARL, Condo, and many others)on trial for war crimes, murder, and thievery. I think that a real prison would be a great place for this group to wallow in it's legacy. #3. Find some people to help this country get it's head out of it's ___!!!!!!! The USA is in very very deep doo on a planet wise basis. WE NEED HELP!!!!! Politicians AIN'T gonna get it done. Wake up USA!!!!!!!!!!! Ken

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One point
Posted by: brunowe on Mar 24, 2008 7:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not totally accurate to leave it pointing out the multi-cultural nature of some appointees. Hussein was a Tikriti, and key generally went to other Tikritis (essentially family/clan members and members of his tribe).

In that respect, the government could be said to be Sunni-dominated. The thing is that it wasn't so because of Sunni-Shi'ite tensions but because the Tikritis happened to be Sunni.

Outside of that, I agree with the article.

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Green Zone babble
Posted by: leafsong1 on Mar 24, 2008 8:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
At first the author seems to be describing the situation quite accurately: an integrated society is split along ethnic lines by the occupation, a split between patriots and collaborators. Then the author says that the real divide in the war is between nationalists and seperatists. And what is his evidence? The political divide between two groups of collaborators in the Green Zone. It seems he is trying to uinderplay the extent to which the occupation is responsible and to replace the "they started fighting as soon as Saddam fell because they are fanatic muslim fundamentalists" with "they are fighting over obscure political differences." The author acknowledges the role of the occupation and then undermines that truth with what seems like just another layer of propaganda. He's been played.

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» RE: Green Zone babble Posted by: particle
» RE: Green Zone babble Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: Green Zone babble Posted by: particle
» RE: Green Zone babble Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: Green Zone babble Posted by: Quannah
» RE: Green Zone babble Posted by: leafsong1
We will never learn
Posted by: solrev on Mar 24, 2008 11:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We fought the communist in Nam and the Vietnamese nationalists defeated us. We now fight the terrorists in Iraq and the Iraqi nationalists will defeat us. What is really crazy is the Shia leader al-Sadr will unite Iraq under the nationalists, and he is our worst enemy. He will be able to call the law of retaliation fulfilled and make alliances with the Kurds and Sunni, together they can control the Iranian backed al-Badr Shia. We also back the al-Badr Shia because their influence is in Basra. How insane is that? Who controls Basra controls the spice.

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» RE: We will never learn Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: We will never learn Posted by: Quannah
Terrorist
Posted by: HeKnew on Mar 24, 2008 6:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The occupation of Iraq doesn't have to happen.

Direct Democracy

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