The Iraq War has been long forgotten and treated as a "mission abolished" after the new president pledged to withdraw U.S. forces and the American media, public, and Congress turned their attention back to a war even liberals could love (or at least support) — Afghanistan. Liberals wanted to refocus on the real war on terror — even though it’s not chic to call it that under the new Democratic administration.
But what about poor Iraq? As baseball great Yogi Berra once said, "It ain’t over, till it’s over." And the underlying indicators seem to indicate that the worst is yet to come.
Although even the starry-eyed Bush administration eventually seemed to figure out — and the Obama team is much more realistic than they were — that a unified, democratic Iraq was unlikely, the reduced violence has again lulled politicians into unrealistic expectations.
The only way Iraq can overcome its many ethno-sectarian and tribal divisions and remain unified is if a massive and prolonged civil war occurs, and the winning faction holds the fractured country together by force. Otherwise, the artificial country is likely to break up into warring city-states, each with its own militia.
There are multiple signs that Iraq is broken beyond repair. Here are some examples:
*The Iraqi parliament is fractious and completely dysfunctional. The various factions have rendered that body unable to pass vitally needed laws — for example, an oil statute to divide oil revenues and entice international oil companies in to repair Iraq’s decrepit oil production infrastructure and increase output.
*The lack of an oil law recently led to a disastrous auction of the rights to work in Iraq’s oil field, with only one agreement reached with foreign oil interests.
*After six years of training by the U.S., only 17 of the Iraqi Army’s 174 combat battalions can conduct counterinsurgency operations without U.S. help. All of the Iraqi army depends on the U.S. military for logistics, intelligence, and air support.
*U.S. forces are so roundly hated in Iraq that U.S. military trainers have to quarantine themselves in fortified compounds separate from the Iraqi soldiers for fear of being fragged by those they trained.
*Factionalism is shown by the Shi’ite government’s failure to implement a law permitting former Ba’ath Party members (mostly Sunnis) to return to their jobs or receive pensions. Furthermore, the government had agreed to pay Sunni Awakening Council members — those former Sunni guerrillas that are now helping the U.S. to fight al-Qaeda in Iraq — but has dragged its feet on getting them their money. In addition, the government, suspicious of the Awakening Councils, has also slow rolled its promise to get their members jobs in the security forces, bureaucracy, or private business. Instead of so co-opting this potential enemy, the government dangerously began arresting Sunni leaders.
*Much resentment still exists over the rampant ethnic cleansing between the ethnic Shi’ite and Sunni groups that occurred in 2006 and 2007. If refugees are allowed to return to their homes, more violence would likely flare.
*Volatility in various areas of Iraq has fluctuated since the U.S. invasion. Now the most severe strains are in the north, with ethnic tensions and violence between the Kurds and the Sunni Arabs over the border between the Kurdish area and the rest of Iraq, especially the oil-rich territory near the northern city of Kirkuk.
*In fact, ethno-sectarian violence is already increasing, and is especially likely after August 2010, when U.S. combat forces are all pledged to be out of Iraq and cannot easily return there. The various factions have astutely reasoned that dissipating their men and arms by fighting the powerful — but "so yesterday" — U.S. military occupation is foolish. They are keeping their powder dry for the main event between themselves as U.S. forces become weaker. The Sunni Awakening Councils, formerly fighting the U.S., even got the U.S. to give their militias money, arms, and training — which will likely make the coming conflagration even worse, as they battle the U.S. trained and equipped Kurdish and Shi’ite units (really militias) in the security forces.
*Basic services have improved somewhat but are still lousy, with continuing power outages and a lack of clean water.
*The worldwide economic collapse has lowered oil prices and has impeded the Iraqi government’s ability to buy peace among the obstreperous factions.
A country’s government can make all of the laws and create all of the institutions it wants, but those things will all be for naught if the underlying forces of ethnicity, sectarianism, and tribalism are strong enough to pull the country apart. Those forces in the form of factions in Iraq are well armed and prepared to do just that whenever the Americans inevitably become so weak that they can’t do much about it.
The only way to avoid this train wreck is to withdraw U.S. forces as soon as possible, so that they don’t get caught in the melee, and hold a national conclave as the draw down. That conclave would let the Iraqis attempt to divide the country peacefully and agree on boundaries that would be honored by all. A central government could be retained, but it would have to be weak so that the various factions would not fight over control of it. Decentralization is Iraq’s only hope to avoid a massive civil war.
Read more by Ivan Eland
- Knocking Our Heads Against a Wall in Palestine – November 3rd, 2009
- Obama Still Doesn’t Grasp Blowback – October 27th, 2009
- Is Adulation of the Military Really Patriotic? – October 20th, 2009
- Five Facts About Afghanistan – October 13th, 2009
- Fire McChrystal and Get Out of Afghanistan – October 6th, 2009





VietNamWarVet
July 3rd, 2009 at 3:39 pm
A fractured weak Iraq is just what the Zionist TRAITORS who LIED and led US into an illegal and unnecessary war with Iraq desired all along – mission accomplished for the benefit of Israel – a destroyed Iraq! Next war for the benefit of Israel is with Iran. One must wonder – is it the US that Israel and its Zionist TRAITORS are really trying to destroy?
Spinrad
July 3rd, 2009 at 8:42 pm
It's possible that the Iraqis, like the French and Germans after world wars 1 and 2, will make peace because they all have long and bitter experience with the alternative. There may be at least some hope that all sides are so exhausted by six years of fighting that they're willing to compromise.
couscous
July 4th, 2009 at 5:23 pm
This article is appalling. Even though this site has served as little more than a propaganda outlet for years, you should still be embarrassed to run something this bad.
The only way Iraq can overcome its many ethno-sectarian and tribal divisions and remain unified is if a massive and prolonged civil war occurs, and the winning faction holds the fractured country together by force.
Congratulations on writing the dumbest statement I’ve ever seen on this site! Care to explain why Iraq has never had a “civil war” before and why America has been unable to ‘hold the fractured country together by force’? They’ve murdered and exiled about a quarter of the Iraqi population and blockaded much of the rest in concrete and barbed wire prisons, but they still can’t seem to stamp out that pesky
guerrilla war‘sectarian violence’!For anyone who cares: Iraq has never had a “civil war”. It has no history of religious violence. The Baath Party was explicitly secular and mainly Shia. One of the vice presidents was Christian. Iraqis are intermarried, though the colonial policy to segregate them into religious ghettos has amusingly only targeted the Arabs and not the Kurds.
The ongoing failure of the puppet army & puppet government is due to them being puppets. The violence will continue as long as the occupation continues. Just like in Vietnam, no change in colonial policy will fix this. As far as “ethnic cleansing”, “sectarian bombings” and the mythical al qaeda in Iraq goes…well lets hear what the Iraqis have to say about them!
Many Iraqis blame the occupation for the bombings "I do not believe it is al-Qaeda any more," a woman weeping near the scene of the bombing told IPS. "I do not care any more, I am just losing my loved ones. The last explosion hit my husband, and now he is disabled, and this one took my son's life."
She referred to a similar bombing two-and-a-half months ago at the same market that killed 137 and wounded many more.
U.S. leaders and Iraqi government officials again accused "terrorists and the Saddamists" of the bombing. But many people around Baghdad are blaming the occupation forces and the U.S.-backed Iraqi government.
"I noticed that security officers did not carry out any site investigation," a former police officer who lives in a neighboring area told IPS, speaking on the condition of anonymity. "I have also noticed that no such crime has been solved since the first days of the occupation."
Iraqis also doubted the existence and motives of “Zarqawi” The view on-the-ground in Iraq, among both Sunnis and Shi'ites, is worth noting. Sheikh Jawad al-Kalesi, the Shi'ite Imam of the al-Kadhimiyah mosque in Baghdad, told Le Monde: "I don’t think that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi exists as such. He’s simply an invention by the occupiers to divide the people."
Iraq’s most powerful Sunni Arab religious authority, the Association of Muslim Scholars, concurs, condemning the call to arms against Shi’ites as a “very dangerous” phenomenon that “plays into the hands of the occupier who wants to split up the country and spark a sectarian war.” In colonial terms, the strategy is known as “divide and rule.”
The ethnic cleansing is done with the active assistance of the American military "They [death squads] evicted many of our good Sunni neighbors and killed many others," Abu Riyad of the predominantly Shia Shula area told IPS. "We protected them for a while, but then we could not face the militias with all the support they had from the Iraqi government and the Americans. It is a terrible shame that we have to live with, but what can we do?"
On the other hand, many Sunni Iraqis seemed unwilling to evict their Shia countrymen – for a while. But people in one mixed area of Baghdad described strange developments.
"It is true that our neighbors did not evict us, but then the Americans swept the area and local fighters had to disappear from the streets," Hussein Allawi, a Shia who lived in a predominantly Sunni neighborhood told IPS. "A group of masked strangers then entered the town right under American soldiers' eyes. Only then did we realize that we must leave, and that our good neighbors could not help us any more."
Many such stories are told around Baghdad.