Washington Post
No 'Owning' Iraq
Forget the slogans. It's time to let Iraqis remake their country.
By Jim Hoagland
January 13, 2005

If one political lesson above all can be drawn from the 20th century, it
must be that no nation is ever "owned" by another. Decolonization, the
breakup of the Soviet empire, America's defeat in Vietnam, the Palestinian
intifada and other events speak authoritatively and clearly on this.

So it is both glib and pernicious to propagate the notion that the United
States has "broken" Iraq and therefore "owns" it. You do not need Pottery
Barn to tell you this is a policy that neither large corporations nor
superpowers can enforce.

It would relieve Saddam Hussein and foreign jihadists of their
responsibility, or credit, if you will, for the hell on earth that central
Iraq has long been. It would deprive Iraqis of their obligation to break the
spell of passivity that Baathist dictatorship, past American betrayal and an
oil economy have cast on them. It would reduce the Iraqi elections a little
over a fortnight away to being a function of George W. Bush's brilliance, or
his stupidity.

That last point is a major part of the attraction for Bush critics and
supporters alike to substitute slogans for analysis of Iraq's complexities.
Even the president and his aides at times neglect the reality that Iraqis
must be swiftly entrusted and empowered to remake their own country in their
own image.

Two constant mistakes of the occupation have been the complex social
engineering practiced on a country that Americans scarcely know, and a
refusal to trust the Iraqis. Those mistakes must not be carried through in
official Washington's reaction to the Jan. 30 elections, which should
establish an unfettered majority rule in Iraq.

As difficult and flawed as it may turn out to be, the election of an Iraqi
constitutional assembly is needed, on schedule, to mark a decisive turning
point away from U.S. occupation -- from "owning" Iraq, as Colin Powell
reportedly used the phrase to Bush before the 2003 invasion.

The so-called Pottery Barn rule is one of several self-defeating myths that
have grown up around Iraq and need to be dispelled by the Jan. 30 vote.
Another is that the "legitimacy" of the elections will hinge on how many
Sunnis vote or boycott.

Legitimacy is a relative concept, as the collection of democracies,
dictatorships, kleptocracies and authoritarian regimes that make up the
United Nations demonstrates. There is no magic formula for participation by
any religious or ethnic group to establish legitimacy. The practicality of
power politics does that, for better or worse.

Holding the elections forces Iraq's Sunnis into a similar practical choice:
They can vote or they can fight. It would be a major error to let them off
the hook of that choice, as those who argue for a substantial delay of the
elections explicitly or implicitly advocate.

The neighboring Sunni monarchs in Jordan and Saudi Arabia want to delay the
day when Iraq's political order will reflect the fact that Shiites make up
the large majority of the population, a fact that Sunnis must at some point
acknowledge and accept.

The White House helped Ayad Allawi, its choice as interim prime minister,
craft a "Sunni engagement" strategy that, as voting day approaches, has
failed to curb escalating violence in Baghdad and the Sunni heartland.

If anything, the option of fighting and voting has given Sunnis all the
incentive they needed to do nothing to oppose the terrorist gangs and
murder-by-suicide bombings aimed at derailing the elections. State
Department officials compounded Allawi's ineffective strategy by leaking a
report that the United States would guarantee Sunni representation in a
future government -- whatever the election returns.

Surely this is a matter for Iraqis to resolve and for Americans to butt out
of six months after Washington supposedly turned over "sovereignty" to
Allawi's floundering regime.

The Shiite candidate list backed by Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani contains
several highly placed Sunni candidates, two of whom were campaigning in
Shiite precincts in and near Najaf this week. They shared the platform with
Ahmed Chalabi, the Shiite politician Washington has sought unsuccessfully to
marginalize, if not destroy, in part to placate Sunni and Baathist
sensitivities.

Chalabi and others are busy negotiating behind the scenes on the shape of a
post-election government that at the top will include Sunnis, Kurds and
members of other minority groups. It will be an authority that responds to
Iraq's domestic political needs, not the unrealistic, more politically
correct norms of the State Department.

Bush's challenge does not end with holding elections on Jan. 30. He must be
ready to accept and implement their results as well, whatever the kings of
Jordan and Saudi Arabia may tell him about the discomforts of democracy.

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