http://www.juancole.com/2011/09/sadrists-to-demonstrate-in-baghdad-against-us-troops-remaining.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+juancole%2Fymbn+%28Informed+Comment%29

 Sadrists to Demonstrate in Baghdad against US Troops
Remaining<http://www.juancole.com/2011/09/sadrists-to-demonstrate-in-baghdad-against-us-troops-remaining.html>

Posted on 09/08/2011 by Juan

One of the major consequences of the September 11 attacks ten years ago was
that members of the Bush administration decided to “take advantage” of the
resulting passions to pursue their long-planned vendetta against the
government of Saddam Hussein. There followed the greatest US foreign policy
disaster since the British occupied Washington, DC and burned the White
House in 1814. I *opposed the Bush invasion and
occupation*<http://www.juancole.com/2005/06/cole-on-iraq-2002-2003-by-way-it-has.html>,
since it violated the UN Charter, and I warned that “I have a bad feeling
about this,” quoting Harrison Ford’s character in *Star Wars*. *I warned
that it would be seen as neo-imperialism, would revivify al-Qaeda, would
throw the Shiites into the arms of
Iran*<http://www.juancole.com/2003/01/journal-of-international-institute.html>and
would anger Turkey with regard to the Kurdistan Regional Government.
Now, the US has an opportunity finally to extricate itself from the
nightmare, but powerful forces in Washington are trying to ensure that the
US keeps a significant troop presence in Iraq.

The number of US troops there is likely to be so small, however, that we
risk a major attack on them, which could pull the US right back into Iraq.
The only way to avoid this scenario is to get out altogether.

The Muqtada al-Sadr nativist Shiite movement in Iraq is planning a huge
demonstration in downtown Baghdad on Friday, *in favor of three
demands.*<http://www.azzaman.com/index.asp?fname=2011\09\09-07\91.htm&storytitle=>The
first is that the Iraqi government announce an immediate jobs program
that would put 50,000 Iraqis to work, from all ethnicities and religious
groups. The second is that the Iraqi government give each Iraqi a royalty
payment on Iraqi oil profits (ironically a suggestion once made by US
viceroy in Iraq, Paul “Jerry” Bremer and modeled on a program in Alaska).
The third is that there be no US troops at all in Iraq by the end of the
year or earlier.

The Sadrists not only have a proven ability to put a lot of people in the
streets, but their some 40 seats in parliament are key to the governing
coalition of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, so that he ignores them to his
peril. The Iraqi constitution allows for parliament to call for a vote of no
confidence if 50 MPs sign off on it, and rivals of al-Maliki such as Ayad
Allawi have been calling for early elections.

The Sadrists’ Tahrir-style demonstration is intended to forestall any
backpedaling by the Iraqi government on the issue of keeping US troops in
the country after the end of this year.

*It is therefore a special
provocation*<http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2011/09/us-now-says-it-is-in-negotiations-with-iraq-over-troops-post-2011/>that
the US State Department now uses the phrase “formal negotiations” for
its discussions with the Iraqi government of al-Maliki about the possibility
of some 3000 US troops remaining in Iraq after December 31. Previously the
terminology was simply “informal discussions.” But US ambassador Jim Jeffrey
now feels that there is enough of a consensus among the Iraqi political
leadership on the desirability of some US troops remaining that it is
legitimate to talk about negotiations.

This terminological upgrade follows on *a controversy in
Washington*<http://ricks.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/09/07/iraq_the_endgame_begins>that
broke out Tuesday when Fox Cable News reported that President Obama
had
over-ruled his generals and opted for keeping only 3000 US troops in Iraq
after December 31.

The report brought howls of outrage from Senators John McCain and Lindsey
Graham, who say they want to keep 25,000 troops in Iraq. I am not sure why
McCain and Graham believe that this decision is their own. The only legal
document governing this issue is a Status of Forces Agreement signed by the
Iraqi parliament and the Bush White House in late 2008, which stipulates
that there must be no US troops in Iraq at all by December 31 of this year.

Al-Maliki is on record as saying that the SOFA cannot be amended. Rather, a
new SOFA would have to be negotiated and approved by parliament, which might
bring US troops back into the country. Personally, I am doubtful that if the
issue goes to parliament, a US troop presence can be approved. The Kurds
would want it, and maybe some members of al-Maliki’s coalition, and a few
members of the Iraqiya List (now largely Sunni Arab in character). But I
doubt the plan could get 163 votes or a majority in parliament.

The only way it could be done would be for the cabinet to make the decision
and sidestep parliament. Then the Kurds, Allawi’s Iraqiya and al-Maliki
could push it through if they wanted to. But al-Maliki has repeatedly said
that the matter would have to go to parliament. Until he reneges on that
commitment, my guess is that the plan is doomed.

Another possibility would be to reclassify US troops as trainers. This step
would be legitimate insofar as Iraq has ordered a lot of military equipment,
especially planes and helicopters, from the US, on which Iraqi crews will
need substantial training.

But any way such a decision were made would provoke a backlash from the
Sadrists, who have threatened to take back up arms if there are US troops in
the country in 2012, and from nationalist or fundamentalist Sunnis. *As Tom
Ricks, among our most experienced Iraq correspondents, points
out*<http://ricks.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/09/07/iraq_the_endgame_begins>,
3,000 US troops aren’t troops, they are hostages waiting to be taken.

McCain and Lindsey play the Iran card in arguing for keeping a division in
Iraq, saying that otherwise Iran will take over. But this argument is, as
usual with Republican politicians regarding Iraq, a bewilderingly uninformed
one. The US presided over the destruction of a Sunni-dominated secular Arab
nationalist regime and the installation of a government led by
fundamentalist Shiites, many of whom had lived in exile in Iran and had
excellent relations with Tehran. That cow is out of the barn, and the
presence of US troops is unlikely to be relevant to the budding
Tehran-Baghdad-Damascus axis, which is a political reality.

Iraq’s parliamentary system regularly produces hung parliaments and
governments can only be formed with outside mediation. The US played that
role in 2005, but Iran played it in 2010, by pressuring Muqtada al-Sadr to
join a governing coalition with his enemy, al-Maliki. Al-Maliki is thus
beholden to both Sadr and to Iran politically, and *has been pushed toward
Tehran by the Sunni crackdown on the Shiites of Bahrain and the prospect of
a Sunni overthrow of the Shiite-dominated Baath Party in
Syria.*<http://www.juancole.com/2011/08/iraq-adopts-irans-backing-of-assad.html>That
is, the Arab Spring has finally produced that Shiite crescent of which
the Sunni Arab monarchs began being afraid in 2004. Nothing Washington does
is likely to change this new and consolidating alignment. And it is this
alignment that makes a long-term US troop presence so unlikely, since none
of the regional principals want it. But were some US troops to stay, they
would be in constant danger and if they were hit, it could provoke the Third
American-Iraqi War.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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