[interesting...]

Gen. Petraeus is clearly convinced that Iraq needs US troops to shore
up the government and security. He has done the most responsible job
yet seen by an American official in Iraq in trying to end the carnage.
He has made bazaars no drive zones to stop the car bombings. He has
surrounded city districts with blast walls to keep out insurgents. He
has reached out to the Sunnis (though alas the Shiite government has
not). He has done what he could, but it hasn't been enough.

What if the US military presence is juvenilizing the Iraqis and
prolonging the civil war? Over 900 Iraqis were killed in political
violence in March, the highest number since September.

Some of the March death toll was from Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's
abrupt attack on the Sadr neighborhoods of Basra, which was repulsed.
But surely al-Maliki rejected negotiations and attacked frontally
because he knew that if he got into trouble he could call down US
close air support. If the US were not in Iraq, might al-Maliki not
have dickered instead?

Might it not be the same between al-Maliki and the Sunnis? Al-Maliki
objected vehemently to the US arming the Sunni Awakening Councils. He
declines to incorporate them into the Iraqi security forces in any
numbers. But his standoffishness comes from knowledge that if the
Sunnis give him too much trouble, he can have his American friends
bomb them.

If we make an analogy to Lebanon, we can see that a foreign military
occupation never resolved Lebanon's problems. Kissinger greenlighted a
Syrian/ Arab League force for Lebanon in 1976. Although the Syrians
invaded and kept tens of thousands of troops in Lebanon, they either
did not want to or could not end the Lebanese civil war, which
sputtered on.

The Israeli attempt in 1982 to install a Phalangist strongman failed.
The US Marines tried to come in to do peace-keeping after the Israeli
invasion, and they faced a still-sullen population, and got hit by
Islamic Amal.

The Syrians could not help but play one Lebanese faction off against another.

Only in 1989, after 14 years of fruitless fighting, did the Lebanese
agree to end the war. The big clan and sect leaders negotiated an end
to the war. Some had been in or associated with the insurgency.

What if Iraq has been Lebononized, but not in the sense that
Ambassador Crocker alleged, of heavy Iranian influence.

What if the US is playing the Syrians here, and the Iraqis the Lebanese?

In this analogy, the war is not ended by foreign occupation troops. If
anything, the Syrian policies just keep the pot boiling.

It is ended by a conference at the resort town of Taef in Saudi Arabia
among the big Lebanese politicians, who make key compromises with one
another and begin practically disbanding militias.

Maybe the Iraqis need to be left on their own militarily, and maybe
what they need is a big conference at Taef.

Maybe the US in Iraq is not the little boy with his finger in the
dike. Maybe we are workers with jackhammers instructed to make the
hole in the dike much more huge.

Just something to think about.

-- By Juan Cole

-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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