On Fourth of July, Let Iraq Go
Posted: 03 Jul 2010 11:30 PM PDT

The Fourth of July celebrates the Declaration of Independence of the
American colonies of Great Britain, on the grounds that they deserved
representative government and popular sovereignty– something denied to
them by the British crown.

Iraq was occupied by American troops in 2003 after an illegal
invasion, and it is still so occupied. The viceroy appointed by George
W. Bush, Paul Bremer, had no legal charter from the US Congress and
represented no one, having never been elected to anything. He wrote
dozens of laws for the Iraqis by fiat. They are still technically the
law of the land in Iraq. He used Iraq’s oil revenue, billions of
dollars worth, to run his interim government, even though no Iraqi
voted to give it to him for that purpose. In subsequent years the US
intervened heavy-handedly in Iraqi political affairs and still does so
today. Few complaints of the Founding Fathers against Britain could
not be lodged against the United States by Iraq.

All through spring of 2009, US officers in Iraq heavily lobbied the
new president, Barack Obama, not to honor the Status of Forces
Agreement that George W. Bush had negotiated with the Iraqi parliament
during his last months in office. It called for troop reductions. The
officers opposed them. It called for US forces to cease actively
patrolling major Iraqi cities on June 30, 2009. the officers said that
step was foolhardy, and would make it impossible to keep up their
collection of intelligence on urban guerrillas. It called for rapid US
troop reductions. The officers argued that Iraq would fall back into
instability.

Obama stuck to his guns, and the US soldiers stopped patrolling the
cities independently on June 30, 2009. In July of that year, the
number of attacks by guerrillas and the number of civilians killed
both fell by one third. It appears that the patrols were causing
violence, not stopping it, since the guerrillas attacked the patrols
and ended up killing civilians.

The troop withdrawal also proceeded apace throughout the past year.
Although Iraq remains in a low-intensity civil war, the monthly death
toll of civilians and security forces averages 300-400 now, compared
to 2500 a month in summer of 2006. At the height of the troop
escalation or surge there were around 170,000 US troops in Iraq. Today
there are about 88,000 and the number is rapidly falling.

Everything the naysayers in the Pentagon alleged about the effect of
implementing the SOFA was wrong.

Now unnamed sources in Iraq are leaking again to the New York Times.
They want to insist that the timetable for troop withdrawal in the
SOFA is unrealistic. They cannot imagine that US troops will really
leave by the end of 2011. They are sure that the SOFA will be
renegotiated by the new Iraqi government whenever it is finally
formed.

While the SOFA could be tinkered with, there are powerful forces
working against that outcome. The Sadrists, fundamentalist Shiites who
follow cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, may well be kingmakers of the new
government, and they are dead set against any change to the SOFA
timetables. The Sadrists are highly politically networked and their
relative success in the March 7 parliamentary elections attests to
their political strength even today. They could prove spoilers of any
attempt by the US to drag its feet on withdrawal, since they can put
thousands of protesters and hundreds of guerrillas in the street.

Nor is the threat only of renewed political unrest among Sadrists if
the US stays in force. Al-Hayat reported on May 24, “The local
government in Basra announced yesterday its commitment to the security
agreement signed by Iraq and the United States for scheduling the US
forces’ withdrawal. The announcement came in reply to statements by
Al-Sadr
Trend in the governorate about preparing its armed wing “Al-Mahdi
Army” to resume the resistance activity against the remaining forces
in the governorate and to wait for orders to do this from Trend Leader
Muqtada al-Sadr.”

It is true that the 50,000 or so troops that will be left in Iraq as
of September may not all be ‘non-combat’ units, since there will be
some rebranding. And it is true that Iraq will need the US air force
for years to come, for logistics purposes. But to say that the
timetable will be tinkered with at the request of the Iraqi parliament
in any major way is wishful thinking.

The US commanders were expecting to be asked by the Iraqi officers to
go on joint patrols in the major cities. They got few invitations,
even though they had trained many of the Iraqi officers who now gave
them the cold shoulder. The new Iraqi military is perfectly capable of
patrolling on its own now in cities such as Baghdad, and of facing
down any ordinary threat from militias. The US is not needed for
routine security patrols. While the Iraqi troops have not been able to
establish order in Mosul or in Diyala Province, the prospect of the
dwindling number of US troops doing so is slim to none. Iraq is just
going to be a little unstable for a few years, and even if US troops
stayed in numbers past the deadlines, it is highly unlikely that they
could miraculously lend the place stability. Bush knocked Iraq off
balance, and it will likely remain off balance for a good long time.
Bush was not authorized by the Iraqi people to destroy the country. He
was acting more like his namesake, King George III, than like a
president who won an election.

Moreover, as the US military has increasingly focused on Afghanistan,
many will realize that they just don’t have the resources to continue
in Iraq.
Iraqi factions are finding it hard to form a government in the wake of
the March 7 parliamentary elections. But they have a perfectly good
interim government, that of incumbent Nuri al-Maliki, in the meantime.
And it took Lebanon 5 months to form a government recently. The
Lebanon case is instructive because the national unity government that
came out of months of wrangling is fairly representative and seems to
have forestalled further trouble of the sort we saw in May 2008. Vice
President Biden may or may not succeed in helping the factions make
progress during his visit to Baghdad this weekend, but contrary to
what some American politicians say, there is no reason the process of
government-formation cannot be protracted. Consensus is better in
Iraqi politics than up-and-down-votes that cause some faction to lose
and to lose face.

For the pragmatic reason that the US cannot afford Iraq, and because
it is the right thing to do, the Obama administration should withdraw
in a systematic and deliberate manner from Iraq. We owe its people
their independence. It is what we used, at least, to stand for.

-- 
Jim Devine
"All science would be superfluous if the form of appearance of things
directly coincided with their essence." -- KM
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