http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article2125419.ece

For the first time, a real blueprint for peace in Iraq 
By Ali Allawi, former Iraqi Defence Minister 
Published: 05 January 2007 

The Iraqi state that was formed in the aftermath of the First World War has 
come to an end. Its successor state is struggling to be born in an environment 
of crises and chaos. The collapse of the entire order in the Middle East now 
threatens as the Iraq imbroglio unleashes forces in the area that have been 
gathering in virulence over the past decades. 

It took the American-led invasion and occupation of Iraq, and the mismanagement 
of the country by both the Coalition Provisional Administration and subsequent 
Iraqi governments, to bring matters to this dire situation.

What was supposed to be a straightforward process of overthrowing a 
dictatorship and replacing it with a liberal-leaning and secular democracy 
under the benign tutelage of the United States, has instead turned into an 
existential battle for identity, power and legitimacy that is affecting not 
only Iraq, but the entire tottering state system in the Middle East.

The Iraq war is a global predicament of the first order and its resolution will 
influence the course of events in the Middle East and beyond for a considerable 
time. What we are witnessing in Iraq is the beginning of the unravelling of the 
unjust and unstable system that was carved out of the wreckage of the Ottoman 
Empire. It had held for nearly 100 years by a mixture of foreign 
occupation,outside meddling, brutal dictatorships and minority rule.

At the same time, it signally failed in providing a permanent sense of 
legitimacy to its power, engaged its citizens in their governance, or provided 
a modicum of well-being and a decent standard of existence for its people.

The Key Challenges

The nature and scope of the Iraq crisis can be encapsulated in the emergence of 
four vital issues that have challenged the entire project for remaking the Iraq 
state. In one form or another, these forces also affect the countries of the 
Arab Middle East, as well as Turkey and Iran, and the relationships between all 
of them.

Firstly, the invasion of Iraq tipped the scales in favour of the Shia, who are 
now determined to emerge as the governing majority after decades, if not 
centuries, of perceived disempowerment and oppression. The consequences of this 
historic shift inside Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East are incalculable.

Secondly, the invasion of Iraq legitimised the semi-independent region that 
Iraq's Kurds had forged over the past decade. The Kurds whose rights to 
self-determination were acknowledged in the 1920 Sevres Treaty, and then 
subsequently ignored by the states of the post-Ottoman Middle East, have 
received an enormous fillip in their march towards recognition of their unique 
status.

What is still left to be decided is the geographic extent of the Kurdish region 
in Iraq, and whether it would have proprietary access to the resources of that 
area. This may prove a way station to the beginnings of the formation of a 
Kurdish state. The challenges that will pose to the integrity and 
self-definition of Turkey, Iran and Syria now or in the future is another 
formidable side effect of the overthrow of the old Baathist state.

Thirdly, the uneven, poorly prepared and messy introduction in Iraq of 
democratic norms for elections, constitution-writing and governance structures 
is a stark break with the authoritarian and dictatorial systems that have 
prevailed in the Middle East. While the Iraqi experiment has so far been marred 
by violence, irregularities and manipulation, it is quite likely to survive as 
the mechanism through which governments will be chosen in the future.

Lastly, the overthrow of Saddam coincided with the attempts by Iran to assert 
its influence and to gain entry into regional counsels. That has exercised a 
number of countries in the area no end, giving rise to alarmist warnings of 
Iranian hegemonistic designs and "Shia crescents". The responses that are being 
planned for the perceived threat are terrifying in their implications, with 
scant attention paid to their consequences to the peace and stability of the 
area.

Iraq was used as a foil to revolutionary Iran during the Iran-Iraq war, with 
devastating consequences for both. We are witnessing a possible reprise, the 
consequence of which, if the new warmongers get their way, will be catastrophic 
for it will go to the heart of the fragile societies of the Middle East. Shia 
will be pitted against Sunni not only in Iraq but in Lebanon, and the Gulf 
countries.

Dangers of Sunni Insurgency

In the sterile world of zero-sum politics, the loss of power of the Sunni Arab 
community in Iraq was soon translated into a raging insurgency that challenged 
not only the US occupation but also the new political dispensation.

The insurgency fed on the deep resentment Sunni Arabs felt to their loss of 
power and prestige. It has been aggravated by the fact it was a totally 
unexpected force that achieved the impossible- the dethronement of the 
community from centuries of power in favour of, as they saw it, a rabble led by 
Persianate clerics. The Sunni Arabs' refusal to countenance any serious 
engagement with the new political order had effectively pushed them into a 
cul-de-sac and has played into the hands of their most determined enemies.

The state is now moving inexorably under the control of the Shia Islamists, 
albeit with a supporting role for the Kurds. The boundaries of Shia-controlled 
Baghdad are moving ever westwards so that the capital itself may fall entirely 
under the sway of the Shia militias.

The only thing stopping that is the deployment of American troops to block the 
entry of the Shia militias in force into these mixed or Sunni neighbourhoods. 
The geographic space outside Baghdad in which the insurgency can flourish will 
persist but the country will be inevitably divided. Under such circumstances, 
the power of the Shia's demographic advantage can only be counter-balanced by 
the Sunni Arabs' recourse to support from the neighbouring Arab states. It is 
inconceivable that such an outcome can possibly lead to a stable Iraqi state 
unless one side or another vanquishes its opponent or if the country is divided 
into separate states.

Impact of Shia Ascendancy

The response to these existential challenges emanating from the invasion of 
Iraq, both inside Iraq and in the Arab world has been panic-stricken or 
fearful, and potentially disastrous to the stability in the area and the 
prospects for its inhabitants.

The Arab countries of the Middle East have been unable to adjust to events in 
Iraq, not so much because of the contagion effect of the changes that have 
taken place there. This had virtually disappeared as Iraq cannot be seen as 
model for anything worth emulating. It has less to do with the instability that 
might spill over from the violence in the country. It is more to do with 
accommodating an unknown quantity into a system that can barely acknowledge 
pluralism and democracy, let alone a Shia ascendancy in Iraq.

Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan, linchpins of the American security order in the 
Arab world, cannot accept the principle of a Shia-dominated Iraq, each for its 
own reasons. They will do their utmost to thwart such a possibility, and 
failing that, will probably try to isolate such an entity from regional counsels

Implications for Middle East

It is this with this backdrop that solutions are being proffered to resolve the 
Iraqi crisis. However, rather than treat the problem in a much wider context, 
each party is determined to stake out its narrow position irrespective of its 
effects on other communities, groups and countries.

The seeds of another 100 years of crisis are being sown, with the Middle East 
consigned to decades of turbulence and the persistence of unmitigated hatreds 
and grudges. The most serious issue that is emerging is the exacerbation of 
sectarian differences between Shia and Sunni. That is a profoundly dangerous 
issue for it affects not only Iraq but also Saudi Arabia, Syria, Lebanon and 
the Gulf countries.

It is plausible that the cost of a Shia ascendancy in Iraq, if it is marked as 
such, will be further pressure on the vulnerable Shia communities in the Gulf 
countries. There is already the rekindling of anti-Shia rhetoric in a 
remarkably similar rerun to the pattern that accompanied the Saudi-led campaign 
to contain the Iranian revolution in the 1980s. The effect of that was the rise 
of the jihadi culture that was the harbinger of mass terrorism and suicide 
bombings.

This may drag the entire area into war or even the forced movement of people as 
fearful countries seek to "quarantine" or expel their Shia population.

The Solution

It requires genuine vision and statesmanship to pull the Middle East from its 
death spiral. The elements of a possible solution are there if the will exists 
to postulate an alternative to the politics of fear, bigotry and hatred.

The first step must be the recognition that the solution to the Iraq crisis 
must be generated first internally, and then, importantly, at the regional 
level. The two are linked and the successful resolution of one would lead to 
the other.

No foreign power, no matter how benevolent, should be allowed to dictate the 
terms of a possible historic and stable settlement in the Middle East. No other 
region of the world would tolerate such a wanton interference in its affairs.

That is not to say that due consideration should not be given to the legitimate 
interests of the great powers in the area, but the future of the area should 
not be held hostage to their designs and exclusive interests.

Secondly, the basis of a settlement must take into account the fact that the 
forces that have been unleashed by the invasion of Iraq must be acknowledged 
and accommodated. These forces, in turn, must accept limits to their demands 
and claims. That would apply, in particular, to the Shias and the Kurds, the 
two communities who have been seen to have gained from the invasion of Iraq.

Thirdly, the Sunni Arab community must become convinced that its loss of 
undivided power will not lead to marginalisation and discrimination. A 
mechanism must be found to allow the Sunni Arabs to monitor and regulate and, 
if need be, correct, any signs of discrimination that may emerge in the new 
Iraqi state.

Fourthly, the existing states surrounding Iraq feel deeply threatened by the 
changes there. That needs to be recognised and treated in any lasting deal for 
Iraq and the area.

A way has to be found for introducing Iran and Turkey into a new security 
structure for the Middle East that would take into account their legitimate 
concerns, fears and interests. It is far better that these countries are seen 
to be part of a stable order for the area rather than as outsiders who need to 
be confronted and challenged.

The Iraqi government that has arisen as a result of the admittedly flawed 
political process must be accepted as a sovereign and responsible government. 
No settlement can possibly succeed if its starting point is the illegitimacy of 
the Iraqi government or one that considers it expendable.

A Brighter Future

The end state of this process would be three interlinked outcomes. The first 
would be a decentralised Iraqi state with new regional governing authorities 
with wide powers and resources.

Devolution of power must be fair, well planned, and executed with equitable 
revenue-distribution. Federal institutions would have to act as adjudicators 
between regions. Security must be decentralised until such time as confidence 
between the communities is re-established.

The second essential outcome would be a treaty that would establish a 
confederation or constellation of states of the Middle East, initially 
including Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan. The main aim of the confederation 
would be to establish a number of conventions and supra-regional bodies that 
would have the effect of acting as guarantors of civil, minority and community 
rights.

The existence of such institutions can go a long way towards removing the 
anxiety disadvantaged groups feel when confronted with the radical changes 
sweeping the area. The gradual build up of such supra-national institutions in 
the proposed confederation may also expand to cover an increased degree of 
economic integration and harmonisation.

That may include a regional development body which would help establish and 
fund common energy and infrastructure policies. Lastly, an indispensable end 
outcome is a regional security pact that would group the countries of the Arab 
Middle East with Iran and Turkey, at first in some form of anti-terrorism pact, 
but later a broader framework for discussing and resolving major security 
issues that impinge on the area as a whole.

That would also provide the forum for combating the spread of virulent 
ideologies and sectarian hatreds and provide the basis for peacefully 
containing and resolving the alarm that some countries feel from the apparent 
expansion of Iranian influence in the area.

The Importance of the US

It was the US that launched this phase of the interminable Middle East crisis, 
by invading Iraq and assuming direct authority over it. Whatever project it had 
for Iraq has vanished, a victim of inappropriate or incoherent policies, and 
the violent upending of Iraq's power structures.

Nevertheless, the US is still the most powerful actor in the Iraq crisis, and 
its decisions can sway the direction and the manner in which events could 
unfold.

In other areas of the world, the US has used its immense influence and power to 
cement regional security and economic associations. There is no reason why the 
regional associations being mooted in conjunction with a decentralised Iraqi 
state, could not play an equally important part in resolving the Iraqi crisis 
and dispersing the dangerous clouds threatening the region.

The Iraqi proposals

1 Iraq government calls for regional security conference including Iraq's 
neighbours to produce an agreement/treaty on non-intervention and combating 
terrorism. Signatory states will be responsible to set of markers for 
commitments.

Purpose: To reduce/eliminate neighbouring countries' support for insurgents, 
terrorists and militias.

2 Iraq government calls for preparatory conference on a Middle-Eastern 
Confederation of States that will examine proposals on economic, trade and 
investment union. Proposals will be presented for a convention on civil, human 
and minority rights in the Near East, with a supreme court/tribunal with 
enforcement powers.

Purpose: To increase regional economic integration and provide minorities in 
signatory countries with supra-national protection.

3 Iraq government calls for an international conference on Iraq that would 
include Iraq, its regional neighbours, Egypt, the UAE, the US, UK, France, 
Germany, Russia and China that would aim to produce a treaty guaranteeing:

a. Iraq's frontiers.
b. The broad principles of Iraq's constitutional arrangements.
c. Establishing international force to replace the multi-national force over 12 
to 18 months. Appointing international co-ordinator to oversee treaty 
implementation.

Purpose: To arrange for the gradual and orderly withdrawal of American troops, 
ensure that Iraq develops along constitutional lines, confirm Iraq and its 
neighbours' common frontiers.

4 Iraq government will introduce changes to government by creating two statuary 
bodies with autonomous financing and independent boards:

a. A reconstruction and development council run by Iraqi professionals and 
technocrats with World Bank/UN support.
b. A security council which will oversee professional ministries of defence, 
interior, intelligence and national security.

Purpose: To remove the reconstruction and development programme from 
incompetent hands and transfer them to an apolitical, professional and 
independent body. Also to remove the oversight, command and control over the 
security ministries from politicised party control to an independent, 
professional and accountable body.

5 The entire peace plan, its preamble and its details must be put before the 
Iraqi parliament for its approval.

Ali A Allawi was Minister of Trade and Minister of Defence in the Iraqi 
Governing Council Cabinet (2003-2004). He was in the Transitional National 
Assembly, and Minister of Finance, Transitional National Government of Iraq 
(2005-2006). His book, 'The Occupation of Iraq Winning the War, Losing the 
Peace' will be published in March 


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