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Hoarding Power
in Iraq
Nikolas Gvosdev
Why the continued resistance by Bush Administration
officials--especially in the Defense Department--to
"internationalizing" the burdens of the occupation of
post-Saddam Iraq? Despite the welcome arrival of the
Polish-led international division, it is unlikely that
estimates of 30,000 non-U.S. troops to be in place by
fall can be met. In other words, despite the rhetoric,
significant burden-sharing among America's friends and
partners for the stability and welfare of Iraq is not
occurring. Just this week, Pakistan and a number of
Arab states declined to offer troops to assist in the
stabilization of Iraq. The reality is plain: we cannot
expect any major help from other powers--in terms of
troops, specialists or funds--as long as the United
States is not prepared to share responsibility for the
occupation.
Yet sharing the burdens is in the fundamental interests
of the Bush Administration. Afghanistan remains
unsettled, and costs from the Iraqi operation continue
to mount. The U.S. has to pay increasing attention to
what is occurring on the Korean Peninsula--a subject
that has received a good deal of attention in these
pages over the last few weeks. What is so important
about keeping other leading powers from having
substantive roles to play in post-war Iraq that it is
worth risking American blood and treasure?
After all, the principle objectives have been met.
Saddam Hussein's regime has been decapitated and removed
from power. The United States military has operational
control of the country, facilitating both the search for
weapons of mass destruction and the elimination of any
remaining terrorist cadres associated with the former
regime. What further objectives does the United States
hope to achieve? The United States removed a
threat--but establishing a regime capable of promoting
additional U.S. objectives is far more difficult. And
what are these additional objectives? A preponderance of
influence in Iraq's oil industry, use of Iraqi territory
as a new strategic jumping-off point for projecting U.S.
military power in the greater Middle East, or
facilitating an Iraqi-Israeli peace agreement, perhaps
on terms envisioned by the Sharon government?
But a heavy hand is not required. U.S. companies
exercise such a degree of clout and influence in the
international oil business that American firms will play
a major role in the restoration and expansion of the
Iraqi hydrocarbons industry--it is not necessary to
micromanage the creation of a new Iraqi administration
to ensure that outcome.
Nor does close supervision over Iraqi reconstruction
ensure that a viable agreement could ever be reached
between Israel and Iraq. Take the lesson of Lebanon in
May 1982. A carefully-crafted treaty (again, one in
which General Sharon played a role in drafting) could
not survive the political reality that conditions were
not ripe for any sort of comprehensive agreement. The
United States would have to remain involved in Iraqi
affairs for years to try and prop up such an agreement.
(It is a telling statistic that in Jordan--a stable,
pro-American, reform-oriented Arab monarchy--that more
than 80 percent of the populace would support abrogation
of the 1994 Treaty if it ever were submitted to a
popular vote.) The most important thing, from Israel's
perspective, is that Saddam's financial support for
Palestinian rejectionist forces have been cut off.
So, by continuing to insist on a high and close degree
of U.S. control over Iraqi affairs, it raises the
suspicion that
Iraq
was a not a country to be liberated but a prize to be
seized. Do we still hope that we can use
Iraq as some sort of
laboratory for testing out our theories on
nation-building and democratization in the Middle East?
Are we afraid that our vision for Iraq will be
compromised by involving other actors in the
reconstruction process (in anything other but slight,
supporting roles)?
It is troubling that many of the same people who now
insist on maintaining very tight and unimpeded U.S.
control over Iraq are the same ones who so badly
underestimated postwar pacification needs--in other
words, that U.S. forces would be greeted as liberators
and that it would be relatively easy to create a
post-Saddam government. Now, the great worry seems to
be that power not be transferred to the Iraqi people in
general, but to specific and tailored groups of Iraqis
prepared to serve as American clients.
But whether such an effort is sustainable and serves
long-term American interests has not been addressed.
Meanwhile, U.S. lives, resources and prestige continue
to hemorrhage in
Iraq.
Nikolas
Gvosdev is editor of In the National Interest. He serves
as Executive Editor of the print version of The National
Interest and is a Senior Fellow for Strategic Studies at
The Nixon Center.
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