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Who Will Rescue the United States?
Martin Woollacott
Iraq has
become a test case for the American experiment in
untrammeled military power, and it is proving a
difficult one. Playwright George Bernard Shaw once
observed that any political arrangement that depends on
soldiers is not likely to continue long. With the
excitement of the armored race to
Baghdad now a distant
memory, the Bush Administration finds itself face to
face, perhaps even more than its predecessors in
Vietnam, with what could be called the essential
meagerness of the military instrument. It can be a key
that opens the door for other kinds of action, but it
cannot substitute for them.
The truth in Iraq has, from the start, been that the
American "occupation", like most occupations, has never
meant any kind of close military control of Iraqi
society. Even if close control was desirable, American
and other coalition troops are not present in sufficient
numbers - nor do they have the language and other skills
that would enable them to exercise it.
While those who predicted an unalloyed welcome for the
Americans proved to be wrong, they were right to the
extent that the U.S. occupation relies on the consent of
important forces in Iraqi society and on the promise of
beneficial political and economic changes. It is this
consent that is now wavering as fighting spreads - and
along with it the idea that the Americans are losing
their way and have no clear idea how to reassert
themselves.
The U.S. position in Iraq has rested until now not
principally on military strength, but on the cooperation
of two critically important Iraqi forces: the Shiite
religious leadership in the south and the reconstituted
Iraqi police, and to a lesser extent the army, in the
center of the country. The political and military
developments of the past few weeks have weakened both of
these pillars. The very fact that American and other
coalition troops are now involved in military action in
and around some areas under the control of Sunni and
Shiite insurgents, even if that control is unlikely to
last, is an index of how serious the circumstances in
Iraq have become.
The Americans have reached this pass for a variety of
reasons. Their main support in the Sunni areas, has for
quite a long time, been hacked away by an insurgency
that has targeted the Iraqi security forces and managed
to reduce them to frightened bystanders in several key
areas. The U.S. forces then compounded the problem, at
least in Fallujah, by launching more aggressive
operations - a change that may have been connected to
the rotation in of new units with "new" thinking.
The main U.S. support in the south, by contrast, has
been damaged by the Americans themselves. When the
Coalition Provisional Authority helped push through an
interim constitution that was not to the liking of the
senior Shiite clergy, they weakened the limited
confidence the latter had that their purposes coincided
sufficiently with those of the U.S. to form a basis for
cooperation.
The worst recent American misstep came with the decision
to take on Moqtada al-Sadr, the young, extremist Shiite
leader who has built a considerable following among
poorer Shiites in Baghdad and in the main Shiite cities.
He is not a major religious figure, despite hailing from
one of Iraq's most important clerical families, but he
embodies the anti-American and anti-foreign mood of many
ordinary Shiites. That mood has been kept in check only
by the authority of Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani and other
senior clerics.
But that authority rests, as one journalist with deep
experience in Iraq puts it, on a popular consensus. In
other words, the senior clergy may appear to lead but -
to a considerable extent - they also must follow, which
explains Sistani's reluctance to unreservedly condemn
Sadr or to endorse the action of American troops against
him and his militiamen. To align themselves completely
with the Americans in a situation where Shiite civilians
are dying is not a politically possible course for the
senior clergy.
The mistakes the Americans have made in
Iraq
have been enumerated often. It was a mistake to disband
the Iraqi army and to ban most Baathists, because that
sent a signal to many Sunnis that they were to be
excluded from any political dispensation, deprived the
Americans of a security instrument they then belatedly
had to reconstitute, and fed an oppositional mood.
It was a mistake to let ideological obsessions about the
free market and lack of regulation govern economic
policy. It was, and is, a mistake to let troops be
governed so much by the idea of self-protection,
although that is one of the lessons about the limits of
military power.
But the biggest error was not to grasp how damaged Iraqi
society had been by years of dictatorship, by sanctions
and by the corruption, apathy and cynicism that grew
behind the facade of Saddam's supposedly strong state.
This larger error was perhaps understandable, because
Saddam's Iraq was not an easy society to read. But it
meant that the Americans had less to work with than they
had expected, which made it even more important to
capitalise on the Iraqi security tradition, repugnant
though in some ways that tradition is, and on the
coincidence of interest with the Shiite leadership.
Iraq is not
yet the defeat for the
United States that it
could become. But America is chastened and perplexed.
The Bush Administration that believed so devoutly that
it could move mountains may now know better. It may even
grasp that the concept to which it has always paid
lip-service - that it is Iraqis who will decide their
own future - is now more than just useful rhetoric. It
is Iraqis, in the accumulation of their choices,
decisions and actions, who will largely decide whether
America's intervention ends up as a success or as a
failure.
The Americans went to Iraq to rescue the Iraqis, and now
stand in need of being rescued themselves.
Martin Woollacott
writes on international affairs for The Guardian,
London, where a version of this essay first appeared.
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