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Some Points About Iraq
Nikolas Gvosdev
In the wake of the president's speech this past week,
pundits and practitioners are offering their own counsel
as to what to do about Iraq.
Here's my own two cents.
Point one: delivery of services. Americans living with
functioning air conditioning, plentiful (if expensive)
gas supplies and reasonable prospects for employment
argue over whether or not an Iraqi government is
sufficiently "representative" and whether ordinary
Iraqis will accept its dictates. I agree that having a
broad-based interim regime is important, but what will
make or break the legitimacy of the provisional
government is whether it can deliver on basic services.
Most governments are legitimated in the eyes of their
citizens not because of elections or representation but
whether that government provides security, power and
employment.
Writing in the symposium on "Iraq At the Turn" in the
forthcoming summer 2004 issue, Michael O'Hanlon and
Adriana Lins de Albuquerque observe that "only a very
small fraction of the $18 billion appropriated by the
U.S. Congress for Iraq for 2004 had been spent by
mid-spring, as of this writing. Remarkably, red tape and
bureaucratic procedures had prevented more than about $1
billion being spent by the end of April. Some 2003 money
and Iraqi funds were also available, meaning that the
flow of resources was not quite as limited as the $1
billion figure suggests, but it was still quite limited.
The slowness of spending aid dollars is a serious
indictment of the American budgetary system, even if it
gets better fast in the coming months. It has also kept
unemployment rates distressingly high—probably still
close to 50 percent, down somewhat from last summer but
much higher than in Ba‘athi days and much too high to
offer any real hope of a stable security environment:
Angry, unemployed young men tend not to throw flowers at
the feet of foreign occupying troops."
Get the money flowing--and get more into the hands of
local Iraqi firms and contractors.
Point two: America must shift to a supporting role as
soon as possible.
In the forthcoming symposium, Geoffrey Kemp makes a
critical observation: popular support for the U.S.
mission in Iraq will erode if the public perceives that
Americans, rather than Iraqis, are shouldering the bulk
of the burden.
There is a great temptation to say that the Iraqis are
not ready to resume sovereign control over their own
country and that they need U.S. help. The problem with
this is that it easily becomes a self-fulfilling
prophecy. In the Republic of
Vietnam,
successive governments were never "ready" to take on the
full burden of dealing with the Viet Cong insurgency.
This is a point Geoff Kemp reiterates in his
contribution to the forthcoming symposium. If the
ongoing struggle to pacify
Iraq continues to be
seen primarily as "Americans versus insurgents" with
other Iraqis, in essence, remaining neutral, then the
long-term viability of the American mission will be
jeopardized.
In an earlier "Realist" column, I opined that we should
not rule out the use of private military contractors
hired directly by the interim Iraqi authority to take
over functions such as training and policework. If Iraqi
troops are not yet sufficiently trained to be deployed,
the fallback should not necessarily be to fill the gap
with American forces.
The British were able to defeat a communist insurgency
in Malaysia because British advisors and forces were
used in a targeted fashion--but Britain did not provide
a bottomless supply of personnel.
Malaysia, not
Vietnam, should be the guiding model for the future role
of U.S. forces in Iraq. In the end, the Iraqi
insurgency can only be defeated – or co-opted – by other
Iraqis.
Point three: Let the interim government be sovereign.
Let the new government forge its own relationships with
key powers. My sense is that other states that have been
reluctant to aid what they perceive to be a "U.S."
effort will be more likely to work directly with Baghdad
if they perceive that the government is truly
independent.
We saw this with regard to Iraqi debt. As long as the
question of reducing Iraq's debt was seen as "aiding
America," Moscow and other creditors were reluctant to
make any commitments. It was only when Iraqi officials
themselves went to Russia and to other states to try and
make arrangements that progress began.
Indeed, it may be in the long-term U.S. interest to have
a disagreement with the new government where Washington
defers to the provisional regime simply to establish its
bona fides as a genuinely independent regime, if for
nothing else than to dispel the snickers about the
puppet-strings being visible, controlling the new
government.
Point four: Distinguish between non-negotiable demands
and the wish list
Everyone has their wish list for a future
Iraq.
But given limited resources and pressing demands, it is
important to send the right signals to the new regime as
to the things which are absolutely non-negotiable.
Renouncing any WMD program and allowing
Iraq to become a base
for terrorists are the logical first priorities.
But beyond that, the main priority should be for any
Iraqi regime to legitimize itself in the eyes of its
people and to gain full control over its territory. In
order to do that, it may have to take anti-democratic
measures or impose what appear to outsiders to be
arbitrary rules or regulations.
Several weeks ago, I argued that we're better off if
Iraq resembles Singapore as opposed to Venezuela or
Colombia. In other words, a stable regime, defined by
"managed pluralism" is a better result than an unstable
state that qualifies as a "full" democracy.
The final point:
Iraq is not a
social science laboratory. Remember those protests in
Russia during
the 1990s ("We are not experiments!")? This is a lesson
to be remembered with regard to Iraq.
In his article for the forthcoming issue, Francis
Fukuyama makes a telling point:
"Of all of the different views that have now come to be
associated with neoconservatives, the strangest one to
me was the confidence that the United States could
transform Iraq into a Western-style democracy, and go on
from there to democratize the broader Middle East. It
struck me as strange precisely because these same
neoconservatives had spent much of the past generation
warning—in TNI's former sister publication, The
Public Interest, for example—about the dangers of
ambitious social engineering, and how social planners
could never control behavior or deal with unanticipated
consequences. If the United States cannot eliminate
poverty or raise test scores in Washington, DC, how in
the world does it expect to bring democracy to a part of
the world that has stubbornly resisted it and is
virulently anti-American to boot?"
This is why a healthy dose of realism with regard to
Iraq is needed, now more than ever.
Nikolas K. Gvosdev is
editor of In the National Interest.
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