President Obama, who said recently that “we are responsibly leaving Iraq to its people,” should watch out for his credibility against the contradictory and contradicting statements of his aides.
U.S.
Ambassador Christopher Hill’s warning on February 18 that it could take
months to form a new government in Baghdad after the Iraqi elections, scheduled for March 7, and
that in turn could mean considerable political turmoil in Iraq, and the
warnings of observers and experts as well as officials against the
looming specter of a renewed sectarian war in the country, indicate
that security, stability, let alone democracy, and a successful
“victorious” withdrawal of American troops from Iraq have all yet a
long way to go. A secure, stable and democratic Iraq will have first to
wait for an end to the raging power struggle over Iraq between the
United States and Iran inside and outside the occupied Arab country.
The
Associated Press quoted Hill as predicting “some tough days, violent
days as well, some intemperate days” ahead of the March 7 vote. The
warnings raise serious questions about U.S. Vice President Joe
Biden’s statement a few days ago calling Iraq the “great achievement”
for the Obama Administration. Neither Biden nor President Barak Obama
are able yet to declare that the United States has won victory in Iraq.
In 2007, both men advised the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq,
but former President George W. Bush opted instead for the military
“surge,” which the Obama Administration is now “responsibly” drawing
down. However, neither the surge nor the drawdown have produced their
declared aim, a secure democracy; instead a pro-Iran sectarian regime
is evolving.
The
upcoming Iraqi elections, scheduled for March 7, have already embroiled
the two major American and Iranian beneficiaries of the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq in 2003 in an open power struggle that neither party
cares any more to contain within the limits of the bilateral tacit
understanding on security coordination that was formalized through
dozens of public and behind-the-scenes ‘dialogue” meetings in Baghdad
between U.S. ambassadors Ryan Crocker and Zalmay Khalilzad and
their Iranian counterparts, until the term of the Bush administration
was over. This open power struggle indicates as well that the honey
moon of their bilateral security coordination in Iraq is either over,
or about to, a very bad omen for the Iraqi people.
Despite
trumpeting the drums of war, the Barak Obama administration is still on
record committed to what the Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton,
described in the Saudi capital Riyadh on February 15 as the “dual track
approach” of simultaneously massing for war and diplomacy given teeth
by building an international consensus on anti-Iran sanctions under the
umbrella of the United Nations. Adding to this the fact that Washington
is restraining a unilateral Israeli attack on Iran and postponing its
positive response to Israeli insistent demand for war as the only
option, and the fact that the U.S. military in Iraq are capable of
confronting the Iranian militias and intelligence networks inside Iraq,
but choosing not to do so yet, are all indicators that Washington is
still eyeing a power sharing arrangement with Iran in Iraq.
However,
Tehran could not be forthcoming to forgo its anti-U.S. leverage in Iraq
as long as Washington continues its current strategy to settle the
scores of the U.S.-Iran power struggle inside Iraq by moving the
struggle to the Iranian homeland itself. Moreover Tehran is desperately
reciprocating this U.S. strategy by trying to disrupt the Arab
launching pad of the anti-Iran front, which Clinton said in Riyadh that
her administration is “working
actively with our regional and international partners” to build,
wherever Iran could do so, from the Palestinian Gaza and Lebanon to
Yemen. Washington is exploiting “Iran’s increasingly disturbing and destabilizing actions,” according to Clinton on the same
occasion, as an additional casus belli for convincing Arab partners to
join that front. U.S. and Iran are turning the entire Middle East with
its Arab heartland into an arena of a bloody tit-for-tat game, with
Iraq as the end game prize.
The
wider U.S. – Iranian conflict in the Middle East is one over Iraq, and
not over Iran itself. The Israeli and the Palestinian factors are
merely a distracting side show and a propaganda ploy for both
protagonists in their psychological warfare to win the hearts and minds
of the helpless Arabs, Palestinians in particular, who are crushed
unmercifully under their war machines, left with the religious heritage
as the only outlet to seek refuge and salvage, while the 22 member
states of the Arab League are cornered into a choice between the worse
and the worst.
Expectantly
therefore, Clinton had almost nothing of substance to say about Iraq
during her joint press conference with her Saudi counterpart Prince
Saud Al Faisal on Monday, who however, for explicit geopolitical
reasons, could not ignore the Iraqi issue: “We
hope that the forthcoming elections will realize the aspirations of the
Iraqi people to achieve security, stability, and territorial integrity
and to consolidate its national unity on the basis of equality among
all Iraqis irrespective of their beliefs and sectarian differences and
to protect their country against any foreign intervention in their
affairs,” he told reporters.
But
“foreign intervention,” or more to the point foreign U.S. military and
Iranian paramilitary occupation, is exactly what would doom the
prince’s hopes to wishful thinking.
The editorial of The
Washington Post on January 20, headlined “Obama administration must
intervene in Iraqi election crisis,” was in fact misleading because the
U.S. intervention has never stopped for a moment in “sovereign” Iraq.
Militarily, U.S. Lt.
Col. Robert Fruehwald and Iraqi Staff Major General Shakir, for
example, have been working together the past nine months to prepare for
the upcoming elections in the Kadhimiya district of Baghdad; the same
applies to every Iraqi district in every Iraqi governorate. Under the
Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), American troops are supposed to
remain outside urban centres and all military operations are to be
conducted with Iraqi government approval. On the ground, the U.S.
military “advisors” are embedded throughout the Iraqi security forces,
selecting targets and directing operations that are supported as
required by massive air bombing.
Politically,
all “secretaries” and senior administration officials that have
whatever to do with Iraq are on record as to who and whom the elections
“should’ and “must” include or exclude. For example, “No Baathist”
should ever stand for elections, U.S ambassador to Iraq Christopher
Hills had said. Contradicting Hills, Clinton had said “the United
States would oppose” any exclusion. On February 10, Vice President Joe
Biden, appearing on CNN’s Larry King Live, voiced pride in his record
intervention: “I’ve been there 17 times now. I go about every two
months, three months. I know every one of the major players in all the
segments of that society.” On February 4, The New York Times, in an
editorial, said Biden was in Baghdad “to press the government” on who
to run in the elections; Iraqi President Jalal Talabani confirmed that
Biden had proposed “that the disqualifications (of candidates) be
deferred until after the election.”
President
Obama, who said recently that “we are responsibly leaving Iraq to its
people,” should watch out for his credibility against the contradictory
and contradicting statements of his aides.
Similarly,
Iran has self-imposed itself as the arbiter of Iraqi politics. The
official Tehran Times, in an editorial written by a “staff writer,”
defended the disqualification of candidates because they are “mostly
the remnants of the Baathist regime” who are supported by “certain Arab
countries.” Iranian “contested” President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on the 31st
anniversary of the Islamic revolution accused the U.S. -- which is
still paying “a horrible price,” according to Biden, for uprooting the
Baath party from power -- of trying to impose the Baath party back into
power. Nejad’s mouthpiece in Iraq, Ahmed Chalabi -- who was the darling
of the U.S neoconservatives of the Bush administration, whose reports
were cited by them as the casus belli for the invasion of Iraq, who
turned out a double agent for Iran, and who is trying to ban those
Iraqi politicians most opposed to Iran's growing influence in Iraq with
an eye on the next premiership -- in a press conference on February 14,
“condemned the U.S. intervention in Iraqi affairs,” citing Biden and
Hills as examples.
The
“horrible price” of the Iraqi invasion, which Biden referred to in his
NBC's “Meet the Press” on February 15, is yet to come. Chalabi was not
a lone pro-Iran voice in Iraq to brave a challenge to U.S. strategy.
Prime Minister Noori Al Maliki was on record as saying that, “We
will not allow American Ambassador Christopher Hill to go beyond his
diplomatic mission;” his aides called for the expulsion of
Hill. These are professional politicians. What are their resources to
brave challenge the U.S., whose soldiers are protecting them and whose
taxpayers’ money has financed them, had not been for their Iranian
credentials?
“Despite
the presence of more than 100,000 US troops, America's influence in
Iraq is fading fast -- and Iran's is growing,” Robert Dreyfuss wrote in
a column titled “Bad to Worse in Iraq” in The Nation on February 8,
adding: “As soon as George W. Bush made the fateful decision to sweep
away the Iraqi government and install pro-Iranian exiles in Baghdad,
the die was cast. President Obama has no choice but to pack up and
leave.”
Self-proclaimed nationalist seculars, who have been and are still an integral part of the U.S. – engineered so-called Iraqi “political process,” are now loosing their battle in this process. De-Baathification,
which was originally a U.S. trade mark of Paul Premer, the first civil
governor of Iraq after the U.S.-led invasion of 2003, is merely a
pretext to disqualify whoever opposes Iran or its sectarian agenda in Iraq. A pro-Iran
sectarian regime is evolving to exclude not only secularism and
democracy but to cement an Iranian power base in Iraq that will sooner
or later spread sectarianism all over the region, instead of turning
the country into a launching pad for democracy in the Middle east, as
promised by the U.S. neoconservatives to justify their invasion of the
country seven years ago.
Thomas
Ricks, the Pulitzer Prize-winning military correspondent and former
Washington Post Pentagon correspondent, has suggested recently that
““at the end of the surge, the fundamental political problems facing
Iraq were the same ones as when it began. The theory of the surge was
that improved security would lead to a political breakthrough. It
didn't. The improved security opened a window, but didn't lead to a
political breakthrough. In that sense, the surge failed.”
Ricks
however fails to note that the imminent drawdown of American troops in
Iraq is about to take place on the backdrop of that “failure,” and that
the drawdown like the surge before it is doomed to failure for the same
reason, namely the sectarian regime which both did their best to
sustain as their agent in Iraq.
* Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli – occupied Palestinian territories.