Top Ten Myths about Iraq 2006
By Juan Cole
12/26/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- --- 1. Myth number one is
that the United States "can still win" in Iraq. Of course,
the truth of this statement, frequently still made by
William Kristol and other Neoconservatives, depends on what
"winning" means. But if it means the establishment of a
stable, pro-American, anti-Iranian government with an
effective and even-handed army and police force in the near
or even medium term, then the assertion is frankly
ridiculous. The Iraqi "government" is barely functioning.
The parliament was not able to meet in December because it
could not attain a quorum. Many key Iraqi politicians live
most of the time in London, and much of parliament is
frequently abroad. Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki does not
control large swathes of the country, and could give few
orders that had any chance of being obeyed. The US military
cannot shore up this government, even with an extra
division, because the government is divided against itself.
Most of the major parties trying to craft legislation are
also linked to militias on the streets who are killing one
another. It is over with. Iraq is in for years of heavy
political violence of a sort that no foreign military force
can hope to stop.
The United States cannot "win" in the sense defined above.
It cannot. And the blindly arrogant assumption that it can
win is calculated to get more tens of thousands of Iraqis
killed and more thousands of American soldiers and Marines
badly wounded or killed. Moreover, since Iraq is coming
apart at the seams under the impact of our presence there,
there is a real danger that we will radically destabilize it
and the whole oil-producing Gulf if we try to stay longer.
2. "US military sweeps of neighborhoods can drive the
guerrillas out." The US put an extra 15,000 men into Baghdad
this past summer, aiming to crush the guerrillas and stop
the violence in the capital, and the number of attacks
actually increased. This result comes about in part
because the guerrillas are not outsiders who come in and
then are forced out. The Sunni Arabs of Ghazaliya and Dora
districts in the capital are the "insurgents." The US
military cannot defeat the Sunni Arab guerrilla movement or
"insurgency" with less than 500,000 troops, based on what we
have seen in the Balkans and other such conflict situations.
The US destroyed Falluja, and even it and other cities of
al-Anbar province are not now safe! The US military leaders
on the ground have spoken of the desirability of just
withdrawing from al-Anbar to Baghdad and giving up on it. In
2003, 14 percent of Sunni Arabs thought it legitimate to
attack US personnel and facilities. In August, 2006, over 70
percent did. How long before it is 100%? Winning guerrilla
wars requires two victories, a military victory over the
guerrillas and a winning of the hearts and minds of the
general public, thus denying the guerrillas support. The US
has not and is unlikely to be able to repress the
guerrillas, and it is losing hearts and minds at an
increasing and alarming rate. They hate us, folks. They
don't want us there.
3. The United States is best off throwing all its support
behind the Iraqi Shiites. This is the position adopted
fairly consistently by
Marc Reuel Gerecht. Gerecht is an informed and acute
observer whose views I respect even when I disagree with
them. But Washington policy-makers should read
Daniel Goleman's work on social intelligence. Goleman
points out that a good manager of a team in a corporation
sets up a win/win framework for every member of the team. If
you set it up on a win/lose basis, so that some are actively
punished and others "triumph," you are asking for trouble.
Conflict is natural. How you manage conflict is what
matters. If you listen to employees' grievances and try to
figure out how they can be resolved in such a way that
everyone benefits, then you are a good manager.
Gerecht, it seems to me, sets up a win/lose model in Iraq.
The Shiites and Kurds win it all, and the Sunni Arabs get
screwed over. Practically speaking, the Bush policy has been
Gerechtian, which in my view has caused all the problems. We
shouldn't have thought of our goal as installing the Shiites
in power. Of course, Bush hoped that those so installed
would be "secular," and that is what Wolfowitz and Chalabi
had promised him. Gerecht came up with the ex post facto
justification that even the religious Shiites are moving
toward democracy via Sistani. But democracy cannot be about
one sectarian identity prevailing over, and marginalizing
others.
The Sunni Arabs have demonstrated conclusively that they can
act effectively as spoilers in the new Iraq. If they aren't
happy, no one is going to be. The US must negotiate with the
guerrilla leaders and find a win/win framework for them to
come in from the cold and work alongside the Kurds and the
religious Shiites. About this, US Ambassador in Baghdad
Zalmay Khalilzad has been absolutely right.
4. "Iraq
is not in a civil war," as Jurassic conservative Fox
commentator Bill O'Reilly insists. There is a
well-established social science definition of civil war put
forward by Professor J. David Singer and his colleagues:
"Sustained military combat, primarily internal, resulting in
at least 1,000 battle-deaths per year, pitting central
government forces against an insurgent force capable of
effective resistance, determined by the latter's ability to
inflict upon the government forces at least 5 percent of the
fatalities that the insurgents sustain." (Errol A. Henderson
and J. David Singer, "Civil War in the Post-Colonial World,
1946-92," Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 37, No. 3, May
2000.)" See my article on this
in Salon.com. By Singer's definition, Iraq has been in
civil war since the Iraqi government was reestablished in
summer of 2004. When I have been around political
scientists, as at the ISA conference, I have found that
scholars in that field tend to accept Singer's definition.
5. "The second Lancet study showing 600,000 excess deaths
from political and criminal violence since the US invasion
is somehow flawed."
Les Roberts replies here to many of the objections that
were raised. See also
the transcript of the Kucinich-Paul Congressional hearings
on the subject. Many critics refer to the numbers of dead
reported in the press as counter-arguments to Roberts et al.
But "passive reporting" such as news articles never captures
more than a fraction of the casualties in any war. I see
deaths reported in the Arabic press all the time that never
show up in the English language wire services. And, a lot of
towns in Iraq don't have local newspapers and many local
deaths are not reported in the national newspapers.
6. "Most deaths in Iraq are from bombings." The Lancet study
found that the majority of violent deaths are from being
shot.
7. "Baghdad and environs are especially violent but the
death rate is lower in the rest of the country." The Lancet
survey found that levels of violence in the rest of the
country are similar to that in Baghdad (remember that the
authors included criminal activities such as gang and
smuggler turf wars in their statistics). The Shiite south is
spared much Sunni-Shiite communal fighting, but criminal
gangs, tribal feuds, and militias fight one another over oil
and antiquities smuggling, and a lot of people are getting
shot down there, too.
8. "Iraq is the central front in the war on terror." From
the beginning of history until 2003 there had never been a
suicide bombing in Iraq. There was no al-Qaeda in Baath-ruled
Iraq.
When Baath intelligence heard that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
might have entered Iraq, they grew alarmed at such an
"al-Qaeda" presence and put out an APB on him! Zarqawi's
so-called "al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia" was never "central" in
Iraq and was never responsible for more than a fraction of
the violent attacks. This assertion is supported by the
outcome of a US-Jordanian operation that killed Zarqawi this
year. His death had no impact whatsoever on the level of
violence. There are probably only about 1,000 foreign
fighters even in Iraq, and most of them are first-time
volunteers, not old-time terrorists. The 50 major guerrilla
cells in Sunni Arab Iraq are mostly made up of Iraqis, and
are mainly: 1) Baathist or neo-Baathist, 2) Sunni revivalist
or Salafi, 3) tribally-based, or 4) based in city quarters.
Al-Qaeda is mainly a boogey man, invoked in Iraq on all
sides, but possessing little real power or presence there.
This is not to deny that radical Sunni Arab volunteers come
to Iraq to blow things (and often themselves) up. They just
are not more than an auxiliary to the big movements, which
are Iraqi.
9. "The Sunni Arab guerrillas in places like Ramadi will
follow the US home to the American mainland and commit
terrorism if we leave Iraq." This assertion is just a
variation on the invalid domino theory. People in Ramadi
only have one beef with the United States. Its troops are
going through their wives' underwear in the course of house
searches every day. They don't want the US troops in their
town or their homes, dictating to them that they must live
under a government of Shiite clerics and Kurdish warlords
(as they think of them). If the US withdrew and let the
Iraqis work out a way to live with one another, people in
Ramadi will be happy. They are not going to start taking
flight lessons and trying to get visas to the US. This
argument about following us, if it were true, would have
prevented us from ever withdrawing from anyplace once we
entered a war there. We'd be forever stuck in the
Philippines for fear that Filipino terrorists would follow
us back home. Or Korea (we moved 15,000 US troops out of
South Korea not so long ago. Was that unwise? Are the
thereby liberated Koreans now gunning for us?) Or how about
the Dominican Republic? Haiti? Grenada? France? The argument
is a crock.
10. "Setting a timetable for withdrawal from Iraq is a bad
idea." Bush and others in his administration have argued
that setting such a timetable would give a significant
military advantage to the guerrillas fighting US forces and
opposed to the new government. That assertion makes sense
only if there were a prospect that the US could militarily
crush the Sunni Arabs. There is no such prospect. The
guerrilla war is hotter now than at any time since the US
invasion. It is more widely supported by more Sunni Arabs
than ever before. It is producing more violent attacks than
ever before. Since we cannot defeat them short of genocide,
we have to negotiate with them. And their first and most
urgent demand is that the US set a timetable for withdrawal
before they will consider coming into the new political
system. That is, we should set a timetable in order to turn
the Sunni guerrillas from combatants to a political
negotiating partner. Even Sunni politicians cooperating with
the US
make this demand. They are disappointed with the lack of
movement on the issue. How long do they remain willing to
cooperate? In addition,
131 Iraqi members of parliament signed a demand that the
US set a timetable for withdrawal. (138 would be a simple
majority.) It is a a major demand of the Sadr Movement. In
fact, the 32 Sadrist MPs withdrew from the ruling United
Iraqi Alliance coalition temporarily over this issue.
In my view, Shiite leaders such as Abdul Aziz al-Hakim are
repeatedly declining to negotiate in good faith with the
Sunni Arabs or to take their views seriously. Al-Hakim knows
that if the Sunnis give him any trouble, he can sic the
Marines on them. The US presence is making it harder for
Iraqi to compromise with Iraqi, which is counterproductive.
Think Progress points out that in 1999, Governor George
W. Bush criticized then President Clinton for declining to
set a withdrawal timetable for Kosovo, saying "Victory means
exit strategy, and it’s important for the president to
explain to us what the exit strategy is."
Comment Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and relevant to the story. We encourage engaging, diverse and meaningful commentary. Do not include personal information such as names, addresses, phone numbers and emails. Comments falling outside our guidelines – those including personal attacks and profanity – are not permitted.
See our complete Comment Policy and use this link to notify us if you have concerns about a comment. We’ll promptly review and remove any inappropriate postings.