Beyond Disaster
Iraq Is About to Become a
Lot Worse
By Chris Hedges
08/08/07 "Truthdig" -- -- The war in Iraq is about to get
worse -- much worse. The Democrats' decision to let the war
run its course, while they frantically wash their hands of
responsibility, means that it will sputter and stagger
forward until the mission collapses. This will be sudden.
The security of the
Green Zone, our imperial city, will be increasingly
breached. Command and control will disintegrate. And we will
back out of Iraq humiliated and defeated. But this will not
be the end of the conflict. It will, in fact, signal a phase
of the war far deadlier and more dangerous to American
interests.
Iraq no longer exists as a
unified country. The experiment that was Iraq, the cobbling
together of disparate and antagonistic patches of the
Ottoman Empire by the victorious powers in the wake of
World War I, belongs to the history books. It will never
come back. The Kurds have set up a de facto state in the
north, the Shiites control most of the south and the center
of the country is a battleground.
There are 2 million Iraqis
who have fled their homes and are internally displaced.
Another 2 million have left the country, most to Syria and
Jordan, which now has the largest number of refugees per
capita of any country on Earth. An Oxfam report estimates
that one in three Iraqis are in need of emergency aid, but
the chaos and violence is so widespread that assistance is
impossible. Iraq is in a state of anarchy. The American
occupation forces are one more source of terror tossed into
the caldron of suicide bombings, mercenary armies, militias,
massive explosions, ambushes, kidnappings and mass
executions. But wait until we leave.
It was not supposed to turn
out like this. Remember all those visions of a democratic
Iraq, visions peddled by the White House and fatuous pundits
like
Thomas Friedman and the gravel-voiced morons who pollute
our airwaves on CNN and Fox News? They assured us that the
war would be a cakewalk. We would be greeted as liberators.
Democracy would seep out over the borders of Iraq to usher
in a new Middle East. Now, struggling to salvage their own
credibility, they blame the debacle on poor planning and
mismanagement.
There are probably about
10,000 Arabists in the United States -- people who have
lived for prolonged periods in the Middle East and speak
Arabic. At the inception of the war you could not have
rounded up more than about a dozen who thought this was a
good idea. And I include all the Arabists in the State
Department, the Pentagon and the intelligence community.
Anyone who had spent significant time in Iraq knew this
would not work. The war was not doomed because Donald
Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz did not do sufficient planning
for the occupation. The war was doomed, period. It never had
a chance. And even a cursory knowledge of
Iraqi history and politics made this apparent.
This is not to deny the
stupidity of the occupation. The disbanding of the Iraqi
army; the ham-fisted attempt to install the crook and, it
now turns out, Iranian spy
Ahmed Chalabi in power; the firing of all Baathist
public officials, including university professors, primary
school teachers, nurses and doctors; the failure to secure
Baghdad and the vast weapons depots from looters; allowing
heavily armed American units to blast their way through
densely populated neighborhoods, giving the insurgency its
most potent recruiting tool -- all ensured a swift descent
into chaos.
But Iraq would not have held
together even if we had been spared the gross incompetence
of the Bush administration. Saddam Hussein, like the more
benign dictator Josip Broz Tito in the former Yugoslavia,
understood that the glue that held the country together was
the secret police.
Iraq, however, is different
from Yugoslavia. Iraq has oil -- lots of it. It also has
water in a part of the world that is running out of water.
And the dismemberment of Iraq will unleash a mad scramble
for dwindling resources that will include the involvement of
neighboring states. The Kurds, like the Shiites and the
Sunnis, know that if they do not get their hands on water
resources and oil they cannot survive. But Turkey, Syria and
Iran have no intention of allowing the Kurds to create a
viable enclave. A functioning Kurdistan in northern Iraq
means rebellion by the repressed Kurdish minorities in these
countries.
The
Kurds, orphans of the 20th century who have been
repeatedly sold out by every ally they ever had, including
the United States, will be crushed. The possibility that
Iraq will become a Shiite state, run by clerics allied with
Iran, terrifies the Arab world. Turkey, as well as Saudi
Arabia, the United States and Israel, would most likely keep
the conflict going by arming Sunni militias. This anarchy
could end with foreign forces, including Iran and Turkey,
carving up the battered carcass of Iraq. No matter what
happens, many, many Iraqis are going to die. And it is our
fault.
The neoconservatives -- and
the liberal interventionists, who still serve as the neocons'
useful idiots when it comes to Iran -- have learned nothing.
They talk about hitting Iran and maybe even Pakistan with
airstrikes. Strikes on Iran would ensure a regional
conflict. Such an action has the potential of drawing Israel
into war -- especially if Iran retaliates for any airstrikes
by hitting Israel, as I would expect Tehran to do. There are
still many in the U.S. who cling to the doctrine of
pre-emptive war, a doctrine that the post-World War II
Nuremberg laws define as a criminal "war of aggression."
The occupation of Iraq,
along with the Afghanistan occupation, has only furthered
the spread of failed states and increased authoritarianism,
savage violence, instability and anarchy. It has swelled the
ranks of our real enemies -- the Islamic terrorists -- and
opened up voids of lawlessness where they can operate and
plot against us. It has scuttled the art of diplomacy. It
has left us an outlaw state intent on creating more outlaw
states. It has empowered Iran, as well as Russia and China,
which sit on the sidelines gleefully watching our
self-immolation. This is what George W. Bush and all those
"reluctant hawks" who supported him have bequeathed us.
What is terrifying is not
that the architects and numerous apologists of the Iraq war
have learned nothing, but that they may not yet be finished.