About-face on Iran coming?
A new US strategy for victory in Iraq may be in the
works
By Hassan Nafaa
08/27/07 "Al-Ahram"
-- - That the US is knee-deep trouble in Iraq is
hardly in dispute. Few inside or outside the US
contest that fact or doubt the reasons that led to
it. And yet, some still argue that the whole thing
is little more than correctable "mistakes" by a
reckless administration. Others wonder if a
face-saving exit is still possible. But at least a
few maintain that a "strategic victory" is
attainable in Iraq.
For a long time, the current US administration
refused even to admit committing mistakes in Iraq.
For a long time, it maintained that victory was
around the corner. The admission that a real problem
exists came hesitantly and late. It came only after
the Baker-Hamilton Commission issued its well-known
report last year. Even then, the current
administration kept arguing that the problems it was
facing in Iraq were no more than "snags" attributed
to "tactical errors" that can be corrected and that
a complete and unambiguous victory was not to be
ruled out. In short, the US administration rejected
the prognosis offered by the Commission and went on
doing things its own way.
The commission said that the situation in Iraq would
get worse unless a major policy change occurred. It
reviewed a number of options, but ruled them all out
because of concern for the US reputation and Iraq's
stability. Those options included: quick withdrawal
from Iraq, maintaining the current policies with no
change, increasing the number of troops, or dividing
Iraq into three parts. After excluding those
options, the report suggested a new policy based on
two components. The first component was external,
involving a "new diplomatic offensive" to rally
international support and help Iraq.
The second component was internal, focusing on
helping Iraq help itself. The commission made 78
recommendations, suggesting that the US launch a
diplomatic offensive in an attempt to reassure the
world that the US was not after Iraq's oil and
didn't want to have military bases in that country
against the wishes of its people.
It made two main conclusions. One was that the US
couldn't get out of the Iraqi morass without the
help of others. The second was that the Middle East
crises were interlinked, and the US needed to
address all of them simultaneously. The report urged
the current administration to build bridges with
both Syria and Iran and make a renewed bid to
resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict.
But the US administration went for the exact
opposite. Instead of gradually reducing its fighting
troops and redeploying them outside turbulent Iraqi
towns, the US administration decided to increase
troops and send them into more battles inside
turbulent areas in the hope of quashing or at least
weakening the resistance.
Instead of courting Iran and Syria, the US
administration decided to tighten sanctions against
them and isolate them internationally. And instead
of doing more to settle the Arab-Israeli conflict, a
matter that would have required serious pressures on
Israel and attempts to unify the Palestinian
position, the US administration decided to alienate
Hamas and impose a stricter blockade on the
Palestinian people. The US administration blocked
all attempts to unify Palestinian factions and
encouraged Israel to adopt hard-line and belligerent
policies.
This approach, which hardly differed from earlier US
policies, deepened the dilemma of the US
administration. As a result, the security and
military situation in Iraq got worse. And the
Lebanon war last year didn't, as some hoped, weaken
"the axis of the extremists" in the region. On the
contrary, Iran, Syria, Hizbullah, Hamas, and Jihad
emerged stronger, while pro- US forces looked
hapless and lame. Consequently, the US
administration found itself in a more awkward place
than it was at the time the Baker-Hamilton
Commission was issued two years ago. All the US
administration did was waste time and money to no
avail.
Because the US administration knows that time is
running out, it has to do one of two things. Either
it accepts defeat and pulls out immediately, which
would damage the US standing as a superpower. Or it
escalates the confrontation through an all-out
attack on the "axis of the extremists." The latter
option cannot be ruled out, considering how
rightwing and dogmatic this administration is and
how inept is the man who leads it. The only problem
is that this second option is too perilous, for the
prospects of a decisive victory are nil in the long
run.
Some members of the neoconservative US elite, who
haven't yet despaired of winning the war in Iraq,
are now busy looking for a third option. Among the
barrage of ideas that surfaced of late, the views of
William S Lind are interesting. Lind is the director
of the Centre for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation. He summed up his views on the
Iraqi debacle in an article published 30 July in The
American Conservative under the title, "How to win
in Iraq".
In that article, Lind notes that the US
administration still defines victory as it did at
the war's outset: an Iraq that is an American
satellite, friendly to Israel, happy to provide the
US with a limitless supply of oil and vast military
bases from which American forces can dominate the
region. None of these objectives, he argues, are now
attainable. Lind believes that the attempts to quell
urban disturbances in Iraq are based on the wrong
assumptions. He argues that the war can still be won
on a strategic level, not through "small tactical
gains." Lind suggests that the new US strategy must
employ what the British military theorist Basil
Liddell-Hart called an "indirect approach."
The threat facing the US is not coming from any
state, but from a collection of groups using
non-conventional methods commonly labelled
"terrorism", Lind argues. Such groups can only
flourish in situations where governments are weak.
He calls for a new strategy of three elements to win
the war on a "strategic" level.
The first element is to engage Iran in a
rapprochement, just as the US did with China in the
early 1970s. At the time, China was creating more
than one Vietnam in order to sap the US power.
Likewise, the groups hostile to the US are trying to
create more than one Iraq in order to baffle the
Americans. Lind believes that it would be hard to
undermine such groups without having a strong
government in Iraq, which requires rapprochement
with Iran. He admits that pro-Iranian Shiites may
end up dominating the Iraqi government, but that
should not be a problem so long as a strong Iraqi
state evolves.
The second element of Lind's strategy is to allow
the Sadr group, which is popular in Iraqi streets,
to achieve its full political potential. The US will
have to pay a price for that, such as giving up the
prospect of military bases in Iraq. So far, the US
has been trying to suppress the Sadr group while
favouring unpopular, pro-American groups. This
approach, Lind says, has weakened successive
governments and reduced their ability to control the
situation on the ground. Lind admits there is no
guarantee Al-Sadr would be able to form a strong
Iraqi government, but the chance is worth taking.
The US administration, he says, must allow Al-Sadr,
or anyone who can, to establish a strong government
in Iraq.
The third element of the strategy is to withdraw all
US forces within 12-18 months. This move would
provide enough time for Al-Sadr or other parties to
put together a government. This wouldn't be the
withdrawal of a defeated army, Lind argues, but a
step toward strategic victory. Withdrawal would be
good for the army and for the US public, he argues.
The above strategy may exacerbate the Sunni- Shiite
divisions not just in Iraq but across the region,
but Lind is not worried about that. In fact, he
believes those divisions might prove beneficial to
the new US strategy in the region.
These are quite disturbing proposals. Lind's ideas
entail certain risks to the Arab world and Iran.
Admittedly, Tehran may be temporarily pleased to see
a friendly government in Iraq, but the cost may
prove too high. The US is likely to use Shiite-Sunni
divisions to turn Sunni Arab countries against Iran.
The main beneficiary of Lind's proposed strategy
would be Israel and the US. The implications for the
Sunnis and the Shiites are frightening. It seems
that the US is heading toward a dual containment
policy of both Shiite fundamentalism and Sunni
Wahhabism. So perhaps this is time for Shias and
Sunnis, as well as Arabs and Iranians, to sit
together and talk.
© Copyright Al-Ahram Weekly. All rights reserved
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