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Nationalists Stirring in Iraq
by Robert Dreyfuss
On January 13, an emerging Sunni-Shiite nationalist bloc in Iraq signed a groundbreaking agreement aimed at ending Iraq's civil war, blocking the privatization of Iraq's oil industry and checkmating the breakaway Kurdish state. It's a big step forward, and it could change the face of Iraqi politics in 2008.
For the past two years, Iraqi nationalists -- opposed to the US occupation, opposed to Al Qaeda, and opposed to Iran's heavyhanded influence in Iraqi affairs -- have struggled to assert themselves. The nascent coalition contains the seeds of true national reconciliation in Iraq, but it has emerged independently of the United States. Unrelated to the constant American pressure on the government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki to meet various reconciliation "benchmarks," the new coalition is designed either to sweep Maliki out of office or force him to join it.
[Republished at PFP with express Agence Global permission.]
An emerging Sunni-Shiite coalition could change the face of Iraq -- if the United States steps back and gets out of the way.
Enormous obstacles stand in the way of the Sunni-Shiite
coalition, and Iraq is just as likely to descend into a new round of
intense civil war as it is to stabilize under a new ruling bloc. Still,
it could work, but there's a big if -- if the United States steps back
and gets out of the way.
Since the rigged Iraqi elections of
2005, the United States has supported a shaky and now utterly
discredited four-party coalition in Iraq. Two of those parties are the
ultra-religious Shiite parties, the Islamic Dawa Party and the Islamic
Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI), both strongly supported by Iran. The
other two are the Kurdish warlord parties, the Kurdistan Democratic
Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). During that
time, Iraq's two prime ministers, Ibrahim Jaafari (2005-06) and Maliki
(2006-2008) -- both from Dawa -- have staunchly refused to open the
door to increased Sunni Arab participation in the government. But now
that coalition is falling apart, and its partners are increasingly at
odds with one another.
The potential collapse of the
Shiite-Kurdish pact that has ruled Iraq under the American occupation
has created a freewheeling search for competing alliances among the
myriad political factions that have emerged since Saddam Hussein's
overthrow.
Partners in the new, twelve-party alliance
include nearly all of the Sunni Arab parties, including the Sunni
religious parties and the secular National Dialogue Front; the secular
Iraqi National List of former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, a secular
Shiite; two big Shiite parties, including Muqtada al-Sadr's bloc and
the Fadhila (Virtue) Party; a faction of the Dawa Party; and assorted
smaller groups, including independents in Iraq's Parliament. Among its
goals, say its leaders, are to ensure that Iraq's "oil, natural gas,
and other treasures [remain the] property of all the Iraqi people,"
opposing both the proposed new oil law that would open the door to
privatization of the oil industry and the illegal oil deals signed by
the Kurdish regional government. Another goal, they say, is to block
the Kurdish takeover of the oil-rich region around Kirkuk in Iraq's
north. And, they say, the new coalition will "overcome the narrow
circle of sectarianism" by uniting Sunnis and Shiites.
What's
more, there are reports of talks involving the remaining Sunni
resistance groups -- those that have not joined the American-sponsored
Awakening movement and the so-called Concerned Local Citizens groups --
in a broad-based national reconciliation effort. According to the Arab
press, six Sunni resistance factions have been meeting in England in
preparation for a proposed conference in Cairo with representatives of
the Iraqi government and political parties. A parallel effort is under
way at meetings in Beirut. And French President Nicolas Sarkozy,
currently touring the Middle East, has renewed his country's offer to
bring Iraq's warring political factions together. Sarkozy suggested
"hosting in France, far from the heat of passions and on neutral
ground, inter-Iraqi roundtable talks that are as large as possible."
It's unclear whether Sarkozy's proposed conference would include
representatives of the armed resistance, but it's possible. (An earlier
offer by France to host similar talks got the cold shoulder from Maliki
and no encouragement from the United States.)
The fact that
Sadr's bloc opted to join the opposition bloc is critical. Not only
does Sadr command thirty-two seats in Iraq's Parliament, but on the
ground in Baghdad and in the south, his Mahdi Army militia is a
formidable force. The Fadhila Party, too, has great power in and around
Basra, Iraq's second-largest city, which controls the bulk of the oil
industry and Iraq's exports.
A wild card in any political
realignment in Iraq is the attitude of the powerful new Sahwa
(Awakening) movement, the 100,000-strong paramilitary force whose
backbone is Iraq's tribal leaders. Currently, the Sahwa movement is
strong in Anbar, Diyala, Salahuddin and Nineveh provinces to the west
and north of the capital, as well as in Baghdad itself and in the
suburban belt south of Baghdad. Though Sahwa is not a party (and thus
has no seats in Parliament), it is a power to be reckoned with, and it
is being courted assiduously both by the new nationalist coalition and
by Dawa and ISCI. If forced to choose, the Sahwa movement would be far
more likely to align with nationalists than with Shiite sectarian
parties, since the tribal leaders regard ISCI, in particular, as an
agent of Iran.
So far, the United States has continued to
prop up Maliki's shaky regime, despite its growing unpopularity. US
officials fear that if Maliki were to fall, the results would be
unpredictable--especially in an election year. Besides, the
nationalists would be far less likely than Maliki to sign the proposed
long-term extension of the American presence in Iraq that Maliki and
President Bush intend to ink by July.
A hint of how
entrenched the American presence in Iraq might be came this week, when
Iraq's defense minister, Abdul Qader Mohammed Jassim, came to the
United States for an extended visit, during which he met with
long-range planning staff at the Pentagon. During his visit, Jasim
declared that a significant number of troops would have to remain in
Iraq for another ten years, until 2018.
The passage, on
January 11, of the so-called "Accountability and Justice Act" by
Parliament was widely hailed by US officials, including President Bush,
as a sign that at least one of the benchmarks laid out at the start of
the surge a year ago had been met. That act was supposed to have eased
the draconian anti-Baath party rules that excluded hundreds of
thousands of Iraqis from government service and jobs.
The
act was passed by a half-empty Parliament, with only 140 of the 275
elected members of the body in attendance. It was widely condemned by
the very people it was designed to help, including several Sunni and
secular parties and former Baathists, and it appears that the new law
could trigger a purge of Iraq's defense ministry, interior ministry,
army and police, forcing many thousands of former Baathists out of the
security services -- in other words, precisely the opposite of its
ostensible purpose. Indeed, because Sadr's bloc is so bitterly
anti-Baathist, it is possible that Maliki chose this moment to force
passage of the law in an attempt to use the divisive issue as a wedge
to split Sadr away from potential partners in the new alliance.
In
the end, Iraq is still a shattered nation. Its economy is a shambles.
The sectarian civil war has eased, but violence is everywhere. In the
past week, two major US military actions -- a sweeping offensive just
north of Baghdad and one of the heaviest aerial bombardments of an area
south of the capital -- killed scores. The situation around Kirkuk is
explosive. And intra-Shiite violence in Basra and other cities in the
south simmers just below civil war levels. Even without US
interference, it might still take a miracle for a stable Iraqi
coalition to take root.
Robert Dreyfuss is a
contributing editor for The Nation magazine, and the author of Devil's
Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam
(Metropolitan).
Copyright © 2008 The Nation
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Released: 17 January 2008
Word count: 1,295
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Released: 17 January 2008
Word Count: 1,295
Rights & Permissions Contact: Agence Global, 1.336.686.9002, rights@agenceglobal.com
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