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28 abril, 2020

Just Leave Iraq


JUST LEAVE IRAQ

 
United States military bases in the Middle East.

The United States has been militarily present in Iraq for the better part of this century: 14 years out of 20 (2003-2011 and 2014-2020). This extended presence included the involvement in a war, in a counter-insurgency, in another war and presently in another counter-insurgency/war of attrition, at a staggering cost of 2 trillion Dollars and the loss of 4487 military personnel.

The initial intentions of toppling Saddam Hussein’s regime, implementing a democracy in Iraq and unveiling weapons of arms of mass destruction (which were nowhere to be found), gradually unravelled under the mismanagement of the occupation, the insurgency of Iraqi Iranian proxies, the fight of the Iraqi branch of Al Qaeda and the increasing sectarianism, eventually mitigated by the 2007 Surge approved by President George W. Bush and led by the General David Petraeus.

Barack Obama’s decision to withdraw from Iraq in 2011 was the equivalent to handing Iraq to Iran in a wrapped paper. The void left in the wake of the American withdrawal was quickly filled by Tehran, either directly through the Islamic Republican Guard (IRGC) Quds Force, or indirectly through the plethora of Iraqi militias loyal to Iran (Badr Organisation, Ketaib Hezbollah, Asaib Ahl Al-Haq, among others). Concurrently, has Iran also increased her influence over the powers that be, including the Iraqi government led by Nouri Al Maliki. Speaking of whom, Al Maliki’s power grew with Tehran’s backing and with it came an increasing sectarianism and persecution of the Sunni citizens that paved the way for the following Islamic State onslaught.

Fast forward to 2014, the United States is drawn back to Iraq because of the establishment of the Caliphate by the Islamic State (IS) in large swaths of Iraq and Syria. The United States’ intervention, plus her allies and the support given to the collapsing Iraqi army, were instrumental in the defeat of the Islamic State.

The USA remained in Syria and in Iraq, under the pretext of continuing to fight the remains of the IS and, in the case of Iraq, also to provide training to her security forces. In Iraq there are an estimated 5200 American troops spread by 5 bases, down from the 9 they had at the beginning of this year. The reason to deliver some bases to the Iraqi military is the need to consolidate, but the increase in rocket attacks on American bases and the need to upgrade the bases’ defence capabilities obviously have played a role in the decision.

Given the long American history in Iraq, its financial cost, its human toll and the scant political and geopolitical gains, it is high time to consider if the United States should persist in her Iraqi quest, or should she just call it a day, fold the bases, the equipment and make the troops go home?

The mainstream opinion is that the USA should stick to Iraq. Actually, it argues that the USA should upgrade her involvement in Iraq, helping the country to attain the capability to fend off threats from neighbours like Iran or Turkey, to prop up Iraq’s economy, to help establishing a standard of good governance and to finish off the vicious circles of endless corruption and bloody sectarianism. On top of these, the USA should also accomplish the feat of brushing aside 15 years of Iranian public and covert influence over Baghdad’s political apparatus, plus putting an end to Iran’s control over countless powerful proxy militias, not to mention her direct military and security involvement in Iraq.

My personal conviction is that the United States is over and done in Iraq and she is actually overstaying there. There are at least seven reasons to substantiate it.

1- The past 15 years abundantly proved that the United States is not able to quash Iran’s influence and ascendant over Iraq. The US has extended a decisive contribution to root out the Islamic State threat and power and yet, after its demise, Iran went back to show her prominence as influencer-in-chief in Baghdad. The American bases in Iraq have been frequently attacked by Iran’s proxy militias. Regardless, the Iraqi parliament approved a non-binding resolution to expel all American troops in Iraq. This, by itself, speaks volumes as to who really calls the shots from behind the scenes.

2- The degree of suggested American involvement in Iraq would entail another huge investment, on the military-security level, on the financial and infra-structure level, on the political and diplomatic level. And all for what? Been there, done that, as they say. The odds that this plan would pan out are diminutive, given the well-established and time-tested Iranian pervasive influence in Baghdad.

3- The American citizenry is increasingly fed up of the excessive US military involvement in the Middle East, of the human toll endured and of the financial burden, as well. As time goes by and the results do not match the investments, the animosity towards the endeavour in Iraq will only grow.

4- Unlike the mainstream conviction, I do not buy into the idea that having a close relationship with Iraq is of crucial national interest to the United States. Besides the unlikelihood of Iraq switching sides, the fact is that the USA would not gain a significant new leverage in the Middle East if she could co-opt Iraq. Although keeping Iraq under Iran’s wing will enable the latter an extended influence in the region, thus preserving the Shiite Arch Iran-Iraq-Syria-Lebanon, there is no reason to believe that it would translate into an overarching and threatening clout across the Middle East.

 
 Iran’s Shiite Arch stretching from the Arabian Sea and the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean, crossing Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.
in “STRATFOR” at www.stratfor.com


 5- Actually, in this Shiite Arch scenario, Iran will be bracing with severe challenges in the mid-term if not before. Iran would find herself struggling to manage and control a group of countries who are themselves ensnared in multiple problems of epic proportions. Iraq, Syria and Lebanon are all mired in sectarian conflicts, in terrorist and militia warfare, subject to multiple foreign meddling (Turkey, Russia, USA, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, United Arab Emirates), undergoing severe economic crises and coping with widespread infrastructure destruction due to warfare, in the case of Syria and Iraq. If one thinks of the strained conditions of the Iranian economy due to foreign adventurism, sanctions, bad management and corruption, it is not difficult to figure that Iran would be utterly incapable of rescuing her allies and proxies.

6- What about an eventual Islamic State resurgence or any other insurgency by existing or new terrorist organisations, be them Sunni or Shiite? Well, on the one hand, it is unlikely that the IS would be able to return to the level of power and impetus it displayed in 2014/15 and the same applies to any other terrorist or insurgent group. On the other hand, if Iraq faces renewed threats from any such organisation, guess who would have to carry the burden of rescuing the Iraqi government? Yes, that will be Iran.

7- Last but not least, the United States faces other challenges that are much more relevant to her national interest and which request much more attention and commitment. Namely, the rising military power and geopolitical ambitions of the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Having 70.000 troops allocated to the Middle East plus the large amount of sea, air and land equipment deployed is a bit of a waste when there is an insufficient military presence in the West Pacific. The USA should not and will not withdraw from the Middle East, but she should have a lighter footprint and terminate the useless and vulnerable land deployments, such as those in Iraq and Syria.

It is quite surprising to see that there is still a cohort of analysts and experts who keep pressing Washington to engage in never-ending nation-building endeavours in spite of the successive failures in previous attempts. It is also bewildering that these same people seem to think that the United States should have a very close relationship with any country, even if they are of little or none geopolitical relevance and/or if the large required investment and the expectable small return clearly do not pay off the costs and risks involved.

No suggestion is being made fore the US to leave the Middle East and bases like the Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar and the Naval Support Activity in Bahrain, among others, are absolutely vital for American power projection and its presence in the region and the adjacent seas.

However, if the United States aims to retain her role as the most important  world power, she has to drop world micromanagement and to focus on the real game changing challenges which, at present, mostly involve the Asia-Pacific region in general and the PRC in particular.
China’s outrageous maritime claims.
in “STRATFOR” at www.stratfor.com








05 abril, 2017

"My Country Needs More Help From the U.S."



“MY COUNTRY NEEDS MORE HELP FROM THE U.S.”



Iraq cracking and Al Abadi struggling.

This is the title of an article by Iraq’s Premier Haider Al-Abadi, recently published in the “Washington Post” (Iraqi prime minister: My country needs more help from the U.S. at https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/iraqi-prime-minister-my-country-needs-more-help-from-the-us/2017/03/23/3fff51a0-0fdb-11e7-ab07-07d9f521f6b5_story.html?utm_term=.b1abe6cd61ab&wpisrc=nl_opinions&wpmm=1 ). Naturally, Abadi makes his bid commending Iraq and her armed forces and cajoling the US for support and financing. We should not, however, take his every word at face value. Let’s check:

Iraqis standing together against the cruelest killers on Earth.
(…) build an Iraq worthy of what we are: a pluralist people, steeped in history, striving to build one nation in peace and mutual respect.
We must reconcile our society across sectarian and ethnic lines.
(…) preserving our sovereignty and ensuring that no neighbor exercises outsize influence within our country.

The part about “Iraqis standing together” is really questionable and the same goes for “mutual respect”. Reconciling sects and ethnicities is almost a utopia and sovereignty preservation is denied by the facts on the ground and by the Premier’s own plea for full US engagement.

We see the Yazidis, formerly persecuted and killed by the Islamic States (IS) now being persecuted and killed by the Kurdish Regional Government’s (KRG) peshmerga.

We see the increasingly autocratic and thuggish KRG trying to take control of disputed territories and to get a foothold on traditional Sunni land, such as Mosul.

We see the blood-thirsty Shiite militias always angling for retribution killings of Sunni civilians.

We see the Iraqi government in Baghdad at loggerheads with the regional government in Arbil which, in turn, is increasingly beholden to Turkey.

And we do not see, at least not yet, the Sunnis fully embracing the hedonistic new order proclaimed by Abadi.

What I do see in a post-Mosul Iraq is:
            * Turkey and Iran vying for influence, power and presence in Northern Iraq.

* An increasingly Ankara-dependent Kurdistan Regional Government fighting Iraq’s central government.

* A multi-faceted Shia political and security establishment striving to keep and apportion power and perks.

* A creepy Al Maliki lurking and planning a comeback.

And, facing this scenario and looking at precedent, I regard a full-fledged Sunni integration into the political, security and economic mainstream with deep skepticism.

O ye of little faith, I might say to myself.



P.S. All of Abadi’s writing, focus on a single ultimate goal: to present an appealing way forward for Iraq in order to ask Americans to assist us as we restore our infrastructure and diversity and partially privatize our economy. We need U.S. investment to rebuild our housing, hospitals, schools, sanitation facilities, roads, highways and bridges. We can also benefit from Americans’ technical expertise as we improve and expand our telecommunications, information technology and health-care sectors. Iraq needs U.S. financiers and corporate partners to help us develop agriculture, petrochemicals and other industries.

So, he wants Washington to pay for Iraq’s reconstruction across the board, far exceeding the scope of Donald Trump’s infrastructure investments for his own country. Asking Trump to splurge money in Iraq, where the main players range from skeptical to outright hostile towards America is a very, very long shot indeed.