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THE WAR
IN IRAQ AND ITS
AFTERMATH
By Stuart
Schaar
Talk delivered October 27, 2004 at
Hofstra University.
The U.S-lead invasion of Iraq on March 19, 2003 is largely the product
of blowback, or the unexpected byproduct of what policy-makers might
have originally viewed as wise planning. Historian William H. McNeill
in his 1992 book The Global Condition (pp. vii-viii and xiv),
reminds us “how ignorant we are about the consequences of our
actions” and that “the best laid plans and most carefully prepared
actions…regularly produce unforeseen consequences – sometimes
disastrous….” For example, from 1980 to 1988, the U.S. armed
Saddam Hussein’s military, as did the Soviet Union. They did this in
order to help Iraq, a country 2/3 the size of Texas, with a population
of 23 million, gain advantages over neighboring and much larger Muslim
Shi’ite revolutionary Iran in a long war. As a result, Washington
and Moscow clearly encouraged Saddam’s megalomania. The United
States also coaxed its allies, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, to help
bankroll Hussein’s fantasies of conquest. That eight-year war cost
Baghdad nearly a half a trillion dollars.
Yet a closer examination shows that President
Ronald Reagan actually seesawed in his support for the belligerents.
The U.S. and some of its allies supplied Ayatollah Khomeini’s regime
with arms whenever it appeared that Iraqi forces might actually defeat
Iran. One set of weapons sales, by Israel to Iran, and the discovery
that Reagan had secretly sent the Iranian leader a birthday
cake, lead to what’s known as “Irangate,” an embarrassment for
the U.S. administration. Washington in the 1980s helped both
protagonists kill each other, hoping to gain from their mutual
slaughter. It’s estimated that about 1 million people lost their
lives in that eight-year face off. Whatever the damage done, Saddam
Hussein emerged from that conflict as a regional power broker.
About the same time that the United States alternated between
supporting Baghdad and Tehran, C.I.A. operatives in Pakistan hired,
armed, and liberally paid holy warriors from all over the Muslim
world. These volunteers included multi-millionaire Osama bin Laden,
who recruited many of the fighters. These men converged on Afghanistan
to topple a Soviet installed regime and dislodge hundreds of thousands
of Russian troops. When the Mujahidiin won that war the world
paid a heavy price for their victory. In the western euphoria over the
fall of the Soviet Union, to which the Afghanistan war contributed,
most people ignored some lethal byproducts of that conflict. Most of
the Muslim fighters returned to their homes with U.S. money, arms and
know-how about overthrowing regimes, and organized or participated in
local insurrections. One of them broke out in Algeria in the 1990s,
killing some 200,000 people over eight years. Other veterans of the
Afghan war, caught up in the jihadi spirit, moved to war-torn
Bosnia, Chechniya and most recently Iraq and have intensified the
violence in those battle zones. U.S. officials should have recognized
that blowback exacts a heavy toll.
If we return to Iraq, the pumped up Saddam Hussein saw a new
vulnerable target on his southern frontier. At the beginning of the
1990s he turned to Kuwait and demanded that it forgive Iraq’s debts,
telling its rulers that he had saved Sunni Arabs from Shi’ite
Iranian domination and conquest. Faced with refusal from the Kuwaitis,
and coveting its large oil reserves, his armies marched into the sandy
kingdom while Kuwait’s military folded and ran, and its royals
rushed into exile. The first Persian Gulf War of 1991, ended when a
U.S.-lead coalition of 500,000 troops defeated the Iraqi army and
liberated Kuwait.
President Bush, the elder, then refused to allow U.S. soldiers to
conquer Baghdad and overthrow Saddam Hussein. Instead the U.S. called
for popular uprisings in the northern Kurdish zone and in the south
where mostly Shi’ites live. When regional allies of the U.S. in the
anti-Iraq coalition balked at this turn of events and Washington
policy-makers began fearing the negative consequences of these
rebellions, the U.S informed Iraqi officials that the U.S. would not
oppose their efforts to keep the country united. Armed with what they
construed as a green light from the victors, remnants of the Iraqi
army acted with impunity and slaughtered Kurds and Shi’ites by the
tens of thousands. Some 2.5 million refugees fled. International
pressures over the plight of these victims lead the U.S. to establish
no-fly zone s over northern and southern Iraq in 1991 and 1992, which
American war-planes thereafter enforced.
Can we consider the U.S. saving of Hussein after his Kuwaiti fiasco
another form of blowback? After all, the United States kept him
in power even when it had the wherewithal to overthrow his regime. The
elder Bush argued, legalistically, and correctly, that UN resolutions
gave no authority to overthrow the Iraqi state. They merely provided
for the removal of the Iraqis from conquered Kuwait. But the way the
war ended left an opening for Bush Jr. to accomplish what his father
had failed to achieve, the removal of the tyrant Saddam Hussein. But
achieving that goal meant that the U.S. would have to act without most
of its allies from the First Persian Gulf War, including some Arab
states. If we can believe ex-Secretary of the Treasury Paul O’Neill
cited in Ron Suskin d’s book The Price of Loyalty (2004), the
National Security Council immediately after George W. Bush’s term
began in January 2001 laid down plans for the war in Iraq.
Before the U.S. could forcibly remove
Saddam Hussein from power, the events of September 11, 2001
transpired. Extremists, presumed to have worked with Osama bin
Laden’s al-Queda organization, drove two commandeered U.S.
civilian jets into twin World Trade Center towers in lower Manhattan,
plowed one more plane into the Pentagon, while a fourth aircraft
crashed in rural Pennsylvania after its passengers fought their
hijackers and saved the country from a larger disaster.
Al-Queda seems also to have masterminded the 1998 bombings of
American embassies in Nairobi, Kenya and Dar es-Salam, Tanzania, in
retribution for the U.S. having sent cruise missiles against its
headquarters in Afghanistan. Bin Laden may also have organized a 1996
attack on U.S. military facilities in Saudi Arabia and the bombing in
October 2000 of the U.S. Destroyer Cole at anchor off of the coast of
Aden, in s outhern Yemen. Bin Laden had responded with fury to the
U.S. sending into the holy land of Arabia tens of thousands of
American troops in 1991. This was worse, bin Laden probably thought,
than the Soviet’s earlier invasion of Afghanistan.
By 9/11, bin Laden’s al-Queda,
in return for paying an annual rent of more than ten million dollars,
enjoyed the hospitality of the Afghan Taliban. This organization of
Islamic radical students had coalesced as an armed force in 1994 and
three years later had conquered 95% of Afghanistan. Nine days after
9/11 U.S. President George W. Bush ordered the Taliban to turn over
bin Laden to Washington. They responded that before doing so they
needed incontrovertible evidence of al-Queda’s involvement in
the attacks. The U.S. presented no such evidence and began bombing
Taliban positions in Afghanistan in preparation for an
invasion.
With the aid of the Northern Alliance,
anti-Taliban Afghan forces in control of a small area in northern
Afghanistan, the U.S. coalition quickly defeated the Taliban and
al-Queda, although thousands of those fighters melted into the
larger population, or took refuge in neighboring Pakistan’s lawless
Northwest Frontier. Taliban leader Mullah Omar and Osama bin Laden
apparently survived. Since then, Taliban forces and their
al-Queda allies have regrouped and control inaccessible
mountainous regions in Afghanistan and northern Pakistan. Some 11,000
U.S. troops stationed in Afghanistan stay close to their quarters out
of fear of stepping on land mines, or being targeted by Afghan
sharpshooters and mortar-bearing irregulars. Elections in October
2004, which Hamid Karzai, the U.S. hand-picked presidential candidate
won with over 55% of the vote, and not the landslide he expected, see
m to represent a lull in an otherwise chaotic situation. Several
warlords, in the areas that voted against Karzai, each with larger
militias than the national army, plus al-Queda-backed Taliban
forces, contest power throughout the country.
The second Persian Gulf War of 2003
finally followed in the wake of the previous year’s defeat of
al-Queda and their Taliban hosts in Afghanistan. Twelve years of
United Nations Security Council-backed sanctions against Iraq had
significantly weakened the country. The framers of the sanction
regime, spearheaded by the United States, initially intended them as a
mechanism to weaken Saddam Hussein’s dictatorial hold over Kuwait
and the Iraqi people. After the defeat of Iraq’s military in 1991,
it became apparent to the Security Council that sanctions should
continue. The U.N. restricted the amount of petroleum the country
could export, and only in 1997 did it allow Iraq to sell enough oil to
pay for food and medicine. By limiting Iraq’s petroleum trading and
by controlling how the country spent it’s earnings, the Security
Council intended to prevent Saddam’s regime from developing weapo ns
of mass destruction.
The first aim of the sanctions, to weaken Hussein’s stranglehold
over Iraqis, never materialized. Instead the Iraqi state became more
centralized and intervened in all aspects of its citizen’s lives.
The ruling Baath party organized a rationing system, under which they
distributed food essentials to nearly the entire population. Before
the war began in 2003, nearly every Iraqi received an allotment of
about $5.00/month of rice, beans, cooking oil and other necessities,
which just kept them alive. Per capita income had fallen dramatically
because of wars and sanctions from a high point of $9,000 in
1979, the year that Saddam Hussein took over the country, to about
$1100 in 2001.
The sanctions succeeded, however, in eliminating Iraq’s weapons of
mass destruction and actually produced the results desired by the
Security Council. The October 2004 report of President Bush’s
hand picked investigator, Charles Duelfer, the head of the Iraq Survey
Group, concluded that U.N.-sponsored weapons inspectors, working
within the sanctions regime, actually forced the Iraqis to stop its
chemical and biological weapons production between 1991 and 1996. The
regime unilaterally destroyed all of its stockpiles of illicit weapons
during that period. The report also found that even after the
inspectors left Iraq in 1998 Hussein’s regime made no attempts to
produce weapons of mass destruction. After 1997 Hussein successfully
made some gains by surreptitiously trading oil for goods or money, and
he, his entourage and family squirreled away some billions of dollars
in Syria and elsewhere to use for rainy days, but there are no
indications that those illegal profits had translated into worrisome
arms purchases from abroad. Continued sanctions, with cruel
consequences for the Iraqi population, clearly could have stifled any
of Saddam’s future WMD ambitions.
The U.S. “coalition of the willing,” consisted of over 250,000
U.S. troops (soon reduced to an occupation force of 138,000), 45,000
British soldiers (reduced at present to nearly 8,000), as well
as Australians, Poles, Danes, Spaniards and Italians plus other token
fighters from very small countries. They attacked on March 19,
2003 and easily dispatched the Iraqi forces after three weeks of
fighting. The Baathist state crumbled and opponents seemed to have
melted away into the general population. In recent months, under
pressures from terrorists and growing violence in Iraq, Spain, the
Philippines, Nicaragua, Honduras, Norway, Dominican Republic, and
Thailand have withdrawn their troops. In addition to the regular U.S.
m ilitary, the Bush administration hired about 20,000 private military
contractors who work with little legal accountability, making them
especially feared and unpopular with the Iraqi
population.
In the heat of the battle, U.S. troops
secured the oil ministry, petroleum wells, some hospitals, and water
storage facilities. As soon as fighting stopped, Iraqis looted
factories, schools, unprotected hospitals and museums in an orgy of
anarchy. Looting contributed to the disintegration of the statist
regime. Bush Republicans favored privatization of some 200 state-owned
factories and the outsourcing of services to private U.S. companies.
Washington hoped to auction off looted factories to American
corporations at bargain prices. Lt. General Jay Garner the first U.S.
Administrator in Iraq, who wanted to convert the place into a large
military base for U.S. forces and had no clear economic agenda, was
quickly replaced by Republican counter-terrorist and homeland security
expert, Ambassador L. Paul Bremer, III. ; Bremer molded
legislation to speed up privatization and prepared the groundwork for
U.S. corporate ownership of Iraqi properties.
An assessment of the Iraq Crisis Group,
composed of mainstream foreign policy
professionals, in September 2004 summed
up the situation succinctly:
For the most part, the occupation forces
came without a plan. What strategy they had benefited from little if
any Iraqi input, [and] was heavily shaped by
ideology….[They]…originally fixated on large-scale privatisation but,
facing Iraqi hostility, [they] neither privatised nor relinquished the
objective. As a result…[they] failed to devise an alternative
approach that might have revived ailing state companies so they could
be used to find temporary jobs for the unemployed.
The U.S. also had little prior intelligence to assess how unusable
Iraq’s infrastructure had become. American bombs had avoided hitting the
country’s electrical grids and dams, out of concern that they
would have to continue functioning. The
fighting frightened off Iraqi technicians who had learned, almost
magically,the ways to patch up the electrical
system and water pipes and pumps over the life of the sanctions, so as
to keep them working. As soon as the
Americans arrived, they sent in U.S. technicians to replace
Iraqis. These, applying American know-how,
attempted to streamline the old system, which turned out to be hopelessly dysfunctional
and resistant to
U.S. upgrading and repairs. The electrical grid more or less collapsed and water
supplies dwindled.
And as security deteriorated, repairing electrical lines,
generating plants and water distribution systems
took second place to preserving U.S. and allies’ lives. Nearly 3
1/2billion dollars originally earmarked for
reconstruction had to be used for security purposes by September 2004.
The sanctions regime therefore had its
own form of blowback, producing the unforeseen near-total collapse of
a critical part of Iraq’s infrastructure after the initial period of
fighting had ended, which even the most well-intentioned U.S.
technicians could not fix. Lack of critical services and massive
unemployment created by the purging of Baath party members from their
jobs, the closing of many state-run factories, the initial abolition
and disintegration of the Iraqi police and army, lead many Iraqis to
turn against the occupation. Later U.S. authorities rehired some Baath
officials and began training police and military, but that process may
have started too late for the U.S. to gain much support. Instead, most
Iraqis could not understand how technologically advanced Americans
could not make the country work again and why so many of them found
themselves unemployed.
While each conflict zone has its own unique context in which events
unfold, we can learn much from the mistakes made in the past by the
U.S. and other governments when they intervened militarily in other
countries. Two significant conflicts, which took place during the
second half of the twentieth century, the Vietnam and Algerian wars,
offer some sober lessons. From both, we learn, firstly, that if an
insurgency takes root and lasts for more than a year, it may become
impossible to dislodge it. Any investments made by the intervening
power thereafter to improve the population’s condition resound to
the credit of the insurgents, who claim that they forced those
investments by their armed opposition to occupation. Winning hearts
and minds does not come from the bar rels of occupiers
guns. Instead, raids, aerial bombing and killing of civilians as
collateral damage intensifies popular resistance and widens
insurgencies. Cultural and social differences breed contempt on all
sides. Linguistic inadequacies of the occupiers cause
misinterpretations and errors, sometimes with fatal consequences.
While the U.S. so far has suffered over 1100 military dead and about
8,000 wounded, the war has killed a minimum of 13,000 Iraqis,
with one recent estimate reaching as high as 100,000.
Secondly, insurgents always target
collaborators working for and with the intervening power. It should
not surprise anyone knowing comparative nationalist reactions to
interventions that the largest numbers of targeted deaths among Iraqi
forces are U.S.-appointed government officials and men signing up to
work as policemen and soldiers, as well as those already recruited and
on duty. Nationalist insurgents save their vengeance for
collaborators, who they believe have to pay a high price for their
choices. Foreign non-governmental agency employees and private
contractors, whose numbers have increased considerably in this war,
have also come under attack. Several have been kidnapped and beheaded,
mostly by foreign extremist groups. Such terror is meant to discourage
aid workers from staying in the country. Suicide bombings also have
indiscriminately killed many civilian bystanders.
Thirdly, the intervening power always
thinks in conspiratorial terms and claims that external forces
manipulate and control the insurgency. In the case of Iraq, the U.S.
blames infiltrated al-Queda operatives crossing over porous
borders working in tandem with an organized force of former Baath
officials possessing large amounts of money, for the worst violence.
They find it difficult to acknowledge the presence of a growing number
of Iraqi nationalists who also oppose occupation. To acknowledge that
fact, implies the existence of a mass movement opposed to occupation,
rather than a handful of evil people intent on fulfilling a larger
agenda. Wipe out the cancer, according to this reasoning, and you win.
In reality, Iraqi nationalism, as contributor to the insurgency,
cannot be discounted. It has roots in the early 1920s when an
anti-colonial struggle started, culminating in the force ful removal
of the British-imposed Iraqi monarchy in 1958. The Iraq-Iran war in
the 1980s intensified that nationalism. U.S. occupation of the country
in 2003 has only made it stronger.
Fourthly, the presence of significant
quantities of oil in Iraq makes it harder for the United States to
establish a timetable for withdrawal. France in 1960 offered the
National Liberation Front independence in the northern third of
Algeria, but not the southern Saharan oil fields, which it intended to
keep indefinitely. The FLN fought on for another two years to win
control of the Sahara. The north and south of Iraq contain the second
largest oil reserves in the world after Saudi Arabia. Further large
reserves probably exist in the extensive unexplored eastern desert of
the country. Discovered Iraqi oil can supply all U.S. imported needs
in petroleum for nearly 100 years if present rates of U.S. consumption
continue. However, some oil specialists foresee the United States
depleting their own reserves by as early as 2010.
Breaking Iraq into three separate zones
to control the oil better, as some analysts have suggested, won’t
work either. The Sunni-dominated center, without exploitable energy
resources, could not survive over the short term and would only become
more unstable than at present. The oil-rich northern Kurdish zone
would surely face war with neighboring Turkey and the Southern
Shi’ites and their oil fields would most likely fall under the
influence of a potentially nuclear Iran. Given growing instability in
Saudi Arabia, which contains the largest oil reserves in the world,
power-holders in the U.S. may wish to control Iraq indefinitely.
Fifthly, as a legacy of Saddam
Hussein’s regime, large-scale arms depots in schools, hospitals and
mosques, throughout Iraq have provided ample weapons for the ongoing
insurrection. Vietnamese and Algerian nationalists bought all the arms
they needed on the open market, or confiscated them when possible from
their enemy’s armies. There are so many arms floating around Iraq
that private militias can afford to cash in some of their guns
and mortars, enrich themselves, and still hold on to enough weapons to
continue the insurrection.
Sixth, alternate sources of news, beyond
the propaganda offered by the state, undermine the credibility of
official policy. The Vietnam and Algerian struggles generated
alternative news outlets, which informed the metropolitan population.
Today wide-spread use of the internet and its access to an assortment
of foreign and critical reporting, undercuts intensified media
concentration, news programs increasingly conceived as propaganda, and
embedded reporting in war zones. It also provides counter-information,
which opponents of the war can use.
Lastly, large-scale and long modern wars
cause havoc with national finances. The US borrowed to paid for its
Vietnam venture; France received subventions from the U.S. through
NATO to fight its war in Algeria, but that conflict nevertheless kept
France’s economy on shaky grounds for decades after. The Bush
administration has spent an estimated $155 billion on the Iraqi war.
The Washington Post (October 26, 2004) reported that the Bush
administration plans to ask Congress in February 2005 for $70 billion
more. Iraqi insecurity has kept oil production at a flat 2 million
barrels/day, contrasted to output of 3 million barrels/day before the
introduction of sanctions. A low volume of energy exports from Iraq
contributes to diminished world supplies and higher prices. U.S. tax
hikes of any sort to pay for the war seem out of the question for a
Bush White House, which means that if the pres ident wins re-election
next month, war costs will most probably continue to come from
borrowed funds. I also expect continued higher oil prices. They
reached $56/barrel last Friday. Specialists project price hikes to
$60/barrel in time for the winter heating season. That, plus rising
interest rates, and a further devaluation of the dollar in response to
our growing deficits and negative balances of trade, caused in part by
continued high energy import costs, leave much to worry about.
Does the U.S. have an alternative to
hanging on and escalating the fighting in Iraq? I think it does.
Looking at past conflicts and how protagonists resolved them gives us
some clues for action. Vietnam provides a negative example. After the
Tet offensive the U.S. position deteriorated and lead to the
evacuation of U.S. troops in early 1973, leaving hundreds of thousands
of Vietnamese collaborators of the U.S. stranded. In Algeria, Charles
de Gaulle offered the Algerians a “Peace of the Brave” wherein he
set a timetable for ending the war after staging a referendum, which
allowed a choice for independence. The French resettled in their own
country only 50,000 Algerians, fighting men and their families, out of
the million estimated collaborators (including families) who
sided openly with France.
The U.S. needs to set a timetable for
withdrawal, the sooner the better. The president should announce the
date in a prominent public forum, for example, during his State of the
Union Address. That will force Iraqis to form political coalitions to
prepare for the transition. Interim elections, with candidates vetted
and chosen by the United States, will not buy peace. The political
forces of the country, defined in terms of secular, ethnic,
religious and tribal groups, will have to make the decisions for
themselves and participate fully in reestablishing their sovereignty.
Once they know that true independence is at hand, the givens on the
ground will change. There is always a risk of civil war in Iraq, but
with a guided transition, following a timetable, and with the
cooperation of both secular and religious leaders that can be avoided.
If the U. S. wishes to purchase Iraqi oil from a sovereign state or
companies allowed by an independent Iraq to exploit those
resources, I am sure that the country’s new leaders will be more
than happy to sell their energy at world market prices. If we
believe in democracy, that seems the best way to proceed.
George W. Bush, in a fit of premature
exuberance, announced from the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln
on May 1, 2003 that the United States and its allies had won the Iraq
war. Little did he know then that blowback from victory would cause
havoc in Iraq and growing opposition within the United States to that
same war and perhaps even to his presidency, causing his popularity to
plummet from soaring heights. Modern wars in distant lands take on a
logic of their own and sometimes have the capacity to dislodge from
power those who embark on such adventures.
Stuart Schaar is Professor of Middle East and Global History at Brooklyn
College, CUNY. He co-edited The
Middle East and Islamic World Reader with Marvin E. Gettleman (New York:
Grove/Atlantic, 2003). His latest book, “Fired Up In New York: The Life and Times
of Three Global Citizens” will be published in
2005.
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