[Note to Atlantic Free Press readers: With Michael Schwartz's post today, Tomdispatch will shut down for at least a week. The next post will either be on Thursday August 9th or Monday the 13th. This website will then be on a lighter schedule until late in the month when it will shut down again until after Labor Day.]
Under the headline, "A War We Just Might Win," the New York Times on Monday published an op-ed by Michael O'Hanlon of the Brookings Institution and Kenneth Pollack, both referred to as critics of the way the Bush administration has "handled" the war in Iraq. (Pollack had, in fact, been a major cheerleader for the Bush administration's invasion in 2003.) After eight days in Iraq "meeting with American and Iraqi military and civilian personnel," the two claimed that "the debate in Washington was surreal," and that "[w]e are finally getting somewhere in Iraq, at least in military terms." The President's surge plan, as carried out by General David Petraeus, was, they added, working. Their carefully cobbled together formula for where it might take American forces went like this: It had "the potential to produce not necessarily victory' but a sustainable stability that both we and the Iraqis could live with." They concluded: "[T]here is enough good happening on the battlefields of Iraq today that Congress should plan on sustaining the effort at least into 2008." Of course, O'Hanlon's and Pollack's ideas about what "Iraqis could live with" and Iraqi ideas on the subject may turn out to differ somewhat.
Be that as it may, the Bush administration even though characterized in the piece as having "lost essentially all credibility" was desperate enough to treat the event as a glowing ray of sunlight in the gloom of night. According to Martha Raddatz of ABC News:
"The White House was thrilled with the op-ed piece because it concentrated on military progress and didn't say very much about the lack of political progress. This is what the President has been trying to push. The White House sent this op-ed piece out to the press corps, anybody that would read it today. They are hoping this buys them more time on the Hill for the surge to continue, but they've been hoping that for a long time."
On that very day, the Iraqi parliament adjourned for a more than month-long vacation without having passed a single major "benchmark" urged on its legislators by either the Bush administration or Congress ("'We do not have anything to discuss in the parliament, no laws or constitutional amendments, nothing from the government. Differences between the political factions have delayed the laws,' Kurdish lawmaker Mahmoud Othman told Reuters."); the major Sunni faction in Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's government was threatening to withdraw; and the Prime Minister himself was reportedly under challenge and in some danger of being ousted by members of his own party.
And that was just the accompanying political news. On the day of the O'Hanlon/Pollack op-ed, a summary report on the humanitarian situation in Iraq by the international aid group Oxfam and about 80 other aid agencies, gave the concept of "sustainable stability" some grim meaning. In fact, the report which the administration did not rush to pass out to a single reporter added up to a functional definition of Iraq as a land in a state of unsustainable instability, a "nation" in which an estimated one million families are now headed by widows. From child malnutrition to "absolute poverty," large-scale unemployment to an almost blanket lack of effective sanitation, the Iraqis O'Hanlon and Pollack didn't meet with are in a hell on Earth. The Oxfam report estimates that almost one-third of the Iraqi population is "in need of emergency aid."
In fact, while Pollack and O'Hanlon met with the "known
knowns" in the equivalent of Green Zone Iraq, a brave French reporter,
Anne Nivat, spent
two weeks living as an Iraqi in a Shiite neighborhood in "Red Zone"
Baghdad. ("Only my contacts knew that I was a foreigner and a
reporter.") She even went from Red Zone to Green Zone Iraq once to
like Pollack and O'Hanlon have a meeting with General Petraeus. ("He
met me in full combat gear. Between the first checkpoint and the
parking lot of the U.S. Embassy, still based in Saddam Hussein's
Republican Palace, a distance of about a mile, I was checked six times.
I had come from the "red zone.")
From Nivat, you get a very
different picture of "sustainable" Iraq, a place, it turns out, where
you're lucky to get 1-2 hours of electricity delivered a day, while the
temperatures soar to 130 degrees and those with small generators that
can make electricity are "the most powerful people in every district."
In one of the more upbeat aspects of her tale, Nivat describes the rise
of a new job category, a "new breed of real-estate agents." They broker
house or apartment exchanges between Sunnis and Shiites being
ethnically cleansed from their present neighborhoods. The parties agree
to exchange abodes "until the situation improves." The Shiite man, who
took Nivat around for her two weeks in Baghdad, in one of the more
devastating quotes to come out of the capital in recent times, told
her: "My uncles and cousins were murdered by Saddam's regime. I wanted
desperately to get rid of him. But today, if Saddam's feet appeared in
front of me, I would fall to my knees and kiss them!"
In the meantime, of course, the Bush administration with a helping
hand from O'Hanlon and Pollack continues along a path guaranteed not
to create a newly sustainable Iraq, but to prolong Iraq's unsustainable
instability for endless months, or years, or even decades to come.
General Petraeus is now publicly talking about
"a large contingent of [U.S.] troops in Iraq until the middle of 2009"
with no end to the American occupation in sight. For all of them, from
the President down to the pundits, the thing that must be and can't
be sustained is what, in the Vietnam period, was known as "American
credibility" and now might be thought of as an American position of
dominance in the Iraqi heartland of the energy heartlands of the
planet. This is a terrible imperial farce in support of a "surge" plan
that, as Michael Schwartz explains, has already surged in directions
too predictable and horrible for sustenance. Tom
The Benchmarks That Matter
The American Military's Lose-Lose Dilemma in Iraq
By Michael Schwartz
President Bush has called upon Congress, the
American public, the Iraqi people, and the world to suspend judgment
until at least September on the success of his escalation of the war,
euphemistically designated a "surge." But the fact is: It has already
failed and it's obvious enough why.
Much attention has been paid to the recent White House report that
recorded "satisfactory performance" on eight Congressional benchmarks
and "unsatisfactory performance" on six others (with an additional four
receiving mixed evaluations). Fred Kaplan of Slate and Patrick Cockburn of the Independent,
among others, have demonstrated the fraudulence of this assessment.
Cockburn summarized his savaging of the document thusly: "In reality,
the six failures are on issues critical to the survival of Iraq while
the eight successes are on largely trivial matters."
As it
happens, though, these benchmarks are almost completely beside the
point. They don't represent the key goals of the surge at all, which
were laid out clearly by the President in his January speech announcing the operation:
"Our
troops will have a well-defined mission: to help Iraqis clear and
secure neighborhoods, to help them protect the local population, and to
help ensure that the Iraqi forces left behind are capable of providing
the security that Baghdad needs."
The success of such
"benchmarks" can be judged relatively easily. As President Bush himself
put the matter: "We can expect to see Iraqi troops chasing down
murderers, fewer brazen acts of terror, and growing trust and
cooperation from Baghdad's residents."
This was supposed to be accomplished through two major initiatives.
Most visibly, the U.S. military was to adopt a more aggressive strategy
for pacifying Baghdad neighborhoods considered strongholds for the
Sunni insurgency. Occupation officials blame them for the bulk of the
vehicle bombs and other suicide attacks that have devastated mainly
Shiite neighborhoods. The second, less visible (but no less important)
initiative involved subduing the Mahdi army of cleric Moqtada al-Sadr
the largest and most ferocious of the Shia militias which occupation
officials blame for the bulk of death-squad murders in and around the
capital.
These changes should have been observable as early as this July. By then, as a "senior American military officer" told the New York Times, it would already be time to refocus attention on "restoring services and rebuilding the neighborhoods.""
To judge the surge right now by the President's real "benchmarks"
we need only look for a dramatic drop in vehicle and other "multiple
fatality bombings" in populated areas, and for a dramatic drop in the
number of tortured and executed bodies found each morning in various
dumping spots around Baghdad.
By these measures, the surge has already been a miserable failure,
something that began to be documented as early as April when Nancy
Youssef of the McClatchy newspapers
reported that there had been no decline in suicide-bombing deaths; and
that, after an initial decline in the bodies discarded by death-squads
around the capital, the numbers were rising again. (These trends have
been substantiated by the Brookings Institution, which has long
collected the latest statistics from Iraq.)
A more vivid way
to appreciate the nature of the almost instantaneous failure of the
overall surge operation is anecdotally by reading news reports of
specific campaigns like the report Julian Barnes and Ned Parker of
the Los Angeles Times
sent in from Baghdad's Sunni-majority Ubaidi neighborhood, which was
headlined: "U.S. troop buildup in Iraq falling short"). It concluded
ominously, "U.S. forces so far have been unable to establish security,
even for themselves."
Or we might note that, instead of ebbing, violence in Iraq was flooding
into new areas, just beyond the reach of the U.S. combat brigades
engaged in the surge. Or perhaps it's worth pointing out that, by July,
the highly fortified "Green Zone" in the very heart of Baghdad
designed as the invulnerable safe haven for American and Iraqi
officials had become a regular target for increasingly destructive
mortar and rocket attacks launched from unpacified neighborhoods
elsewhere in the capital. According to New York Times reporters Alissa J. Rubin and Stephen Farrell, the Zone has been "attacked almost daily for weeks."
Or we could focus on the fact that the long supply lines
needed to support the surge massive convoys of trucks moving weapons,
ammunition, and supplies heading north from Kuwait into Baghdad have
become a regular target for insurgents. Embedded reporter Michael Yon,
for instance, recently reported that, for convoys on this route, "it's
not unusual to be diverted or delayed a half-dozen times or more due to
real or suspected bombs."
In the end, though, perhaps the
best indicator is the surging strength of the surge's primary target in
Shia areas. Since the surge plan was officially launched in
mid-February, according to the Times' Rubin, the Mahdi Army "has effectively taken over vast swaths of the capital."
Twenty thousand more American combat troops are now in and around the
capital. (The rest of the 28,500 troops the President sent surging into
Iraq have been dispatched to other provinces outside the capital.) This
has meant a tripling
of American troops on patrol at any given time, but it has failed to
produce either significantly "fewer brazen acts of terror" or progress
in "restoring services and rebuilding the neighborhoods." So it can be
no surprise that the surge has failed to generate "growing trust and
cooperation from Baghdad's residents."
Why Don't U.S. Troops Try to Protect Shia Markets and Mosques?
Why then has the surge failed? And so quickly at that?
This only makes sense when you explore the strategy utilized by the
U.S. military to reduce the number of suicide bombers and the "multiple
fatality bombings" they perpetrate. Terrorist attacks of this sort need
four elements for success: an organization capable of creating such
bombs; a pool of individuals willing to risk or sacrifice their lives
to deliver the explosives; a host community willing to hide the
preparations; and a target community unable to prevent the delivery of
these deadly, indiscriminate weapons of massive destruction.
Virtually all of these attacks are organized by Sunni jihadists
and, while the Brookings database shows that many of them are aimed at
military or government targets, the majority of deaths occur in
spectacular bombings of public gathering spots "soft targets" in
Shia neighborhoods. It might then have seemed logical for U.S.
commanders to concentrate their increased troop strength on these
obvious delivery areas, setting up checkpoints and guard posts that
would scrutinize car and truck traffic entering highly vulnerable
areas.
This strategy might indeed have worked if the U.S.
were willing to form an alliance with local Shia neighborhood defense
forces. As it happens though, the Shia communities in Baghdad are
already well patrolled
by the Mahdi army, whose street fighters have proven effective in
either spotting alien vehicles or responding to reports from local
residents about suspicious cars or people. However, enormous public
spaces, filled with large numbers of non-residents and outside
vehicles, require dense patrolling practices. The Mahdis have been able
to generate such patrol "density" only in their headquarters community,
Sadr City the vast Shia slum in the eastern part of Baghdad. There,
where the Mahdis have a huge presence, there were almost no suicide attacks
until late 2006 when the U.S. military began sending patrols into the
community aimed at disarming, disrupting, or destroying the Sadrist
militia. This forced them off the streets, opening the way for suicide
bombers to reach their targets.
If the U.S. had decided to
join forces with the Mahdis, augmenting their neighborhood patrols with
a strong American presence in public gathering places, they might
indeed have choked off all but a few of the most determined,
resourceful, or lucky bombers. However, this strategy was not adopted,
at least in part because it would have strengthened the Mahdis, a group
that the U.S. military and President Bush had until their recent
fixation on al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) repeatedly designated as their
most dangerous enemy.
Instead, the surge has been forced to focus on the suicide-bomber
"supply side." Lt. Gen Raymond T. Odierno, the commander of day-to-day
U.S. military operations, told Barnes of the Los Angeles Times
that the anti-bombing strategy was directed toward al-Qaeda in Iraq
because they "are the ones that are creating the truck bombs and car
bombs . So we are going after the safe havens that allow them to build
these things without a lot of interference." According to Barnes, the
generals charged with implementing the plan endorsed the surge into
Sunni neighborhoods because, "for the first time, they have enough
forces to root out Al Qaeda fighters by entering havens where U.S.
forces have not been for years."
Thus, the American strategy
for preventing suicide bombings in Shia communities involved flooding
Sunni communities with huge numbers of soldiers.
Invading the Hotbeds of the Insurgency
Historically, to successfully "root out" groups like the al-Qaeda
fighters requires an occupying force capable of enlisting the aid of
large numbers of people within a host community. After all, those
planning multiple-fatality bombings need a level of toleration, if not
outright support or participation, from the surrounding community. If
local residents are totally alienated from the effort, someone will
either take direct action or contact the occupying authorities, who can
then raid key locations, capturing or killing the plotters.
An attack on the "supply side" might therefore have been a viable
option for the Americans, if the host community was hostile to the jihadists. In fact, such hostilityjihadists that local citizens
conform to their fundamentalist beliefs including prohibitions on
alcohol and tobacco consumption, as well as an insistence that men grow
full beards and women wear headscarves.
As a result, a tactical alliance of convenience between the occupation and the nationalist Sunni insurgency against the AQI and other fundamentalist jihadists has been an option for the U.S. military since as early as the last months of 2004, when the U.S. refused an offer by insurgent leaders in Falluja to expel the jihadists
if the U.S. would refrain from its pending attack on the city. The next
year, during a major offensive in Western Anbar province, U.S. military
commanders stood idly by despite explicit calls for help while
local insurgents fought fierce battles with jihadists,
telling embedded reporters that they were letting two equally
objectionable enemies weaken each other. American commanders have
repeatedly enunciated a general principle that they would never form an alliance with, or give aid to, any "Sunni group that had attacked Americans."
Starting in early 2007, this principle was apparently compromised in Anbar Province; by July, under the pressure of the failing surge, it was also being eroded in Baghdad.
But these alliances with local militia groups of various sorts involve
their own sets of problems. They only create further conundrums for
U.S. strategists since, of course, they undermine the larger goals of
the occupation. After all, the anti-al-Qaeda insurgents not the jihadist
car-bombers are, by far, the major force in the insurgency and they
are unremitting enemies of the occupation as well as of the Shia and
Kurdish-dominated central Iraqi government, which they view as an agent
of either the American occupation or Iranian imperial designs.
Major General Rick Lynch, who was involved in negotiations with the Anbar insurgents,
quoted them as saying, "We hate you because you are occupiers. But we
hate Al Qaeda worse, and we hate the Persians even more." Under these
circumstances, any alliance can almost certainly only be temporary,
strengthening as it does the chief antagonist to the American presence.
The Independent's Cockburn summarized the situation this way:
"The
US is caught in [a] quagmire of its own making. Such successes as it
does have are usually the result of tenuous alliances with previously
hostile tribes, insurgent groups or militias. The British experience in
Basra was that these marriages of convenience with local gangs weakened
the central government and contributed to anarchy in Iraq. They did not
work in the long term."
In Baghdad, the U.S. chose at
least for the opening months of the surge to hold the line against
such an alliance with Shia insurgents. Instead, they used the presence
of al-Qaeda militants in Sunni communities as an invitation to attack
the communities themselves, attempting to "root out" the insurgents,
who have been their chief adversary all these years, while also
capturing or killing the al-Qaeda activists responsible for the suicide
attacks on Shia neighborhoods.
But this dual strategy has no hope of capturing the support of local
Sunni communities and, without such support, the U.S. has no choice but
to adopt a grim, if straightforward, strategy of brute force
in neighborhoods where its sources of information (and so targeting)
are, at best, severely limited. The military has, in fact, taken such
crude and, in the end, self-defeating tactical measures as erecting
massive barriers around target Sunni communities to prevent their
quarry from escaping; manning check-points at all entrances to capture
suspects with weapons and explosives in their vehicles; and erecting
outposts within these hostile communities to create a 24-hour
quick-response presence. Worse yet, they have conducted
knock-the-door-down, house-to-house searches looking for suspicious
individuals, weapons, or literature the sort of approach that, for
years, has been known to thoroughly alienate the inhabitants of such
neighborhoods.
This strategy insures that the failure of the
surge is no passing phenomenon. It leads, first of all, to the brutal
treatment of local civilians (of a sort recently documented by Chris
Hedges and Laila al-Arian though the testimony of American military
personnel in the Nation magazine)
at checkpoints, by patrols, and most strikingly during those home
invasions. These assaults only generate further hatred of the
occupation, which, of course, rallies support for the local guerrillas.
As one soldier, who, earlier in the war, participated in such a
midnight home invasion that terrorized a dozen members of an Iraqi
family, recalled: "I thought of my family at the time and thought, 'If
I was the patriarch of the family, if soldiers came from another
country and did this to my family, I would be an insurgent too.'"
These localized applications of "overwhelming" force, when meeting sustained resistance, lead to the calling in of air power or, in some cases, artillery fire. A strategy guaranteed to kill and wound guerrillas and
local inhabitants alike, destroy homes, generate more refugees, wreck
local economies, and, in the end, create ghostly, uninhabitable former
neighborhoods.
Ironically (but logically), while target
communities have been crippled by such prolonged operations, both the
insurgency and the jihadists
have only grown stronger. The attacks swell the ranks of the
insurgency, while a small but sufficient supply of embittered
individuals become willing to sacrifice their lives to achieve some
measure of revenge against the American occupation and/or its Shia
allies.
As for the tiny group of jihadist planners
and bomb manufacturers, most escape targeted neighborhoods when under
pressure, having harvested a new wave of bitterness to fuel a new wave
of suicide bombings.
Meanwhile, Back in Sadr City
In the Shia areas, on the other hand, the Americans were providing an unprecedented opportunity
for suicide bombers to breach Mahdi Army security. In the second prong
of the surge, American patrols were sent into these Shia communities to
target local Mahdi Army leaders. While these operations did not add up
to the full-scale invasions visited upon Sunni neighborhoods, they
nonetheless tended to force Mahdi patrols off the streets, opening up
such communities to jihadist suicide attacks.
Having relocated to new quarters (apparently on the outskirts of Baghdad), the jihadi
leadership utilized newly recruited suicide volunteers to exploit this
sudden vulnerability with a wave of attacks that sent the number of
Shia deaths from multiple-fatality bombings recorded in the Brookings
database soaring from under 300 before the start of the surge to well
over 400 in the months after it began.
And then came the death squads. Originally, they seem to have been organized from Shia militia members by U.S. military and intelligence personnel
and housed in the Iraqi Ministry of the Interior. Modeled after the
American-organized death squads in Central America in the 1980s, they
were designed to murder suspected Sunni resistance leaders and
therefore weaken the insurgency.
After the bombing of the
Golden Mosque in Samarra on February 22, 2006, they achieved partial or
full independence from their American organizers and began targeting
Sunni men in indiscriminate campaigns of torture and execution,
justified by the argument that they were suspected of involvement in
attacks on Shia communities. Just as the car bombers see themselves as
retaliating against American and Iraqi government atrocities in Sunni
communities, the death squads see themselves as executing the jihadist perpetrators of attacks on their neighbors and their possible supporters.
When the surge began, the number of death-squad murders fell, evidently
in part because the death-squad members hoped that American offensives
in Sunni communities would significantly reduce suicide attacks. But as
this hope was dashed, the number of death-squad killings began to rise
again.
The Occupation Faces a "Lose-Lose" Dilemma
As this latest debacle developed, President Bush and his commanding
generals began to argue to Congress, American public opinion, the
Iraqi people, and the world that we must reschedule
the benchmark moment. First, it was from July to September, and then
from September to November, and soon after from 2007 to 2008, and
lately from 2008 to 2009. Congress (which has temporarily suspended its
debate on Iraq policy) and American public opinion (where Bush recorded
an exceedingly modest uptick in "approval" recently) might well give the President a little more breathing room on the basis of these appeals.
But events on the ground in Iraq do not respond to Presidential appeals
or the sunny testimony of generals. In Baghdad and surrounding
provinces, the situation has already entered what might be thought of
as post-surge reality. In part as a consequence of the surge strategy,
ethnic cleansing in major neighborhoods of Baghdad may be nearing
completion; meanwhile, in the north, the shaky relationship between the
Kurds and Turkey is wavering on the brink of a hot war, while the
Kurd-Turkmen-Arab cauldron in the oil-rich city of Kirkuk may erupt any
time into a new Baghdad.
While all this goes on, desperate American military leaders have embraced, amplified, and expanded their anti-al-Qaeda-in-Iraq alliance
with local guerrillas in al-Anbar Province so much for dismantling
Iraqi militias and are lurching toward a new set of disasters. These
may already be underway, starting with a confrontation between the
American commander of the surge plan, General David Petraeus, and the
head of an increasingly embattled and shaky Iraqi government, Prime
Minister Nuri al-Maliki. According to Juan Cole
at his Informed Comment website, Maliki "fears that once the Sunni
tribesmen have dispatched al-Qaeda,' they will turn on the largely
Shiite government with their new American weapons." To prevent this, he
"has considered asking Washington to pull the general out of Baghdad."
For President Bush, who has visibly put all his eggs in General
Petraeus' surge basket, this would be inconceivable, which means that
the next crisis in Iraq policy and probably several after that is
already underway.
As Mahmoud Othman, a veteran Iraqi politician, put it, "The Americans are defeated. They haven't achieved any of their aims."
Michael
Schwartz, Professor of Sociology and Faculty Director of the
Undergraduate College of Global Studies at Stony Brook University, has
written extensively on popular protest and insurgency, and on American
business and government dynamics. His books include Radical Protest and Social Structure and Social Policy and The Conservative Agenda
(edited, with Clarence Lo). His work on Iraq has appeared on numerous
Internet sites, including Tomdispatch, Asia Times, Mother Jones, and
ZNET; and in print in Contexts, Against the Current, and Z Magazine.
His email address is Ms42@optonline.net.
does exist in many Sunni communities, including among insurgent groups
that are the backbone of the fight against the American occupation.
This hostility derives partly from a principled opposition to attacks
on Iraqis most of the 30 or so key insurgent groups have explicitly
stated that they support armed force only against the American-led
coalition forces, often exempting even Iraqi police and military units
from attack. But the hostility also comes from distaste for the
violently enforced demands of the