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They Don't Like Us
The Bush administration's tendency to engage in wishful thinking
led to critical missteps that helped ignite a pivotal week.
By Shibley Telhami
San Jose Mercury
Sunday, April 11, 2004
The
pattern was familiar: After bloody confrontations last week that left more than
40 Americans and hundreds of Iraqis dead, the blame in
Washington focused on a single
"outlaw" Iraqi Shiite leader, Muqtada al-Sadr. As the Bush administration portrayed it, Sadr was one of the only dark spots in an otherwise
positive picture of an emerging prosperous and democratic Iraq.
This
narrative -- that a few rabble-rousers are obscuring the real progress being
made -- has taken many forms since the toppling of Saddam Hussein's government a
year ago. Convinced that Iraqis would see Americans as liberators, the Bush
administration has consistently underestimated the extent of Iraqi opposition
and the prevalent view of Americans as occupiers.
At first, the blame for
violence rested with "remnants" of Saddam Hussein's government, then
with a few "Saddam loyalists" and "foreign terrorists,"
later with the "Sunni triangle," and then, Sunnis in general. When
the fighting spread last week to Shiite areas, the administration said the
problem was primarily one defiant man and his followers.
There is
always an element of truth to the administration's rendition of the Iraq
story: In the current episode, Sadr is painted as a
maverick with a relatively small following. And it is true that the young Shiite
leader lacks theological seniority, has many enemies among the Shiites and does
not have the backing of most of the clergy, especially most senior leaders. His
prominence is mainly a legacy of his father, a highly revered Shiite cleric who
stood up to Saddam and was killed in 1999.
But this
version of the story misses the point. It is rarely the case in areas of
conflict that those who engage in actual fighting are majorities; most are
usually passive. Most of the time, life in Baghdad,
Mosul or
Basra appears perfectly
normal, with people going about the business of earning food for their
families. Until a bomb explodes, or a missile strikes.
All it takes to incite violence is a few who are willing to plant a bomb.
3 central questions
To figure
out if last week's violence will spread out of control, the administration
needs to ask more central questions than how many followers Sadr
has right now: Are there determined groups willing to stand up to those who
carry on with violent means? Are the majorities of the passive public wishing
the militants well or ill? And are the ranks of those willing to fight
shrinking or growing? The answers may be more troubling than the Bush
administration has been willing to accept -- or than its representatives have
been willing to admit.
Take, for
example, the behavior of Iraqi police who are supposed to become the backbone
of Iraq's
internal security after the transfer of sovereignty. Many of them stepped aside
last week as Sadr's militia took to the streets and
came to control all or most of three Iraqi cities. Some reportedly expressed
sympathy for the militias.
Even more potentially troubling to the United States: There are signs of
possible coordination, and certainly sympathy, between Sunni and Shiite
factions. Despite significant
differences on many issues, they share an opposition to the occupation. Last
week, Sadr was being hailed in some of the Sunni
press and his picture was being posted in some Sunni towns.
Refusing
to acknowledge the scope of the problem not only creates a misconception at
home about progress in Iraq,
but it also muddles decision making. Would the administration have decided to
announce Sadr was a wanted man and close his
newspaper if it believed Shiite anger toward the United States was widespread, that Sadr's support could increase and that the potential for a
Sunni-Shiite coordinated opposition would emerge?
View of the US
The view
of the United States as an occupying power that must relinquish authority to a
legitimate Iraqi government is widespread in Iraq, including among the Shiites
and other segments of the Iraqi population that were happy to see Saddam
Hussein's government fall. It is also clear that the appointed Iraqi Governing
Council lacks legitimacy and is seen primarily as an instrument of U.S.
occupation.
No one today speaks for most
Iraqis. But probably no one makes as much of a difference as the Shiite
spiritual leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani. The
most influential and respected Shiite theological figure in Iraq, he demonstrated
his power in the past few months as he was able to mobilize hundreds of
thousands of people to take to the streets to protest the U.S. plan to bypass
direct elections.
The United States actually understands Sistani's power, but U.S.
policy-makers in Iraq
didn't seem to grasp the dilemma they put him in when they moved against Sadr. Although the less militant Sistani
probably views Sadr as a threat to his authority, he
increasingly finds himself having to take his side. Even Sistani
has limited power and needs to maintain his nationalist credentials, and
opposition to the United
States outweighs opposition to Sadr.
In intensifying the battle
against Sadr's Shiite men, and in mounting the type
of operation in Sunni Al-Fallujah last week that
included an American attack on a mosque sheltering insurgents, the United States made it impossible for any
credible Iraqi leader to take America's
side.
Surely the United States felt that it was in
something of a no-win situation. If it didn't strike back against insurgents --
including the mob that recently mutilated the bodies of Americans -- it could
leave soldiers and other Americans vulnerable to more attacks. But the net
result is the same: The bloody outcome assures more thirst for revenge, broader
public sympathy for the militants, and more opposition to the United States. Sistani may want to remain on the fence, but with every
casualty, he is forced to move closer to Sadr.
Last week
may end up being a pivotal one because it made clear that there are no good
options for America in Iraq.
Inevitably, there is a tendency to look back to try to figure out what the
administration could have done differently to avoid facing such bleak choices.
The failure to exploit
American influence immediately after the fall of Saddam to broaden the
international role and stakes in Iraq, the reluctance to move closer to Sistani on the issue of Iraqi elections, the destruction of
existing Iraqi institutions, especially the army, and more recently, the hasty
closure of Sadr's newspaper all look like critical
missteps.
Flawed decisions
Certainly, hindsight is
always clearer. But in this case, there is a pattern of wishful thinking that
blurred the picture and resulted in those flawed decisions. Administration
officials have indulged in such thinking in part because they continue to rely
for information on self-interested Iraqis, especially former expatriates, many
of whom we now know provided erroneous information before the war on weapons of
mass destruction. The other culprit in American leaders' rosy outlook is the
political need to tell "the good news" about Iraq to the American public, which
has further distorted the analysis.
But the battle for Iraq
has always been as much outside of that country as it was within. Iraq was to be either an inspiring model for the
people of the Middle East in the pursuit of democracy or an example of American
resolve that would command respect for U.S. power. Those goals may yet be
met if one remains optimistic about the prospects for this troubled country in
the years to come. But for now, the pictures of unrest and the American
crackdown work against the United States
in the Middle East and in much of the world.
Consider the recent statement
by former U.N. arms inspector Hans Blix that Iraq today
is in worse shape than it was under Saddam Hussein. Regardless of the objective
facts in Iraq
itself (where no doubt some Iraqis feel their country is better off), the
perception in much of the world, and certainly in the Middle East, echoes Blix's.
Bleak U.S.
options
In the Arab world, where the
majority of people had predicted that the war would result in less democracy in
the region, most see the continued bloodshed, the personal insecurity, the
economic hardship and the collapse of social norms as frightening experiences
to be avoided.
Rather
than serving as an inspiring model, today's Iraq is a tool in the hands of
authoritarian governments reluctant to embark on rapid change and happy to
point to the Iraqi example: "Is this what you want for your own
country?" And while many governments have been awed by the exercise of
American power, most now see the United States
as far weaker because it depleted its financial and military resources in Iraq.
As
American options in the short-term look increasingly bleak, questions are again
being raised about whether the United States
should try to meet the projected June 30 date for the transfer of sovereignty
to Iraq
or delay it.
That very
debate may be distorting. Whatever one calls such
formal change in the sovereign status of Iraq, both the reality on the
ground and the global perceptions of that reality are not likely to change
much: American forces will remain, Iraqi security will be highly dependent on
them, and the U.S.-appointed government will continue to be highly responsive
to American decisions. Few around the world will view Iraq as
sovereign.
Instead of focusing on
sovereignty in the short term, the administration -- and Iraq -- would
be better served if the president considered more dramatic options. One would
be challenging the U.N. Security Council to devise its own plan for Iraq,
increasing its stakes in the country's future; another would be contemplating
the possibility of early elections, even if imperfect, if that's what it takes
to gain the support of credible Iraqi leaders such as Sistani.
The stakes are far too great
to remain in the mode of wishful thinking or to link policy options to an
election-year timetable.
Shibley Telhami is Anwar Sadat Professor for Peace and Development at the
University of Maryland and a senior fellow at Saban Center of the Brookings
Institution. His best-selling book, The Stakes: America and the Middle East,
is available in paperback.
Copyright © 2004, San Jose Mercury
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