March 24th, 2008

Five Years of War: Let the Country Divide, and Get Out

 by Ivan Eland  
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Although a U.S. withdrawal and soft partition is not a perfect solution, Iraq is in some sense already partitioned, with forces primarily loyal to ethno-sectarian groups providing security.

As the fifth anniversary of the United States' second-longest (next to Vietnam) and second-costliest (next to World War II) war passes, the good news is that the counterinsurgency strategy of Gen. David Petraeus and Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno seems to be working. The bad news is that it will probably not save Iraq.

Although the U.S. troop "surge" has had some effect, it is probably not the most important factor dampening violence back down to the levels of mid-2004. The United States had comparable force levels in Iraq (about 155,000 troops) in 2005, but the mayhem was worse than now and was increasing.

Furthermore, the carnage in Iraq started dropping even before the United States began the surge (and temporarily increased again as U.S. troops were being added). In part, prior ethnic cleansing that had more cleanly separated hostile Shiite and Sunni populations has likely caused the reduction. Even more important was probably Petraeus' and Odierno's exploitation of the fissure between mainline Sunni insurgents and al-Qaeda in Iraq.

Al-Qaeda in Iraq's blindingly incompetent slaughter of fellow Muslim civilians, which brought rebuke even by al-Qaeda's central leadership, caused Sunni insurgents to get fed up and turn against the group. Petraeus and Odierno cleverly exploited this fissure by driving a wedge between the two factions. Although guerrilla operations are the most successful form of warfare in human history and counterinsurgency forces seldom win over the long term, they do best when they can divide the rebel movement.

The United States was able to defeat the Greek communist insurgents during the 1947-49 period and Filipino rebels from 1900 to 1902 by splitting the insurgencies. In the latter case, the United States was able to persuade Emilio Aguinaldo, the most prominent rebel commander — perhaps by a cash payment — to surrender his forces. In Iraq, the United States is now essentially paying off former Sunni guerrillas in the "Awakening Councils" by funding, equipping and training them to fight al-Qaeda in Iraq and working with the formerly hostile Shiite Mahdi militia.

Although this strategy has merits by attenuating violence in the short term, it will likely exacerbate Iraq's larger problems, thus eventually leading to a full-blown civil war. The Petraeus and Odierno strategy makes sense if the objective is to keep a lid on the violence until President Bush leaves office. When the tar baby is successfully passed onto the next president, Bush can then rerun the "Kissinger" argument from Vietnam. That argument goes something like this: "The United States would have won the Vietnam War if the Democratic Congress hadn't cut off funding for it." In Iraq, the similar Bush administration refrain will be: "The situation in Iraq was improving until we left office and handed over to power to President X."

But Bush's short-term strategy would likely aggravate Iraq's central underlying problem — ethno-sectarian hostility. Had the Bush administration made a serious effort to consult experts on the Arab world before invading Iraq, it would have discovered that the country was one of the most fractured in the Arab world and would be one of the least likely to support and sustain a liberal democratic federation. Prior to supporting former Sunni guerrillas, the administration was only funding, equipping and training two sides — the Kurds and Shiites — in the ongoing civil war. Now the administration is supporting all three sides. The Shiite/Kurdish-controlled government is opposed to the U.S. program to support the Sunnis and has been reluctant to let them in the security forces.

Such deep underlying ethno-sectarian suspicions and fissures have been around for centuries in what is now Iraq and are unlikely to be rectified by passing a few benchmark laws. Given the history of Iraq — in which one group controlled the central government and oppressed the other groups — all groups, even including the formerly ruling Sunnis, are suspicious of central authority and will fight for control of it. Thus, societal cooperation, of which Iraq has little, must precede legislation or the laws will be disregarded. Even less credibility will accrue to laws passed under pressure from an outside occupying power.

The only way the United States can pull its finger out of the dike without the dam crashing down is to use the threat of withdrawal — pulling the backstop out from the corrupt Shiite/Kurdish government — to get the Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds to agree to formally decentralize the country. If the central government has only limited power, the groups would fear its potential oppression less and attenuate their fight for control of it. In a decentralized, loosely confederated Iraq, their militias could provide security over members of their own groups in new autonomous regions (the country would probably have three or more of these regions based on ethno-sectarian or tribal affiliation). Also, judicial, resource (oil) management and most other government functions could reside at the regional level. The central government would be responsible only for diplomatic representation overseas and negotiating trade agreements with other countries and among regions.

Heretofore, the major sticking point in getting the three groups to support such a decentralization scheme was Sunni worries about meager oil resources in their region. The Kurds have had a de facto state in northern Iraq since the end of the Persian Gulf War in 1991. Many Shiite leaders also favor setting up an autonomous region, the possibility of which is guaranteed in Iraq's constitution. Even the Sunnis, finally disabused of the fantasy that they are strong enough to once again rule all of Iraq, and having tasted oppression at the hands of the Shiite-dominated security forces, are becoming more favorable to decentralization.

To push the Shiite/Kurdish-dominated Iraqi government into gerrymandering regional borders — giving territory containing oil to the Sunnis to ensure their acceptance of decentralization — any new U.S. president must establish a timetable for the rapid withdrawal of U.S. forces, which prop up that dysfunctional government.

Because the Shiite have roughly 60 percent of the oil and about 60 percent of the population, the only border that might need to be gerrymandered is near the northern oil fields by Kirkuk between Kurdistan (about 20 percent of the population and approximately 40 percent of the oil) and Sunni-dominated areas (roughly 20 percent of the population and little oil).

The historical record on partitions illuminates dos and don'ts for any soft partition of Iraq into a loose confederation — the most important of which is that the Iraqis must do the dividing themselves for it to have crucial legitimacy in their eyes. In 1947, in partitioning India and Pakistan, Britain found out the hard way that the location of the partition line is vitally important and that an outside power drawing such a border arbitrarily can have disastrous and violent consequences.

Thus, the United States should avoid getting involved in the details of creating borders between regions, but some general lessons can be learned from past partitions. First, regional boundaries don't have to exactly mirror ethno-sectarian areas, but they should come as close as possible. The case of Northern Ireland shows that a large minority (Catholics), which could be perceived as a threat by the majority (Protestants), should not be stranded on the other side of the borderline. A small minority on the other side of the line will probably experience little violence (Protestants in Ireland). Second, the case of Kosovo demonstrates that boundaries must consider ethno-sectarian or tribal shrines and sites. Third, although drawing borders along ethno-sectarian divides should minimize population movements, some migration will likely be necessary. Such movements must be voluntary, can be encouraged through incentives and must be protected (as the violence in Indian-Pakistan in 1947 showed).

Although a U.S. withdrawal and soft partition is not a perfect solution, Iraq is in some sense already partitioned, with forces primarily loyal to ethno-sectarian groups providing security. U.S. policy training of such armed organizations is merely reinforcing this de facto partition. Such an unratified partition is very dangerous and will likely lead to a full-blown civil war. Only a new American president signaling a rapid U.S. withdrawal could motivate the parties to formalize, adjust and make permanent the decentralized Iraq that already exists.

Foreign Affairs: Iraq War



Ivan Eland is a Senior Fellow at The Independent Institute, Director of the Institute’s Center on Peace & Liberty, and author of the books The Empire Has No Clothes, and Putting “Defense” Back into U.S. Defense Policy.
ieland@independent.org
http://www.independent.org

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  1. The American Civil War and WWII both lasted right at 5 years. Technically, the Korean War is our longest-running foreign action to date, as it remains ongoing to this day. In addition, the cost to the United States of executing WWII, not including figures such as Lend-Lease aid, was 288 billion in 1945 dollars, or over 3 trillion in today's money. At last report, even over at the Daily Kos, we haven't spent quite 3 trillion in Iraq yet. We may have killed 3 trillion civilians though - it's hard to tell.

    Comment by Patrick Mulligan | March 24, 2008

  2. But hey, let's not let facts get into the way of perfectly good rhetoric!

    Comment by Patrick Mulligan | March 24, 2008

  3. I already answered Eland’s faulty 'surge analysis' in my comments to his previous article (see: http://www.intellectualconservative.com/2008/03/11/accepting-reality-is-no-vice-and-being-oblivious-is-no-virtue/), along with his claims regarding the effectiveness of guerrilla warfare, and will not repeat all that here. His suggestions of ineffectuality were just as unsupported by any proof, there, and just as biased.

    Eland's 7th & 8th paragraphs above are no more than a provocation that supposes Eland has a better idea of what Bush is thinking than Bush does himself, and assumes the worst possible motivation. There is ample evidence Bush ‘consulted’ many Muslims and Arab ‘experts’, and continues to consult them, contrary to what Eland implies. So much so, many supporters feel he relies on them too much. Bush knows probably better than Eland how fractured Iraq is and how difficult it is creating a workable democracy. Unlike Eland, however, Bush is willing to try it before condemning it as futile and consigning the Iraqi people to another despot. Saying we now fund all three sides against each other is scurrilous, and suggests cupidity because the only way republican government can work is by NOT excluding any group from power sharing. We are supporting all three factions, but not supporting anything that smacks of infighting. We are supporting them putting their house in order; no more. If this takes longer than Bush has in office, then that is no fault of his and the next President must be prepared to finish it. If Bush were, instead, to support one group over the others (as Eland seems to suggest he is) simply to finish and get out, Bush would then be guilty of the very thing his Eland accuses him of – supporting puppet regimes and leaving it to others to fix. We can be sure Eland would then pounce on Bush as a puppet-master. So, Eland has set this up as a damned-if-you-do and damned-if-you-don't proposition in order to nail Bush (and his supportbase) either way.

    Comment by Bob Stapler | March 28, 2008

  4. Dear Mr. Eland:

    I think your conclusion that a divided Iraq may be a more workable solution than the current federation is certainly possible, but how that would come about is almost as problematic as the difficulties of staying together.

    Kurdistan is an obvious viable de facto independent area. It would be vehemently opposed by Turkey, Syria, and Iran who have large kurdish populations, perhaps to the point of war, but on the other hand, Kurdistan could prove to be one of the few American allies in the mideast and a bulwark against the Iranians and Syrians.

    You mention, the Kurds ceding some of their oil producing area, most likely Mosul and Kirkuk, but that is a tall order. The Kurds who were the majoritry population of Mosul before Hussein's forced Arabization, do not appear very willing to drop the reclamation of what was formerly a Kurd majority area and indeed are in a bitter struggle to regain supremacy over the newly immigrant Arabs and the longterm Turkmen minority.

    The other difficulty will be Baghdad. I cannot see either the Sunnis or Shia giving up the capital city without a fight. I don't think there is a recent accurate census, but my understanding is the population is relatively evenly divided between the two groups. Perhaps, Baghdad could be a seperately administered case, but it is a longshot.

    Looking at the historical record, there are certainly many examples either way of the virtues of staying intact vs. breaking apart a nation. We have our own civil war, which kept us together at an enormous cost. Who knows what would have happened if the Confederacy were allowed to have remained.

    I think the recent dissolution of Czechoslovakia in 1993, is a textbook case of a succesful dissolution, and Yugoslavia as probably a necessary one.

    So, how and if the country could be divided, remains a concept more than a clear alternative, but in terms of us getting out, I think there are some important considerations.

    Regardless of ones position on the virtue of our involvement in this war, we started a process which has resulted in a horrific result for the Iraqi people.

    I blame this on the terrorists, but since we opened the Pandoras box from which they sprung, we bear some responsibility for fixing the problem. At this point in time US forces might be the only stabilizing element in the country.

    I see two camps on this issue which to me are equally wrong. The "stay in regardless", and the "pull out regardless" camp.

    I am in the camp of the Kenny Rogers proverbial gambler, " you got to know when to hold, and know when to fold". Circumstances dictate these decisions, and to declare ones intentions before all the cards are turned up is bad poker and foreign policy.

    Comment by yonkel | March 29, 2008

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