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Sunni elite moves toward an accommodation with US occupation
of Iraq
By James Cogan
27 May 2005
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Over 1,000 representatives of the Sunni Muslim political and
religious elite that previously dominated the Baathist state headed
by Saddam Hussein gathered in Baghdad on May 22 to debate participation
in the US-dictated political reorganisation of Iraq. While still
tentative, the conference marks a shift by a previously recalcitrant
faction of the Sunni bourgeois establishment toward legitimising
and joining with the post-invasion regime.
Among those in attendance on May 22 were leading members of
the Iraqi Islamic Party (IIP) and the Association of Muslim Scholars
(AMS), the umbrella organisation of Sunni clerics that called
for a boycott of the US-organised January 30 elections to form
a transitional government in Iraq. The vast majority
of Iraqs Sunnis who make up at least 20 percent of the population
refused to vote. As a result, just 17 of the 275 seats in the
National Assembly are held by Sunni legislators.
Leaders of some of the main Arab tribes in the Sunni heartland
provinces of central and northern Iraq where the anti-occupation
resistance is most intense also took part, as did former Iraqi
officers, many of whom are believed by the US military to be advising
the insurgents.
The AMS and the IIP leadership wield considerable authority
among the Sunni population due to their stance during the elections.
While initially toying with participating, they called for a boycott
amidst the US offensive last November on the predominantly Sunni
city of Fallujah. The destruction and killings by the US military
enraged Iraqis of all religious and ethnic backgrounds, especially
Sunnis, whose communities have borne the brunt of US intimidation
and repression. The boycott became the political focus for a mass
rejection of the occupation.
On May 22, however, the erstwhile opponents of the US takeover
of Iraq mingled with representatives of Adnan Pachachi, the Sunni
exile who returned to Iraq in 2003 and has collaborated with the
occupation from the beginning. With minimal support among the
population, his electoral list received less than 13,000 votes
in the January election and won no seats in the parliament.
The conference statement did not go so far as to openly disassociate
the participants from the armed resistance. It declared that resisting
the occupier is a legitimate right. At the same time, however,
it referred to liberating Iraq by all legal means,
a clause that lends credibility to US claims that the armed resistance
is criminal. Most significantly, it called for the nomination
of 10 to 15 representatives to take part in the recently-formed
committee delegated with drafting a new Iraqi constitution by
August.
Involvement in drafting the constitution amounts to an endorsement
of the next stage of elections being organised under US occupation.
A referendum to adopt the constitution is scheduled to be held
by October 15 and new elections on December 15. If the proposed
constitution is agreed to by the IIP and AMS and ratified by the
referendum, it is unlikely these parties will call for a further
boycott.
The agreement to take part in the process amounts to an implicit
abandonment by the AMS of its demand for an immediate withdrawal
of all occupation troops and the holding of elections free of
foreign interference.
Members of both organisations used the conference to explicitly
call for an end to the boycott tactic. AMS representative Ahmed
Abdul Ghafur Sammarrai stated: We must not make the same
mistake again. Sunnis must unite to prepare to participate in
the next election. IIP delegate Tarik al-Hashimy said: Were
trying to build a concrete coalition for the next election.
Hinting at the type of coalition that may be forged in coming
months, Pachachi told the New York Times that he had recently
met with Iyad Allawi, the former US-installed interim prime minister,
and they had agreed to join forces to compete with the more
religious Shiite parties.
The timing and tone of the gathering suggests that behind-the-scenes
many more negotiations have been taking place, including between
Sunni powerbrokers and US officials and, most likely, with Allawis
Iraqi National Accord (INA). It coincides with a concerted push
by the Bush administration for the incorporation of significant
elements of the Sunni establishment into the new government.
Since the January 30 election the US publicly expressed its
frustration with the Shiite United Iraqi Alliance (UIA) coalition
that won the majority of seats in the National Assembly and dominates
the transitional government headed by Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari.
The UIA articulates the interests of a predominantly Shiite
layer of the Iraqi elite, which was excluded from political power
and related economic benefits under Hussein. It is endorsed by
the leading Shiite cleric in Iraq, Ali al-Sistani, and is centred
on the fundamentalist Daawa Party and Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI). It also includes Ahmed Chalabis
Iraqi National Congress (INC)a grouping of mainly US-based
Iraqi businessmen and land-owners who were driven into exile when
the Iraqi monarchy was overthrown in 1958 or who fell out with
the military and Baathist regimes that ruled Iraq over the following
decades.
On a number of occasions, Bush administration officials, US
military officers and the American media have pressured the UIA
to repudiate its policy of excluding former members of Saddam
Husseins regime and military from the state apparatus being
assembled under US occupationa policy dubbed de-Baathification.
Most recently, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice flew to
Iraq on May 15 to personally demand that Jaafari include more
Sunni political figures in the drafting of the constitution.
US imperialism and de-Baathification
Behind the US opposition to de-Baathification is the assessment
that one driving force behind the insurgencywhich is tying
down close to 140,000 US troops and costing more than $1 billion
per week to fightis the resentment of the former Baathist
establishment and Sunni middle class at their loss of power and
wealth since 2003. That is, they are not fighting out of die-hard
loyalty to the old regime, as US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
declared repeatedly in the early stages of the occupation, but
to restore the privileges of the Sunni elite.
The rough draft of a study into the Iraqi insurgency published
on May 19 by the US thinktank, the Center for International and
Strategic Studies, states for example:
The CIA has acknowledged in classified studies that Baathist
and ex-regime loyalists represent only a part of the insurgency...
The largest element of the insurgency appears to be newly radicalised
Iraqi Sunnis. According to the CIA reports, the Sunni loss of
power, prestige and economic influence is a key factor, as is
unemployment and a loss of personal statusdirect and disguised
unemployment among young Sunni men has been 40 to 60 percent in
many areas ever since the fall of Saddam Hussein. Many insurgents
are motivated by tribal or family grievances, nationalism and
religious duty. Others are motivated by the US occupationparticularly
those who have lost a loved one fighting US forcesand the
political and economic turbulence that accompanied the occupation.
After initially pursuing a policy of de-Baathification, the
US installation of Iyad Allawi as interim prime minister in June
2004 marked an initial turn toward what could be called a policy
of re-Baathification. Allawi, a secular Shiite and
former Baathist, oversaw the wholesale recruitment of hundreds
of former Baathist secret police into the new internal security
ministry and thousands of officers from Husseins armed forces
into the new Iraqi Army. In November 2004, Allawi facilitated
the massive US offensive against the city of Fallujah, which was
largely controlled by Islamic fundamentalist opponents of both
the occupation and the former regime.
However, Allawis Iraqi List coalition received only 14
percent of the vote in the January 30 election, compared with
48 percent for the Shiite alliance. The Bush administration has
therefore been compelled to base a transitional government on
the UIA parties, who represent social forces that see the realisation
of their interests as bound up with undermining the position of
the former, predominantly Sunni ruling stratum.
Mass hostility to the occupation, combined with the power struggle
between the rival factions of the ruling elite, has produced a
dramatic upsurge in the scale of violence in Iraq in the months
since. There has been a sharp increase in what are clearly sectarian
bombings and killings targeting Shiites and an increasing number
of retaliatory attacks on Sunni figures, raising the danger of
a descent toward civil war. The AMS last week publicly accused
SCIRIs Badr Corp militia of assassinating several Sunni
clerics and closed down hundreds of Sunni mosques for three days
in protest.
The US military has been forced to launch three major offensives
on Sunni areas this monthtwo in western Iraq and one in
the suburbs of Baghdadin an attempt to stem the constant
insurgent attacks on occupation forces. US casualties have climbed
from 36 dead in March to 62 so far in May, with more 400 more
wounded.
As the quagmire deepens, a New York Times editorial
on May 20 succinctly summed up the conclusions being drawn in
Washington. It declared that as long as the Shiite-dominated government
continued to shun a serious political strategy to draw away
Sunni support from the insurgents, large numbers of American troops
will be stuck fighting a prolonged and bloody counterinsurgency
in much of northern and western Iraq.
The Times solution was explicit: It is understandable
that Iraqs Shiites and Kurds, who suffered so much under
Saddam Hussein, are uncomfortable about letting people who served
his predominantly Sunni regime back into power. But unless lower-
and middle-echelon Baathists are allowed to serve, much of the
Sunni professional class will remain excluded from government
and sympathetic to the insurgents.
The push by the Bush administration to impose this perspective
is a measure of the desperation in US ruling circles over the
state of affairs in Iraq. After promoting the lie that Iraq was
invaded to liberate its people from Saddam Hussein,
Washington is now attempting to buy off a significant proportion
of the Baathist elite and state apparatus that kept him in power
with the offer of political positions.
The US calculates that incorporating Sunni political leaders
into an American client-state will confuse and disorientate the
broad hostility toward the occupation among Sunnis and divide
the insurgency. Moreover, US plans to decrease the number of American
troops in Iraq hinge on assembling a local state apparatus that
is capable of maintaining a reign of terror against the population
and forcing it to bow down before the indefinite US domination
of the country. Those with the most experience in repressing the
Iraqi people are Husseins former security forces. Former
Baathists who were recruited under Allawi in 2004 are already
being used as counterinsurgency death-squads in some areas.
The US overtures have encouraged a substantial layer of the
Sunni establishment to seek an accommodation with the occupation
in return for some of its former privileges. In the final analysis,
this venal perspective has been at the basis of the Sunni elites
encouragement of armed resistance over the past two years. They
have sought to exploit popular hostility among the broader Sunni
population as a bargaining chip to extract better terms from US
imperialism.
The conference on May 22 is the clearest signal yet that the
IIP and the Sunni clergy are moving to use their influence to
channel the Sunni masses in the reactionary direction of sectarianism.
As far as delegates were concerned, the mistake in
calling for a boycott was that it allowed their Shiite rivals
to dominate the US puppet government in Baghdad.
The inability of the Iraqi bourgeoisie to unite the overwhelming
popular opposition to the US occupation into a common political
movement is testimony to the utter bankruptcy of any perspective
that seeks to uphold private property interests and the nation-state
system. The concern of all factions of the Iraqi ruling classSunni,
Shiite and Kurdishis not the liberation of the masses from
oppression and exploitation, but maneuvering with US imperialism
to enhance their own wealth and privileges.
See Also:
US issues more demands on Iraqi government
to include former Baathists
[20 May 2005]
US demands Iraq's new government repudiate
"de-Baathification"
[4 May 2005]
Who is Iraq's new prime minister
Ibrahim al-Jaafari?
[18 April 2005]
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