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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
US intelligence report points to Iraqi governments removal
By Peter Symonds
27 August 2007
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The National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iraq released last
week reflects a growing consensus not just among the US spy agencies,
but in the White House and American ruling elite, that the main
obstacle to the US agenda in Iraq is the government of Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki.
Not surprisingly, the four-page unclassified portion of the
NIE drawn up by 16 US intelligence agencies backs the Bush administrations
surge strategy. The report highlighted measurable
but uneven improvements in Iraqs security situation since
the last estimate in January 2007 and predicted further
modest gains as long as US troops remained and aggressive
military operations continued.
Nevertheless, despite its muted, conservative language, the
NIE painted a grim picture of the US occupation. [T]he level
of overall violence, including attacks on and casualties among
civilians, remains high; Iraqs sectarian groups remain unreconciled;
AQI [Al Qaeda in Iraq] retains the ability to conduct high-profile
attacks; and, to date, Iraqi political leaders remain unable to
govern effectively, it stated.
The final comment about the Maliki government reflects the
frustration in US ruling circles over the failure of the 2003
invasion to transform the country into a stable client state and
to open up its vast oil reserves for exploitation by American
corporations. Just weeks before Washingtons top general
and its senior diplomat in Baghdad are due to report to the US
Congress, none of the Bush administrations so-called benchmarks,
including the passage of oil laws, has been met.
Without openly calling for Malikis removal, the logic
of the NIEs judgments certainly leads to that
conclusion. The report notes the US militarys gains in enlisting
the support of Sunni tribes and some insurgents in fighting so-called
Al Qaeda groups, but highlights the failure of the Shiite-dominated
government in Baghdad to reach any accommodation with these new
Sunni allies. [W]e judge these initiatives will only translate
into widespread political accommodation and enduring stability
if the Iraqi government accepts and supports them, it warned.
The NIE also assessed that the position of Maliki
would become more precarious over the next six to
12 months because of criticism by Shiite parties, as well as Sunni
and Kurdish parties. The Iraqi government would continue
to struggle to achieve national-level political reconciliation
and improved governance over the same period. The NIE highlighted
the need for a fundamental shift in the factors driving
Iraqi political and security developments for long-term
progress to be madethe most obvious shift being
Malikis removal.
The NIE document followed a barrage of comments in Washington
last week expressing dissatisfaction with the Maliki government.
After a two-day visit to Iraq, Carl Levin, the Democratic Party
chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, openly called
for the Iraqi parliament to replace Maliki with a less sectarian
and a more unifying prime minister. Leading presidential
contender, Hillary Clinton, publicly endorsed Levins remarks
a day later.
President Bush stopped short of openly calling for Maliki to
go. Yet, while nominally continuing to support the Iraqi prime
minister, he declared last Tuesday: The fundamental question
is: Will the government respond to the demands of the people?
If the government doesnt respond to the demands of the people,
they will replace the government. The US ambassador to Iraq,
Ryan Crocker, added his own damning assessment of the Baghdad
government last week as extremely disappointing.
The appeal to the demands of the Iraqi people is
simply absurdthe vast majority of Iraqis are opposed to
continued US occupation of their country. The moves against Maliki
are determined by the shifting requirements of US strategy not
only in Iraq but more broadly throughout the Middle East. The
Bush administration backed the Shiite and Kurdish parties that
form the Maliki government as a means for ousting Saddam Husseins
Baathist regime, which rested on Iraqs Sunni Arab elite.
However, having provoked an anti-US insurgency and a sectarian
civil war between Sunni and Shiite militias, the White House is
now demanding that Baghdad accommodates sections of the ousted
Baathist regime in order to divide the Sunni insurgency.
More fundamentally, as the Bush administration escalates its
confrontation with neighbouring Iran, the Maliki government, with
its ties to Tehran, has become untenable as far as Washington
is concerned. In recent weeks, the White House and the Pentagon
have stepped up the propaganda blitz against Iran over its alleged
nuclear weapons programs and unsubstantiated claims that it is
assisting attacks by Shiite militia on US troops. Maliki is also
an obstacle to US attempts to forge an anti-Iranian alliance of
so-called Sunni states in the Middle East such as Saudi Arabia
and Egypt that are bitterly opposed to the Shiite regime in Baghdad.
Maintaining the thrust of US propaganda, the NIE repeated the
allegation of Iranian interference in Iraq. Assistance
to armed groups, especially from Iran, exacerbates the violence
inside Iraq, and the reluctance of the Sunni states that are generally
supportive of US regional goals to offer support to the Iraqi
government probably bolsters Iraqi Sunni Arabs rejection
of the governments legitimacy, it stated.
Maliki reacted sharply to the public calls for his removal,
describing the comments of Clinton and Levin as discourteous.
In an obvious reference to the Bush administrations benchmarks,
he declared: No one has the right to place timetables on
the Iraq government. Speaking during a visit to Syria, Maliki
said he would find friends elsewhere if he were abandoned
by the US. Far from warding off a move against his government,
this last remark, hinting at a turn to Tehran and Damascus, will
only strengthen Washingtons resolve to refashion the Baghdad
regime.
The Bush administrations dissatisfaction with the Iraqi
government has been evident for months, encouraging Malikis
rivals to move against him. Since the beginning of the year, there
have been walkouts from the cabinet by the Basra-based Shiite
Islamic Virtue Party (Fadhila), the Shiite bloc loyal to cleric
Moqtada al-Sadr and the major Sunni Arab factions. On Saturday,
the Iraqi National List of former interim prime minister Iyad
Allawi formally announced its withdrawal after previously boycotting
cabinet meetings.
In preparation for parliaments resumption early next
month, all the Iraqi factions are engaged in intense backroom
manoeuvring. Maliki is attempting to shore up the current ruling
Shiite-Kurdish bloc, while his rivals are preparing for a vote
of no confidence. None of this has anything to do with the will
of the Iraqi people. All the Iraqi parties are well aware
that the final decision on the fate of Malikis government
will be taken in Washington, not Baghdad.
Significantly, one of the main contenders for the prime ministers
post, Iyad Allawi, has hired high-profile lobbying firm Barbour
Griffith & Rogers for six months at the cost of $300,000 to
provide strategic counsel and representation before
the US government, Congress, media and others. Central
to Allawis campaign in Washington is President Bushs
former envoy to Iraq, Ambassador Robert Blackwill, who is the
firms president, as well as other top Bush administration
aides, including Philip Zelikow, a former adviser to Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice.
Blackwill, who also served as Bushs ambassador to India,
is a senior figure in the US foreign affairs establishment. He
was Rices mentor before she took office. As Bushs
adviser on Iraq in 2004, Blackwill played a crucial role in installing
Allawi as head of the interim government. While the Bush administration
now insists that Blackwill is operating as a private citizen,
there is little doubt that the White House has given the green
light for his campaign against Maliki.
Allawi, who received virtually no support in the 2005 Iraqi
elections, was a loyal political thug for Saddam Husseins
regime before breaking away and becoming a longtime CIA asset.
He has close relations with sections of the Baathist party, particularly
in the military and intelligence. In a policy statement published
in the Washington Post on August 18, Allawi laid out a
six-point Plan for Iraq, in which he declared he would
impose a state of emergency on Baghdad and all conflict areas
and carry out a far-reaching restructuring of the Iraqi security
forces.
Allawi is not the only possibility being contemplated in Washington.
But he certainly fits the bill as a political strongman who would
not hesitate to carry out US orders and use every available means
to crush opposition to his rule. That he is even under consideration
is an indication of the type of regime that the Bush administration
is seekingwith or without the approval of the Iraqi parliament.
In its cautious criticisms of the present regime, the NIE document
is another sign that, one way or another, Malikis days are
numbered.
See Also:
Amid calls from Clinton and Levin, US
moves to oust Iraqi prime minister
[23 August 2007]
Iraqi government on brink of collapse
following cabinet walkouts
[11 August 2007]
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