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Bush administration failing to achieve its benchmarks
in Iraq
By James Cogan
28 May 2007
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US President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice have all personally warned Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki that time is running out. Deadlines have
gone or are fast approaching. Still, the Bush administration is
no closer to achieving the benchmarks it demanded
of the Iraqi government on January 10 and linked to the success
of its current military surge.
The benchmarks are intended to pressure the Shiite- and Kurdish-dominated
Iraqi government into agreeing to a new power-sharing arrangement.
The US wanted major concessions made to the predominantly Sunni
Arab elite of the former Baathist regime of Saddam Hussein, in
the hope that significant sections of the Sunni insurgency would
end their armed resistance. The marginalisation of the Baathists
and the elevation of Shiite and Kurdish parties following the
US invasion was a factor in the eruption of an anti-occupation
guerilla war in Sunni areas, as well as the subsequent outbreak
of a sectarian civil war.
The revamping of the puppet government in Baghdad was also
an essential component of the Bush administrations broader
regional strategy. In its escalating confrontation with Iran,
the White House has appealed for support from so-called Sunni
states such as Saudi Arabia and Egypt, which are hostile to the
growing Iranian influence in the region, including within the
Iraqi government. In part, the US benchmarks are aimed
at fashioning a regime in Baghdad more acceptable to US regional
allies and supportive of any American military action against
Shiite Iran.
At the top of Washingtons agenda is the passage of an
Iraqi oil law opening up the country to US corporations, but the
legislation is mired in conflicting interests.
The Bush administration has demanded that the Iraqi government
revise the US-drafted 2006 constitution that handed control over
new oil production to the Kurdish- and Shiite-dominated provinces
in the north and south where the countrys main fields are
located. Unless the constitution is changed, the central Iraqi
government and the predominantly Sunni, but resource-poor, provinces
of central and western Iraq would see the bulk of oil revenue
flowing to the Kurdish and Shiite elites. The alienated Sunni
establishment would have no material incentive to withdraw its
support for the anti-US armed struggle.
In another concession to the Sunni elite, the US has insisted
on an end to the de-Baathification policy, which excludes
senior members of the Baath Party from holding posts in the government,
the state administration or military. Bush also wants provincial
elections be held later this year, enabling Sunni parties, which
boycotted the previous poll, to gain control of the Sunni provinces.
The White House calculated that the Kurdish and Shiite factions
would fall into line with the US agenda. On this political front,
however, the surge is clearly failing.
The Iraqi constitutional reform committee, which had until
May 22 to recommend changes to the constitution to the parliament,
could not agree on a final draft. The Kurdish nationalist parties,
key allies of the US occupation from the outset, have refused
to accept revisions that would take new oil production out of
the hands of the semi-autonomous Kurdish Regional Government (KRG),
which administers three northern, predominantly Kurdish provinces.
Some Shiite leaders have also opposed any weakening of the
regional and provincial powers over the oil industry. The Supreme
Islamic Iraqi Council (SIIC), another crucial US ally, has expressed
ambitions to establish a Shiite region in southern Iraq, which
would contain the largest of Iraqs untapped oilfields.
The US helped draw up a new oil law overturning regional control,
which was accepted by Malikis cabinet in April. Parliament
is supposed to pass the bill by May 31. The legislation calls
for 93 percent of Iraqs untapped oil fields to be put under
the control of a state-owned national oil company, which would
be answerable to the central government and would allocate contracts
to foreign corporations. Revenues would be collected by the national
government, then distributed to the provinces on the basis of
population and need.
The failure to modify the constitution, however, effectively
kills the new oil law. The KRG issued a statement on April 27
labelling the proposed legislation unconstitutional.
It declared that the law will not be supported by the KRG
in the federal parliament. The establishment of a national
oil company, the KRG stated, breaches requirements under
the Iraq constitution that the petroleum sector be developed through
private investment, with regional control over new petroleum fields,
and joint development between regions and the federal government
of currently producing fields.
The wording of the original constitution also means the KRG
has a veto over any changes affecting its powers. Clause 126 (4)
of the document states: Articles of the constitution may
not be amended if such amendment takes away from the powers of
the regions that are not within the exclusive powers of the federal
authorities, except by the approval of the legislative authority
of the concerned region and the approval of the majority of its
citizens in a general referendum.
The Kurdish parties have also rejected any change to the constitutionally
mandated date of December 31, 2007, to hold a referendum in the
province of Kirkuk to determine whether it will become part of
the Kurdish region. Over 40 percent of Iraqs known oil fields
are located in Kirkuk.
The Shiite movement led by cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, two Sunni-based
parties and the secular front headed by former interim prime minister
Iyad Allawi have each declared their opposition to the referendum.
The International Crisis Group warned in an April report that
full-scale civil war was likely to erupt in northern Iraq if the
Kurdish parties did not give up their ambitions to take the province.
Representatives of the Arab and Turkomen communities in Kirkuk
have threatened to take up arms to prevent the referendumwhich
has been structured to ensure that Kurdish voters will be a clear
majority in the area.
While the Kurdish nationalists are blocking the oil law and
threatening to plunge the north into turmoil, the Shiite parties
in the government are blocking any end to de-Baathification.
The Shiite clerical establishment, the SIIC and the Sadrist
movement have opposed any large-scale rehabilitation of the former
regimes upper echelon. While the Bush administration considers
national reconciliation to be an essential ingredient
in convincing Sunni insurgents to lay down their arms, the Shiite
religious factions view it as threat to their power and privileges.
Moreover, their supporters among the Shiite population suffered
brutal repression under Saddam Hussein and bitterly oppose any
concessions to the Baathists.
A Sadrist legislator, Falah Hassan Shansal, told the Washington
Post last week: If national reconciliation is at the
expense of return of the assassin Baathists, then we will reject
reconciliation.
The Maliki government is stalling on setting dates for the
holding of provincial elections. Malikis Dawa Party
and the SIIC fear that the Sadrist movement will take control
of most of the predominantly Shiite southern provinces if polls
take place.
A significant section of the Shiite population view Dawa
and the SIIC as US puppets. The Sadrists, by contrast, fought
a brief uprising against American forces in 2004. While they subsequently
entered into a coalition with the other Shiite parties and the
government, the Sadrists have strengthened their base of support
by demanding that the Bush administration set a timetable for
the withdrawal of all US and foreign troops. In April, as popular
opposition heightened toward the US surge in Baghdad,
Sadr ordered his supporters to resign from Malikis cabinet.
The Sadrists boycotted the provincial elections in 2005 but
believe they can now win most of the south in any new poll. In
a show of political strength, hundreds of thousands of people
took part in a Sadrist rally in Najaf on April 9 to protest against
the US occupation. Over the past several months, bloody clashes
have taken place between the Saadrist Mahdi Army and rival Shiite
militias in Basra, Najaf, Nasiriyah, and smaller southern cities,
as local rivalries intensify.
Concerned that the Sadrist movement could become a dangerous
focus for opposition to the US occupation, the US military is
seeking to weaken or destroy the Mahdi Army and take control of
its stronghold in the Baghdad suburb of Sadr City. However, US
military operations against the Mahdi Army have done little to
weaken its influence.
Seeking to broaden their authority, the Sadrists have initiated
talks with Sunni tribes and organisations to establish a political
alliance. Some Sunni-based parties and the Sadrists share common
ground. Both advocate a strong central government controlling
the countrys oil resources and reject the Kurdish claims
on Kirkuk. Each are also seeking to making an appeal to broad
layers of the population that are deeply opposed to the US occupation.
Associated Press, citing Sadrist insiders, reported on May
23 that Sadr is preparing for the day when his movement can take
power in Baghdad. The AP article stated: The strategy is
based in part on al-Sadrs belief that Washington will soon
start pulling out troops or draw them down significantly, leaving
behind a huge hole in Iraqs security and political power
structure, al-Sadrs associates said.... Al-Sadr also believes,
his associates said, that Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Malikis
government may not last much longer, given its failure to improve
security, services and the economy. A government collapse is certain
to be followed by a political realignment in which the Sadrist
movement stands a good chance of emerging as the main player.
The Maliki governments inability to meet any of Bushs
benchmarks, combined with the entrenched divisions among the various
sectarian and ethnic factions, may well trigger a US move to suspend
parliament and appoint some form of national salvation
junta. There have been reports over the past year that the Bush
administration is weighing up installing a military strongman
to simply impose US demands on the country.
It is clear, however, that such a naked puppet regime would
have no social base of support and its survival would be totally
dependent upon the US military. It would confront an increasingly
hostile Kurdish north, an ongoing insurgency in Sunni areas and
the prospect of a Sadrist-led uprising involving millions of Shiites
in Baghdad and southern Iraq.
See Also:
US officials guilty of "sociocide"
in Iraq must be held accountable
[24 May 2007]
Democrats drop withdrawal
deadlines as administration mulls post-surge Iraq
[23 May 2007]
The US war and occupation of Iraqthe
murder of a society
[19 May 2007]
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