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Those who have
been watching the war on television are familiar with the
video footage: after the US military took control of Safwan,
the southern Iraqi border town, this fellow was captured on
film banging on a large, partially destroyed wall portrait
of Saddam Hussein with his shoe. It was the closest the world
has so far come to viewing joyous Iraqis dancing in the street
before their American liberators. Such images may yet arrive,
validating the assurances of American and British war advocates
who maintained that this military action is indeed liberation,
not conquest; that Iraqis would welcome such intervention;
and that the invasion and occupation would place Iraq on the
road to democracy. But if the dancing does not happen soon,
the war planners can expect to have a tougher time securing
Iraq and creating the environment necessary for reconstruction
and democratization.
Consider the celebratory heel-banging in Safwan.
A few days after the shoe-heard-around-the-world smacked against
Hussein's forehead, ABC News reporter John Donvan and his
crew--working unembeddedly--crossed the border into Kuwait
and visited the town. They witnessed no rejoicing. Townspeople
surrounded the journalists and passionately voiced their opinions
of the US invasion. "We learned," Donvan reported,
"that just because the townsfolk don't like Saddam, it
doesn't mean they like the Americans trying to take him out....They
were angry at America, and said US forces had shot at people
in the town. They were also angry because they needed food,
water and medicine and the aid promised by President Bush
had not appeared....They asked us why the United States was
taking over Iraq, and whether the Americans would stay in
Iraq for ever. They saw the US-led invasion as a takeover,
not liberation."
Resentment and suspicion, not gratitude and
embrace. If the sentiment of these people was an accurate
indicator of how other Iraqis are or will be reacting to Operation
Iraqi Freedom, the coming (or so the Bush administration promises)
mission to democratize and remake Iraq will face severe challenges.
Now that the war is under way--damage done--the
Bush administration's professed desire to free the repressed
citizens of Iraq and introduce them to democracy and liberty
ought to be supported and encouraged, and the White House's
commitment to this supposed war aim closely monitored. ("This
nation never conquers, but we liberate," Bush said. Did
he forget the Mexican War, the Spanish-American War, the subjugation
of Native Americans and other past glories, including the
invasions of Nicaragua, Honduras, Haiti, and the Dominican
Republic? Oh, never mind.) But how does Bush plan to seed
Iraq with democracy? He and his administration have not offered
any specific plans. It may well be because they do not truly
know. "I'm not sure they've gotten beyond platitudes
and wishful thinking," says one federally-funded democracy
-development expert. But whatever their strategy may be--or
end up being--it won't mean much if the Iraqi people are not
with the program.
Before Operation Bring 'em Democracy can kick
off, the war has to be won and the country secured. As of
this writing, these goals remain unattained. And it seems
at the moment that if the war is indeed won in the conventional
sense, there still may be resistance throughout the country
to an occupying force. If that opposition is widespread and
persistent, it could soak up attention and resources that
might otherwise be directed toward rebuilding (politically
and otherwise) Iraq. Lingering resistance could also produce
a security situation not conducive to democracy-building.
If military officials in the field have to deal with an ongoing
insurgency--an intifada?--it will be even more difficult for
them to create rudimentary democratic structures. Judith Kipper,
director of the Middle East Forum, has suggested that if Saddam
Hussein survives the US attack, he might reemerge to lead
an underground guerrilla force that fights the US occupation.
To use Vietnam terminology, Iraq has to be pacified before
it can be saved.
And that pacification needs to happen fast.
Democracy-building experts cite several factors as crucial
to success in Iraq. Foremost among them is a good and quick
start. As a report of the Council on Foreign Relations put
it, US forces should enter Iraq with the "mission to
establish public security and provide humanitarian aid. This
is distinct from the tasks generally assigned to combat troops."
A retired general with experience in Iraq, Bosnia and Kosovo
told me, "You have to begin immediately with two major
endeavors simultaneously. You have to establish public security
and bring about stability within the country, and you have
to mount a humanitarian effort to give meaning to your claim
you're here to help the Iraqi people. After that you have
to try bottom-up and top-down efforts to build a semblance
of political order."
By supplying security and aid expeditiously
and effectively, US forces can take a stab at conquering the
resentment and distrust. As Donvan found out in Safwan, residents
there were already complaining about the absence of assistance.
The administration had a good initial excuse: the opposition
in Basra and the South was tougher than expected, and humanitarian
supplies could not be moved into Iraq. But there should have
been a plan for such a scenario. (Aid started flowing once
British and US forces secured portions of the South.) "People
are suspicious," the retried general notes. "We've
just bombed and strafed their town. There is 12 years of anger.
There were sanctions. Twelve years ago, we crapped out on
them [by not supporting the resistance that occurred during
the first Gulf War]. Most of this stuff is in the eye of the
beholder, not the declarations of the occupiers. People have
to believe you are doing what you say and not that you're
just there for the oil."
The credibility gap that must be overcome is
pronounced, says Kipper. "It is very unlikely any American
transition plan...will be accepted," she maintains. Noting
that Iraq has been an independent country since 1921, Kipper
observes, "they're losing their sovereignty. That's not
something a very proud, fierce, nationalist people will accept
very easily." And, she adds, "we are culturally
and linguistically deprived" in matters related to the
Middle East. "We will have to wait until [the war] is
over and see how sensitive we can be," she says. "This
is a war of choice--an American-led war against a Muslim-led
country and that has consequences. Iraqis will be happy Saddam
Hussein is gone. But they will not be happy to be occupied."
To address the likely distrust--which might
not be surmountable--the occupiers must take rapid steps toward
establishing a new political order. In cities and towns across
the country, US officials--presumably military people--will
have to identify locals (tribal elders, prominent citizens,
bureaucrats) with whom to work toward developing some form
of representative governance. "This is hard, very hard,"
says the retired general. A former military official who was
in charge of an Iraqi town during the first Gulf War notes,
"You're a battalion commander and you have an interpreter,
this is what you do: you go looking for the old guys. You
try to pull together a clan of elders. But you need someone
who can explain the clans, the tribes, and the gossip. I wish
I had had that. And if you're giving out copious amounts of
aid and doing medical work, you create some jobs by paying
people to clear up road intersections." (By the way,
there are 150 tribes and 2000 clans in Iraq, some of which
may attempt to establish their own militias. The democracy-builders
of the US occupation will have to understand and take into
account the rivalries and conflicts among the groups.)
At the same time, the retired general adds,
some kind of national structure has to be established. In
the run-up to the war, there was disagreement within the US
government about whether to ready a provisional government
composed of Iraqi exiles, most notably millionaire Ahmed Chalabi,
who has lived outside Iraq since 1956 and who was convicted
of financial fraud in Jordan in 1992. (He claims it was a
set-up.) "I'm very suspicious, as are most Iraqis, of
Chalabi," says the retired general. "We need a collective
gathering of folks who at least appear to be a reasonable
cross-section of the Iraqi people and let them start the process.
Everything we do will be assessed as to whether this is for
our purposes or for those of the Iraqi people. One reason
we needed more allies was to create the impression this is
not being done for our gain." In addition to providing
security, aid, and a roadmap to self-representation, the United
States also will have to oversee, strengthen or establish
the courts, the police, the banking system, the energy and
water systems, and, of course, the oil industry.
"I don't think they understand what the
fuck they just bought into," the retired general says.
"They're like the dog that catches the car, but it's
an 18-wheeler. This is work that requires more patience and
more commitment that I've seen to date. Exhibit One is Afghanistan."
A recent essay by Larry Goodson in the Journal
of Democracy, which is published by the National Endowment
for Democracy, should cause Iraqis to fret about their occupiers.
Goodson, a professor of Middle East studies at the US Army
War College, was a consultant in 2002 to the Afghan loya jirga
that chose Hamid Karzai as Afghanistan's president. In the
piece, he recalls being "excited to see democracy (of
a sort) in action" when he witnessed Afghans voting last
May for members of the loya jirga, He even gave a short speech,
"telling the soon-to-be voters that the whole world was
watching Afghanistan, and that any of them who had a complaint
could come to me, as a representative of the international
community."
Now the optimist is a pessimist. "Afghanistan's
transition," Goodson writes, "even to stability
(much less democracy) is highly unlikely. What is worse, after
a largely successful military campaign, the United States
and the rest of the world may have only a limited window of
opportunity within which to aid Afghanistan's transition.
Moreover, they may be losing interest in doing so, which would
almost certainly doom any chance that the country might have."
The United States, he argues, failed to do what was necessary
to achieve stability in the country--that is, it did not maintain
a security presence throughout Afghanistan, nor did it mount
a "swift and massive" reconstruction. It essentially
blocked "any serious international peacekeeping"
outside of Kabul, which has enabled warlordism to rise outside
the capital city. "Total spending on peacekeeping operations
in Afghanistan during the past year," Goodson notes,
"was $540 million, or about 5.4 percent of the roughly
$10 billion that it cost the US-led military coalition to
operate there."
Money pledged to Afghanistan by the United States
and other nations for rebuilding was insufficient. The $1.8
billion promised for 2002 was less per capita than what was
spent in Rwanda, Bosnia, East Timor or Kosovo. Washington
and the international community, Goodson maintains, botched
the political reconstruction by pushing a centralized model
rather than a federal system. "Most Afghan leaders today,"
he observes, "derive their authority from a combination
of appeals to Islam, illicit economic activities (such as
the opium trade), and gunmen."
Iraq is not Afghanistan. But Washington is still
Washington. And a broken commitment in Afghanistan does not
augur well for the new commitment in Iraq. In February, there
was a preview in Washington of the debate that might ensue
within the administration over how far Washington should go
to bring stability to Iraq. General Eric Shinseki, the Army
chief of staff, testified in the Senate that "several
hundred thousand" troops will be needed for an effective
postwar operation in Iraq. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz
blasted that estimate two days later, dismissing it as "wildly
off the mark" and "hard to imagine." How many
troops does the administration intend to commit to postwar
Iraq? It hasn't said. But is it serious about achieving stability
throughout Iraq? "With nation-building as with peacekeeping,"
Goodson writes, "there are no shortcuts and no substitutes."
Ray Jennings, a fellow at the US Institute of
Peace who previously was a senior field adviser for the Office
of Transition Initiatives at the US Agency for International
Development, agrees the United States' record in Afghanistan
is not encouraging. Moreover, he notes, "the US track
record on nation-building is discouragingly mixed. Of the
eighteen regimes the United States has displaced by force
this past century, democratic rule has prevailed in only five
places."
Money, resources, and planning count--and so
does tone. "It is with some humility, then, that the
United States should enter Baghdad," Jennings maintains.
"The seductions of privilege and absolute control that
accompany occupations may make it difficult to rule Iraq without
hubris--but it is essential that the United States make the
effort. Arrogance will almost certainly prove disastrous.
Every gesture will carry political significance in an environment
where international legitimacy for occupation is in short
supply. Rebuilding a nation, occupying it in order to free
it, is an inherently arrogant act."
Can Washington breed democracy in a land it
occupies? Can it provide security and stability without being
heavy-handed and imperious? How to balance the need to not
rule for too long with the need to remain committed (and not
repeat its near cut-and-run performance in Afghanistan)? "If
the United States meddles far too much with the shape and
form of what comes next," Kipper says, "it will
not work. The Iraqi people have to take charge of their own
destiny....American rhetoric is very important. We must speak
in respectful terms and we need to say over and over we will
be there a short time." What's a short time? Administration
officials have testified in Congress that the United States
might have to stay in charge for two years. And Kipper is
not alone among Middle East experts in noting that for the
United States to be seen as acting in good-faith by Iraqis
and other Arabs it must vigorously "address the Israeli-Palestinian
problem."
Building--not rebuilding--democracy in Iraq
will be a task requiring both delicacy and vigor. It will
have to be conducted with speed and with steadfastness. And,
as Joe Wilson, a former acting US ambassador to Iraq, says,
"we should not be surprised if the outcome is not what
we would like to see." Install democracy in Iraq and
what arises may not be a national government that is friendly
(and grateful) toward the United States. Perhaps the people
will chose leaders who want the United States out of Iraq
sooner than later, who intend to nationalize the oil industry
and do business with non-American firms, who fully support
Palestinian extremists, who ally themselves with the mullahs
of Tehran or other Islamic fundamentalists. What would Donald
Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Cheney and George Bush (let
alone Bill Kristol and the other neocon war-cheerleaders)
do then? Celebrate the triumph of the people's will?
After all, what does that guy with the shoe
and his neighbors want? Is it the same thing as Richard Perle?
If not, whose desires will win out?
To date, Bush has not shown the skill and talent
needed to navigate the difficult assignment he has assumed:
growing democracy in Iraq. He's been a my-way-or-the-highway
sort of guy who does seem to appreciate policy nuances. Prior
to September 11, he scoffed at nation-building. After the
al Qaeda attack, he had to pay it heed, but he failed to embrace
it fully in Afghanistan. And after abandoning the United Nations
Security Council, Bush has to court allies and international
organizations to participate in the rehabilitation of Iraq.
The administration has started discussions with the UN about
how to handle the postwar period, but will it again insist
its own priorities and policies come first?
Will Bush the Liberator stick it out in Iraq
and export democracy to that troubled nation? Will he even
get the chance? He's but one piece of a big and unwieldy puzzle.
There's also the Iraqi people: the liberated ones, who may
not consider themselves liberated.
Submitted by, Leena James
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