In These Times is not immune to the Great Recession. Please donate now!
PrintDiscuss
Views » February 14, 2005

Sinking in Deeper

By Robert Parry

Rather than provide an exit, the Iraqi election could draw U.S. troops into a burgeoning civil war.

Like many of his U.S. press colleagues, New York Times foreign policy columnist Thomas L. Friedman has pronounced himself “unreservedly happy” about the Iraqi election of Jan. 30, adding: “You should be, too.”

But rather than pointing toward an exit for the United States from Iraq, the election may just be another mirage, hiding the fact that U.S. troops could be pulled in to Iraq’s long and bloody history of sectarian violence between Sunnis and Shiites.

Indeed, if the Sunni-based insurgency doesn’t give up in the months ahead, American soldiers could find themselves enmeshed in a long and brutal civil war, helping the Shiite majority crush the resistance of the Sunni minority. The Sunnis, who have long dominated Iraq, find themselves in a tight corner and may see little choice but to fight on.

The U.S. invasion of Iraq in March 2003 started the Sunnis’ reversal of fortune by ousting the Sunni-run government of Saddam Hussein. Since then, the armed resistance, based in the so-called Sunni Triangle, has represented the Sunnis’ reaction to their sharply diminished status as well as their resentment of the U.S.-led military occupation.

Now, the election has hardened this new reality of the Sunnis’ secondary role, leaving them a painful choice of either accepting Shiite domination of the country’s political system or challenging the powerful U.S. military in a guerrilla war that could turn many Sunni communities into smoking ruins like Fallujah.

Those troubling prospects represent a scenario that the U.S. news media has largely ignored. As Iraqis raised fingers stained with voting ink, American journalists scrambled over each other to climb on board George W. Bush’s bandwagon, again.

Just as the U.S. press corps feared challenging Bush during the WMD hysteria in fall 2002, the press corps treated the Iraqi election as an unquestioned success story, much as Friedman did in his column, titled “A Day to Remember.”

But, like those earlier examples of press acquiescence, the lack of skepticism about the real meaning of the Jan. 30 election carries potential dangers for Americans, especially if the triumphal Bush administration now starts dusting off its most ambitious plans for the Middle East. If that happens, the military disaster in Iraq, which has cost the lives of more than 1,400 American soldiers and tens of thousands of Iraqis, could be a prelude to catastrophes to come.

Indeed, many of the U.S. mistakes in Iraq can be traced to the American euphoria after the successful three-week U.S. military campaign that ousted Hussein in April 2003. Weeks later, Bush donned a flight suit, landed on a U.S. aircraft carrier returning home from Iraq and pronounced the end of major combat under a banner reading “Mission Accomplished.”

Then, instead of moving to hold the quick elections favored by retired Gen. Jay Garner, the first U.S. administrator in Iraq, Bush’s neoconservative advisers pushed to restructure Iraq’s economy by selling off government assets and adopting a “free market” model. A quick election might have given some legitimacy to a new Iraqi government and left less political space for insurgents to build their resistance to the U.S. occupation.

Reflecting these pumped-up ambitions, Garner’s replacement, Paul Bremer, put off Iraqi elections pending the drafting of a constitution. Over the next several months, however, the Bush administration’s ambitious economic schemes floundered, as the insurgency grew.

Eventually, faced with demands from Shiite cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, U.S. officials agreed to accelerate the timetable for elections. By then, however, Sunni areas had become largely ungovernable. Many Sunni leaders urged a postponement of the election until better security could be arranged. But Shiite leaders, sensing certain victory, insisted on the scheduled election, as did President Bush, who had built up the election as a potential turning point in the Iraq war.

The election indeed did prove to be a public-relations boon for the Bush administration and a psychological setback for the insurgents. While much of the enthusiasm about the voting appears real, later reports indicated that many polling stations in Sunni areas were virtually deserted and others hadn’t gotten a full supply of ballots.

The election followed what should have been an anticipated course. The long-oppressed Shiite majority, expecting to gain the bulk of national power, voted in large numbers, as did the Kurds, who want either autonomy or outright independence. The Sunnis, the powerful minority who had the most to lose from the election, either boycotted or voted in low numbers.

Now, the question is whether the Sunnis will seek some post-election accommodation with the Shiites or will continue resisting the new U.S.-backed power structure. If they choose the latter, the election may end up locking the U.S. military into a long-term role as the military arm of a Shiite-dominated government waging a counterinsurgency war.

  • Help In These Times publish more articles like this. Donate today!
  • Subscribe today and save 46% off the newsstand price!
Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the '80s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His books, including Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush and Secrecy and Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq, can be ordered here. He is the editor of Consortium News.

More information about Robert Parry
  • subscribe to print magazine

  • Reader Comments

    It is my understanding that one of the great tragedies of the Iraq war is that Sunni/Shiite tensions have traditionally NOT been an issue in Iraq. I have come across this information several times, usually with the conclusion that media, with its incessant need for antagonists and protagonists has greatly exaggerated (and possibly exacerbated) this divide. While I greatly enjoy In These Times’ articles, this one seems to be part of the problem rather than the solution.

    Posted by Gabe on Feb 14, 2005 at 3:30 PM

    Who knows where the war will lead? I do agree with the notion that the election protends nothing.

    Let’s let the Bushies enjoy their moment, for if it doesn’t work out they will forever be branded as fools thorughout the eternal abyss of history.

    Posted by Chris on Feb 14, 2005 at 6:58 PM

    My current inclination toward this situation is to hope with reservation. I would like to see our troops out of Iraq and on their way. The main thing that scares me is that if Bush gets the feeling that his job in Iraq is done, regardless of cost or consequence he will find another front for his endless warmongering, be it Iran, North Korea, or Syria. In some ways i believe it may be better for him to spend the next four years quagmired in a low intensity civil war, in order that he might be preoccupied from starting disasters of greater magnitude. Of course who knows if that will stop him anyway?

    Posted by Hurin on Feb 14, 2005 at 9:05 PM

    Hurin:

    Check the news.  President Bonehead and his band of merry neocons are gung-ho to invade both Iran and Syria.  They have had a hard-on to kill a lot of Arabs and Persians since the 1979 takeover of the American embassy in Tehran.  They will too, if Congress rolls over and plays dead as they have so many times the last five years.

    Regardless of what happens in Iraq, good or ill, remember two things:

    (1) The U.S. did NOT go into Iraq to spread democracy.  That is the 3rd justification that Bushwa has used on the ever-gullible American people, if you have been keeping score.  The first was because Saddam had WMDs (wrong), the second was because Saddam was such a brutal dictator and had filled mass graves with innocent victims(yeah, so what about Uzbekistan, Congo and Indonesia?) and,
    (2) In a free society, the ends NEVER justify the means.

    Peace is the only answer.

    Stephen Kriz

    Posted by Stephen Kriz on Feb 15, 2005 at 8:33 PM

    As long as we have all these pasifists sitting around watching animated cartoons on TV that only was intended for idiots, nothing is going to be done about stopping this administration from furthering it’s quest to dominate all oil bearing countries.  Bush if you remember reading the history on him was never successful in any of his dealings before politica.  Why anyone would vote him into office is anybodys guess.
    We are in for another rough 4 years, the last 4 were bad enough.  How many generations is it going to take to pay off this one war, if he involves us in one or more other wars, this country will go belly up and then what will we do?  We owe China and Japan so much money they own us now.  This is very scary people.

    Posted by Pat Grzybowski on Feb 15, 2005 at 10:48 PM
  • extended discussion >>>Continued...

    Discussions with more than 5 comments are continued on our special discussion page to encourage continuity and ease of use. There are currently 46 posts.

Appeared in the March 14, 2005 Issue
Also by Robert Parry
IN THESE TIMES COMMUNITY MEMBERS