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News > September 10, 2007

Why Iraq is Getting Worse

A new civil war between Shiites erupts within the old civil war between Sunnis and Shiites

By David Enders

Iraqis march outside Najaf on August 31 to condemn the bombing of a shrine in Karbala. At least 52 people died and 300 were wounded.

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A cloud of steam rises above the crowd in the 120-degree heat. As their leader approaches the podium, the thousands who have assembled meet him with pledges of their fealty.

“We are all Badr Brigade!” they shout, a reference to the paramilitary organization of the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council (SIIC), which held this rally on July 19, in honor of Ayatollah Bakr al-Hakim, the party’s founding leader, who was assassinated here four years ago. His nephew, Amar al-Hakim, now holds the position.

I was one of the millions who attended al-Hakim’s funeral four years ago, some of whom walked the 100 miles from Baghdad to Najaf to show their sorrow. It was largely a peaceful affair.

But now, as Iraq devolves further into civil war inside civil war inside occupation, the commemoration of al-Hakim’s death, which prompted mourning from Shiites across the country, has taken on a largely political feel. The Badr Brigade is at war with Sunni guerillas and other Shiite militias, and largely considered by its opponents to be the tool of corrupt, exiled elites who have allied themselves with the occupation in order to carve up Iraq.

The country’s disintegration is obvious in Najaf, one of the seven of the nine southern provinces in which SIIC controls the municipal government. Here, things are run as a police state: I accepted an invitation by SIIC to travel to Najaf from Baghdad because it was the only way to safely negotiate the dangerous road between the two cities.

Despite the assurances of SIIC officials that Najaf was safe, we were given strict orders not to leave our hotel—at which Iraqi military and police loyal to the party had been posted—unless we were with them. When I left the tour for a pre-arranged meeting with the spokesman from Tayyera Sadrieen, another Shiite political party led by Moqtada al-Sadr, it nearly provoked an armed confrontation.

During the interview, Tayyera Sadrieen’s spokesman, Saleh al-Obaidi, laid out why supporters of his party and its paramilitary, the Jeish al-Mehdi (JAM), had clashed with Badr loyalists across the country and, increasingly, in southern Iraq’s poorest provinces of Misan and Muthanna, which are inaccessible to western journalists. In August, two of SIIC’s governors there were assassinated by the JAM.

“The Sadrieen in general focus on the people. The southern governorates are suffering more than Baghdad maybe, concerning the services and the economic situation,” al-Obaidi says. “There were no tensions for 15 or 16 months [after the invasion], but, at the same time, there were no services and no help from the governors of these provinces, so the people started to demonstrate and look and ask for something better. Unfortunately, the reaction from many governors was severe—they used guns and campaigns of detention against the people.”

Fighting escalated at the end of August in Karbala, when JAM fighters attempted to take over a Badr-controlled Shiite shrine during a religious festival. After clashes that left more than 50 dead, Sadr ordered his militia to “suspend” operations for six months, though it is unclear to what extent Sadr controls the men fighting under his name, and the announcement mirrored one Sadr made two years ago.

In Basra, the only place in Iraq that is actually exporting oil and therefore producing revenue, a three-way battle is taking place between SIIC, the JAM and Fadhila, a Sadrist offshoot with support in the city. The British military withdrew its troops at the end of August, leaving only about 5,000 troops stationed at the airport. Corruption and a deadly power struggle have left Basra in a state of decline. Fadhila and SIIC, the two most powerful parties in Basra’s provincial council, continue to fight over the governor’s seat, which has brought governance to a halt, while the JAM and gangs that increasingly fought British troops have taken over the streets.

At the center of the struggle is the approximately $170 million yearly reconstruction budget allocated to the province, as well as control of the port and its oil exports. Fadhila’s governor, Mohamed Al-Waili, claims sole oversight over such projects, and his detractors charge he’s embezzled most of the money. Al-Waili claimed “80 to 90 percent” of the planned reconstruction projects in the last year had been completed, but declined to show journalists any of them.

Meanwhile, in Baghdad, the surge has not worked the way the United States anticipated, or perhaps intended. (The stated purpose was to create space for political reconciliation, but among other intentions, according to the Guardian, was sending a message to the Iranian government.) The greatest effect has been to keep Shiite militias from openly carrying weapons on the streets, slowing some of the efforts to cleanse neighborhoods of Sunnis.

“If it weren’t for the surge, there would be no Sunnis left in Baghdad,” says one Iraqi journalist who works for an American paper. Nonetheless, the surge has not stopped militia activity in many neighborhoods, and the JAM continues to expand.

All over Baghdad and the surrounding areas, Sunni guerillas and tribal militias, some of whom participated in sectarian cleansing over the past three years that forced millions of Iraqis, mostly Shiites, from their homes, have now decided to work with the U.S. military, largely in fear of the Iraqi army—which is full of Badr and JAM loyalists—and the increasingly well-armed Shiite militias.

North of Baghdad, in Falahat, Sunni tribal leaders have decided to work with the United States against al Qaeda. The tribal militiamen admitted they were as afraid of Sunni extremists as they were of the Shiite militias that have grown in number as millions of Shiites have been driven from their homes. The militiamen said they feared the Shiite families that had been removed would return seeking revenge.

In the north, America’s Kurdish allies are growing increasingly impatient with the U.S. military and government. The Sunni guerillas and tribes now working with the United States have driven Kurds from their homes, and the majority of the Kurdish population has fled Mosul, Iraq’s third largest city.

But the real prize is oil-rich Kirkuk. The Iraqi government has dragged its feet on a referendum on whether Kirkuk should join the Kurdish regional government. The referendum, originally mandated by the end of this year, appears unlikely to occur, and the Kurds have grown impatient with the U.S. military’s failure to secure the city.

“We cannot wait,” says Noschirwan Mustafa, a founding member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, the party of Jalal Talabani, Iraq’s current president. “If they leave Kirkuk to us, we can control it.”

“Control” almost certainly means ethnic cleansing. Various scenarios could play out, but most observers fear Turkey would intervene out of fear of an independent Kurdish statelet and on behalf of the small, ethnic Turkish minority that resides around Kirkuk.

The Kurds are likely to take Kirkuk, the moment the U.S. allows it, although Mustafa believes the United States would betray its Kurdish allies, as it did in the mid-’70s, to avoid angering the Turks.

“The Kurds demand to have control of their own territory,” Mustafa says.

David Enders, author of Baghdad Bulletin, reported from Iraq this summer with support from a grant by the Pulitzer Center.

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  • Reader Comments

    It won’t really matter.  Iraq is a failed state and doomed to decades of warfare.  Iraq is not more than a distraction for the moment....because the drums are beating for Iran.  That’s where Plan B will go into effect....

    If you have any doubt whatsoever.....put the pieces together of the puzzle presented here:

    FIVE EASY PIECES to IRAN - A Warning.

    http://tvnewslies.org/blog/?p=658

    CLICK HERE

    Posted by skipper7 on Sep 10, 2007 at 5:22 PM

    Iraq won’t get any better until some Iraqi can manage to bring together Sunni, Shi ite and Kurds.
    Shrub will be more apt to rescind all tax cuts and admit that he messed up by the numbers.
    No Westerner will ever bring about a true peace in any area of the Mideast.
    How many Peace Accords and Cease Fires have been broken by one side or the other?
    Shrub had the vision of a united Iraq, modeled on the US. He is unable to acknowledge that visions are not reality.
    A totally flawed policy on waging a new kind of war went down hill fast and he keeps saying be patient.
    Had there been a real reason to invade Iraq other than his ego and oil, it might have been different.
    Had he not appointed a SecDef who had visions of re-inventing the military as a profit making corporation, things might have been different.
    But, both things did happen and the American people will be paying the cost in dollars, troops killed and, at times worse, the numerous troops who have been severely maimed, and then relegated to a 3rd world hospital in the nations capitol.
    The Iraqi people have lost their lives, their homes, their way of life, all so the Shrub could declare himself a war president, after dodging the draft in ‘Nam, and get the oil companies that backed him into Iraq’s oil fields.

    Posted by farmer on Sep 12, 2007 at 6:26 AM

    For me I’ve become so tired of the latest “conventional wisdom” about Iraq from the politicians in Washington which is along the lines of “If we pull out of Iraq, all hell will break loose.”

    What history is this based on? The Middle East has long had “all hell breaking loose” and the region continues to last. We pulled out of Lebanon under Reagan and Lebanon went on to have their hell and almost every American couldn’t tell you boo about the events in the years after. Iraq and Iran had a long war in the 1980’s and hardly an American knew it was happening and those two countries had their hell. The Middle East had several wars with Israel, and “hell” was let loose and life goes on. The Infada “hell” has been going on for a decade or so and Americans live on.

    Conventional wisdom from the Republicans about Iraq has been wrong repeatedly. Weapons of Mass Destruction, wrong. Mission Accomplished, wrong. De-Bathification, wrong. Elections and purple fingers, wrong. Surge, wrong...interesting that Bush is claiming success for the surge, yet when they pull out those troops next summer our troop level will be the same as before, is that progress?

    We could pull out today, some type of “hell” will happen as “hell” has always happened over there, and months later Americans will have begun to ignore Iraq as we usually do when we aren’t involved.

    Posted by Jon B on Sep 15, 2007 at 6:57 AM

    Some American troops will be required on the ground in Iraq to maintain security for the American Oil companies, Halliburton and Hunt initially, to operate.
    I know Halliburton isn’t an oil company as such, but rather a provider of services to the oil drilling companies such as Hunt and whatever others can use their close ties to the Shrub and Shootist to gain permission to exploit yet another new field for the greater glory of the pocketbook.
    The incidental (to them) fact that the native peoples are suffering a loss of great magnitude makes no difference.
    Shrub makes a big deal of the success of the Iraqi political system which is in as bad a state as our own right now. But he had no problem with his bud from Texas bypassing the Central Government and making a side deal with an Autonomous Kurdish Region.
    Guess that is part of his plan to unify Iraq by splitting it into 3 regions, Kurd, Shiite and Sunni.
    And we all thought that the old Colonial System whereby select politician’s in far distant countries decided how another country should be divided up was a thing of the past. Oops.

    Posted by farmer on Sep 15, 2007 at 8:54 AM
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Also by David Enders
  • Make-a-Sheikh
    How the Pentagon transformed a contractor into a symbol of the surge's 'success'
  • Why Iraq is Getting Worse
    A new civil war between Shiites erupts within the old civil war between Sunnis and Shiites

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of David Sirota's New York Times bestseller The Uprising: An Unauthorized Tour of the Populist Revolt Scaring Wall Street and Washington

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