Iraq after the Surge
II: The Need for a New Political Strategy
Middle East Report N°75
30 April 2008
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
This is the second of two companion reports on
Iraq after the Surge, which Crisis Group is publishing simultaneously,
with identical Executive Summaries and policy Recommendations. Part
I analyses changes in the Sunni landscape. Part II analyses the
state of political progress.
Against the odds, the U.S. military surge contributed
to a significant reduction in violence. Its achievements should
not be understated. But in the absence of the fundamental political
changes in Iraq the surge was meant to facilitate, its successes
will remain insufficient, fragile and reversible. The ever-more
relative lull is an opportunity for the U.S. to focus on two missing
ingredients: pressuring the Iraqi government to take long overdue
steps toward political compromise and altering the regional climate
so that Iraq’s neighbours use their leverage to encourage
that compromise and make it stick. As shown in these two companion
reports, this entails ceasing to provide the Iraqi government with
unconditional military support; reaching out to what remains of
the insurgency; using its leverage to encourage free and fair provincial
elections and progress toward a broad national dialogue and compact;
and engaging in real diplomacy with all Iraq’s neighbours,
Iran and Syria included.
Many factors account for the reduction in violence:
the surge in some cases benefited from, in others encouraged, and
in the remainder produced, a series of politico-military shifts
affecting the Sunni and Shiite communities. But there is little
doubt that U.S. field commanders displayed sophistication and knowledge
of local dynamics without precedent during a conflict characterised
from the outset by U.S. policy misguided in its assumptions and
flawed in its execution. A conceptual revolution within the military
leadership gave U.S. forces the ability to carry out new policies
and take advantage of new dynamics. Had they remained mired in past
conceptions, propitious evolutions on the ground notwithstanding,
the situation today would be far bleaker.
One of the more remarkable changes has been the
realignment of tribal elements in Anbar, known as the sahwat, and
of former insurgents, collectively known as the “Sons of Iraq”.
This was largely due to increased friction over al-Qaeda in Iraq’s
brutal tactics, proclamation of an Islamic state and escalating
assaults on ordinary citizens. But the tribal and insurgent decisions
also were aided by enhanced military pressure on the jihadi movement
resulting from augmented U.S. troops: in both instances U.S. forces
demonstrated more subtle understanding of existing tensions and
intra-Sunni fault lines. Overall, the military campaign calmed areas
that had become particularly violent and inaccessible, such as Anbar
and several Baghdad neighbourhoods, and essentially halted sectarian
warfare.
But on their own, without an overarching strategy
for Iraq and the region, these tactical victories cannot turn into
lasting success. The mood among Sunnis could alter. The turn against
al-Qaeda in Iraq is not necessarily the end of the story. While
some tribal chiefs, left in the cold after Saddam’s fall,
found in the U.S. a new patron ready and able to provide resources,
this hardly equates with a genuine, durable trend toward Sunni Arab
acceptance of the political process. For these chiefs, as for the
former insurgents, it mainly is a tactical alliance, forged to confront
an immediate enemy (al-Qaeda in Iraq) or the central one (Iran).
Any accommodation has been with the U.S., not between them and their
government. It risks unravelling if the ruling parties do not agree
to greater power sharing and if Sunni Arabs become convinced the
U.S. is not prepared to side with them against Iran or its perceived
proxies; at that point, confronting the greater foe (Shiite militias
or the Shiite-dominated government) once again will take precedence.
Forces combating the U.S. have been weakened but
not vanquished. The insurgency has been cut down to more manageable
size and, after believing victory was within reach, now appears
eager for negotiations with the U.S. Still, what remains is an enduring
source of violence and instability that could be revived should
political progress lag or the Sons of Iraq experiment falter. Even
al-Qaeda in Iraq cannot be decisively defeated through U.S. military
means alone. While the organisation has been significantly weakened
and its operational capacity severely degraded, its deep pockets,
fluid structure and ideological appeal to many young Iraqis mean
it will not be irrevocably vanquished. The only lasting solution
is a state that extends its intelligence and coercive apparatus
throughout its territory, while offering credible alternatives and
socio-economic opportunities to younger generations.
The U.S. approach suffers from another drawback.
It is bolstering a set of local actors operating beyond the state’s
realm or the rule of law and who impose their authority by force
of arms. The sahwat in particular has generated new divisions in
an already divided society and new potential sources of violence
in an already multilayered conflict. Some tribes have benefited
heavily from U.S. assistance, others less so. This redistribution
of power almost certainly will engender instability and rivalry,
which in turn could trigger intense feuds – an outcome on
which still-active insurgent groups are banking. None of this constitutes
progress toward consolidation of the central government or institutions;
all of it could amount to little more than the U.S. boosting specific
actors in an increasingly fragmented civil war and unbridled scramble
for power and resources. Short-term achievement could threaten long-term
stability.
By President Bush’s own standards, the military
surge was useful primarily insofar as it led the Iraqi government
to forge a national consensus, recalibrate power relations and provide
Sunni Arabs in particular with a sense their future was secure.
Observers may legitimately differ over how many of the administration’s
so-called benchmarks have been met. None could reasonably dispute
that the government’s performance has been utterly lacking.
Its absence of capacity cannot conceal or excuse its absence of
will. True to its sectarian nature and loath to share power, the
ruling coalition has actively resisted compromise. Why not? It has
no reason to alienate its constituency, jeopardise its political
makeup or relinquish its perks and privileges when inaction has
no consequence and the U.S. will always back it.
The surge is the latest instalment in a stop-and-start
project to build a functioning state and legitimate institutions.
All along, the fundamental challenge has been to settle major disputes
and end a chaotic scramble for power, positions and resources in
a society that, after a reign of terror, finds itself without accepted
rules of the game or means to enforce them. Politically, this conflict
has expressed itself in disputes, both violent and non-violent,
over the structure of the state system (federalism/regionalisation
and the degree of power devolution); ownership, management and distribution
of oil and gas wealth (a hydrocarbons law); internal boundaries
(particularly of the Kurdistan region); mechanisms for settling
relations between post-Saddam “winners” and “losers”
(for example, de-Baathification, amnesty, reintegration); and the
way in which groups gain power (elections vs. force).
A small number of agreements have been reached
and are regularly trumpeted. But they have made virtually no difference.
Without basic political consensus over the nature of the state and
the distribution of power and resources, passage of legislation
is only the first step, and often the least meaningful one. Most
of these laws are ambiguous enough to ensure that implementation
is postponed, or that the battle over substance becomes a struggle
over interpretation. Moreover, in the absence of legitimate and
effective state and local institutions, implementation by definition
will be partisan and politicised. What matters is not principally
whether a law is passed in the Green Zone. It is how the law is
carried out in the Red Zone.
Three things are becoming increasingly clear:
First, the issues at the heart of the political struggle cannot
be solved individually or sequentially. Secondly, the current governing
structure does not want, nor is it able, to take advantage of the
surge to produce agreement on fundamentals. Thirdly, without cooperation
from regional actors, progress will be unsustainable, with dissatisfied
groups seeking help from neighbouring states to promote their interests.
All this suggests that the current piecemeal approach toward deal
making should be replaced with efforts to bring about a broad agreement
that deals with federalism, oil and internal boundaries; encourages
reconciliation/accommodation; and ensures provincial and national
elections as a means of renewing and expanding the political class.
It also suggests yet again the need for the U.S. to engage in both
genuine negotiations with the insurgency and for vigorous regional
diplomacy to achieve agreement on rules of the game for outside
actors in Iraq.
In the U.S., much of the debate has focused on
whether to maintain or withdraw troops. But this puts the question
the wrong way, and spawns misguided answers. The issue, rather,
should be whether the U.S. is pursuing a policy that, by laying
the foundations of legitimate, functional institutions and rules
of the game, will minimise the costs to itself, the Iraqi people
and regional stability of a withdrawal that sooner or later must
occur – or whether it is simply postponing a scenario of Iraq’s
collapse into a failed and fragmented state, protracted and multilayered
violence, as well as increased foreign meddling.
The surge clearly has contributed to a series
of notable successes. But the question is: Now what? What higher
purpose will they serve? For the first four years of the war, the
U.S. administration pursued a lofty strategy – the spread
of democracy; Iraq as a regional model – detached from any
realistic tactics. The risk today is that, having finally adopted
a set of smart, pragmatic tactics, it finds itself devoid of any
overarching strategy.
RECOMMENDATIONS
To the Government of Iraq:
1. Organise provincial council elections no later
than 1 October 2008, and ensure these are inclusive of all parties,
groups and individuals that publicly accept non-violence (rather
than, at this stage, disband their militias).
2. Create an environment in which these elections
will be free and fair, specifically by:
(a) allowing and encouraging
refugees and the internally displaced to vote in their places
of current abode;
(b) providing free and equal state media access
to all parties and individual candidates; and
(c) encouraging independent Iraqi and international
election monitors to attend elections preparations and be present
at polling stations on election day.
3. Remove officials and commanders guilty of sectarian
behaviour from government agencies, the security forces and intelligence
services.
4. Engage with a wide spectrum of political actors,
both within and outside the council of representatives, to reach
a broad new integrated political accord on issues of territory,
power and resources, key elements of which should include:
(a) the status of so-called
disputed territories: by recognising the rights of all their communities
and inhabitants, including through power-sharing arrangements
and protection of minority rights;
(b) the hydrocarbons law: by allowing and encouraging
the Kurdistan Regional Government to explore and exploit the oil
and gas resources located in the Kurdistan region through production-sharing
contracts;
(c) federalism: by encouraging asymmetric federalism
that recognises the Kurdistan region but decentralises power in
the rest of Iraq by governorates rather than regions; and
(d) constitutional review: by revising the constitution
according to agreements reached on the above three elements and
submitting the package deal to popular referendum.
5. Encourage reconciliation by:
(a) amending the January 2008
de-Baathification law to allow former Baath officials who committed
no crimes to regain positions in the government and security agencies;
(b) implementing on a non-partisan basis the
February 2008 amnesty law and calling on the U.S. to transfer
detainees held in Iraq to government custody; and
(c) integrating (through vetting and retraining)
Sons of Iraq into the civil service and security agencies on condition
they make a public commitment to refrain from violence, and create
jobs for those who cannot so be integrated.
To the U.S. Government:
6. Press and assist the Iraqi government in organising
free, fair, inclusive and secure provincial council elections by
1 October 2008.
7. Adjust the basis on which military support
is provided by:
(a) only supporting Iraqi
military operations consistent with its own strategy and objectives;
(b) conditioning training and assistance on the
professionalism and non-partisan behaviour of its recipients;
(c) refusing to back sectarian ministers or sectarian
army units and their commanders; and
(d) focusing on vetting and retraining existing
units.
8. Press Iraqi political actors to reach a comprehensive
political accord, and assist them to do so, in particular by:
(a) conditioning support to
the government and its allies on their agreeing to the political
compromises on disputed territories, federalism, the hydrocarbon
law and reconciliation as described above;
(b) seeking through UN mediation to engage in
negotiations with what remains of the insurgency (minus al-Qaeda
in Iraq), making clear at the outset that it intends to bring
its military presence to an end and not to establish permanent
bases; and
(c) undertaking regional diplomacy with a view
to reducing interference in Iraq and agreeing on rules of the
game, notably through engaging Iran and Syria (as described in
earlier Crisis Group reports) and encouraging Iranian-Saudi dialogue.
9. Adopt as a goal, should these efforts fail,
the convening, under UN auspices, of a broad and inclusive conference
bringing together Iraqi actors, regional states and key members
of the international community with a view to reaching a new political
compact.
To the United Nations Secretary-General:
10. Assist the government of Iraq in preparing
free, fair and inclusive provincial council elections to be held
no later than 1 October 2008 (and national elections before the
end of 2009) by:
(a) providing independent
monitors;
(b) publicly withdrawing support if these elections
threaten to be less than inclusive, free and fair, or take place
in a non-permissive security environment; and
(c) publicly condemning the results if elections
are carried out under such conditions.
11. Assist the U.S. and other members of the international
community in engaging Iraq’s neighbours in discussions over
Iraq’s future with a view to lessening tensions and interference.
12. Mandate an envoy to reach out to the insurgency
(al-Qaeda in Iraq excepted) to pave the way for negotiations with
the U.S.
13. Encourage and assist Iraqi political actors
in reaching a comprehensive political accord as described above.
14. Adopt as a goal, should these efforts fail,
the convening of a broad and inclusive conference bringing together
Iraqi actors, regional states and key members of the international
community with a view to reaching a new political compact.
15. Increase staff and resources to reflect the
UN’s growing political role in Iraq. |