"There is nothing preventing Iraq from going right back to October 2006"
Karen DeYoung's article in the Washington Post nicely captures two things: One, how tenuous a situation we have right now in Iraq, and how the gains of 2007 can be wiped out frighteningly quickly, and two, what an absolute mess the British Army left southern Iraq. This is what happens when you march into Basra Province thinking it's an Arabic-speaking Country Armagh. This is what happens when you equate a lack of violence with everything going well -- and ignore the militias who are taking control of the streets. This is what happens when you decide to do peace-keeping rather than counter-insurgency.
As outlined by several civilian and military officials, none of whom was authorized to speak on the record, a victory in Basra against what Bush described as "those who believe they are outside the law" could prove Maliki's mettle. "Basra's been a mess for a long time," said a U.S. official in Baghdad, "and everybody's said to Maliki, 'What are you doing about it?' "But this official and others said that if the fighting in Basra leads to a breakdown in the cease-fire observed since August by the bulk of Sadr's forces elsewhere in the country, it could easily shatter the tenuous U.S. security gains of recent months.
The violence has already spread to Baghdad, where Iraqi and U.S. forces yesterday continued sporadic fighting with militia members in the sprawling eastern enclave known as Sadr City. Despite indications that many of the fighters were mainline Mahdi Army, U.S. officials chose to consider them members of "special groups" that have resisted Sadr's authority. To acknowledge otherwise would be to declare a de facto end to the cease-fire.
A renewal of significant violence in the capital and the surrounding area of central Iraq could lead to the collapse of U.S. security arrangements with former Sunni insurgents known as the Sons of Iraq. "All the same players and all the same weapons are still out there," said Stephen Biddle, a military expert at the Council on Foreign Relations who has advised Army Gen. David H. Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Iraq.
"There is nothing preventing Iraq from going right back to October 2006 except voluntary agreements by the players. That's why Basra is so dangerous," Biddle said. "It's a real policy problem" for the administration, he said, "and the fact that there are no coalition forces on the ground in Basra is really coming home right now."
Biddle said that "if this thing collapses, there will be a lot of pressure [from the military] to halt further withdrawals of U.S. troops." About 9,000 troops have been withdrawn since last year, with an additional three brigades scheduled to come home by the end of July. An aide to Petraeus said yesterday there are "no plans on slowing anything at this point."
U.S. forces have stayed away from southern Iraq since they passed through rapidly on their march to Baghdad in the spring of 2003. The southern part of the country is overwhelmingly Shiite, and the U.S. focus during the first three years of the war was on the insurgency emanating from Sunnis backing Saddam Hussein and from the group al-Qaeda in Iraq.
At the same time, British forces had been given control of the south. While U.S. officers frequently disparaged British tactics as tepid, the administration was reluctant to criticize its key international ally. British forces eventually withdrew from the region and the city of Basra and are now largely confined, in reduced numbers, to a base near the Basra airport. In December, Basra became the latest province to be placed under complete Iraqi government control.
Even if they had wanted to move into the south at any point over the past five years, however, U.S. forces were already spread thin in the rest of the country. The sectarian warfare between Sunnis and Shiite militia groups that erupted in 2006 led Bush last year to deploy an additional 30,000 troops, which were concentrated in Baghdad and the surrounding area.
A National Intelligence Estimate last August warned that "intra-Shia conflict involving factions competing for power and resources probably will intensify as Iraqis assume control of provincial security" in the south. In Basra, it concluded, "violence has escalated with the drawdown of [British] forces there. Local militias show few signs of reducing their competition for control of valuable oil resources and territory."
13 comments:
KBR is already building dinning facilities at the Basra airport for about 4,000 troops.
So there are plans to put a U.S. brigade (Marines?) there. Just wonder from where they will get these ...
The marines are bored in Anbar.
Split the MEF into two MEBs and send one to Basrah...
So the Americans, who let looting go in Baghdad for weeks without declaring Marshal Law, then disbanded the Iraqi Army essentially creating the insurgency, are pointing fingers at the British for a job poorly done in Basra? The mind boggles.
Whether the British Army consciously chose to perform Peacekeeping instead of COIN in Basra out of preference for the former over the latter or not, the fact is that the political will and support, never mind resources, were critically lacking to wage an effective COIN campaign anyway. A genuine pacification of Basra would have taken perhaps half of the fighting force of Britain's Regular Army to achieve, which was and is simply beyond its resources. That, together with thousands of troops in Afghanistan, the general public perception that Iraq is "America's war", the lack of political will to make hard choices and provide the necessary resources to see things through, and weak senior military leadership, have precluded the waging of an effective COIN campaign by the British Army in and around Basra.
The US leapt head-first into a sand-pit went it went into Iraq in 2003; it may crawl out, someday, but once de-Baathification began, it was never going to be able to leap back out. Sadly, whether appropriate or not, the US is more or less stuck owning this mess.
To argue that US troops would have done a markedly better job in reducing "militia" (read, JAM) influence in Basra through proactive COIN ops would require one to argue that they're done a better job in Sadr City.
Obviously, they haven't--at best they've deterred JAM into a temporary ceasefire, which now may be breaking down.
Was it right to disband the army?
Probably not...but it was not the end all be all that people claim it was.
That army was in poor shape and would have been infiltrated by insurgents from the beginning...it wasn't going to help us for the most part.
What should have been done was paying them from the beginning after they were disbanded instead of waiting and not helping them until fighting started...
Maybe a Saddamist Army could have been helpful, maybe not.
But why everyone acts like it would have been this great thing that could have helped us out makes me scratch my head...
infiltrated by what insurgents? there was no insurgency before the army was disbanded!
The American military was greated with open arms. McCain is right, I remember it too. It's not true that they hated US troops right off. It started with the looting, and Rumsfeld not doing anything about it. No attempt was made to declare Marshall Law. How does he explain that?
Live and learn.
Surely it will go better next time.
Rumsfeld has been in the business of war for a long time. Cheney, too. Among the most experienced men in Washington, too.
Never thought Id see a Rumsfeld supporter post here.
Steve
I've quoted you and linked to you here: http://consul-at-arms.blogspot.com/2008/03/re-there-is-nothing-preventing-iraq.html
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