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18 December 2009
By Nicola Nasser*
Nowhere it is more
obvious than in Iraq that the existence of an election
law, elections themselves and the constitution they
are based on are not indicators of democracy or
legitimacy, because these mechanisms are merely
symbols of the antithesis of the mechanisms of
democracy as practiced back home by the U.S. occupying
power.
An editorial of The
Washington Post on December 8 hailed the passing two
days earlier of an amended version of the 2005
election law by the Iraqi “Council of Representatives”
(CoR) as a “Breakthrough in Iraq,” which “gives
democracy a chance to work.” However if this statement
is not misleading, then it is extremely too
optimistic, at least for one reason: The Iraqis
themselves had another say.
The new
version was vetoed by none other than Vice-President
Tareq al-Hashemi. On November 23, under U.S. excessive
pressure including a phone call by President Barak
Obama to
Kurdistan Regional Government
head
Masoud
Barzani,
the CoR passed another amended version of the law
without addressing al-Hashemi’s demands to increase
the representation in parliament of displaced people,
internally and abroad, from 5% of the total to 15%,
which indicates yielding in to U.S. pressure by al-Hashemi,
nor did it address the Kurds’ threat to boycott the
elections if their demands in Kirkuk were not met, in
another indication of yielding to U.S. pressure by the
Kurds, although it did meet their complaint for more
parliamentary seats.
Rachel Schneller, a
Foreign Service officer with the U.S. State Department
writing for the Council on Foreign Relations on
December 4, warned that the latest version of the
Iraqi election law could make things worse in Iraq if
approved. The Sunnis, including Hashemi, could resort
to “desperate measures” to gain power as the new
election law provoked claims of Shiite dominance.
Schneller wrote that elections in Iraq are not a sign
of stability. “The United States would do well to back
away from the policy of elections at any cost,” she
concluded.
Obama’s administration had a different point of view.
U.S. diplomats, notably Washington 's ambassador in
Baghdad Christopher Hill, had pushed MPs to pass the
law, which they did in the wake of a meeting between a
US delegation including US Forces Commander in Iraq
General Raymond Odierno and deputy US Ambassador to
Baghdad Robert Ford and the Iraqi president Jalal
Talibani. The White House said the move was “a
decisive moment for Iraq's democracy.” White House
spokesman Robert Gibbs said the U.S.. welcomed the new
law. “This legislative action will allow Iraq to hold
national elections within Iraq 's constitutional
framework,” he said. Earlier, Obama had hailed the
Iraqi elections next year as a “significant
breakthrough” and a “milestone …
that can bring lasting peace and unity to Iraq..”
The administration sees the election as a prerequisite
to the U.S. meeting its goal of releasing more combat
troops for the Afghani theatre by August next year,
and redeploying its combatants fully by 2012, whatever
the cost might be to Iraqis.
The
carnage left by a series of coordinated attacks by car
bombs and suicide bombers on December 15, December 8,
October 25 and August 19, which struck at the symbols
of what the U.S. hopes would be a burgeoning
pro-western government, if not a puppet regime, in and
near the heavily
protected Green Zone, which houses the largest U.S.
Embassy worldwide, the Iraqi parliament and other
government offices and embassies in
Baghdad, claiming more than 500 lives and hundreds of
wounded, and inflicting devastating damage on public
order infrastructure, is a stark and humiliating proof
of the U.S. failure, and not only a failure of a proxy
Iraqi government, in securing even the Iraqi capital
after less than nine years of the U.S. – led invasion
of Iraq.
Those
bloody demonstrations of insecurity cast serious
doubts on the planned imminent redeployment of U.S.
troops. “The
American role is necessary now in Iraq , not only to
maintain security but to maintain political
stability,” Hameed Fadhel, a political science
professor at Baghdad University told Asia Times on Dec
15. “The Iraqi people no longer trust their
politicians,” added Tariq Harb, a member of Prime
Minister Noori al-Maliki's State of Law alliance. Sadi
Pira, a politburo member of the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan, PUK, one of the two dominant Kurdish
parties, was more vocal on maintaining the U.S.
“military role” in Iraq : The latest bombings in
Baghdad , along with unrest in Mosul and Kirkuk ,
“proves that the Iraqi forces are not able to control
the cities or the borders. If the U.S. position is to
extend the [stay] of the remaining coalition forces,
it is not bad for Iraq ,” Pira told the Times.
Such statements vindicate
the U.S. officials who were quoted by Reuters on
December 10 as saying that the 60-day period after
Iraq's election will probably reveal whether the
country will tip back into sectarian bloodshed or move
toward stability and peace.
But more importantly, the immediate aftermath
of the upcoming elections would reveal whether the
U.S. troops would redeploy on time. The U.S. force in
Iraq is supposed to be reduced to 50,000 by the end of
August from around 115,000 now. However, the date for
the end of the U.S. combat operations in Iraq is not
included in a bilateral security pact signed last
year, but was set by Obama as part of a pledge to U.S.
voters to end the war on Iraq .
In his accepting
Nobel Peace Prize
speech earlier this month, Obama proclaimed a
justification for war that could label him more a
modern Niccolo Maichiaville than “the candidate of
change,” which does not preclude the extension of his
country’s military presence in Iraq as a hidden
agenda. “The instruments of war do have a role to play
in preserving the peace,” Obama declared. The United
States reserves the right to “act unilaterally if
necessary” and to launch wars whose purpose “extends
beyond self-defense or the defense of one nation
against an aggressor,” he said.
Could this be the hidden
agenda of the United States in Iraq : i.e. to create
pretexts for a permanent military presence in Iraq ?
Within this context it has been noteworthy that the
government of al- Maliki and its security officials,
when they were questioned by the parliament in closed
and public sessions last week, were divided over whom
to blame for the bombings: Syria and other “Arab”
countries or infiltrators of their security agencies
by resistance elements whom they dub as “terrorists,”
but they never hinted to the U.S. occupying power as a
possible culprit, which maintains the capability to
really infiltrate the security shield around the
“Green Zone” and could be the major beneficiary of
portraying the government as still incapable of
maintaining law and order; this possibility was given
substance, for example, by the report of The New York
Times on December 11 that Blackwater gunmen,
ostensibly contracted as security guards in Iraq and
Afghanistan, “participated in some of the CIA’s most
sensitive activities—clandestine raids with agency
officers,” and by CIA Director Leon Panetta’s briefing
before Congressional intelligence committees last June
about a covert “assassination program” involving
Blackwater. Nor did they hint to Iran , the major
beneficiary of the U.S. occupation or to voting by
bombs by the political components of the U.S.
–engineered “political process” as they used to do
since they were brought into the country by the
invading armies.
The reason underlying the
U.S. failure in Iraq should be sought in the fact that
the United States has failed to establish a political
system of its own image in Iraq and has instead
created its antithesis, which deprived both its
presence in the country as well as the political
regime it has so far failed to install there of a
legitimacy that would credibly stand on its own as an
alternative to the legitimate national regime the U.S.
invasion devastated in 2003, notwithstanding the fact
it was labeled a dictatorship by western standards of
liberal parliamentary democracy.
For the same reason, the
U.S. – engineered Iraqi constitution of 2005 and the
election law which regulated the Iraqi elections the
next year as well as the latest amended election law,
which will regulate the upcoming elections early next
year, have so far failed to vindicate the missing
legitimacy.
Although
the U.S. managed to go to its war on Iraq on seemingly
“legally
sufficient grounds both nationally and
internationally, the problem was legitimacy”: U.S.
invasion struck at the heart of the “just-war theory,”
which is codified in international law, retired
General Wesley K. Clark, a senior fellow at the Burkle
Center for International Relations, rightly noted on
July 2, 2007, indicating that the U.S. biggest mistake
was the failure to appreciate the importance of law
and the concept of legitimacy in the conduct of
American affairs abroad, and citing “recent polls”, he
said the U.S. is seen by some as “the greatest threat
to peace and, in some instances, (former) President
(George W.) Bush more dangerous than Osama Bin Laden!”
Indeed, given the
“continuity” of Bush’s policies in Iraq , Bush’s
successor is not less responsible for the current
status quo in the country if he doesn’t reverse
course, which incumbent President Obama did not so
far. The invasion was illegitimate, the ensuing
occupation is still illegitimate, the proxy regime the
U.S. occupying power is still trying to install in
Baghdad is illegitimate, and no artificially and
hastily drafted and instituted constitution and
election law could legitimize an illegitimate status
quo in Iraq .
Illegitimacy of the
status quo in Iraq is further questioned by the bitter
and tragic inhumane fruits of the status quo.
What elections as indicator
of democracy could any objective observer perceive in
a country where the U.S. military adventure has left
around five million children orphans, one million
child laborers, street vendors or beggars, and three
million women widows. At least there are three million
Iraqi refugees abroad; the U.N. has
estimated that there were about 2 million Iraqi
refugees in neighboring Jordan and Syria , and some
2.6 million people displaced within Iraq,
in addition to millions of unemployed Iraqis -- all
constituting more than half of the 27 – million
population. The
state infrastructure is still not rehabilitated, the
central government could not secure its own safety,
let alone the safety of the population, in the capital
Baghdad, let alone the rest of the country, without
the presence of about 115 thousand mainly U.S. troops
and around 100 thousand foreign mercenaries, dubbed as
security contractors, and where the basic services
like water and power are either totally broken down or
partially operational, and basics like fuel are in
short supply in a country floating on the largest oil
reserves in the world, second only to Saudi Arabia.
The U.S. support of
undemocratic Arab regimes all throughout the twentieth
century, allegedly for giving priority to alliances
against communism over democratization, is held
responsible for the survival of oppressive
governments, the emergence of military dictatorships
and delaying the normal pace of development in the
Arab world.
However, following the
collapse of the communist Soviet Union, the ensuing
disintegration of the Warsaw Pact late in the eighties
of the past century, and the emergence of the United
States as the leader of a unipolar world system and
the sole inheritor of the WWII victory, have all
contributed to a U.S. turnabout toward improving the
image of the American world leader, and within this
context unfortunately the U.S. launched a war on Iraq
“on the wings of a lie” (Thomas L. Friedman on
November 18, 2005) that was portrayed -- after all
other pretexts for the war were proved pure lies,
including WMD and links to al-Qaeda -- by US official
propaganda as a war for democracy, not only in Iraq,
but also from the Iraqi launching pad all throughout
the region.
Creating the antithesis
of U.S. non – sectarian democracy in Iraq might serve
the immediate goals of the war on the country, but
absolutely it negates the U.S. self – proclaimed goal
of creating a democracy there. First among the
immediate goals is precluding a power vacuum if Iraq
has no elected parliament and no new government in
place by March 2010, because the ensuing renewal of
sectarian civil war could restrict releasing more U.S.
combat troops for Afghanistan . However, instituting a
sectarian government that takes its legitimacy from a
sectarian parliament elected on the basis of a
sectarian constitution would only be the ideal
political recipe for the renewal of the status quo.
Nobody
cares now to hold the U.S. administration responsible
for ignoring the bipartisan consensus on the
“benchmarks” that were set to avoid the creation of a
sectarian regime in Baghdad , and consequently to
quell the sectarian war that erupted in the footsteps
of the invading armies, and still fuelled by the
ruling “friends” of the United States .
Washington’s calls for a “timetable” to achieve the
benchmarks as a precondition for U.S. military and
financial support fell on deaf ears in Baghdad .
Patrick Lang, former head of the Middle East section
of the Defense Intelligence Agency, said the trouble
is that Iraqis do not believe there will be serious
consequences if they fail to achieve these benchmarks.
“Realistically they can figure out that the chances we
would pull the plug and leave is
just about zero.” (Council on Foreign Relations, March
11, 2008)
Amendment
of the sectarian constitution of 2005 was among
eighteen benchmarks set by the
Iraq
Study Group, but this benchmark has yet to
be met.
Ironically, U.S..
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is in
charge of foreign policy, has yet to step in with more
than a nominal role in Iraq .. Following her latest
counterproductive input in Pakistan and the Arab –
Israeli peace process, she seems in a frenzy to clinch
the title of her post in an administration that has
unequivocally shifted the management of foreign policy
from the Foggy Bottom to the White House, to jostle
herself the place she is entitled to among a veteran
team of heavyweight old hands whom President Obama
assigned the most critical foreign affairs problems in
Afghanistan – Pakistan, the Middle East and Iraq to
Richard
Holbrooke who ended the Balkan war, George Mitchell
who brought peace to Northern Ireland and Vice
President Joe Biden respectively.
Hardly
Mrs. Clinton has so far figured out or in about Iraq .
Yet, and despite her negative voting record on Iraq,
she still can make a difference by at least weighing
in for a speedy withdrawal out of the country by U.S.
marines and troops, to leave Iraq to Iraqis so they
could find a way out of the tragic quagmire her
country plunged Iraq in.
Total and complete
withdrawal of the U.S. military from Iraq is the
prerequisite for a free country where election laws
could then be drafted on national, and not on
sectarian basis, to be credibly part of a democratic
evolution. Mere “redeployment” of the U.S. military
there will not do the trick and will not change the
status quo.
* Nicola Nasser is a
veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank
of the Israeli – occupied territories. |