Op-Ed: US-trained Iraqi Special Forces aid al-Maliki's repression
The US helped to train and now equips the Iraqi Special Operations Forces (ISOF). The forces are used by Iraqi PM Nouri al-Maliki to help him centralise power and repress opposing Sunni politicians.
Robert
Tollast in
The National Interest maintains that even as the US prepared to drawn
down its forces “elements of ISOF were already being used as a
private army by Iraqi prime minister Nouri al-Maliki.”
Earlier
last year, al-Maliki moved against his Sunni vice-president Tariq
al-Hashimi,
and laid a number of charges against him including that he directed
death squads. He was eventually sentenced to death in absentia as he
sought refuge in Turkey. Many think that the charges were politically
motivated and the court is under the control of Maliki.
The
pattern of cracking down on opposition Sunni politicians has
continued, with a raid upon the home and offices of the finance
minister, as reported recently in Digital
Journal. Rafie
al-Issawi was a prominent member of the Iraqiya political group. He
claims that about 150 in total of his guards and staff had been
arrested in the raid. While US authorities expressed concern about
the raid, the US continues training and support for Maliki's special
forces.
Robert
Tollast claims that
Maliki “controls ISOF through the Counterterrorism Bureau, which
has proved a useful tool for crushing dissent”, and is “implicated
in the intimidation, arrest and even murder of Sunni politicians and
opposition figures.” The US
provides Iraq with
a great deal of military aid and equipment. Even a year ago, there
were alarms issued about the provision of arms:
The Obama administration is moving ahead with the sale of nearly $11 billion worth of arms and training for the Iraqi military despite concerns that Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki is seeking to consolidate authority, create a one-party Shiite-dominated state and abandon the American-backed power-sharing government.
No
doubt the US is worried about the possibility of Sunni Hussein
loyalists gaining power within Iraq. However, US material support of
Maliki's repression actually fuels Sunni and Al Qaeda insurgency.
Tony
Dodge, an Iraqi expert at the London School of Economics said:
“Maliki is heading towards an incredibly destructive dictatorship, and it looks to me as though the Obama administration is waving him across the finishing line. Meanwhile, the most likely outcomes, which are either dictatorship or civil war, would be catastrophic because Iraq sits between Iran and Syria.”
As
Tollast points out, Maliki's policies do not create security against
terrorism, but rather produce recruits for their cause as more and
more Sunnis see the Maliki government as illegitimate. Maliki has
disenfranchised Sunnis and angered Kurds. Even Muqtada
al Sadr a
Shia leader has come out against Maliki and in support of those
protesting his policies. Recently there have been numerous
demonstrations against Maliki's government as shown on the appended
video.
Iraqi
Shiite Cleric Lends Support to Sunni Protest
A
top anti-American Shiite cleric lent support Tuesday to Sunni
protesters who have been rallying against Iraq's Shiite-dominated
central government, increasing pressure on the leadership in Baghdad.
1
January, 2012
Hard-line
religious leader Muqtada al-Sadr told reporters in the Shiite holy
city of Najaf that the demonstrators have the right to protest as
long as they are peaceful. He stopped short of calling for a wider
uprising like those that have rippled across the region over the past
two years, but warned of further unrest if demands on the street are
not met.
"Beware
of the Arab Spring in Iraq," the firebrand cleric said in a
warning to the power-sharing government led by Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki, a Shiite.
Thousands
of protesters have been holding rallies in the western desert
province of Anbar and other Sunni strongholds for more than a week.
The
demonstrations follow the arrest of bodyguards assigned to the Sunni
finance minister, Rafia al-Issawi, though they tap into deeper Sunni
grievances of perceived discrimination by al-Maliki's government. The
protesters' demands include guarantees of better government services
and release of prisoners in Iraqi jails.
Al-Sadr
has a complex relationship with Baghdad and with Iraqi blocs outside
his conservative Shiite power base.
He
grudgingly backed longtime rival al-Maliki following elections in
2010, then last year joined Iraq's minority Sunni Arabs and Kurds in
calling for al-Maliki to resign. Al-Sadr's loyalists hold 40 seats in
parliament and retain control of several government ministries.
He
said Tuesday that al-Maliki "bears full responsibility" for
the discontent among Iraqis calling for change.
Still,
the cleric's backing is not unequivocal. He expressed hope that
protesters would not advocate a return to dictatorship or pursue a
sectarian agenda.
Iraq's
majority Shiites, including al-Sadr and al-Maliki, rose to political
prominence following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that ousted dictator
Saddam Hussein's Sunni-dominated regime.
"As
long as the demonstrations are peaceful and don't seek to dismantle
Iraq ... we are with the protests, and parliament should be with
them, not against them," he said. "The demands of
demonstrators are legitimate and popular, so they should be met."
The
staying power and level of anger among the Anbar protesters in
particular appears to have caught Iraqi leaders off guard.
At
least two people were wounded on Sunday when bodyguards and security
forces protecting a senior Sunni politician opened fire to disperse
protesters, marking the first casualties since the demonstrations
began. The politician, Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq, blamed
the incident on "rogue elements" within the crowd.
The
unrest comes as Iraq struggles to maintain its security and stability
a year after the last U.S. combat troops left.
British
monitoring group Iraq Body Count said in its annual report Tuesday
that it recorded 4,471 civilian deaths from violence in Iraq during
2012, up from 4,136 in 2011. The non-governmental organization has
consistently attempted to record Iraqi civilian casualties since the
invasion in March 2003.
A
wave of attacks that primarily targeted Iraqi Shiites and the
ethnically disputed city of Kirkuk killed at least 26 people on
Monday.
Iraqi
civilian deaths rise in "low-level war": study
A
total of 4,471 civilians died in Iraq's festering "low-level
war" with insurgents in 2012, the first annual climb in the
death toll in three years, campaigners said on Tuesday.
1
January, 2013
The
deaths, up from 4,059 in 2011, showed militant fighters were still
bent on carrying out large-scale bomb attacks, said rights group Iraq
Body Count (IBC) in its annual report.
Tensions
between Shi'ite, Kurdish and Sunni factions in Iraq's power-sharing
government have been on the rise this year and the civil war in
neighboring Syria is whipping up sectarian tension across the region.
Insurgents
pose a potent threat even though violence has fallen sharply since
the height of inter communal slaughter that followed the 2003
U.S.-led invasion that toppled former President Saddam Hussein.
There
has been at least one large bombing a month this year, usually
targeting security forces, government offices or Shi'ite Muslims. The
bloodiest day of 2012 was September 9, when more than 100 people were
killed in series of bomb blasts.
"2012
marks the first year since 2009 where the death toll for the year has
increased," IBC said in a statement.
"In
sum the latest evidence suggests that the country remains in a state
of low-level war little changed since early 2009, with a 'background'
level of everyday armed violence punctuated by occasional
larger-scale attacks designed to kill many people at once," it
added.
A
year after U.S. troops left, sectarian friction, as well as tension
over land and oil between Arabs and ethnic Kurds, threaten renewed
unrest and are hampering efforts to repair the damage of years of
violence and exploit Iraq's energy riches.
In
December, figures released by government showed 208 Iraqis were
killed, including 55 policemen and 28 soldiers.
IBC
said it has now recorded between 110,937 and 121,227 civilian deaths
in violent incidents since the 2003 invasion.
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