Iraq
in 2014: Back to civil war?
Fears
grow that elections next year could re-ignite sectarian tensions
21
December, 2013
As
Iraq closes out one of its bloodiest years since the 2003 U.S.
invasion, fears are mounting that the national elections next April
will foreshadow more violence and perhaps even another descent into
the sectarian conflict that enveloped the country and cost tens of
thousands of lives.
These
will be the first national elections since the U.S. military
withdrawal in 2011. Then, violence was at a relative lull, and
reconciliation between ethnic groups seemed to be within reach. Since
that time, however, violent attacks have sharply
increased.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is under pressure from his allies in
and outside Iraq to demonstrate inclusiveness in his government, and
his actions after the virtually certain victory for his Shia bloc
will be critical.
The
past week began with
a series of car bombings that killed nearly 100 people; over the past
month, more than 260 people have died in similar attacks. The number
of dead so far this year now rivals 2006 and 2007 figures, when
sectarian fighting was at its most feverish, tit-for-tat attacks
drove millions of people from their homes, and at
least a
million refugees left the country.
The
majority of the recent attacks have been carried out against the
majority Shia population by Sunni groups led, primarily, by a branch
of Al-Qaeda that has folded in Al-Qaeda in Iraq with its affiliates
in Syria to become known as Al-Qaeda in Iraq and Syria (AQIS). The
group continues to absorb fighters filing across the 400-mile border
the two countries share. Attacks on Iraqi security forces,
simultaneous bomb attacks in different locations, and mass prison
breaks have rapidly escalated in the past 12 months
In
February 2006, Sunni fighters blew up
the golden-domed al-Askari mosque in Samarra. Shia leaders called it
their people's 9/11 – an act so grievous it propelled Shia
militia death
squads into
rampaging through Sunni neighborhoods, kidnapping dozens of people en
masse and piling the corpses of people killed execution-style into
morgues that had nowhere to hold them.
"Going
back to 2006 is the major fear," Michael Knights, a research
fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy who recently
visited Iraq, told Al Jazeera America. "What we don't want to
happen is going back there and we have to go through another cycle of
civil war."
He
said he believed civilians would, unlike in 2006, sit out the current
conflict. The mass attacks, hetold the
House Committee on Foreign Affairs during a hearing last week on the
resurgence of Al-Qaeda in Iraq, "are beginning to severely test
Shia patience, resulting in growing evidence of revenge attacks on
Sunni mosques, preachers and civilians."
But
to Sunnis in Baghdad, Knights continued, "the Iraqi security
forces appear to be the ultimate Shia militia, corralling Sunnis into
ghettoized neighborhoods, where they are subject to repressive
policing and economic isolation."
The
fight continues to roil between the Sunni-led groups, such as AQIS,
and the Iraqi security forces, which, on the whole, are politically
driven, ethnocentric and corrupt. Their members, most of them Shias,
include many who claim membership in militia groups.
Ranj
Alaaldin, a Middle East analyst and doctoral researcher with the
London School of Economics, says violence in Iraq will continue
unabated in the new year.
"Terrorists
will continue targeting sensitive and crowded areas with the aim of
launching mass-casualty attacks," he said in an interview,
adding that Al-Qaeda-linked groups will see the upcoming elections as
an opportunity "to undermine the government and exacerbate
political tensions."
De-Baathification still law
So
far there is no candidate within Maliki's political bloc challenging
his position, although another contender could emerge in the weeks
prior to the poll. His Dawa party is expected to retain power with
the help of other Shia groups with which he is aligned. Other Shia
leaders, including former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi,
will challenge him
on a separate ticket. The political party loyal to Shia cleric
Muqtada al Sadr is also opposing Maliki's rule.
The
rifts that Maliki had been tasked with healing persist. Political
reconciliation, both informal and otherwise among the Shias, Sunnis
and Kurds, are suspended as Maliki and his government continue to
target political adversaries. His office, for instance,
recently issued arrest
warrants for three legislators belonging to Sadr's party.
The
government finance minister, Rafi al-Issawi, a moderate
Sunni, resigned in
protest in March after security forces raided his office and over
other acts he saw as alienating to his political party, the Iraqiya
List, headed by former prime minister Ayad Allawi.
De-Baathification, adopted in
2003 to weed out Saddam Hussein-era officials from positions of
power, is still law. It has been employed by the Maliki government to
isolate, arrest or oust political threats and opponents.
The
security forces remain under the thumb of Shia politicians, including
those from Maliki’s Dawa party, but also members of the Badr
brigade — the former military wing of the Islamic Supreme Council
of Iraq, which ran against Maliki's
Dawa Party in the last parliamentary election, in 2010. Despite
repeated appeals by the U.S. to bring more Sunnis into the ranks, the
Interior Ministry, which controls the country's security forces,
remains a Shia bastion. Sunnis guarding the few remaining Sunni
enclaves in Baghdad in makeshift units called the Sons
of Iraq continue
to be shut out of joining.
Maliki wants the
U.S. to provide Iraq with Apache attack helicopters and drones
and recentlypurchased
Korean fighter jets. His critics claim he intends to use them against
their communities.
These
issues, says Knights, will figure prominently as the time for
election nears.
"Perceptions
of a stolen election, of Iranian meddling or of noninclusive
government without Sunni Arab participation would gift the terrorists
with a further propaganda coup," he says. "On the other
hand, a positive propaganda coup might be secured by the government
if the terrorism charges against Rafi al-Issawi … can be rapidly
quashed."
Maliki defends his record
During
a visit to Washington in October, Maliki blamed the tumult in Iraq on
the Syrian conflict and the Arab Spring.
"Regretfully
the Arab revolutions were able to shake the dictatorships, but were
not able to fill the void in the right way," he told an
audience at the U.S. Institute for Peace. "So, a vacuum was
created and Al-Qaeda and other terrorist organizations were able to
exploit, and to gain ground."
Iraq
needs support from its international friends, he said, or the
consequences "would be disastrous for the whole world."
He
also defended his record, denying that his failure to reach out to
political opponents and bring more Sunnis into the government had
prompted much of the backlash and violence.
"I
never, never stepped on the constitution," Maliki said.
"Democracy needs lots of time and solutions, and we have a very
heavy legacy."
Economic growth within reach
At
the same time, Iraq's fragile economic gains could serve to unite its
leaders and people, especially with the outlook for its oil exports
predicting exponential growth, said Deputy Assistant Secretary Brett
McGurk during testimony before
the House Foreign Affairs Committee at a different hearing last
month.
Last
year, Iraq surpassed Iran as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries' second-largest producer, he said. It now leads Iran as an
exporter to India and China, and its 3 million barrels a day were
earning nearly $200 billion in revenue a year.
That
rate is expected to increase to 6 million a day by 2020 and 8 million
by 2035, McGurk went on, and revenues for the period could approach
$5 trillion.
The
U.S. does not take sides in the Iraq conflict, he said, although
Washington has repeatedlycalled
on Maliki to reach out to other parties. "Instead, we focus on
the principles enshrined in the Iraqi constitution and the maxim that
it is always better to peacefully divide a large pie than to fight
over a small one."
Also
solidifying its financial base are Al-Qaeda and its affiliates, who
sought to bolster their local support in cities such as Mosul, in the
north, where Iraqi security forces have failed to gain a foothold.
"Since
2010 AQIS has been self-funding through organized crime rackets
involving kidnap for ransom, protection payments from large Iraqi
companies, plus trucking, smuggling and real estate portfolios,"
Knights said.
That
Al-Qaeda fighters are crossing borders to perpetrate attacks in Iraq
and Syria strengthens Maliki’s mandate to crack down on what he
deems security threats. In comments broadcast in August on Iraqi
state television he warned that "no one should imagine that he
can interfere and set a country and its people on fire" while
escaping "the interference of others in their affairs."
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