Iraq
crisis: As Shia shrines are targeted and Tikrit is strangled, the
fiercest of wars lies ahead
A
demoralised army is hoping that the US will step in with drones, but
their use could bring devastating revenge attacks
Patrick
Cockburn
6
July, 2014
The
meltdown of American and British policy in Iraq and Syria attracts
surprisingly little criticism at home. Their aim for the past three
years has been get rid of Bashar al-Assad as ruler of Syria and
stabilise Iraq under the leadership of Nouri al-Maliki. The exact
reverse has happened, with Mr Assad in power and likely to remain so,
while Iraq is in turmoil with the government's authority extending
only a few miles north and west of Baghdad.
By
pretending that the Syrian opposition stood a chance of overthrowing
Mr Assad after the middle of 2012, and insisting that his departure
be the justification for peace talks, Washington, London and Paris
have ensured that the Syrian civil war would go on. "I spent
three years telling them again and again that the war in Syria would
inevitably destabilise Iraq, but they paid no attention," the
Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari told me last week. I remember
in the autumn of 2012 a senior British diplomat assuring me that talk
of the Syrian war spreading was much exaggerated.
Now
the bills are beginning to come in, with Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the
leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis), declaring
a caliphate in northern Iraq and Syria. He has called on all Muslims
to pledge allegiance to the Islamic state and effectively denied the
legitimacy of Muslim rulers throughout the world. No wonder Saudi
Arabia has moved 30,000 troops to guard its 500-mile-long border with
Iraq. There is a certain divine justice in this, since until six
months ago the Saudis were speeding jihadists in the general
direction of Syria and Iraq but is now dreading their return.
The
success of Isis depends on its ability to win spectacular victories
against the odds and not on its primeval and brutal ideology. Victory
in battle is what makes it attractive to young Sunni recruits and it
can also afford to pay them. It cannot sit on its laurels for long
but needs to secure the territories it has taken and make sure that
its Sunni allies – tribal, Baathist, former members of Saddam's
army – who joined it to fight against Mr Maliki will not find the
new masters worse than the old and change sides. Isis has moved
swiftly to prevent this by demanding that the allies swear allegiance
to the caliphate and give up their weapons. But beyond that Isis must
show that success at Mosul was not a flash in the pan. As Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi put it last week: "There is no deed better than
jihad, so to arms, to arms, soldiers of the Islamic state, fight,
fight."
The
Baghdad government is hopeful that the White House will ultimately
use drones against Isis convoys even if it will not allow air strikes
by fixed wing aircraft called in by American forward air controllers
on the ground. Drones are particularly appealing to politicians
because they appear to maximise damage to the enemy without American
loss of life which might anger voters back home. It is true that
roving Isis columns of trucks packed with fighters and heavy machine
guns have proved effective so far. One Iraqi official compared them
to "Arab raiders of old who would strike at caravans and then
quickly withdraw". But the core Isis military leadership is
experienced Iraqi military professionals who will make sure their men
don't make easy targets. Even so, any American military action,
however, limited will buoy up the faltering morale of the Iraqi army.
The
US is pleased with the way drones have worked in Yemen and Waziristan
against small groups of al-Qa'ida-associated groups. But these
isolated gangs are not a serious threat compared with what is brewing
in Syria and Iraq, where there will soon be tens of thousands of
trained, well-equipped and fanatical militants under a strong central
command.
But
there is one important aspect of drone warfare to which Washington
has not given enough attention. Drones have hitherto been used
largely against ill-equipped tribespeople in isolated parts of the
world and not against well-organised groups such as Isis. The latter
may not be able to do much against drones at the moment they strike,
but it will certainly retaliate later against American or European
targets. Sunni are attracted by the idea – and Hezbollah in Lebanon
have the same attraction for Shia – that here at last is a Sunni
military organisation that can fight and win, however toxic its
beliefs and behaviour. Faith expressed through war and death is at
the heart of jihadism, so drone strikes will inevitably bring
retaliation.
Another
round in the war in Iraq is gathering strength. Isis and its allies
have succeeded easily because of the dysfunctional nature of the
Iraqi army and because they have been advancing almost entirely
through sympathetic Sunni-dominated areas. It is now up against Shia
militia and is coming into mixed or Shia neighbourhoods where it will
be resisted. But Iraq more than most countries is dominated by its
capital with its seven million people, and Isis may want to establish
that it has Baghdad under the gun, even if it cannot capture it.
The
US, Britain, France and their allies still do not have a policy to
counter Isis. Washington is trying to do now what it should have done
in 2010 when it could have got rid of Mr Maliki. Smugly triumphant at
the time at besting the Americans in Iraq, the Iranians made the same
mistake in thinking that Mr Maliki was the safest bet for them,
without realising the degree to which his effort to monopolise power
was degrading the Iraqi state and armed forces and enraging the Sunni
minority.
While
the Americans imagine the Iranians are full of devious plots, they
are, in fact, aghast at what has happened. "They don't want to
overextend themselves," said an Iraqi politician I asked about
Iranian policy. "They are waiting for the Americans to do
something."
The
Iranians have started acting in Iraq, though they have not committed
many people. They are trying repeat their tactics in Syria, which is
to create a parallel army out of the militias to buttress or replace
the regular Iraqi army. They openly say they are doing so. But there
is another aspect of their Syrian strategy which shows signs of
appearing in Iraq and is bad news for Iraqis. This is to cut off
electricity and water to rebel areas and pulverise any town or city
held by the enemy with shellfire and bombing without assaulting it,
but forcing the civilian population to flee; then advance cautiously
and try to encircle enemy positions with checkpoints so they can be
gradually strangled.
This
appears to be what is happening in Tikrit, the birthplace of Saddam
Hussein and a city of 200,000 on the Tigris river. The city centre is
being systematically smashed according to eyewitnesses, and any point
of resistance is pounded by artillery. Iraqi security officials say
they believe they have a good chance of clearing Salahuddin province
of which Tikrit is the capital, but they admit that recapturing Mosul
will take a long time. Meanwhile, Isis has started bulldozing Shia
shrines and religious buildings, opening the door to a ferocious
religious war.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.