Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

With a Whimper, not a Bang;
A Milestone on the Way to the End of American Iraq

T.S. Eliot wrote at the end of "Hollow Men" in 1926, "This is the way the world ends/ Not with a bang but a whimper." He may as well have been talking about the war George W. Bush launched in Iraq in 2003.

The end of routine, independent patrolling of major Iraqi cities by US troops today is a major milestone in modern Iraqi history.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki declared Tuesday "National Sovereignty Day." Some 86 US bases have been closed in recent weeks (see the Jim Muir report). The LAT says that on Monday night, people in Baghdad danced in the streets, sang and set off (non-lethal) fireworks even in the midst of a dust storm.

Some Americans might find all this celebrating offensive. But the US public has mostly moved on, little interested in the foreign wars its armed forces are still fighting, and worried much more about the long-term consequences of the Republican Party's Ponzi-scheme economy of 2001-2008, the collapse of which has cost them or their family and friends their jobs. As in the 1930s, even celebrity gossip and the glitz of Hollywood are more present in people's minds than distant armies on the march. The public and the mass media mysteriously ignored the Afghanistan War right from 2002, and now Iraq is being given the same treatment, even though there are 130,000 or so US troops in Iraq and 38,000 in Afghanistan, and both contingents are still fighting and dying.

The end of US patrolling should neither be exaggerated nor downplayed as a turning point. Of course, US troops will still be in Iraqi streets from time to time, accompanying Iraqi forces. Special Operations teams will likely engage in surgical strikes in coordination with their Iraqi colleagues for years to come.

But there is an essential difference between such occasional interventions of a collaborative sort and routine patrols by a foreign military of densely populated urban areas in an Arab, Muslim country. The latter is viewed as a form of neo-colonialism by most Iraqis. The former could be welcome if it adds to law and order.

I was talking to a US military officer who had been in Baghdad in December, and he told me that he thought that Iraqi troops were now capable of patrolling independently, something he would not have said a year or two earlier. If they get into trouble, he said, they stand and fight. They still have poor logistical support. If the firefight lasts 5 hours rather than one hour, they might be in trouble because no one is bringing them ammunition and water. Az-Zaman writes in Arabic that the governor of Najaf remarked Sunday that US troops would still provide logistical support to Iraqi ones, despite the end of routine American patrols.

The Iraqi military has been setting up extra patrols and checkpoints in preparation for the cessation of American patrols. The az-Zaman article cited above speaks of some mysteries, including the incarceration of dozens of Iraqis in the provinces. And there is the sudden release of a major Mahdi Army militia commander. Is Washington trying to cut a deal as it leaves?

That the Iraqi military has experienced a sudden increase in efficiency is attested by relatively successful campaigns in 2008 against the Mahdi Army Shiite militia in Basra, Amara, Nasiriya, and Sadr City (East Baghdad). Security appears tangibly to have improved in the south in the aftermath. Still, of course the Iraqi police and other security forces have a long way to go toward professionalism.

Aljazeera English has video on the constant threat to police from guerrillas:



Of course, the operations in Basra and east Baghdad succeeded in part because the US air force gave the Iraqi military close air support. That is another way that the US is not just vanishing from Iraq. Iraq does not have an air force and will not have one for something close to a decade, and its government wants the US to act as a surrogate Iraqi air force for the time being. Note, however, that such air support can be proffered from al-Udeid base in Qatar. It does not require a base inside Iraq.

More US troops will be withdrawn, though Gen. Ray Odierno wants to have a big enough force in January to help provide security for the parliamentary elections that month. I think there is some fear that if US troops are not sufficient in number to help lock down the country for the elections, that paucity of troops may encourage Sunni Arab radicals to disrupt the balloting with massive car bombings. Moreover, there is a danger of Iranian hard liners trying to steal the Iraqi elections, as a repeat performance of what happened in Iran on June 12, by using petrodollars to buy votes for their hard line Shiite allies.

In the medium term, the bombings by Sunni Arab guerrilla groups who cannot reconcile to the Shiite- and Kurdish-led new government, will likely continue. It is not clear, however, that such bombings can actually undermine the new government or force a radical change. If they cannot, they are useless.

The end of major US combat operations, prematurely announced by Bush on the USS Lincoln in 2003, may finally be at hand. Iraq faces many challenges going forward. Corruption is almost crippling for reconstruction. There has been little political reconciliation. Guerrillas are still deadly, as are sectarian militias. An Arab-Kurdish struggle over oil-rich Kirkuk of some ferocity could break out at any time. Increasingly, however, these problems will have to be dealt with by the new Iraqi elite itself.

End/ (Not Continued)

21 Comments:

At 2:31 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

.
if I was an Iraqi soldier in the "Iraqi Army" during the period 2005 - 2008, and I saw that my Iraqi Commander was being ordered about by American Sergeants and Lieutenants, I am not going to "stand and fight" for the foreign occupiers. I'll play soldier in order to collect the paycheck so I can keep my kids from starving, but I would have no loyalty to a bunch of quisling collaborators or their occidental masters.

That your American Officer friend cannot see the nose on his face is not even interesting anymore.

a student of institutional racism in an institution that preaches that it is above racism, a la "The White Man's Burden," 1899.
.

 
At 2:38 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

.
Those poor, helpless Iraqi military people. Whatever will they do, Miss Scarlet ?

They need logistical support, but their Army doesn't have the capability to provide bottled water or bullets.

Maybe they could get their logistics support the same way the US Army gets theirs ?
No, not with organic logistics capabilities, you sentimental fool. You must be thinking of established US Army doctrine and the Principles taught in our military education system.
No, in this brave new world, where shareholder profits and guaranteeing access to oil for the US oil companies drives strategy,
we get our bottled water, and get our bullets, delivered by contractors. See, for example, https://www.fbo.gov/index?s=opportunity&mode=form&id=4269935ba5c3585f2664f233e85a24db&tab=core&_cview=1.

The Iraqis can do the same thing.
.

 
At 5:46 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am unclear about what is going to happen to ALL the US military bases in Iraq. I have not read they will be closed and 100% of US military personel are going to leave Iraq.

Sorry, but I smell a rotten fish, aka US propaganda. It reminds me of the visiting uncle who professes to leave but his clothes are still left in the closets and he somehow never remembers to return the front door key.

Can someone please clarify what exactly is going on in Iraq regarding American influence and involvement. Did America really give up the "front door key" to Iraq ????

 
At 9:15 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

There are thousands, if not tens of thousands of "unmanned drone robots" US forces are currently using in Iraq that fly or crawl on treads. It appears there has been enthusiastic acceptance of these tools by the US soldiers on the ground. (see the Danger Room blog on Wired). Are we passing these off the Iraqi forces ? How important have these been in the last years for successful counter insurgency ?
This is just one of the "known unknowns". What other surprises are instore ?

 
At 10:33 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

One of the things that's not being reported is the schedule or status of the Withdrawal/SoFA referendum that was appended to get it past Sistani and thru parliament last fall-winter. Is the referendum going away without even a whimper?

Supposedly the referendum was funded ($100M) earlier this month, accompanied by desultery 'who needs it anymore' comments from Maliki aid Ali al-Dabbagh. A wiki article says the referendum is delayed/scheduled to appear on the national parliamentary ballot in Jan. 2010. But the footnote on that item leads to a dated 6/10/09 article in German. A delay in something so foundational to US-Iraq policy should show up in the US press or Jazeera pretty quickly.

http://derstandard.at/fs/1244460360004/Referendum-ueber-Abkommen-mit-den-USA-im-Jaenner
Referendum über Abkommen mit den USA im Jänner
10. Juni 2009, 12:39

 
At 10:36 AM, Anonymous Jeff said...

Wow I'm surprised. So are there no longer any problems with cohesiveness between Sunni/Shi'a in the security apparatus? That's a major milestone toward a functional Iraqi state. Are there any plans to scale back the US imperial presence in Baghdad and our gigantic embassy? Former President Clinton suggested to me in 2007 that we should donate our castle of an embassy to the Iraqi people to use as a national museum, to replace the one that was looted after ‘shock & awe.”

I must disagree with your label that the Republican Party is responsible for our massively failing 'ponzi scheme' economy. Certainly it is a ponzi scheme, but the Federal Reserve, which lowered interest rates to rock bottom while the NASDAQ bubble popped is to blame. The Federal Reserve knows no party and influences both. If you think what Bush and Greenspan was bad, Obama and Bernanke are repeating all the same mistakes.

Good article though. Ending these wasteful wars would be wonderful for our economy.

 
At 10:44 AM, Blogger sherm said...

Do we want to start printing and distributing the "NEVER AGAIN" bumper stickers now, or should we wait until after the final trashing of Afghanistan and Pakistan?

 
At 10:57 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

http://www.democracynow.org/2009/6/30/headlines#8

June 30, 2009

Ahead of US Meeting, Israel Annexes New West Bank Land, Announces New Settlement Construction
By Amy Goodman

The Israeli government has announced plans to expropriate a new swath of the occupied West Bank. Israel says it will take fifty-four square miles of Palestinian land, including shoreline near the Dead Sea. Palestinians will have forty-five days to contest the seizure in an Israeli court. A Palestinian cabinet minister called the move Israel’s single largest land takeover since it occupied the West Bank and Gaza in the 1967 war. The Israeli government, meanwhile, has authorized the construction of new homes in the West Bank settlement of Adam. The building plans are the latest in Israel’s rejection of President Obama’s call to stop settlement expansion. They come on the eve of Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak’s visit to Washington for talks with US officials. Obama has so far refused to apply any meaningful pressure on Israel, including the suspension of billions of dollars in annual US aid.

 
At 1:48 PM, Blogger Mark Barry said...

I like that, Republican Party Ponzi scheme economy, if only they all got 150 years.

 
At 2:34 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

http://angryarab.blogspot.com/2009/06/removing-president-but-not-coup.html

June 30, 2009

Removing the President but Not a Coup

You learn so much from reading the enemy's official media. Read this account in the New York Times: "Still, administration officials said that they did not expect that the military would go so far as to carry out a coup. 'There was talk of how they might remove the president from office, how he could be arrested, on whose authority they could do that,' the administration official said. But the official said that the speculation had focused on legal maneuvers to remove the president, not a coup." * So the US Obama administration was for removing the president but not for a coup? Please explain that one.

* http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/30/world/americas/30honduras.html

-- As'ad AbuKhalil

 
At 2:35 PM, Blogger Leo said...

A lot of loose ends have been left by the Americans in Iraq. Iraq and ordinary Iraqis will pay the price of an Iranian retaliation to the alleged American interference in the internal Iranian affairs (election protests) and the best way to do so (or perhaps the only way) is to create more chaos in Iraq to distract the attention of the media since they (Iranians) have managed to very successfully do after 2003. I suspect that all the jailed Mahdi Army militiamen (not terrorists, only Sunnis are terrorists as per the Iraqi government's media) will be released quietly and gradually by the government and do expect that Muqtada Al Sadr will come back from Iran with his Ayatollah designation soon after successfully completing his "how to become an Ayatollah in 6 months" crash course in Qum-Iran and so is the organized ethnic cleansing of the Sunnis will start again. I am sure that we will also hear some high level statements from the Iraqi government or Shiite members of parliament whom are on the Iranian payrole the condemning Saudi Arabia and accusing KSA of interfering in Iraq's internal affairs or supporting terrorists. This is the traditional Iranian way of retaliation. This is my forecast for what is going to happen over the next few months in Iraq. Of course, US troops will now or is now withdrawing from the cities out to where the oil fields are to protect US national interests!

 
At 2:42 PM, Blogger MonsieurGonzo said...

YouTube : “T.S. Eliot, The Hollow Men

 
At 3:35 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

Funny how "US combat forces out of Iraqi cities" has been softened to "The end of routine, independent patrolling of major Iraqi cities by US troops today ".

You are a propagandist, Juan.

 
At 3:53 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

why are comments so heavily moderated? this isn't conducive to dialogue. can't you wrangle a volunteer to manage the blog for you while you're away?


-omen

 
At 4:09 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Cole writes: Of course, US troops will still be in Iraqi streets from time to time, accompanying Iraqi forces. Special Operations teams will likely engage in surgical strikes in coordination with their Iraqi colleagues for years to come. But there is an essential difference between such occasional interventions of a collaborative sort and routine patrols by a foreign military of densely populated urban areas in an Arab, Muslim country. The latter is viewed as a form of neo-colonialism by most Iraqis. The former could be welcome if it adds to law and order.

Well, it seems like an on-going neo-colonialism to me, and I can't believe there are many who will see it differently.

And of course, Iraq will be expected to pay billions for its new airforce... I wonder from which country those arms will be purchased?

 
At 4:28 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have a friend in Iraq who says that on his base at least, they've been given no orders to pack up yet. This was via phone, not 10 minutes ago.

He's slightly concerned because the locals seem to be getting ready for a parade and appear to believe that the Americans getting ready to move out.

 
At 11:44 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Juan writes:

"Some Americans might find all this celebrating offensive."

Frankly, who cares? Did US citizens worry about how British people may view their celerbations after winning the war of independance? With over a million Iraqi's dead, we are worried about the US publics hurt feelings?

"But the US public has mostly moved on, little interested in the foreign wars its armed forces are still fighting"

Now that is amazingly offensive!

Juan I love your blog and have been reading it every day for a long time. But you still sometimes suprise me when you are so ready to buy into American exeptionalism, this has been particularily true since Obama came to office.

 
At 3:06 AM, Blogger Shirin said...

"Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki declared Tuesday "National Sovereignty Day."

There is something truly pathetic about declaring "National Sovereignty Day" as the day the imperial occupier sort of, but not really stops patrolling your cities and withdraws sort of but not really to their "enduring" bases in your supposedly sovereign territory.

But then, let's not forget that Maliki was the guy the emperor felt was acceptable after he absolutely rejected Ja`fari, the man chosen by the Iraqi Parliament for Prime Minister. So, I guess Maliki knows who his true master is.

 
At 2:20 AM, Blogger Shirin said...

"there is an essential difference between such occasional interventions of a collaborative sort and routine patrols by a foreign military of densely populated urban areas in an Arab, Muslim country."

Occupation is occupation.

"The latter is viewed as a form of neo-colonialism by most Iraqis. The former could be welcome if it adds to law and order."

I don't think so. Iraqis are not so naive as that. They know an occupying force when they see one.

 
At 8:47 AM, Blogger Woody (Tokin Librul/Rogue Scholar/ Helluvafella!) said...

USer troops will still be in Iraq when the grand-children of the youngest person reading this blog are in college (or the Army, fighting in Central Asia)...

 
At 1:56 PM, Blogger Shirin said...

"USer troops will still be in Iraq when the grand-children of the youngest person reading this blog are in college..."

I have too much confidence in the Iraqi people to believe that.

 

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