NationStates Jolt Archive


The New Iraq Strategy?

Dude111
01-05-2006, 23:33
Here's an interesting little article that I've read in the NYT about how to succeed in Iraq. It was written by Joe Biden, who is a prestigous senator and some other guy. Here tis:

Unity Through Autonomy in Iraq
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By JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR. and LESLIE H. GELB
Published: May 1, 2006
A decade ago, Bosnia was torn apart by ethnic cleansing and facing its demise as a single country. After much hesitation, the United States stepped in decisively with the Dayton Accords,which kept the country whole by, paradoxically, dividing it into ethnic federations, even allowing Muslims, Croats and Serbs to retain separate armies. With the help of American and other forces, Bosnians have lived a decade in relative peace and are now slowly strengthening their common central government, including disbanding those separate armies last year.

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Forum: The Transition in Iraq
Now the Bush administration, despite its profound strategic misjudgments in Iraq, has a similar opportunity. To seize it, however, America must get beyond the present false choice between "staying the course" and "bringing the troops home now" and choose a third way that would wind down our military presence responsibly while preventing chaos and preserving our key security goals.

The idea, as in Bosnia, is to maintain a united Iraq by decentralizing it, giving each ethno-religious group — Kurd, Sunni Arab and Shiite Arab — room to run its own affairs, while leaving the central government in charge of common interests. We could drive this in place with irresistible sweeteners for the Sunnis to join in, a plan designed by the military for withdrawing and redeploying American forces, and a regional nonaggression pact.

It is increasingly clear that President Bush does not have a strategy for victory in Iraq. Rather, he hopes to prevent defeat and pass the problem along to his successor. Meanwhile, the frustration of Americans is mounting so fast that Congress might end up mandating a rapid pullout, even at the risk of precipitating chaos and a civil war that becomes a regional war.

As long as American troops are in Iraq in significant numbers, the insurgents can't win and we can't lose. But intercommunal violence has surpassed the insurgency as the main security threat. Militias rule swathes of Iraq and death squads kill dozens daily. Sectarian cleansing has recently forced tens of thousands from their homes. On top of this, President Bush did not request additional reconstruction assistance and is slashing funds for groups promoting democracy.

Iraq's new government of national unity will not stop the deterioration. Iraqis have had three such governments in the last three years, each with Sunnis in key posts, without noticeable effect. The alternative path out of this terrible trap has five elements.

The first is to establish three largely autonomous regions with a viable central government in Baghdad. The Kurdish, Sunni and Shiite regions would each be responsible for their own domestic laws, administration and internal security. The central government would control border defense, foreign affairs and oil revenues. Baghdad would become a federal zone, while densely populated areas of mixed populations would receive both multisectarian and international police protection.

Decentralization is hardly as radical as it may seem: the Iraqi Constitution, in fact, already provides for a federal structure and a procedure for provinces to combine into regional governments.

Besides, things are already heading toward partition: increasingly, each community supports federalism, if only as a last resort. The Sunnis, who until recently believed they would retake power in Iraq, are beginning to recognize that they won't and don't want to live in a Shiite-controlled, highly centralized state with laws enforced by sectarian militias. The Shiites know they can dominate the government, but they can't defeat a Sunni insurrection. The Kurds will not give up their 15-year-old autonomy.

Some will say moving toward strong regionalism would ignite sectarian cleansing. But that's exactly what is going on already, in ever-bigger waves. Others will argue that it would lead to partition. But a breakup is already under way. As it was in Bosnia, a strong federal system is a viable means to prevent both perils in Iraq.

The second element would be to entice the Sunnis into joining the federal system with an offer they couldn't refuse. To begin with, running their own region should be far preferable to the alternatives: being dominated by Kurds and Shiites in a central government or being the main victims of a civil war. But they also have to be given money to make their oil-poor region viable. The Constitution must be amended to guarantee Sunni areas 20 percent (approximately their proportion of the population) of all revenues.

The third component would be to ensure the protection of the rights of women and ethno-religious minorities by increasing American aid to Iraq but tying it to respect for those rights. Such protections will be difficult, especially in the Shiite-controlled south, but Washington has to be clear that widespread violations will stop the cash flow.

Fourth, the president must direct the military to design a plan for withdrawing and redeploying our troops from Iraq by 2008 (while providing for a small but effective residual force to combat terrorists and keep the neighbors honest). We must avoid a precipitous withdrawal that would lead to a national meltdown , but we also can't have a substantial long-term American military presence. That would do terrible damage to our armed forces, break American and Iraqi public support for the mission and leave Iraqis without any incentive to shape up.

Fifth, under an international or United Nations umbrella, we should convene a regional conference to pledge respect for Iraq's borders and its federal system. For all that Iraq's neighbors might gain by picking at its pieces, each faces the greater danger of a regional war. A "contact group" of major powers would be set up to lean on neighbors to comply with the deal.

Mr. Bush has spent three years in a futile effort to establish a strong central government in Baghdad, leaving us without a real political settlement, with a deteriorating security situation — and with nothing but the most difficult policy choices. The five-point alternative plan offers a plausible path to that core political settlement among Iraqis, along with the economic, military and diplomatic levers to make the political solution work. It is also a plausible way for Democrats and Republicans alike to protect our basic security interests and honor our country's sacrifices.

Joseph R. Biden Jr., Democrat of Delaware, is the ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Leslie H. Gelb is the president emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations.

The end.

It sounded crazy to me at first, but it made more sense as I kept reading. At least it's a strategy, better than what we have now. Your thoughts?.
Dude111
02-05-2006, 00:23
well
CSW
02-05-2006, 00:41
You've proposed something lengthy and sensable. Such a thing is not discussed on NS general.
Tactical Grace
02-05-2006, 00:43
It still took years of full-scale civil war punctuated by the massacres of thousands of people to get it out of their system, with a brief reprise years after everyone thought it was over.

What you suggest can only really be applied in a place where the scores have already been settled. In Iraq, they have not.
Fleckenstein
02-05-2006, 00:45
i dont trust biden. he's running and gunning for the presidency and this impacts everything he does.

he's gonna lose anyway.
Camel Monkey
02-05-2006, 00:47
it is a good, logical and sound solution, one that redresses the fundamental screw ups of the middle east - the arbitary drawing of country boundaries by western powers, and creating more realistic ethnical central regions built upon a common framework .... the only problem is language such as this

'We could drive this in place'

there is still the notion that is up to the west to arrive at the ideas and aid in in its implication. no westerner have ever astute can have an answer, and it is the blind resolution that we do has led to the problems in the mid east. we can not be father, but we can be brother
Verdigroth
02-05-2006, 00:50
Turkey won't like it but you know what...I have always favored chicken anyway.
Dude111
02-05-2006, 01:04
It still took years of full-scale civil war punctuated by the massacres of thousands of people to get it out of their system, with a brief reprise years after everyone thought it was over.

What you suggest can only really be applied in a place where the scores have already been settled. In Iraq, they have not.
It worked in Bosnia, did it not?
Tactical Grace
02-05-2006, 19:53
It worked in Bosnia, did it not?
Yes it did, but the situation in Iraq would only be the same if the US stepped back and permitted the launch of Operation Triumphant Restoration of Ethnic Purity.

A few years later, the country would be ripe for a negotiated political settlement. :rolleyes:
Deep Kimchi
02-05-2006, 20:01
IMHO, it doesn't matter what this administration does or does not do - or for that matter, what any later administration does or does not do - including washing their hands of the whole thing.

Any outcome, no matter how happy the Iraqi people are, will be interpreted as a complete failure, depending on who is currently in office with a current policy.

Plenty of work for the pundits into the next 50 years. We'll be debating what worked (next to nothing) and what didn't (almost everything we tried) for the next 50 years.

I remember people writing theses on the subject of the pacification of Europe 40 years after WW II - papers that were full of acrimonious crap about what a fuckup the whole thing was. Depends on who you talk to, I guess.
PsychoticDan
02-05-2006, 20:03
Yes it did, but the situation in Iraq would only be the same if the US stepped back and permitted the launch of Operation Triumphant Restoration of Ethnic Purity.

A few years later, the country would be ripe for a negotiated political settlement. :rolleyes:
You're probably right, but I think it's best to at least give it a try because it's better than the present unrealistic program and it's better than the alternative you mention of just walking away and allowing a blood bath. The problem, of course, is how to divide the oil wealth. The Sunnis, who are used to enjoying an abundance of oil wealth under Saddam, have very little oil in the ground that they occupy. It's probably going to be hard to get the Shittes and Kurds, who have basically been brutalized by the Sunnis, to want to share much.

Aww.., fuck it. Let 'em eviscerate each other.