Viewpoint:
Whether or not more troops are sent, the circumstances of Saddam's
hanging are a stark reminder that the U.S. may lack an Iraqi partner
for its strategy By
TONY KARON Having created a new state in Iraq — and not yet ready to admit
that it is a failed state — the U.S. felt obliged to hand Saddam
Hussein over to the Iraqis to administer the death penalty, even though
Washington made clear it would have preferred that Saddam's sentence be
administered at a less fraught moment — and in a less rushed manner.
But being the ones to kill Saddam was a political prize for at least a
section of the current government — the ultimate gesture of vengeance
on behalf of the long-suffering Shi'ite majority, clearly calculated to
boost the political standing of those who administered it. And so, as
the video makes clear, Saddam faced death to the sound of chants
proclaiming Shi'ite victory and extolling the name of the anti-American
radical Shi'ite cleric Moqtada Sadr — not exactly the healing
denouement the U.S. had in mind for the Saddam era.
It's no surprise that the Iraqi government wasn't inclined to follow a
U.S. script in dispatching Saddam, because it hasn't been inclined to
follow a U.S. script on the fundamental questions of national unity —
reconciling with the Sunnis, making concessions to the insurgents to
draw former Baathists back into the fold, and most importantly, reining
in the Shi'ite death squads. Nor is this problem a unique failing of
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki — who, in an interview in the Wall Street
Journal on Wednesday made clear that he no longer wants the job. The
U.S. had no greater joy with his predecessor, Ibrahim al-Jaafari.
And U.S. efforts to either detach Maliki from his key patron — Sadr,
whose militia is in the thick of much of the sectarian violence — or
else persuade Shi'ite rivals such as Abdulaziz al-Hakim to form a new
coalition with the Sunnis and Kurds, excluding Maliki and Sadr, appear
to be floundering. Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, the supreme Shi'ite
spiritual leader whose expressed will neither Maliki nor Hakim can
cross, has made clear that he will not tolerate any moves that break
the unity of the ruling Shi'ite coalition that includes Maliki, Hakim
and Sadr.
A little over a month ago, an internal Bush Administration memo written
by National Security Adviser Stephen J. Hadley wondered somewhat
naively whether Maliki might be a "witting participant" in "an
aggressive push to consolidate Shia power and influence" in Baghdad.
Shi'ite power, after all, is the raison d'etre of the ruling Shi'ite
alliance; Sistani ensured that all the major Shi'ite parties contested
the election as a bloc in order to guarantee the Shi'ites a share of
political power congruent with their demographic majority.
Shi'ite-power, far from a hidden agenda, was the winning ticket in both
of Iraq's democratic elections.
So if, as the U.S. recognizes, the major security challenge in
Iraq is sectarianism tending toward civil war, then the Iraqi
government is hardly above the fray. (The two main Shi'ite militias
responsible for most attacks on Sunnis, for example, are affiliated
with the ruling coalition, which has tended to restrain U.S. military
action against them.) While the Shi'ite leadership is willing to
cooperate with the U.S. to the extent that this helps it pursue its own
goals, the Shi'ite base is increasingly mistrustful of Washington's
efforts to promote reconciliation with the Baathists and take down
militias that many Shi'ites see as vital to their defense against Sunni
insurgents. At the very moment the U.S. needs greater cooperation from
the government, Prime Minister Maliki needs to show his independence
from Washington, where doubts about his usefulness are no secret. No
wonder he no longer wants the job.
As America waits for President Bush to announce a new plan for
Iraq, the brutal spectacle of Saddam Hussein's execution, recorded on
cell phone video and seen around the Middle East, has drawn
condemnation from around the world, including Washington. But Saddam's
final moments highlight a much more serious and fundamental problem
facing the Administration: The U.S. no longer has any control over the
Iraqi political process.
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Wednesday, January 03, 2007
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