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Is the Enemy of Your Enemy Really Your Friend?

Much has been made (and, come September 15, will be made) of the new U.S. alliance with Sunni tribesmen in Iraq's Anbar province. The fragile union aims to rid the area of al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI). And, indeed, the new tactics appear to be working, at least in the short term: Between December 2006 and June 2007 (the most recent month for which numbers are available), insurgent attacks in Anbar province declined by 34 percent. As the Pentagon described in its most recent report to Congress, "In Anbar province, anti-AQI sentiment is widespread, with growing tribal influence as the primary driver of decreasing violence levels."

But, as the new NIE warns, the relative calm in Anbar could be shortlived:

Sunni Arab resistance to AQI has expanded, and neighborhood security groups, occasionally consisting of mixed Shia-Sunni units, have proliferated in the past several months. These trends, combined with increased Coalition operations, have eroded AQI’s operational presence and capabilities in some areas... Such initiatives, if not fully exploited by the Iraqi Government, could over time also shift greater power to the regions, undermine efforts to impose central authority, and reinvigorate armed opposition to the Baghdad government.

Did we really need the NIE to tell us that arming Sunni tribesmen carries risk of blowback? More importantly, should we consider the recent gains in Anbar to be anything other than illusory? From Walter Pincus in this morning's Washington Post:

Fourteen months ago, a 300-page Defense Department-sponsored research paper titled "Iraq Tribal Study: Al-Anbar Governorate" was completed and delivered to the Pentagon. That report -- put together by a distinguished group of retired military counterinsurgency specialists and academics, each with Iraq experience -- was circulated in the Army's Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., at the time led by then-Lt. Gen. David H. Petraeus, now the top U.S. commander in Iraq. The study proposed changing how the United States interacts with Sunni tribal leaders, eventually contributing to winning their support in fighting al-Qaeda in Iraq forces...
The study summed up how the Sunni tribes viewed the conditions that Washington established in Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein. "Throughout the modern history of Iraq, the Sunni tribes have occupied a privileged position in Iraq society and enjoyed wealth, autonomy and political clout," the report said. "To lose those advantages in a system of proportional representation that empowered the Shia, or in a truncated Iraq with a Kurdish autonomous province, would bring shame to a long and prosperous Sunni history."
It also cautioned that the main themes of the U.S. message in Iraq -- "freedom and democracy" -- do not resonate well with the population "because freedom is associated with chaos in Iraq." In addition, the Sunnis "are deathly afraid of being ruled by a Shia government, which they believe will be little more than a puppet of the Shia religious extremists in Iran."
The study identified three tribes in al-Anbar province, all of which initially fought as insurgents against U.S. forces. But more recently, all three tribes -- or "significant parts of them" -- joined the movement against al-Qaeda in Iraq. "This presents a window of opportunity for engagement and influence of the tribes by the coalition," the study stated.
However, the study warned that with two of the tribes, such cooperation "should not be considered as support for, or even acceptance of, coalition activities." Instead, it occurs "for no other purpose but to rid the area of a common enemy, al-Qaeda and its allies." With the third, it cautioned, "the recognized leadership plays both ends of the insurgency, coalition versus the insurgents, against the middle while maintaining a single motive, to force the coalition to leave Iraq."
In short, the study's experts pointed toward what has become a short-term U.S. success, while warning more than a year ago -- as the intelligence community did last week -- that it is all temporary.





Comments

When troops are moved in any manner from one place to another, it is only reasonable to conclude that violence would go down in that area. The problem has been and continues to be, the invasion of Iraq has created more folks that are against the US. The only chance is to reduce the troop levels as soon as possible and let the people of Iraq solve the problem themselves. Hundreds, perhaps thousands of years of hatred cannot be solved overnight, and these people must learn to live together, although it will not be easy.

Posted by: lylepink on 08/27/07 at 2:45 PM  Respond

“These people must learn to live together” says lylepink. They learned to live together under the regime of Saddam Hussein, sometimes in mixed Sunni-Shia neighborhoods. Now they will probably learn to live together under a Shia dictatorship. As far as their establishing anything approaching a truly representative democracy within a decade or two, that prospect has two chances of success, I think: slim and none.

Posted by: Jerry Elliott on 08/27/07 at 8:04 PM  Respond

As long as the Saudi's continue to support the Sunni's and Iran supporting the Shiites, the civil unrest/war in Iraq will continue. These factions hate each other as much as they both hate the Israeli's and the U.S. We need to evac from Iraq and carpet bomb that pile of rock with B52's. If we're lucky, maybe a few will also land on Tehran.

Posted by: ewad on 08/28/07 at 11:41 AM  Respond

I believe that it is time to make a major, some might say, radical change in American Foreign Policy in the Middle East. The current policy of complete support of Israel, the support of repressive despotic regimes and the use of force to insure that many of these autocracies be kept in power must cease.
The only way to reduce tensions in this area is for the United States to remove all military personnel from land bases in the area. We will continue to guarantee the territorial integrity of Israel diplomatically and militarily IF necessary, but no longer should we give them a blank check to run roughshod over the area.
Anything else will be a continuation of the current failed policies; and only an insane person keeps doing the same thing and expecting a different outcome.

Posted by: Bill p on 09/02/07 at 3:07 PM  Respond

Thanks for your feedback.

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