(from the LA TIMES)
Democracy's Power Fades as Iraq Panacea
Some officials doubt the White House view that political progress can end the insurgency. Acrimony reigns as referendum nears.
By Tyler Marshall and Louise Roug
Times Staff Writers
October 9, 2005
WASHINGTON — Senior U.S. officials have begun to question a key presumption of American strategy in Iraq: that establishing democracy there can erode and ultimately eradicate the insurgency gripping the country.
The expectation that political progress would bring stability has been fundamental to the Bush administration's approach to rebuilding Iraq as well as a central theme of White House rhetoric to convince the American public that its policy in Iraq remains on course.
But within the last two months, U.S. analysts with access to classified intelligence data have started to challenge this precept, noting a "significant and disturbing disconnect" between apparent advances on the political front and any progress in reducing insurgent attacks.
Now, with next Saturday's constitutional referendum appearing more likely to divide than unify the country, some within the Bush administration have concluded that the quest for democracy in Iraq, at least in its current form, could actually strengthen the guerrillas.
The commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, Army Gen. George W. Casey, has acknowledged that such a scenario is possible, while officials elsewhere in the administration, all of whom declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the subject, said they shared similar concerns about the referendum.
Iraq's Sunni Muslim Arabs, who are believed to form the core of the insurgency, are bitterly opposed to a constitution drafted mainly by the country's majority Shiite Muslim sect and ethnic Kurds. Yet from all indications, they will fail to muster enough votes to defeat it.
"It could make people on the fence a little more angry or [make them] come off the fence," said a senior U.S. official who requested anonymity.
A growing number of experts outside the administration and in Iraq agree with such assessments.
"If the constitution passes in a non-amicable way, the violence will increase," said Ali Dabagh, an Iraqi National Assembly member who is believed to be close to Prime Minister Ibrahim Jafari.
The White House has consistently linked the building of democracy in Iraq and the broader Middle East with the defeat of the insurgency there.
President Bush repeated that assertion Thursday in a major policy address to the National Endowment for Democracy in Washington. "If the peoples of [the Middle East] are permitted to choose their own destiny and advance by their own energy and by their participation as free men and women," he declared, "then the extremists will be marginalized and the flow of violent radicalism to the rest of the world will slow and eventually end."
Vice President Dick Cheney has put it more succinctly. "I think ... we will, in fact, succeed in getting democracy established in Iraq, and I think when we do, that will be the end of the insurgency," he told CNN in June.
Those comments echoed a belief put forward earlier by the Pentagon, which asserted that U.S. forces could not defeat the insurgency through military might alone but that success required redeploying troops to protect the nascent democratic process. That process, commanders said, together with military force, would eventually smother rebel violence.
Despite what Bush on Thursday called "incredible political progress" in Iraq since Saddam Hussein's fall 2 1/2 years ago, the Iraqi insurgency has grown in strength and sophistication. From about 5,000 Hussein loyalists using leftover Iraqi army equipment in late 2003, it has mushroomed into a disparate yet potent force of up to 20,000 equipped with explosives capable of knocking out even heavily armored military vehicles.
"The surface political process has stumbled forward, but the insurgency came up and kind of stayed that way," said a U.S. government analyst with access to classified intelligence. Several analysts, who spoke on condition of anonymity while discussing intelligence, indicated that initial evidence of the disconnect began to surface in the spring — after Iraq's first national elections on Jan. 30 — and it has gradually become clearer since.
Doubts about such a central pillar of Iraq policy come at an awkward time for the White House: Opinion polls show eroding public confidence in Bush as a leader and in his management of the war. In recent days, Bush, Cheney and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice have tried to shore up public support for staying in Iraq.
But Middle East experts say they have found little correlation between Iraq's emerging democracy and the strength of the rebellion.
"The democratic process as it has worked so far has certainly done nothing to undermine the insurgency," said Nathan Brown, who researches Middle East political reform at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington.
Robert Malley, who co-wrote a September report by the International Crisis Group concluding that approval of the constitution could make things worse, called the administration's Iraq policy "a case study of pinning too much hope on an electoral process without doing so much of the other work."
Success in Iraq "is not about democracy or non-democracy; it's about reaching consensus on a political pact that all parties agree to," said Malley, a former advisor to President Clinton on Arab-Israeli affairs. "If they don't agree, the political process won't help."
U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad is reportedly trying to broker 11th-hour changes in the draft to ease Sunni concerns, but even if he succeeds, the effect of such concessions would not be immediately clear, analysts said.
A Western diplomat in Baghdad who spoke on condition of anonymity said a government that is unable to provide for basic needs such as security, electricity, potable water and jobs commands little loyalty.
Brian Jenkins, a terrorism specialist at the RAND Corp. think tank in Santa Monica, said that a cursory look at history shows "there is no guarantee that political progress diminishes political violence." He cited Colombia, Sri Lanka, the Philippines and Northern Ireland as places where insurgencies have survived for decades in functioning democracies with educated populations.
He said those militant movements were driven by various factors, including the aspirations of aggrieved groups, criminal profit-seeking and a lack of economic development. Jenkins and others believe that Iraq's insurgency has already developed several motivating strands that would probably sustain it for years.
With the divisive constitutional referendum only a week away, the first Hussein trial scheduled to begin this month and the prospect that the December election will produce a Shiite-dominated parliament, upcoming events may only further distance Sunni Arabs from Iraq's emerging democratic state, analysts say.
Sunnis, largely excluded from this summer's crucial negotiations on the constitution, see the draft as rigged against their interests. They fear, for example, that blunt language outlawing Hussein's Sunni-dominated Baath Party could be used to block public-sector employment for their sect. The draft also appears to open the door to such a loosely federated system that it could deprive Sunni Arab regions of the benefits of the country's huge oil reserves.
Some Iraqis accuse the Bush administration of sacrificing a unifying political process in favor of speed and arbitrary deadlines needed to sustain U.S. public support for the war and justify politically important military draw-downs.
"We're short of time — it's the fault of the Americans," Kurdish politician Mahmoud Othman said. "They are always insisting on short deadlines. It's as if they're [making] hamburgers and fast food."
Othman added: "If we'd had more time, it would have been possible to get Sunni participation. When Oct. 15 comes, many won't even have seen the constitution."
Marshall reported from Washington and Roug from Baghdad. Times staff writer Mark Mazzetti in Washington contributed to this report.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DEMOCRACY AS THE SOLUTION IN IRAQ?
What in the world is going on?
- Zlatko Waterman
- Posts: 1631
- Joined: August 19th, 2004, 8:30 am
- Location: Los Angeles, CA USA
- Contact:
- stilltrucking
- Posts: 20646
- Joined: October 24th, 2004, 12:29 pm
- Location: Oz or somepLace like Kansas
Post by stilltrucking » October 9th, 2005, 10:46 am
Thanks again. I have come to depend on your eyes. "You got eyes buddy." The Big Sleep.
Return to “Culture, Politics, Philosophy”
Jump to
- Community
- ↳ Introductions
- ↳ Announcements, Help, Banners, Books
- ↳ Studio8 Announcements
- ↳ Cenacle's Announcements
- ↳ Help & Feedback
- ↳ Banners
- ↳ S8 Community Books
- ↳ Radio8
- Creative Writing
- ↳ Poetry
- ↳ ~GO!
- ↳ Haiku
- ↳ Stories & Essays
- Visual Arts & Multi-Media
- ↳ Arts Center
- ↳ Paintings & Drawings
- ↳ Digital Art
- ↳ Photography
- ↳ Sculpture, Collage, etc.
- ↳ Artstalk
- ↳ Other Arts Sites
- ↳ Music, Spoken Word & Video
- Discussion
- ↳ General Discussion
- ↳ Culture, Politics, Philosophy
- ↳ Rant, Rage & Laugh
- Member Forums
- ↳ Artlogs & Studios
- ↳ Chat Spot
- ↳ Mingo's Lingo
- ↳ Asylum for the Terminally Vain
- ↳ The Luck of a Dame
- ↳ judih's Inner Jams
- ↳ Arcadia's Place
- ↳ Flying Horse Cafe
- ↳ Infinity Sideways
- ↳ Columnists
- ↳ Sunday Stream
- ↳ Life in the Horse Lane
- Archives
- ↳ Archived Community Word Jams: 2004 - 2019
- ↳ # 55 - Solstice through New Years 2019 Light-the-World Word Jam
- ↳ #54 - Healing Jam!
- ↳ #53 - Showers to Flowers Jam - April & May 2016
- ↳ #52 - 2016 Welcome Word Jam!
- ↳ #51– 2015 Annual Spring Equinox Poetry Jam
- ↳ #50 - Solstice to New Years Word Jam - 2014-2015!
- ↳ #49 - 1-Day Xtreme Jam!
- ↳ #48- The Blues & Good News New Years Jam
- ↳ #47 - The Survival Holiday Jam
- ↳ #46 - March Free Poetry Jam
- ↳ March Free Poetry Jam
- ↳ #45 - Solstice through New Years Light-the-World Word & Image Jam
- ↳ #44 - Block Party - A Spring Poetry & Image Jam
- ↳ #43 - Mid-Winter Word Jam 2011
- ↳ #42 - Spirit of Love Art & Poetry Jam
- ↳ #41 - Summer's End to Autumn Transition Jam
- ↳ #40 - The Annual Spring Equinox Jam
- ↳ #39- The 2009 Solstice thru New Years 2010 Word Jam
- ↳ #37 - Solstice 2008 thru New Years 2009 Light-the-World Jam
- ↳ #38 - The M(Earth) Word Jam
- ↳ #36- The Leaves & Arrivals Autumn Word Jam
- ↳ #35 - Close-ups of Summer Jam
- ↳ #34 - The I Can't Wait Word Jam - Part 1
- ↳ #33 - The I Can't Wait Word Jam - part 2
- ↳ #32 - Solstice to New Years Jam 2008!
- ↳ #31 - The Instant Gratification Gratitude Jam
- ↳ #30 - An April Shower of Words
- ↳ #29 - Portrait of Love Art Jam
- ↳ #28 - The January Ringing in 2007 New Years Party Jam
- ↳ #27 - 2nd Annual Winter Holi-Dazed & EnLightened Word Jam
- ↳ #26 - 8 Images in Search of a Poet
- ↳ #25 - B&W & Read All Over Jam
- ↳ #24 - The Unannounced Summer Solstice Poetry Jam
- ↳ #23 - Spring Poetry & Image Jam
- ↳ #22 - Let Me GO! Image & Word Jam
- ↳ #21 - The 2nd Annual Spring Equinox Word Jam
- ↳ #20 - Connecting Branches – A Treeku Word Jam
- ↳ #19 - 2006 New Year Jam
- ↳ #18 - The Winter Holi-Dazed & EnLightened Word Jam
- ↳ #17 - Image Jams
- ↳ #16 - The I Can't Wait Word Jam!
- ↳ #15 - The Summer Home, Summer Not Travelogue Jam
- ↳ #14 - Online Improv Play Green Room
- ↳ #13 - "Ward Nine - Frontal Lobotomy" - An Improv Play
- ↳ #12 - Major Minor Madcap Mayhem Word Jam
- ↳ #11 - The Low-Key Weekend Jam
- ↳ #10 - The 1st Annual Spring Equinox Word Jam
- ↳ #9 - Big Time Poetry Melt Word Jam
- ↳ #8 - The January Knock Yer Socks Off Jam
- ↳ #7 - 2005 New Years Party
- ↳ #6 - Saved - It's a Miracle!
- ↳ #6 - Now! More than ever - 8 Day Miracle Jam
- ↳ #5 - When the 9 Strikes!
- ↳ #4 - 2004 Election Party
- ↳ #3 - Kick out da Jams, Man!
- ↳ #2 - Jam it out!... Let's GO!
- ↳ #1 - Kick out da word jam
- ↳ Archives
- ↳ Retired Forums
- ↳ Eyewitness Reports
- ↳ Postips & e-sources
- ↳ Interviews & Articles
- ↳ Rejection Slip?
- ↳ Trailerpark
- ↳ Performance Arts
- ↳ Duets
- ↳ Workshop & Prompts
- ↳ Image Jams & Photo Travelogue
- ↳ Literature & Film
- ↳ Variations
- ↳ Retired Columns & Artlogs
- ↳ Cathouse
- ↳ Remnants of Madness
- ↳ For Pete's Sake!
- ↳ Pit of Crazy
- ↳ Pic This
- ↳ Poetry Cut-Ups
- ↳ Ronnie GETS it!
- ↳ Things Nobody Wants to Hear
- ↳ Ask da Biotch! - Advice Column
- ↳ Inspiration Station
- ↳ A New Kind Of Random
- ↳ The Anti-Academy
- ↳ Mouse Droppings
- ↳ Mystic Arts
- ↳ Open Mike Soundoff
- ↳ The Pregnant Pope
- In Memoriam
- ↳ To Honor our Departed Site Members
- ↳ Lightning Rod
- ↳ Photos of Lightning Rod
- ↳ The Poet's Eye by Lightning Rod
- ↳ Norman Mallory
- ↳ ZlatKomix (artwork by Norman Mallory)
- ↳ Constantine
- ↳ Constantinople – (A collection of Constantine's poetry)
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests