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PIPES' LINE
A weekly column by Daniel Pipes, President George W Bush's controversial
appointee to the board of directors of the federally funded United States
Institute for Peace.
Time for Iraqis to run Iraq
What to do in Iraq?
The question is made urgent by the steady attrition of coalition forces,
punctuated by seven large car bomb explosions. The latest of them, on Sunday,
killed six and wounded dozens at the Baghdad Hotel.
More broadly, the briefly-held gratitude to the coalition for being relieved of
Saddam Hussein's hideous rule has been overtaken, as the weeks turn into
months, by feelings of resentment. Iraqis complain that the bridges have not
been rebuilt fast enough, the currency is not steady enough, and utilities are
not regular enough. A people accustomed to live in the confines of a
totalitarian state finds the free-for-all disturbing.
Even Iraqis working closely with the coalition are grumbling with Washington's
decisions. The Iraqi Governing Council (IGC), an appointed body, has expressed
dismay at the prospect of Turkish troops being stationed in Iraq - something
the Bush administration had worked particularly hard for.
These divergences between Iraqis and their liberators are likely to increase
over time.
What to do?
It's simple, actually: Turn power over to the Iraqis. Let them form a
government. Reduce the scope of presidential envoy L Paul Bremer's role.
Take coalition forces off their patrols of city streets and away from
protecting buildings, and put them in desert bases. From there, they can
undertake the key tasks of controlling the borders, guaranteeing the oil and
gas infrastructure, chasing down Saddam, and providing the ultimate authority
for the Iraqi government - without being in the Iraqi population's face.
Admittedly, this advice runs roughly along the lines of what the French
government is calling for; President Jacques Chirac has said that "there will
be no concrete solution unless sovereignty is transferred to Iraq as quickly as
possible", and called for a shift of power over six to nine months.
US Secretary of State Colin L Powell responded by dismissing such a transfer as
"totally unrealistic". The US plan is for the Iraqis to take control in a
matter of years, not months.
But Iraqis hostile to the coalition and the French are not alone in wanting a
speedier transition; so, too, do those Iraqis working with the coalition,
whether they are tight with Tehran, Riyadh, the Central Intelligence Agency or
the Defense Department. Most notably, Ahmad Chalabi, head of the Iraqi National
Congress, is urging for Iraqis, at least partially, to take over the finance
and security ministries. This has met with wide support, enhancing Chalabi's
popularity. The Financial Times reports that his "proposals on sovereignty
strike a chord among ordinary Iraqis, who feel the best way to get the country
moving is the return of control".
So major a change in direction has unpleasant implications for Washington. It
raises questions about American staying power; forfeits much of the credibility
that came from the successful war against Saddam; risks throwing away a chance
of victory; and permits Arab, European and Democratic critics to crow. Worse,
it will be noted that sustained violence against US troops works, perhaps
inviting further attacks on US forces elsewhere.
These are valid reasons not to pull out - but they lose their pertinence if one
expects, as I do, that the mission in Iraq will end in failure. I predict that
unhappy outcome, not due to shortcomings on the American side, but by
calculating the US motivation for being there versus the Iraqi motivation to
remove them. The latter strikes me as more formidable. It reflects the intense
hostility commonly felt by Muslims against those non-Muslims who would rule
them. For examples, note the violence undertaken by (among others)
Palestinians, Chechens, Kashmiris and Moros.
From this pattern, I draw a rule of thumb: unless a non-Muslim ruler has
compelling reasons to control a Muslim population, it will eventually be worn
down by the violence directed against it and give up. Note that the US
government has already given up twice in recent years, in Lebanon and Somalia.
The US-led effort to fix Iraq is not important enough for Americans, Britons or
other non-Muslim partners to stick it out. That is why I advocate handing
substantial power over to the Iraqis, and doing so the sooner the better.
Daniel Pipes (www.DanielPipes.org)
is director of the Middle East Forum and author of Militant Islam
Reaches America (W W Norton).
(Copyright 2003, Daniel Pipes)
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