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The Disintegration of Iraq by Allan Topol, 2005
ARTICLE ORIGINALLY APPEARED AT
MILITARY.COM, August 17, 2005
For months, the words federalism and autonomy have been euphemisms for this process. The United States has been pushing hard, prodding the constitutional draftsmen to insist on unity. Weve been like the builders of a sea wall resisting the incursion of the waves. All of that was brought home with a vengeance last week with the statement of one of Iraqs most powerful Shiite politicians.
Abdul al Hakim threw a live grenade on the table as the constitution drafting process was nearing its completion. In a speech, Hakim supported other Shiite leaders demanding autonomy for southern Iraq. This region, inhabited almost exclusively by Shiites, also happens to be the locale for about eighty percent of the countrys oil.
In view of Hakims words, the constitution will not be worth the paper its written on. It seems likely that the demands for southern Shiite autonomy will continue in the weeks and months ahead. If Hakims position becomes the dominant view of the Shiites, who are about sixty percent of the population, then the result will not be a single democratic Iraq as the Bush administration hopes. At best, there will be a federation of autonomous regions, some controlled by Shiites, others by Sunnis and still others by Kurds. All of this will be accompanied by endless squabbling over oil revenues. At worst, there will be three nations and a civil war. Sounds like the breakup of Yugoslavia all over again.
Sunni leaders objected to Hakims demand and decried the idea of a confederation which would lead to a break up of Iraq. They insisted that they want to preserve the unity of Iraq. There is amore than a little irony to the Sunnis position. They were the ones who boycotted the election and initially the constitutional process. It is from their ranks that most of the insurgents have come.
Officials in Washington are equally horrified by the prospect raised by Hakims words. But its time to be realistic. Iraq was never a single democratic country. It consisted of three groups of people, who have hated each other for centuries, held together by a colonial ruler or a tyrannical despot.
In addition to historical animosity, there are fundamental differences dividing the three communities. The Kurds are far more secular and resisting a central role for Islam. The Shiites are demanding a theocracy. The Sunnis have been the upper class, but they dont have the oil.
If the inevitable occurs and the country fragments, there will be endless hand wringing in Washington. Critics of the Bush administration will once again unsheathe their stilettos, this time to claim that he United States destroyed a perfectly sound and viable country. This is total rot. Preemptively, the point should be made that terror was the mortar holding the Iraqi country together.
The disintegration of Iraq will be fraught with peril for the United States. The oil rich Shiite south is likely to be a close allay of Iran. Baghdad will be the source of constant skirmishes as Jerusalem has been.
There is a valuable lesson which has been repeated over and over again in the last sixty years, but we never seem to get it. Whether its the Indian subcontinent, Cypress, Israel, Lebanon, or Yugoslavia, the conclusion is the same. People divided by ethnicity or religion, with deep seated hatreds, will not agree to live together peacefully in the same political entity.
This conclusion may not be pc, but it is true. Naively, we assume that because Irish and Italians in Boston, and other ethnic groups in American cities learned to live peacefully together it will happen in places like Iraq. It wont!
The solution on the Indian subcontinent is two states: Hindu, India and Muslim, Pakistan. In Israel, Prime Minister Sharon has seen the light. Hes building a fence on the west bank and removing the Jews from Gaza.
The disintegration of Iraq wont happen overnight. Right now the U.S. military is the glue holding the country together. It may work as long as were there, although even thats questionable. Once we leave the cracks will turn into fissures, then a full scale division.
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