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Exiting
Iraq Is Easier Than They Say
Chris Toensing
The Nation
(web-only)
July 16, 2008
The debate over
the war in Iraq follows a yellowing script: The minute someone suggests
that the US move to withdraw its troops, war supporters cry “Havoc!”
True to form, when no less a figure than Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki stated he wants a timeline for a US pullout, John McCain
summoned the specter of dire consequences. “I’ve always
said we’ll come home with honor and with victory and not through
a set timetable,” McCain said. In his major foreign policy
speech on July 15, Barack Obama affirmed his support for a withdrawal
timetable, adding that the US must “get out as carefully as
we were careless getting in.” Obama’s position is the
correct one, but he, like many other war critics, has done too little
to counter the refrain that withdrawal is simply “cutting
and running,” a recipe for disaster.
To answer that
line of attack was the charge of the Task Force for a Responsible
Withdrawal from Iraq, whose report appeared in June. In March, the
Task Force, of which I was a member, convened a group of Middle
East and security policy experts on the premise that the next president
will indeed set a timetable for extracting US soldiers entirely
from their Mesopotamian entanglement. Our Task Force did not seek
to restate the case, well argued by now, for the necessity of withdrawal.
Nor did we rehash the reasons why the worst-case scenarios of intensified
chaos in Iraq and endemic regional warfare are far from inevitable.
Rather, we asked ourselves: What concrete steps can the US take,
immediately and during the withdrawal, to minimize further bloodshed
and, instead, encourage peace and stability in Iraq? And how can
our nation and others contribute to Iraq’s eventual recovery
from its excruciating ordeal?
We approached
this charge with a sense of humility. After five years of occupation
and civil war, not to mention the preceding decades of war, sanctions
and dictatorship, Iraq is a traumatized and politically fragmented
country. Since 2003, neighboring states have intervened in Iraq’s
internal conflicts to protect their own interests -- and they may
be tempted to intervene further when the US military departs. On
the diplomatic front, Washington’s credibility is badly eroded
by a war that most of the world opposed.
Nevertheless,
we believe there are many steps that can and should be taken. In
the short term, to prevent an abrupt power vacuum, there should
be a brief extension of the UN mandate that gives the US-dominated
“Coalition forces” in Iraq their legal cover and is
due to expire in December. We urge the next president to pursue
a sweeping new UN mandate, to take effect in 2009, predicated upon
a timetable of 12-18 months for a complete withdrawal of US soldiers
and private contractors. That mandate should define the contours
of international participation in Iraqi reconciliation, reconstruction
and humanitarian aid. Simultaneously, the next president should
inform the Maliki government that the US is adopting a stance of
neutrality and non-interference in Iraqi politics. Lasting security
is unachievable absent a political compromise among Iraq’s
various factions, and that compromise is impossible as long as the
US and its favored Iraqi politicians are calling the shots.
So Washington
must let the UN do its job. With the US pullout underway, the UN
should sponsor a pan-Iraqi conference in which the constituent parties
of the Maliki government would sit down as equals with Sadrists,
Sunni Arab insurgents and others (except the small, nihilistic al-Qaeda
bands) who have been marginalized by the post-Saddam political transition.
The summit should seek an immediate official ceasefire and consensus
on the type of multinational force that a genuine government of
national unity might request to keep the post-reconciliation peace.
The Task Force does not presume to prescribe the shape of an Iraqi
national compact, but at a minimum it will need to address questions
of federalism, revision of the 2005 constitution, debaathification
and oil revenue distribution.
National reconciliation
in Iraq will be arduous work. The US can help it along by pressing
its regional allies to stem the flows of arms and foreign fighters
that have exacerbated the country’s internecine fighting. The
next president must also recognize that the Bush administration’s
project of “standing up” Iraqi security forces has itself
armed and trained combatants in the civil war. Responsibility for
provisioning the nascent Iraqi army should be transferred to a UN
special envoy, and assistance to units should be contingent upon their
meeting standards of professionalism, respect for rule of law and
non-sectarian composition. With lead time and US-led investment,
much can be done to build the UN’s capacity to perform these
functions.
But perhaps
the single most important thing the US can do to aid Iraqi national
reconciliation, after withdrawal itself, is to drop the Bush administration’s
belligerence toward Iran and Syria. If an arms embargo is not to
leak, these two countries must help enforce it. If Iraqi factions
are not to revert to zero-sum communal logic, Iran in particular
must stop playing favorites. Yet the incentives for Iran and Syria
are now all running the other way. To secure their cooperation,
Washington will need the leverage that only wide-ranging and direct
diplomatic engagement can provide. The US may also need to offer
carrots to its allies Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey to cement
a united front of principled non-interference in Iraq.
It is fashionable
among Democrats to decry the unspent billions in Iraqi accounts
while US taxpayer dollars continue to fund reconstruction projects.
Given that Congress just allocated an additional $162 billion for
prosecuting the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the dyspepsia is surely
misplaced. Yet while withdrawal will certainly cost less than continued
occupation, meeting long-term US responsibilities to Iraq will not
be cheap. It is reasonable that the Iraqis should pay their operating
expenses, but to ask them to repair the damage done by the US-led
sanctions, invasion and occupation is surely wrong.
The US should
be prepared to donate heavily to a UN peacekeeping force, should
the Iraqis request one; to programs for disarming, demobilizing
and reintegrating Iraqi militias; and to an Iraq Development Fund
that bankrolls a labor-intensive public works program, addresses
the roots of food insecurity and strengthens Iraqi civil society
organizations. Washington should push Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to
follow the lead of the United Arab Emirates and forgive the debts
accrued by Saddam Hussein. The biggest debt of all is owed to the
more than 4 million Iraqis who are refugees or internally displaced
persons as a result of the Bush administration’s war of choice.
The US should plan to contribute significantly to UN and Iraqi government
aid agencies caring for the displaced, and send substantial sums
to Jordan, Lebanon and Syria to help the Iraqis living there, until
such time as they can return home or resettle.
We do not dismiss
the contingencies that will bedevil the best of plans and intentions
for a responsible policy toward Iraq. Yet the chief uncertainty,
on which all else depends, is whether the next president, whoever
he may be, will heed the wishes of most Americans and Iraqis, at
last, and order a full US withdrawal.
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The report
of the Task Force for a Responsible Withdrawal from Iraq is online.
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