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pscot

(21,024 posts)
Sat Oct 4, 2014, 05:12 PM Oct 2014

It takes a lot of turning points to go in a circle

Peter Van Buren is a 24 year state Department veteran and the author of We Meant Well, in which he tries to explain it. This is worth a click.
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MID-02-240914.html



I was charged with meeting the Sahwa leaders in my area. My job back then was to try to persuade them to stay on board just a little longer, even as they came to realize that they'd been had....
False alliances and double-crosses were not unfamiliar to the Sunni warlords I engaged with. Often, our talk - over endless tiny glasses of sweet, sweet tea stirred with white-hot metal spoons - shifted from the Shia and the Americans to their great-grandfathers' struggle against the British. Revenge unfolds over generations, they assured me, and memories are long in the Middle East, they warned.

When I left in 2010, the year before the American military finally departed, the truth on the ground should have been clear enough to anyone with the vision to take it in. Iraq had already been tacitly divided into feuding state-lets controlled by Sunnis, Shias, and Kurds. The Baghdad government had turned into a typical, gleeful third-world kleptocracy fueled by American money, but with a particularly nasty twist: they were also a group of autocrats dedicated to persecuting, marginalizing, degrading, and perhaps one day destroying the country's Sunni minority

.......

The truth on the ground these days is tragically familiar: an Iraq even more divided into feuding state-lets; a Baghdad government kleptocracy about to be reinvigorated by free-flowing American money; and a new Shia prime minister being issued the same 2003-2011 to-do list by Washington: mollify the Sunnis, unify Iraq, and make it snappy. The State Department still stays hidden behind the walls of that billion-dollar embassy. More money will be spent to train the collapsed Iraqi military. Iran remains the foreign power with the most influence over events.

One odd difference should be noted, however: in the last Iraq war, the Iranians sponsored and directed attacks by Shia militias against American occupation forces (and me); now, its special operatives and combat advisors fight side-by-side with those same Shia militias under the cover of American air power. You want real boots on the ground? Iranian forces are already there. It's certainly an example of how politics makes strange bedfellows, but also of what happens when you assemble your "strategy" on the run.

Obama hardly can be blamed for all of this, but he's done his part to make it worse - and worse it will surely get as his administration once again assumes ownership of the Sunni-Shia fight. The "new" unity plan that will fail follows the pattern of the one that did fail in 2007: use American military force to create a political space for "reconciliation" between once-burned, twice-shy Sunnis and a compromise Shia government that American money tries to nudge into an agreement against Iran's wishes
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It takes a lot of turning points to go in a circle (Original Post) pscot Oct 2014 OP
Excellent article. Amazing how they all pivot on their right foot. nt adirondacker Oct 2014 #1
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