The Iraq Trap
http://watchingamerica.com/WA/2015/06/29/the-iraq-trap/
Neocon douchebag
The Iraq Trap
Published in El País (Spain) on 12 June 2015 by Sami Nair [link to original]
Translated from Spanish by Miken Trogdon. Edited by Nathan Moseley.
Posted on June 29, 2015.
Four years after the withdrawal of American forces from Iraq, and due to the Islamic States victories, President Obama feels obligated to reinforce the 3,100 American military advisors already in Iraq with another 450 soldiers, which highlights the disaster that is the stabilization of this country.
The American strategy, mainly developed in the 90s by Paul Wolfowitz, the ultra-conservative ex-advisor to George W. Bush, is based on the sectarianism of Iraq as an antidote to secular, authoritarian and potentially anti-imperialist nationalism. This vision produces a Western conception of Arabian geopolitics, according to which the installation of democracy in these countries happens through the necessary fragmentation of the state, allowing the multiple ethnicities and faiths to act and present themselves as the armor of the state.
The Iraqi tragedy provoked by the Anglo-American invasion in 2003, as well as the human rights disaster in Syria, shows the perversion of this strategy. Here, cultural ignorance of the Arab-Islamic world reaches its peak; since the Gulf War in 1991 it has plunged the Near East into indescribable chaos, giving it over to its cultural demons and ending any form of modern rationale from the state. Of course this situation benefits U.S. allies in the region Saudi Arabia, the oil monarchies, Israel but with the rise of the Islamic State group, it has become extremely dangerous for everyone again because, unlike al-Qaida, the Islamic State group wants to become a legitimate nation through edict of the caliphate. In short, the result of the sectarianism policy of division amongst religious denominations is a massive failure.
In Iraq, the Shiite majority has established a corrupt, militarily ineffective, potentially totalitarian power sustained by two allies the U.S. and Iran who despise each other and have radically diverging short term goals: The U.S. wants stability among tribes, while Iran desires the strengthening of the Iraqi Shiites against the Sunnis in general and against the Islamic State group specifically.