Posted on July 11, 2008, Printed on July 12, 2008
The official Iraqi demand for U.S. withdrawal confirms what was
becoming increasingly clear in recent months -- that the Iraqi regime
has decided to shed its military dependence on the United States.
The
two strongly pro-Iranian Shiite factions supporting the regime in
Baghdad, the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (SIIC) and al-Maliki's own
Dawa Party, were under strong pressure from both Iran and their own
Shiite population and from Shiite clerics, including Ayatollah Ali
Sistani, to demand U.S. withdrawal.
The statement by al-Rubaei
came immediately after he had met with Sistani, thus confirming earlier
reports that Sistani was opposed to any continuing U.S. military
presence.
The Bush administration has had doubts in the past
about the loyalties of those two Shiite groups and of the SIIC's Badr
Corps paramilitary organization, and it maneuvered in 2005 and early
2006 to try to weaken their grip on the interior ministry and the
police.
By 2007, however, the administration hoped that it had
forged a new level of cooperation with al-Maliki aimed at weakening
their common enemy, Moqtada al-Sadr's anti-occupation Mahdi Army. SIIC
leader Abdul Aziz al-Hakim was invited to the White House in December
2006 and met with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in November 2007.
The
degree of cooperation with the al-Maliki regime against the Sadrists
was so close that the Bush administration even accepted for a brief
period in late 2007 the al-Maliki regime's argument that Iran was
restraining the Mahdi Army by pressing Sadr to issue his August 2007
ceasefire order.
In November, Bush and al-Maliki agreed on a set
of principles as the basis for negotiating agreements on stationing of
U.S. forces and bilateral cooperation, including a U.S. guarantee of
Iraq's security and territorial integrity. In February 2008, U.S. and
Iraqi military planners were already preparing for a U.S.-British-Iraqi
military operation later in the summer to squeeze the Sadrists out of
Basra.
But after the U.S. draft agreement of Mar. 7 was given to
the Iraqi government, the attitude of the al-Maliki government toward
the U.S. military presence began to shift dramatically, just as Iran
was playing a more overt role in brokering ceasefire agreements between
the two warring Shiite factions.
The first indication was
al-Maliki's refusal to go along with the Basra plan and his sudden
decision to take over Basra immediately without U.S. troops. Petraeus
later said a company of U.S. army troops was attached to some units as
advisers "just really because we were having a problem figuring where
was the front line."
That al-Maliki decision was followed by an
Iranian political mediation of the intra-Shiite fighting in Basra, at
the request of a delegation from the two pro-government parties. The
result was that Sadr's forces gave up control of the city, even though
they were far from having been defeated.
U.S. military officials
were privately disgruntled at that development, which effectively
canceled the plan for a much bigger operation against the Sadrists
during the summer. Weeks later, a U.S. "defense official" would tell
the New York Times, "We may have wasted an opportunity in Basra to kill those that needed to be killed."
In
another sign of the shifting Iraqi position away from Washington, in
early May, al-Maliki refused to cooperate with a Cheney-Petraeus scheme
to embarrass Iran by having the Iraqi government publicly accuse it of
arming anti-government Shiites in the South. The prime minister angered
U.S. officials by naming a committee to investigate U.S. charges.
Even
worse for the Bush administration, a delegation of Shiite officials to
Tehran that was supposed to confront Iran over the arms issue instead
returned with a new Iranian strategy for dealing with Sadr, according
to Alissa J. Rubin of the New York Times: reach a negotiated settlement with him.
The
al-Maliki regime began to apply the new Iranian strategy immediately.
On May 10, al-Maliki and Sadr reached an accord on Sadr City, where
pitched battles were being fought between U.S. troops and the Sadrists.
The
new accord prevented a major U.S. escalation of violence against the
Mahdi Army stronghold and ended heavy U.S. bombing there. Seven U.S.
battalions had been poised to assault Sadr City with tanks and armored
cars in a battle expected to last several weeks.
Under the new
pact, Sadr allowed Iraqi troops to patrol in his stronghold, in return
for the government's agreement not to arrest any Sadrist troops unless
they were found with "medium and heavy weaponry".
The new
determination to keep U.S. forces out of the intra-Shiite conflict was
accompanied by a new tough line in the negotiations with the Bush
administration on status of forces and cooperation agreements. In a May
21 briefing for Senate staff, Bush administration officials said Iraq
was now demanding "significant changes to the form of the agreements".
The
al-Maliki regime was rejecting the U.S. demand for access to bases with
no time limit as well as for complete freedom to use them without
consultation with the Iraqi government, as well as its demand for
immunity for its troops and contractors. The Iraqis were asserting that
these demands violated Iraqi sovereignty. By early June, Iraqi
officials were openly questioning for the first time whether Iraq needs
a U.S. military presence at all.
The unexpected Iraqi resistance
to the U.S. demands reflected the underlying influence of Iran on the
al-Maliki government as well as Sadr's recognition that he could
achieve his goal of liberating Iraq from U.S. occupation through
political-diplomatic means rather than through military pressures.
Iran
put very strong pressure on Iraq to reject the agreement, as soon as it
saw the initial U.S. draft. It could cite the fact that the draft would
allow the United States to use Iraqi bases to attack Iran, which was
known to be a red line in Iran-Iraq relations.
The Iranians could
argue that an Iraqi Shiite regime could not depend on the United
States, which was committed to a strategy of alliance with Sunni
regimes in the region against the Shiite regimes.
Iran was able
to exploit a deep vein of Iraqi Shiite suspicion that the U.S. might
still try to overthrow the Shiite regime, using former Prime Minister
Iyad Allawi and some figures in the Iraqi Army. When the U.S. draft
dropped an earlier U.S. commitment to defend Iraq against external
aggression and pledged only to "consult" in the event of an external
threat, Iran certainly exploited the opening to push al-Maliki to
reject the agreement.
The use of military bases in Iraq to
project U.S. power into the region to carry out regime change in Iran
and elsewhere had been an essential part of the neoconservative plan
for invading Iraq from the beginning.
The Bush administration
raised the objective of a long-term military presence in Iraq based on
the "Korea model" last year at the height of the U.S. celebration of
the pacification of the Sunni stronghold of Anbar province, which it
viewed as sealing its victory in the war.
But the Iraqi demand
for withdrawal makes it clear that the Bush administration was not
really in control of events in Iraq, and that Shiite political
opposition and Iranian diplomacy could trump U.S. military power.
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