From its sprawling, $750 million
embassy in Baghdad - the largest, most expensive American diplomatic
mission in the world - Washington had hoped for a cozy relationship with
the Iraqi government, forged after a U.S.-led military coalition ousted
former president Saddam Hussein.
But in the seven months since the United States withdrew its combat
forces from Iraq, U.S. relations with Baghdad have deteriorated as Iraqi
insurgents have carried out a major attack at least once a month.
Hundreds of people have been killed in the ongoing violence that
included coordinated bombings and gunbattles on July 23 unleashed by
Iraq's al-Qaida affiliate.
As American influence in Iraq has ebbed to its lowest point in
years, and with Iraq in political turmoil, the Obama administration
recently announced large reductions to the size and scope of its mission
in a country less willing to accept a significant American footprint.
Last month, the Islamic Republic thwarted anti-American cleric and Iran ally Moqtada al-Sadr's push to join Sunnis and Kurds in calling for a no-confidence vote to oust the Iraqi prime minister, a fellow Shi'ite.
Asian Defence News
These include plans to slash the huge diplomatic presence it had
envisioned for Iraq by one-third, drastically pare down a highly-touted
but deeply unpopular police training program and close its consulate in
Kirkuk.
U.S. Cuts Iraq Funding
Government experts warned U.S. lawmakers earlier this year that Iraq is
questioning the continued presence of large numbers of Americans on its
soil. A slimmed-down staff of 1,235 U.S. diplomats was present at the
end of June, along with 12,477 employees of U.S.-funded contractors,
most of whom were sent to guard and feed them.
In May, the U.S. Senate appropriations committee reduced the Obama
administration’s original $2.26 billion request for 2013 Iraq funding in
half, to $1.1 billion.
If approved, the biggest chunk of the reduction would eliminate $850
million for the Police Development Program, a key component of the U.S.
civilian aid mission to Iraq, advertised as America's largest rebuilding
project since the post-World War Two Marshall Plan.
A critical report by the Special Inspector General for Iraq
Reconstruction, released last week, cited Iraqi "disinterest" in the
program as the primary reason for cutting the number of in-country
advisers by nearly 90 percent, from 350 to 36.
The report said the American embassy in Baghdad never received a
written commitment from Iraq to participate in the project and will
close its $108 million Baghdad Police College Annex, turning it over to
the Iraqis by the end of the year. Another $98 million was spent to
construct a consulate in southern Iraq so it could be used for police
training. But the Basra component ended "because the [Iraqi Interior
Ministry] decided to terminate training at that location," it added.
Iraq's deputy interior minister, Adnan al-Asadi, told U.S. inspectors
in May the program was "useless" and that Iraqi police officers had
indicated the training received was "not beneficial," the report said.
With Americans now largely confined to the Baghdad embassy because of
safety concerns, investigators recently disclosed that "support costs
and security expenses accounted for 93 percent of the estimated $4
billion [allocated for] 2012 operations in Iraq."
U.S lawmakers say they are cautiously examining future investments in Iraq.
U.S. Rep. John F. Tierney, ranking U.S. House minority member of a Congressional subcommittee on foreign operations, said in June that he has “long expressed concern about the U.S. government’s significant footprint in Iraq.” He added that “the transition in Iraq and the taxpayer dollars that are being spent in that country” will be closely monitored.
U.S lawmakers say they are cautiously examining future investments in Iraq.
U.S. Rep. John F. Tierney, ranking U.S. House minority member of a Congressional subcommittee on foreign operations, said in June that he has “long expressed concern about the U.S. government’s significant footprint in Iraq.” He added that “the transition in Iraq and the taxpayer dollars that are being spent in that country” will be closely monitored.
Ambivalent Relationship
Representatives from across Iraq's political spectrum claim they want
both independence from and a close relationship with the United States.
"We need the Americans. We need to work together to reach the point
when Iraq no longer needs help from anyone, including the U.S.," said
Sami al-Askari, a Shi'ite lawmaker close to Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki.
Independent Kurdish lawmaker Mahmoud Osman added that "foreign
countries" have exacerbated domestic conflicts, such as Baghdad's
ongoing dispute with the Kurdish regional government over oil rights.
Osman said Kurds should try to solve their own issues directly within
Iraq and beware of depending too much on alliances with other nations,
including the United States.
"These countries have their own interests. Today they help you, they
talk to you, then they leave you or sell you [out]. We've seen this in
the past," Osman said. "So I hope the Kurdish leadership will try...to
[conduct] a dialogue with other blocs [and] with the government here, as
long as we are part of Iraq, anyway," he said.
Baghdad resident Sadun Salam says "the U.S. withdrawal was a mistake
because rebuilding and [fostering] democracy would have needed an
American military presence."
Another Baghdad resident, Huda Ahmed, credited Washington for ousting
Saddam Hussein, but said Iraqis' hopes for change have not been met.
"While I am not denying the huge role the U.S. played in toppling the [former] regime, the U.S. is not doing anything right now for the sake of Iraqi citizens. Americans are not trying to help Iraq improve its economic situation," Ahmed said.
"While I am not denying the huge role the U.S. played in toppling the [former] regime, the U.S. is not doing anything right now for the sake of Iraqi citizens. Americans are not trying to help Iraq improve its economic situation," Ahmed said.
Iran's Expanded Role
Meanwhile, as U.S. power in Iraq has steadily declined since the 2003
invasion, Maliki's embattled government has increasingly aligned itself
with the region's dominant Shi'ite state, Iran, which is at odds with
the U.S. on several fronts.
Last month, the Islamic Republic thwarted anti-American cleric and Iran ally Moqtada al-Sadr's push to join Sunnis and Kurds in calling for a no-confidence vote to oust the Iraqi prime minister, a fellow Shi'ite.
"Mr. Sadr was the key element in the process," said parliament member
Askari, who acknowledged that Sadr's changed stance "is mainly a result
of Iranian pressure" as well as pushback from within his devout base of
Shi'ite supporters opposed to U.S. influence in Iraq.
That rankles many Iraq policy brokers in Washington who "dislike
intensely when they see Iraqis following [Iran] on so many issues in the
region," said Alex Vatanka, an analyst at the Middle East Institute.
While the Iraqi political crisis has eased for the moment, the
sectarian conflict in neighboring Syria continues to unnerve Shi'ite
leaders in Iraq.
Resurgent religious violence has added to fears that regional Sunni
powers - chiefly Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey - want to topple the
Damascus and Baghdad governments by any means.
"Whenever you have [the] Shia-Sunni schism across the Middle East, the
Iraqi Shia look to [their co-religionists] in the region for support,
and, obviously, the biggest, most powerful Shia state is Iran," said
Vatanka. "If the sectarian issue doesn't blow up, if it becomes less of a
factor, the way it was just a decade ago, why can't we see an
independent Iraq?" he asked.
Continued U.S. Presence
Maliki's government insists it wants good relations with Washington,
and has signed a $3 billion deal to buy American-built F-16 fighter
planes. U.S. oil giants have also begun to invest in Iraq's petroleum
sector, which drives national commerce and accounts for more than 90
percent of the country's budget.
"I think the United States was and will stay the milestone in Iraq's
future," lawmaker Askari said. "Most Iraqi leaders - I'm talking about
the [ruling] National Alliance - are keen to have strong relations with
the U.S. because this is the way to build Iraq and stabilize this
important region."
Many analysts agree Washington still has an important role to play in
Iraq, while some American officials say a smaller, more reserved U.S.
presence may actually produce better results.
"I don't think we should count the U.S. completely out," said Gregory
Gause, a Middle East expert at the University of Vermont. "I think there
are plenty of political players in Iraq who want to keep the Americans
in reserve because they don't want to be completely beholden to Iran."
Vatanka said most American diplomats who deal with Iraq believe the
U.S. has a good chance of remaining a significant player in the country
despite Tehran's current advantage.
"It becomes an issue of looking [at] the balance sheet...and asking
yourself, if you’re in Baghdad, 'what can Iran actually bring to the
table in the long term while [Tehran] itself is [so] isolated in the
region and internationally?" he said. "That’s why I think the U.S. can
be, by far, the most likely attractive partner for Iraq."
Still, by nearly all accounts, the grand strategy behind the 2003 U.S. invasion has yet to be realized.
"I think the most optimistic and ambitious version of that vision - a
stable, democratic Iraq, strongly allied with the United States, at
peace with Israel and confronting Iran - was a pipe dream," analyst
Gause said.
"That was never going to happen," he said. "The medium ambitious
version of the vision - a stable, democratic Iraq with a close
relationship with the U.S. - has not been achieved."
No comments:
Post a Comment