0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views2 pages

02-28-08 CP - Iraq' Falls Apart by PATRICK COCKBURN

The Turkish army invaded northern Iraq last week and remains there, weakening the autonomous Kurdish region. While the US claims to protect Iraqi sovereignty, it has allowed the Turkish attack. Iraq is disintegrating faster than ever, with the government powerless and the country more divided along ethnic and religious lines. The Sunnis, Shias, and Kurds all want the US to leave but have temporary tactical alliances, and the only reliable US allies were the Kurds but now they are not protected from Turkey. Very little holds Iraq together as the government is confined to the Green Zone and the country visibly falls apart.

Uploaded by

Mark Welkie
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views2 pages

02-28-08 CP - Iraq' Falls Apart by PATRICK COCKBURN

The Turkish army invaded northern Iraq last week and remains there, weakening the autonomous Kurdish region. While the US claims to protect Iraqi sovereignty, it has allowed the Turkish attack. Iraq is disintegrating faster than ever, with the government powerless and the country more divided along ethnic and religious lines. The Sunnis, Shias, and Kurds all want the US to leave but have temporary tactical alliances, and the only reliable US allies were the Kurds but now they are not protected from Turkey. Very little holds Iraq together as the government is confined to the Green Zone and the country visibly falls apart.

Uploaded by

Mark Welkie
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 2

53414341.

doc Page 1 of 2

February 28, 2008

The Turkish Invasion

‘Iraq’ Falls Apart


By PATRICK COCKBURN

Iraq is disintegrating faster than ever. The Turkish army invaded the north of the
country last week and is still there. Iraqi Kurdistan is becoming like Gaza where the
Israel can send in its tanks and helicopters at will. The US, so sensitive to any threat
to Iraqi sovereignty from Iran or Syria, has blandly consented to the Turkish attack on
the one part of Iraq which was at peace.
The Turkish government piously claims that its army is in pursuit of PKK Turkish Kurd
guerrillas, but it is unlikely to inflict serious damage on them as they hide in long-
prepared bunkers and deep ravines of the Kurdish mountains. What the Turkish
incursion is doing is weakening the Kurdistan Regional Government, the autonomous
Kurdish zone, the creation of which is one of the few concrete achievements of the
US and British invasion of Iraq five years ago.
One of the most extraordinary developments in the Iraqi war has been the success
with which the White House has been able to persuade so much of the political and
media establishment in the US that, by means of 'the Surge', an extra 30,000 US
troops, it is on the verge of political and military success in Iraq. All that is needed
now, US generals argue, is political reconciliation between the Iraqi communities.
Few demands could be more hypocritical. American success in reducing the level of
violence over the last year has happened precisely because Iraqis are so divided. The
Sunni Arabs of Iraq were the heart of the rebellion against the American occupation
since 2003. In fighting the US forces they were highly successful.
But in 2006, after the bombing of the Shia shrine at Samarra, Baghdad and central
Iraq was wracked by a savage civil war between Shia and Sunni. In some months the
bodies of 3,000 civilians were found and many others lie buried in the desert or
disappeared into the river. I do not know an Iraqi family that did not lose a relative
and usually more than one.
The Shia won this civil war. By the end of 2006 they held three quarters of Baghdad.
The Sunni rebels, fighting the Mehdi Army Shia militia and the Shia-dominated Iraqi
army and police, and also under pressure from al Qa'ida, decided to end their war
with US forces. They formed al-Sahwa, the Awakening movement, which is now allied
to and paid for by the US.
In effect Iraq now has an 80,000 strong Sunni militia which does not hide its
contempt for the Iraqi government which it claims is dominated by Iranian controlled
militias. The former anti-American guerrillas have largely joined al-Sahwa. The Shia
53414341.doc Page 2 of 2

majority, for its part, is determined not to let the Sunni win back their old control of
the Iraqi state. Power in Iraq is more fragmented than ever.
This all may sound like good news for America. For the moment its casualties are
down. Fewer Iraqi civilians are being slaughtered. But the Sunni have not fallen in
love with the occupation. The fundamental weakness of the US position in Iraq
remains its lack of reliable allies outside Kurdistan.

At one moment British officers used to lecture their American counterparts, much to
their irritation, about the British Army's rich experience of successful counter-
insurgency warfare in Malaya and Northern Ireland. "That showed a fundamental
misunderstanding of Iraq on our part," a former British officer in Basra told me in
exasperation. "In Malaya the guerrillas all came from the minority Chinese
community and in Northern Ireland from the minority Roman Catholics. Basra was
exactly the opposite. The majority supported our enemies. We had no friends there."
This lack of allies may not be so immediately obvious in Baghdad and central Iraq
because both Shia and Sunni are willing and at times eager to make tactical alliances
with US forces. But in the long term neither Sunni nor Shia Arab want the Americans
to stay in Iraq. Hitherto the only reliable American allies have been the Kurds who are
now discovering that Washington is not going to protect them against Turkey.
Very little is holding Iraq together. The government is marooned in the Green Zone.
Having declared the Surge a great success the US military commanders need just as
many troops to maintain a semblance of control now as they did before the Surge.
The mainly Shia police force regards al-Sahwa as anti-government guerrillas wearing
new uniforms.
The Turkish invasion should have given the government in Baghdad a chance to
defend Iraq's territorial integrity and burnish its patriotic credentials. Instead the
prime minister Nouri al-Maliki has chosen this moment to have his regular medical
check up in London, a visit which his colleagues say is simply an excuse to escape
Baghdad. Behind him he has left a country which is visibly falling apart.
Patrick Cockburn is the author of 'The Occupation: War, resistance and daily life in
Iraq', a finalist for the National Book Critics' Circle Award for best non-fiction book of
2006. His forthcoming book 'Muqtada! Muqtada al-Sadr, the Shia revival and the
struggle for Iraq' is published by Scribner in April.

You might also like