No end in sight for Iraq fiasco
S P SETH
As the world’s attention is focused on the
ongoing Syrian massacre, the killings in Iraq continue unabated. When it was
attacked in 2003 under the presidency of George Bush, Iraq was to be rid of
Saddam Hussein and his weapons of mass destruction. Soon after, then-president
Bush appeared on the deck of a US warship wearing military uniform to declare
victory, and a new ‘liberated’ Iraq was launched that was supposed to become a
model democracy for the region. But that didn’t happen. The US got increasingly
embroiled in all sorts of troubles, finally quitting in 2011 leaving the
country with Noor al-Maliki as its prime minister. Even though Iraq had
elections and Maliki cobbled together a government, it somehow didn’t gain
legitimacy among the country’s disparate and divided population. Its Kurdish
region is virtually independent, its minority Sunni population is at war with
the country’s new majority Shia government, and there is an ongoing al Qaeda
insurgency blowing up people here and there. Iraq’s so-called liberation is a
cruel joke on its people.
How did it all happen? Indeed, for a time,
in the eighties, Saddam was a US favorite in the region, a bulwark against the ‘crazy’
mullahs who had seized power in Iran in 1979 through a popular revolution against
the shah. At another time, in 1951, a popular revolution had got rid of the shah
electing the country’s nationalist leader Dr. Mohammad Mossadeq as prime
minister. But a US engineered coup got rid of Mossadeq, and brought back the shah
as their trusted man. But his megalomaniac rule was hugely unpopular. He was
deposed once again 1979 in a popular revolution led by Ayatollah Khomeini and
backed by elements of the liberal-left political spectrum. As the predominantly
new clerical political order took hold, it soon became a bloody affair both
internally and externally.
Internally, Ayatollah Khomeini adroitly
eliminated his one time liberal-left political partners in revolution through a
bloody purge, throwing many of them into prison, just like the shah had done
earlier with his political enemies. Those who escaped fled into exile operating
as People’s Mujahedin of Iran and were given shelter in Iraq by Saddam Hussein.
However, within Iran, the new clerical political order, with Ayatollah Khomeini
as the supreme leader, continued to have popular support.
The external dimension of the 1979
revolution was a bitter fall out between the new Iranian regime and the United
States. Tehran accused the US embassy in Iran of being a hive of spies, and its
staff were held hostage by the revolutionary guards for well over one year. To
this day, the US and Iran have no diplomatic relations and their relationship
remains in a state of crisis. Iran is facing the worst economic sanctions from
the US and many other countries for its nuclear programme.
It was against this backdrop of intense US
hostility to Iran that Saddam Hussein’s Iraq became Washington’s virtual ally.
Saddam had a long-standing maritime dispute with Iran over the Shatt al-Arab
river boundary between the two countries. Saddam obviously saw an opportunity
in the uncertainty and confusion that prevailed in the period after the
revolution in Iran and sought to settle the scores and undermine the new regime.
The new Shia political order in Iran was seen as a dangerous development. It
was feared that the new regime might be inclined to extend its revolutionary
fervor and missionary zeal to whip up Iraq’s majority Shia population. Saddam
was, therefore, keen to preempt any Iranian threat in the near future by
starting a war in 1980 while the new regime was still finding its feet.
Iran’s ongoing troubles with the United
States created a commonality of purpose between Saddam Hussein and the United
States. Saddam got encouragement, weapons, chemicals, intelligence, money and much
more from the US during his war with Iran. It was a bloody war, lasting 8 years
(1980-88), and fought to a stalemate. Iraq extensively used chemicals weapons,
such as mustard gas, against Iranian troops. The estimates of casualties, with
Iran suffering the most, vary from half-a-million to a million or more.
Saddam Hussein, who was generally not well
regarded by his fellow Arab rulers, if not out-rightly hated, received their
support in his crusade against Iran under its clerical regime. Some of them,
cash rich with their oil revenues, lent him money to prosecute his war against
Iran. But when the whole project failed, they wanted their money back with
interest. Saddam’s Iran war had bankrupted Iraq and he was looking for some way
of replenishing his coffers, as well as to restore his lost prestige among his
people and in the region. He decided to attack and occupy Kuwait with its vast
oil wealth, which would make Iraq the preeminent oil producer in the world.
He was said to have broached the subject at
the time with the US ambassador and received no specific objection. Banking on
his friendship with the US, forged during his Iranian adventure, he let loose
his armed forces against Kuwait and managed to occupy much of the country in a
rather short period of time. Which raised hackles among the Arab world’s oil
producing monarchs, many of them US allies as well as important oil suppliers. The Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, which
threatened to change the region’s geopolitical situation with Iraq commanding
significant oil supplies, created alarm bells in Washington that led to the US invasion
of Iraq, early 1991. Iraq was easily defeated but the then-president Bush senior
desisted from regime change.
The Saddam regime lived on US sufferance,
subjected to severe UN sanctions and barely surviving on the oil-for-food
programme. That is to say, it was allowed to sell enough oil to buy its food and
other necessities. This didn’t seem to seriously affect the regime, but the
Iraqi people, particularly Iraqi children, suffered horribly under this because
of shortages of medical supplies and other necessities. The regime change was
subsequently effected under George Bush (junior) to complete his father’s
half-finished job after he attacked Iraq in 2003. Saddam was hunted down and
subsequently hanged by a new Iraqi Shia regime installed under the US
occupation.
The prime reasons for the US invasion of
Iraq that it had weapons of mass destruction and links with the al Qaeda were
found to be untrue. As we now know that the laudable objective of liberating
and making Iraq into a model regional democracy has turned out to be cruel joke
played on the Iraqi people. Surely, Saddam Hussein was a tyrant and his
overthrow by the Iraqi people would have been a welcome development. But its US
invasion only compounded Iraq’s tragedy.
Worse still, the increasing involvement of
extremists of the al-Qaeda linked Islamic State of Iraq and Levant in the
Syrian conflict to support rebels has the potential of turning the two states
into another terrorist hub, on the lines of Pakistan and Afghanistan. Iraq’s
tragedy is not over yet. It is likely to get worse before it gets better-- if
it gets better.
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times.
Contact: sushilpseth@yahoo.com.au
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