|
The
Deflation of a Superpower
Iraq is a Bloody No Man's Land
By PATRICK COCKBURN
"The battlefield is a great place for liars,"
Stonewall Jackson once said on viewing the aftermath of a battle
in the American civil war.
The great general meant that the confusion of battle
is such that anybody can claim anything during a war and hope to
get away with it. But even by the standards of other conflicts,
Iraq has been particularly fertile in lies. Going by the claims
of President George Bush, the war should long be over since his
infamous "Mission Accomplished" speech on 1 May 2003.
In fact most of the 1,600 US dead and 12,000 wounded have become
casualties in the following two years.
The ferocious resistance encountered last week by
the 1,000-strong US marine task force trying to fight its way into
villages around the towns of Qaim and Obeidi in western Iraq shows
that the war is far from over. So far nine marines have been killed
in the week-long campaign, while another US soldier was killed and
four wounded in central Iraq on Friday. Meanwhile, a car bomb targeting
a police patrol exploded in central Baghdad yesterday, killing at
least five Iraqis and injuring 12.
Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, the leader of one
of the Kurdish parties, confidently told a meeting in Brasilia last
week that there is war in only three or four out of 18 Iraqi provinces.
Back in Baghdad Mr Talabani, an experienced guerrilla leader, has
deployed no fewer than 3,000 Kurdish soldiers or peshmerga around
his residence in case of attack. One visitor was amused to hear
the newly elected President interrupt his own relentlessly upbeat
account of government achievements to snap orders to his aides on
the correct positioning of troops and heavy weapons around his house.
There is no doubt that the US has failed to win
the war. Much of Iraq is a bloody no man's land. The army has not
been able to secure the short highway to the airport, though it
is the most important road in the country, linking the US civil
headquarters in the Green Zone with its military HQ at Camp Victory.
Ironically, the extent of US failure to control
Iraq is masked by the fact that it is too dangerous for the foreign
media to venture out of central Baghdad. Some have retreated to
the supposed safety of the Green Zone. Mr Bush can claim that no
news is good news, though in fact the precise opposite is true.
Embedded journalism fosters false optimism. It means
reporters are only present where American troops are active, though
US forces seldom venture into much of Iraq. Embedded correspondents
bravely covered the storming of Fallujah by US marines last November
and rightly portrayed it as a US military success. But the outside
world remained largely unaware, because no reporters were present
with US forces, that at the same moment an insurgent offensive had
captured most of Mosul, a city five times larger than Fallujah.
Why has the vastly expensive and heavily equipped
US army failed militarily in Iraq? After the crescendo of violence
over the past month there should be no doubts that the US has not
quashed the insurgents whom for two years American military spokesmen
have portrayed as a hunted remnant of Saddam Hussein's regime assisted
by foreign fighters.
The failure was in part political. Immediately after
the fall of Saddam Hussein polls showed that Iraqis were evenly
divided on whether they had been liberated or occupied. Eighteen
months later the great majority both of Sunni and Shia said they
had been occupied, and they did not like it. Every time I visited
a spot where an American soldier had been killed or a US vehicle
destroyed there were crowds of young men and children screaming
their delight. "I am a poor man but I am going home to cook
a chicken to celebrate," said one man as he stood by the spot
marked with the blood of an American soldier who had just been shot
to death.
Many of the resistance groups are bigoted Sunni
Arab fanatics who see Shia as well as US soldiers as infidels whom
it is a religious duty to kill. Others are led by officers from
Saddam's brutal security forces. But Washington never appreciated
the fact that the US occupation was so unpopular that even the most
unsavoury groups received popular support.
From the start, there was something dysfunctional
about the American armed forces. They could not adapt themselves
to Iraq. Their massive firepower meant they won any set-piece battle,
but it also meant that they accidentally killed so many Iraqi civilians
that they were the recruiting sergeants of the resistance. The army
denied counting Iraqi civilian dead, which might be helpful in dealing
with American public opinion. But Iraqis knew how many of their
people were dying.
The US war machine was over-armed. I once saw a
unit trying to restore order at a petrol station where there was
a fist fight between Iraqi drivers over queue-jumping (given that
people sometimes sleep two nights in their cars waiting to fill
a tank, tempers were understandably frayed). In one corner was a
massive howitzer, its barrel capable of hurling a shell 30km, which
the soldiers had brought along for this minor policing exercise.
The US army was designed to fight a high-technology
blitzkrieg, but not much else. It required large quantities of supplies
and its supply lines were vulnerable to roadside bombs. Combat engineers,
essentially sappers, lamented that they had received absolutely
no training in doing this. Even conventional mine detectors did
not work. Roadsides in Iraq are full of metal because Iraqi drivers
normally dispose of soft drink cans out the window. Sappers were
reduced to prodding the soil nervously with titanium rods like wizards'
wands. Because of poor intelligence and excessive firepower, American
operations all became exercises in collective punishment. At first
the US did not realise that all Iraqi men have guns and they considered
possession of a weapon a sign of hostile intention towards the occupation.
They confiscated as suspicious large quantities of cash in farmers'
houses, not realising that Iraqis often keep the family fortune
at home in $100 bills ever since Saddam Hussein closed the banks
before the Gulf war and, when they reopened, Iraqi dinar deposits
were almost worthless.
The US army was also too thin on the ground. It
has 145,000 men in Iraq, but reportedly only half of these are combat
troops. During the heavily publicised assault on Fallujah the US
forces drained the rest of Iraq of its soldiers. "We discovered
the US troops had suddenly abandoned the main road between Kirkuk
and Baghdad without telling anybody," said one indignant observer.
"It promptly fell under the control of the insurgents."
The army acts as a sort of fire brigade, briefly
effective in dousing the flames, but always moving on before they
are fully extinguished. There are only about 6,000 US soldiers in
Nineveh province, of which Mosul is the capital and which has a
population of three million. For the election on 30 January, US
reserves arriving in Iraq were all sent to Mosul to raise the level
to 15,000 to prevent any uprising in the city. They succeeded in
doing so but were then promptly withdrawn.
The shortage of US forces has a political explanation.
Before the war Donald Rumsfeld, the Secretary of Defence, and his
neo-conservative allies derided generals who said an occupation
force numbering hundreds of thousands would be necessary to hold
Iraq. When they were proved wrong they dealt with failure by denying
it had taken place.
There is a sense of bitterness among many US National
Guardsmen that they have been shanghaied into fighting in a dangerous
war. I was leaving the Green Zone one day when one came up to me
and said he noticed that I had a limp and kindly offered to show
me a quicker way to the main gate. As we walked along he politely
asked the cause of my disability. I explained I had had polio many
years ago. He sighed and said he too had had his share of bad luck.
Since he looked hale and hearty this surprised me. "Yes,"
he said bitterly. "My bad luck was that I joined the Washington
State National Guard which had not been called up since 1945. Two
months later they sent me here where I stand good chance of being
killed."
The solution for the White House has been to build
up an Iraqi force to take the place of US soldiers. This has been
the policy since the autumn of 2003 and it has repeatedly failed.
In April 2004, during the first fight for Fallujah, the Iraqi army
battalions either mutinied before going to the city or refused to
fight against fellow Iraqis once there. In Mosul in November 2004
the 14,000 police force melted away during the insurgent offensive,
abandoning 30 police stations and $40m in equipment. Now the US
is trying again. By the end of next year an Iraqi army and police
force totalling 300,000 should be trained and ready to fight. Already
they are much more evident in the streets of Baghdad and other cities.
The problem is that the troops are often based on
militias which have a sectarian or ethnic base. The best troops
are Kurdish peshmerga. Shia units are often connected with the Badr
Brigade which fought on the side of Iran in the Iran-Iraq war. When
14 Sunni farmers from the Dulaimi tribe were found executed in Baghdad
a week ago the Interior Ministry had to deny what was widely believed,
that they had been killed by a Shia police unit.
The greatest failure of the US in Iraq is not that
mistakes were made but that its political system has proved incapable
of redressing them. Neither Mr Rumsfeld nor his lieutenants have
been sacked. Paul Wolfowitz, under-secretary of defence and architect
of the war, has been promoted to the World Bank.
Almost exactly a century ago the Russian empire
fought a war with Japan in the belief that a swift victory would
strengthen the powers-that-be in St Petersburg. Instead the Tsar's
armies met defeat. Russian generals, who said that their tactic
of charging Japanese machine guns with sabre-wielding cavalry had
failed only because their men had attacked with insufficient brio,
held their jobs. In Iraq, American generals and their political
masters of demonstrable incompetence are not fired. The US is turning
out to be much less of a military and political superpower than
the rest of the world had supposed.
Patrick Cockburn,
co-author of the Out of the Ashes: the Resurrection of Saddam Hussein,
is the winner of the 2005 Martha Gellhorn Award for war reporting.
Originally published
at http://www.counterpunch.org/
|