July 30, 2008
By Robert Dreyfuss
Source:
The Nation
While everyone's looking at
Iraq's effect on American politics — and whether or not John McCain and Barack
Obama are converging on a policy that combines a flexible timetable with a
vague, and long-lasting, residual force — let's take a look instead at Iraqi
politics. The picture isn't pretty.
Despite the Optimism of the Neocons, which has pushed mainstream media coverage
to be increasingly flowery about
There are at least three flashpoints for an explosion, any or all of which could
blow up over the next couple of months. (Way to go, Surgin' Generals!) The first
is the brewing crisis over
Perhaps the issue of
The election law was supported by Sadr's bloc and backed by former Prime
Minister Iyad Allawi and his Iraq National List. Another nationalist party, the
National Dialogue Council, has demanded the ouster of President Talabani over
his veto of the law. Other Iraqi parties are backing the now-vetoed law, too,
which also restricts the use of Islamic religious symbols by political parties
seeking to corral illiterate, religious voters.
Because of all this, it now looks like there won't be provincial elections this
year at all. The ruling bloc of Shiite religious parties and Kurdish warlords is
split over the crisis, weakening Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, and members of
the ruling coalition are trying to patch things up. I don't think they'll
succeed. Many Shiites in the ruling bloc, including ISCI, have criticized the
law as divisive, but as Arabs it's hard for them to endorse a Kurdish takeover
of
The IIP says that it wants to mediate the crisis. But the IIP is in a very, very
weak position. Having just rejoined the Maliki government, it is under siege at
home in its base in Anbar province, where the Awakening is flexing its muscle.
This could be the second explosion. The Sunni Arabs are still seething over the
divisive Iraqi Constitution and their continuing exclusion from political power,
and the Awakening movement sees the IIP (correctly) as wildly unrepresentative.
So the Awakening, representing Sunni tribal powers and former resistance
fighters, wants in, at the expense of the IIP. That time bomb is ticking, too.
The final crisis-to-be is the Sadr vs. Badr one. The Times today suggests that
Sadr is weakening:
The militia that was once the biggest defender of poor Shiites in
Don't believe it. Sadr's rivals, ISCI, don't have anything like the popular base
that Sadr has. And underneath Sadr is a volatile mix of neighborhood, local and
regional militias, mosques, and economic fiefdoms that won't yield easily to
ISCI and Maliki. Because Sadr's forces are dependent on Iran, however, for arms
and cash, Iran may be in the driver's seat. Just the other day, the commander of
Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps crowed that the United States has failed to
install an anti-Iranian regime in Baghdad, and he's completely right.
So Iraq is still poised to explode, and Iran may be in control. McCain's
solution: provoke a showdown with Iran. Obama's solution: try to make a deal
with Iran to stabilize Iraq. I'm not sure either "plan" will work.