- "Imagine what the region would look like without Saddam and
with a regime that's aligned with U.S. interests. It would change
everything in the region and beyond."
A few weeks later, Bush speechwriter David Frum offered an
even more exuberant version of the same vision to the New York Times
Magazine: "An American-led overthrow of Saddam Hussein, and the
replacement of the radical Baathist dictatorship with a new government
more closely aligned with the United States, would put America more
wholly in charge of the region than any power since the Ottomans, or
maybe even the Romans."
From the moment on May 1, 2003, when
the President declared "major combat operations… ended" on the deck of
the USS Abraham Lincoln, such exuberant administration statements have
repeatedly been deflated by events on the ground. Left unsaid through
all the twists and turns in Iraq has been this: Whatever their
disappointments, administration officials never actually gave up on
their grandiose ambitions. Through thick and thin, Washington has
sought to install a regime "aligned with U.S. interests" -- a
government ready to cooperate in establishing the United States as the
predominant power in the Middle East.
Recently, with
significantly lower levels of violence in Iraq extending into a second
year, Washington insiders have begun crediting themselves with --
finally -- a winning strategy (a claim neatly punctured by Juan Cole,
among other Middle East experts). In this context, actual Bush policy
aims have, once again, emerged more clearly, but so has the
administration's striking and continual failure to implement them --
thanks to the Iraqis.
In the past few weeks, the Iraqi
government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has made it all too clear
that, in the long run, it has little inclination to remain "aligned
with U.S. interests" in the region. In fact, we may be witnessing a
classic "tipping point," a moment when Washington's efforts to dominate
the Middle East are definitively deep-sixed.
The client state
that the Bush administration has spent so many years and hundreds of
billions of dollars creating, nurturing, and defending has shown
increasing disloyalty and lack of gratitude, as well as an ever
stronger urge to go its own way. Under the pressure of Iraqi politics,
Maliki has moved strongly in the direction of a nationalist position on
two key issues: the continuing American occupation of the country and
the future of Iraqi oil. In the process, he has sought to distance his
government from the Bush administration and to establish congenial
relationships, if not an outright alliance, with Washington's
international adversaries, including the Bush administration's mortal
enemy, Iran.
Withdrawal Becomes an Official Issue
Perhaps
the most dramatic symbol of this new independence is the Iraqi
government's resistance to a Washington proposal for a "status of
forces agreement" (SOFA) that would allow for a permanent and
uninhibited U.S. military presence in Iraq.
With the impending
expiration of the UN resolutions that gave legal cover to the U.S.
military presence in Iraq, the SOFA negotiations are crucial. They
began with a proposal that expressed the full extent of Washington's
ambitions to utilize Iraq as the base for making the U.S. "more wholly
in charge of the region than any power since the Ottomans, or maybe
even the Romans." The proposal first leaked to the press in June 2008
was essentially a major land grab, including provisions like the
following that would not have seemed out of place in a nineteenth
century colonial treaty:
*An indefinite number of U.S. troops
would remain in Iraq indefinitely, stationed on up to 58 bases in
locations determined by the United States.
*These troops would
be allowed to mount attacks on any target inside Iraq without the
permission of, or even notification to, Iraqi authorities.
*U.S.
military and civilian authorities would be free to use Iraqi territory
to mount attacks against any of Iraq's neighbors without permission
from the Iraqi government.
*The U.S. would control Iraqi
airspace up to 30,000 feet, freeing the U.S. Air Force to strike as it
wishes inside Iraq and creating the basis for the use of, or passage
through, Iraq's air space for planes bent on attacking other countries.
*The U.S. military and its private contractors would be immune
from Iraqi law, even for actions unrelated to their military duties.
*Iraq's
defense, interior, and national security ministries (and all of Iraq's
arms purchases) would be under U.S. supervision for 10 years.
When
leaked (clearly by Iraqis involved in the negotiations), this proposal
generated opposition across the political spectrum from parliament to
the streets. It was even denounced by the usually silent Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the most influential Shia Ayatollah. Soon,
Prime Minister Maliki made clear his own rejection of the proposal,
setting in motion a chaotic negotiating process in which the Iraqis
seem to have argued vehemently for a more modest, briefer U.S.
presence, as well as a definite deadline for full withdrawal -- a
proposal that was anathema to the Bush administration.
By
early August, when the details of a new proposal endorsed by Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice began to leak out, it was clear that U.S.
negotiators had given way, granting significant concessions to the
Iraqi side. According to Iraqi insiders, the new draft agreement called
for U.S. troops to be completely withdrawn from Iraqi cities, where
most of the fighting usually takes place, by the summer of 2009. All
U.S. troops -- not just the "combat" troops usually mentioned when
Democrats talk about withdrawal timelines in Iraq -- would have to be
gone by the end of 2011.
If the leaked draft were implemented,
the U.S. would leave behind those 58 bases, including the five massive
"enduring" bases into which the Bush administration has poured billions
of dollars. Moreover, the unhindered scope of action Washington had
originally demanded for its forces would be dramatically limited: The
U.S. would not have the right to attack other countries from Iraqi
soil, its ability to conduct operations within Iraq would be
circumscribed, and immunity from prosecution would be restricted to
U.S. military personnel (and then only when they were participating in
approved military actions).
Symptomatic of the loosening U.S.
grip on its Iraqi client government were the reactions of the two sides
to the leaked provisions of the new version of the agreement. Secretary
of State Rice declared it "acceptable" and explained uneasily that the
timeline proposed was not the sort of fixed withdrawal date that the
Bush administration had long adamantly rejected, but an "aspirational"
"time horizon" that would depend on "conditions" in Iraq.
Maliki,
in all likelihood responding to the fervor of public protests to Rice's
comments, immediately declared the agreement unacceptable unless the
deadline for withdrawal was time-based and unconditional. In a well
publicized speech to a gathering of tribal sheiks, he said that any
agreement must be based on the principle that "no foreign soldier
remains in Iraq after a specific deadline, not an open time frame." In
further clarifying his remarks, a key aide told the Associated Press
that "the last American soldiers must leave Iraq by the end of 2011,
regardless of conditions at the time."
The latest reports
suggest that a further round of secret negotiations had restored some
U.S. demands, including full immunity for American soldiers (but not
mercenary fighters), and application of the withdrawal deadline to
combat troops only. Such concessions by Maliki, however, appeared
certain to trigger another round of protest and resistance in the
streets and in the Iraqi Parliament.
Whatever their outcome,
the still-unfinished negotiations point to something quite new in the
relationship between the two governments. Until recently, the Iraqi
leadership faithfully sought to enact whatever policies the Bush
administration favored (though its capacity to implement them was
always in question). With the proposed SOFA, this posture disappeared,
replaced by a clear antagonism to Washington's desires. With its
formidable weapons (including 146,000 soldiers on the ground),
Washington is bound to win at least some of these confrontations, but
what we may be seeing is the end of the dream of a regime "closely
aligned" with U.S. policies.
The Re-emergence of Oil Nationalism
Nothing
better highlights this transformation than oil policy. From the
beginning of its occupation of Iraq, the Bush administration sought to
quadruple Iraqi oil production by delivering control of the industry to
the major international oil companies. Once given free rein to act on
their own discretion, Washington policymakers believed that the oil
majors would invest vast sums in modernizing existing fields, activate
undeveloped reserves using the most advanced technology available, and
discover major new fields utilizing state-of-the-art exploration and
extraction methods.
Up until 2007, the Iraqi government was an
active ally in this enterprise, even though the vast majority of Iraqis
-- including the powerful oil workers union, the religious leadership,
and a majority of Parliament -- vehemently opposed these plans,
demanding instead that control of the industry remain in government
hands. In 2004, the U.S.-appointed Iraqi government enthusiastically
endorsed an International Monetary Fund agreement that mandated the
development of major Iraqi oil reserves by international oil companies.
When those companies found the legal basis for such investment too
fragile to risk vast sums of capital, the Iraqi government (surrounded
by American advisors) immediately began work on an oil law that would
presumably provide a more secure foundation for their investment. In
the meantime, informal advice was accepted from the oil majors, whose
technicians were placed in charge of various engineering operations
within the country.
In 2007, when the oil law was finally
delivered to the Iraqi Parliament, it met with unremitting opposition.
The always strong oil unions immediately began a ferocious resistance
campaign that stalled the law.
None of these developments
altered the Bush administration's determination to push the law
through. They did not, however, anticipate that the Maliki
administration itself would become a further source of opposition. As
Charles Ries told journalists on leaving his position as U.S. Economic
Ambassador to Iraq in August 2008 after a year of failure, "When I got
here… I was quite optimistic it was only a month or two [before the
petroleum bill would be passed, but the] more I understood what the
real issues were… it was clear this was going to be a major political
challenge."
While Ries was on the job, even the leadership of
the Ministry of Oil, until then a pro-American bastion, went into
opposition. One symptom of this was its failure to complete five no-bid
contracts (that did not include either investment or extraction rights)
with oil consortia led by the usual suspects -- Exxon Mobil, Royal
Dutch Shell, BP, Total, and Chevron -- designed to increase Iraqi
production by 500,000 barrels per day. Oil Minister Hussein
al-Shahrastani told the Wall Street Journal that a key reason for the
faltering negotiations was the desire of the oil companies for
"preferential treatment for future oil-exploration deals." This
comment, like the faltering negotiations, hinted at the abandonment of
the Bush administration's long-desired version of Iraqi oil policy.
The
new attitude was underscored when the Oil Ministry revived a Saddam-era
agreement with the China National Petroleum Corporation, which was now
granted a $3 billion contract to develop the Ahdab oil field. Given the
growing U.S.-China rivalry over the control of foreign oil sources, the
symbolism of this act couldn't have been clearer -- especially since
the earlier contract had been unceremoniously canceled by the United
States at the beginning of the occupation in 2003. No less important,
this was a "service contract" whose terms did not follow U.S.
guidelines calling for the reduction or elimination of Iraqi government
control of the oil industry.
Soon after announcing this new
agreement, Oil Minister Shahrastani offered what might be seen as a
declaration of oil policy independence. "[Global] oil supplies," he
declared, "meet and may slightly exceed current world demand." The
world, that is, had plenty of oil, and so there was, he insisted, no
global need to rush pell-mell into oil development agreements that
might not, in the long run, be of use to Iraq.
This
represented an attack on the fundamental premise of U.S. oil policy --
that, as Vice President Cheney told an oil industry gathering back in
1999, "By 2010 we will need on the order of an additional fifty million
barrels a day. So where is the oil going to come from? While many
regions of the world offer great oil opportunities, the Middle East,
with two-thirds of the world's oil and the lowest cost, is still where
the prize ultimately lies."
Significantly, back in 2001 -- and
before 9/11 -- the Cheney Energy Task Force, working with the National
Security Council, would make this commitment the centerpiece of
administration Middle Eastern policy, defining the world situation as
one in which the supply of oil must be drastically increased to meet
the demand for an "additional fifty million barrels a day."
Oil-producing
countries of the Middle East never embraced Cheney's analysis and
consistently resisted U.S. efforts to encourage, induce, or coerce
dramatic increases in oil production. Instead, they viewed the
"shortage" of oil as a natural result of market forces, beneficial to
their own economies.
With the success of the U.S. invasion,
the Iraqi government threatened to become a maverick among the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), endorsing
U.S. supported plans that, theoretically, would have quadrupled Iraqi
production within 10 years. So Shahrastani's comments were a signal
that Iraq was rejoining OPEC's ranks and potentially opening a new era
in post-invasion Iraqi politics in which the government he represented
would no longer be a reliable ally of the United States.
A Nail in the Coffin of American Defeat?
Implicit
in these actions is a new attitude toward, and assessment of, the U.S.
presence in Iraq. Prime Minister Maliki and his cohorts appear to have
adopted the viewpoint of journalist Nir Rosen that "the Americans are
just one more militia," just the most powerful of the rogue forces that
they have to manage and eventually eliminate.
As the Iraqi
government accumulates an expanding lake of petrodollars and finds ways
to shake them loose from the clutches of U.S. banks and U.S. government
administrators, its leaders will have the resources to pursue policies
that reflect their own goals. The decline in violence, taken in the
U.S. as a sign of American "success," has actually accelerated this
process. It has made the Maliki regime feel ever less dependent for its
survival on the American presence, while strengthening internal and
regional forces resistant or antagonistic to Washington's Middle East
ambitions.
The respected Iraqi newspaper Azzaman pointed to
one of these forces in a recent editorial: "Iran has emerged as the
country's top trading partner. Its firms are present in the Kurdish
north and southern Iraq carrying out projects worth billions of
dollars. Iranian goods are the most conspicuous merchandise in Iraqi
shops. Iraq, though occupied and administered by America, has grown to
be so dependent on Iran that some analysts see it as a satellite state
of Tehran."
To support this contention, Azzaman asserted: "The
Ministry of Oil and other key portfolios such the Ministry of Interior
and Finance are in the hands of pro-Iran Shiite factions." Citing Oil
Ministry sources, it suggested that recent changes in oil policy
actually reflected Iranian pressure to "exclude U.S. oil majors from
contracts to develop the country's massive oil fields."
Azzaman
may be overemphasizing Iranian influence, since there are myriad
internal Iraqi influences that continue to press against Washington's
desire for a client regime. Parliament, the Sunni and Shia religious
leaderships, powerful unions, and the Sunni and Shia insurgencies have
all registered broad opposition to continued U.S. presence and
influence.
As all this occurs, U.S. leverage over the Iraqi
government, though still formidable, is in decline. The Bush
administration -- or its soon-to-be elected successor --- may face a
difficult dilemma: whether to accept some version of the withdrawal
demands of the Iraqi government or re-escalate the war in yet one more
attempt to create a government that is "aligned with U.S. interests."
The recent declaration by the Pentagon that only the most modest of
troop reductions is militarily feasible in the foreseeable future may
be a symptom of this dilemma. Without a full complement of U.S. troops,
after all, it will be increasingly difficult to convince the Maliki
regime to re-embrace policies favored by Washington.
The
question remains: Can anything reverse the centripetal forces pulling
Iraq from Washington's orbit? Will the President's "surge" strategy
prove to have been the nail in the coffin of its hopes for U.S.
dominance in the Middle East?
If this turns out to be the
case, then watch out domestically. The inevitable controversy over "who
lost Iraq" -- an echo of those earlier controversies over "who lost
China" and "who lost Vietnam" -- is bound to be on the way.