Britney Spears said:
However, if you claim, as Bush and company do, that the invasion of iraq was fueled by ana ltruistic concern for the lot of the Iraqi people, I must disagree. I must also disagree if you are claiming, with a straight face, that the Iraqi insurgency continues not because of ar desire for national self determination, but because "They're jealous of our freedom." or "They hate our way of life." or any other such nonsense, which betrays an underlying idea that the Iraqis are sub-human to the point that they are incapable of rational discourse.
"Britney":
Re: Altruism - I agree with you. If some Wilsonian conviction of spreading democracy to the Iraqi people was indeed included in the strategy, I believe it was on the bottom of the list. Bush is
not Wilsonian.
Re: Motivation of Iraqi insurgents - I agree with you as well. I'm generally supportive of the viewpoint put forth by William Lind that the Iraq was has entered its Third Phase:
1) Phase 1: US and Coalition vs. Ba'ath regime
2) Phase 2: US and Coalition vs. Remnents of Fedayeen
3) Phase 3: General civil war as everybody realizes that Saddam is actually gone and races for the pie.
America is in the middle of a civil war. As I've said before, it appears that everyone killing Americans (and eachother) comes to the fray for numerous reasons:
- Shi'ite radicals bankrolled by Iran.
- Sunni radicals bankrolled from Saudi Arabia.
- Left over Ba'athists who have nothing better to do (Those Republican Guard guys had to go somewhere)
- Kurds who finally can give what they've been taking for so long.
- Terrorists who see Iraq as an opportunity to bloody the nose of America.
- People who are just pissed off because anyone of these parties (including Americans) has blown their mosque, their house, and their market down.
This is why I believe Iraq is a crapshoot right now. It's almost like Bosnia in 94 or something - everybody is in it for their own reasons.
As such, I gave my own interpretation of events going on this viewpoint of the current status of the Iraq conflict.
"However, I am skeptical of mixing the strategy of behaviour modification with some sort of attempt at the short-term spread of democracy - I call it democracy on the end of a bayonet. I do not believe that a strategy of evangelism (for lack of any better term) is suited to Western interests. Trying to force some facade of a liberal democratic order is about as useless an expression of Wilsonian idealism as there is. This is why I am not sure I support active intervention in the civil society of Iraq. It was fractured from the artifice of the Ba'athist regime, conflict was a foregone conclusion - Iraq would need some time to sort out its new state identity. With America putting its units in Saddam's palaces and having bureaucrats and tanks moving about during this is the equivalent of sticking your hand in a hornets nest right after you pounded it with a stick. End result, you get drawn in and two-bit chumps like Moqtada al-Sadr all of the sudden gain real currency as players in the game (which undermines the efforts of guys like Grand Ayatollah al-Sistani, who are generally friendly to your cause).
As well, getting tangled up in the populations of Iraq leads to another issue that I believe affects attitudes - the fact that American soldiers in Iraq do draw Jihadis out like a magnet. However valid soem may feel the theory of engaging Jihadi forces in Iraq rather then in America is, I am sure that the citizens of Iraq do not appreciate the fact that their houses, markets, and mosques are being used as a battleground by US and Jihadi fighters. Sticking combat soldiers in cities seems to be burning more bridges then their building.
I often wonder if a strategy of "sitting back" in the ensuing scrum would have been a more effective way to go about things. Leave the Tigris and Euphrates floodplain and move to the uninhabited desert of the West. Let Iraq iron out itself - they can come to their own conclusions on how to rule themselves. Someone was keen to point out that the people of Iraq were an ancient and complex civilization while we Westerners were living in huts and worshipping trees. Offer help if asked and don't pick sides and don't put your military forces in someone else's fight. Use Special Operations Forces to make forays into any Jihadi elements that can be identified and wipe them out quietly and effectively.
Make it clear to the people of Iraq that the West is not their on an "evangelist" mission (YOU WILL BE A DEMOCRACY - VOTE!), but are in the Middle East to intervene against a faction that is unfriendly our interests. As well, make it clear to whoever comes out on top of the scrum that they have to play ball with the international community. Use diplomacy - the "carrot and the stick" - to show Iraq that the West will not tolerate replacing Saddam with another despot who thrives off of nepotism and acts as a destabilizing force in the region. The fate of Saddam Hussein should be proof enough that the West means what it says. There was a good article in a recent issue of Foreign Affairs that pointed out how Pax Romana and Pax Britannica were built and sustained by assetive and yet subtle diplomacy along with the force to back it up. As Teddy Roosevelt said - "Walk Softly but Carry a Big Stick...."
The occupants of the Middle East are a tough and proud people; they will recognize and respect the strength of Western and American might and resolve to undermine the threat of terrorism at it's center of gravity - the unstable geopolitical region of the Middle East. However, I do not believe they will respect us if we use the might and resolve to attempt to rebuild Iraq in our image."
PS: I'm getting slightly excited pretending I'm arguing politics with Britney Spears, could you use this as your Avatar please!