Surge strategy shows weaknesses

Source IPS

More than three months into the implementation of the Bush administration's "surge" strategy, skepticism over the likelihood of its success is still running high in Washington. Except among neoconservatives, who have been the strategy's most enthusiastic champions, most analysts believe it is doomed to failure in the absence of major moves–of which there have so far been virtually none–by the Shia-led government of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to promote national reconciliation with the Sunni minority. But even while the addition of thousands of US troops in Baghdad has reduced sectarian killings there–a major goal of the surge–violence outside the capital appears to have increased. According to a draft report by the Government Accountability Office obtained this week by The New York Times, the number of attacks on civilian and security forces across Iraq remained at roughly the same level in March and April as at the end of last year, before the surge got underway in February. The actual death toll from those attacks, a growing proportion of which consists of car and truck bombings in civilian areas, may actually have risen compared to previous months, according to some analysts who note that the Maliki government last month stopped releasing casualty figures. At the same time, US casualties, a particularly sensitive indicator in the United States, have clearly been on the rise. In accordance with classic counterinsurgency doctrine, more soldiers are aggressively patrolling areas from dispersed outposts, rather than hunkering down inside fortified bases. But the surge has also meant more targets for both Sunni insurgents and Shia militias–a challenge that was illustrated dramatically late last month when suicide attackers overran an outpost in Baquba, killing nine US troops, and again on May 12 when four soldiers were killed and three others were captured in an insurgent ambush south of Baghdad. Moreover, the fact that some commanders, including Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno, who runs day-to-day operations in Iraq, are already calling for the surge to continue though at least next spring is seen as an implicit admission that what progress has been achieved has come more slowly than expected. As presented by the administration, the surge, which added some 30,000 troops to the 135,000 already deployed to Iraq when Bush announced the plan on Jan. 10, was designed to pacify Baghdad and regain some degree of control over the predominantly Sunni Anbar province, a stronghold of the insurgency. The surge, which began in early February, is expected to reach its full complement by the end of June. By curbing sectarian violence in the capital and going on the offensive against insurgents in Anbar, the surge's authors had hoped to arrest the country's drift into full-scale civil war and thus provide the security and political space needed for "moderate" forces on all sides to forge a consensus on key issues, such as the powers of local governments, reversing de-Baathification, the distribution of oil revenues and the disbanding of sectarian militias. The current commander in Iraq, Gen. David Petraeus, has always stressed that the strategy can only succeed if these issues are successfully addressed by Iraqis themselves. But, despite persistent pressure from Petraeus, the new US ambassador in Baghdad, Ryan Crocker, and a series of visits by top-level administration officials, including Vice President Dick Cheney who made a surprise trip to Baghdad late last week, Maliki's government has been largely unresponsive, while the Iraqi parliament has been depicted in Washington as increasingly dysfunctional. "We just don't see what we need to see in terms of serious negotiations among the principal parties," one administration official who has traveled frequently to Iraq said in an interview. "Distrust has not diminished; if anything, it has gotten worse." Besides the reduction of killings in Baghdad, which most analysts attribute to Moqtada al-Sadr's orders in January to his Mahdi Army to lie low and avoid confrontations with US forces, the surge's defenders point to Anbar as the brightest spot in the strategy's implementation to date. Not only have government- and US-backed forces regained control of Ramadi from insurgents, but a new alliance called the Jihad and Reform Front (RJF) with deep roots throughout the province has mobilized against al-Qaida–which renamed itself the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI)–effectively splitting the insurgency. As encouraging as these developments appear to be, some experts caution against optimism or depicting them, as some neoconservative analysts have, as a consequence of the surge. According to Marc Lynch, a specialist at George Washington University who publishes the influential abuaardvark.com blog, the RJF's opposition to the ISI does not translate into support either for US forces and even less for the Maliki government. Rather, it remains at heart a nationalist movement committed both to expelling US forces and fighting Shia domination, which it depicts as an Iranian occupation. "The most important implication of the Sunni turn against al-Qaida is not that the 'surge' is working, or that the insurgency is losing steam," Lynch wrote last month in The American Prospect, although he added that it may be more possible to enter into negotiations with the nationalist Sunni movement provided that Washington sets a firm commitment for withdrawing its forces. While the Sunni split in Anbar may nonetheless be seen as an advance, events elsewhere are not nearly as positive. Growing intra-Shia violence in southern Iraq is a source of increasing concern among US officials, and the US commander in Diyala province, where hundreds of US reinforcements were sent in the face of rising sectarian conflict two months ago, appealed for yet more troops late last week. And while killings in Baghdad itself may be down compared to late last year, they have been steadily creeping upwards over the last two months, according to published reports. Even the super-protected Green Zone–the nerve center of US operations and the Iraqi government–has become increasingly insecure. Two people were killed and 10 more wounded by mortar fire into the Zone on May 17, the second day in a row that it has come under fire. So dangerous has the area become that the US Embassy warned all residents earlier this month to keep outdoor travel to a minimum and "remain within a hardened structure to the maximum extent possible and strictly avoid congregating outdoors." Those who work outdoors were ordered to wear bulletproof vests and helmets at all times. "In any other embassy, we would have been evacuated," one State Department staffer told McClatchy newspapers earlier this week. "They are going to wait until 20 people die, then the people back in Washington will say we have a problem."