No Friends Just Masters
Friday, November 21, 2003
By: Tashbih Sayyed
Up until the statue of Saddam Hussein came down tumbling as a result
of "Operation Free Iraq," there used to be only one master
in Iraq. He was Saddam Hussein. His word was law. The people of Iraq
were not free but they knew where they stood. There was no ambiguity
about their situation and there was no confusion regarding the authority.
Iraqis knew that so long as they submit to the will of Saddam Hussein,
they are safe. President George W. Bush changed all that. He wanted
to liberate them by removing the master and introducing democracy.
He did succeed in toppling the autocrat but failed to introduce democracy.
He could not find people with grass roots support to replace the
dictator.
The enemy did not allow it. The enemy needed a political and power
vacuum to convert its defeat into victory. A deliberate chaos was
created to make it impossible for the U.S. to establish enough authority
to establish order. Suddenly a multi-ethnic and hybrid Iraq that
was held together by the iron hand of an absolute tyrant was being
pulled apart by numerous centrifugal forces. There was a total vacuum
of power.
Baathists, Nationalists, anarchists, Islamists, different ethnic
groups and any one else who hated stability and wanted to see the
U.S. defeated took full advantage of this vacuum. Claiming to be
the champions of the popular causes, these selfish "leaders" started
to assert their authority. A central authority was not in their
interest. And since the US-appointed Iraqi Governing Council (IGC)
had no support at the grass roots level, it posed no threat to
these negative forces. IGC had no legitimacy what so ever to even
pretend to be the government. The enemy knew that the members of
the U.S. appointed IGC were too self centered to be working selflessly
for the cause of the democracy. They were incapable of winning
the hearts and minds of the street. It lacked legitimacy and it
was bound to remain an agency of the foreign occupying powers.
As a result the removal of Saddam Hussein, could not empower the
people. It empowered the enemies. Individuals and groups with their
own selfish agendas imposed themselves on the people as masters.
None of them was a friend of the people. They were power hungry
hyenas. They did not want any central authority in place. They
ensured that the U.S. did not have the needed authority to establish
a just order. People of Iraq, who were looking forward to a future
without oppression and exploitation found being hounded by not
one, not two or three but by a multitude of groups and "leaders." Iraqis
did not know whom to obey. They were a totally confused bunch of
souls. In the absence of a legitimate central authority, they had
no choice but to listen to who ever could guarantee the security
of their life, property and future. Unfortunately neither the coalition
partners nor the IGC members were there to provide these guarantees.
They found out that their safety depended on following the Baathist
remnants, nationalists, clerics, Islamists and Al-Qaeda sympathizers.
They had no alternative.
This is the true picture of Iraq today
There is a disorder of the highest order in Iraq. Iraqis find themselves
surrounded by masters but no friends. They had learned to live
with the tyranny of one person. But find themselves ill prepared
to submit to the whims of a pantheon of gods. They had hoped
to be liberated by the "Operation Freedom Iraq" but
instead find themselves enslaved by many. The absolutist calm
of one man's tyranny has been replaced by the terror of many.
Each of them is trying to chain them to his or her ideology.
Each claiming to be the champion of their cause.
To start with, there are Saddam loyalists, represented by Baathist
activists. Then there are former administrators and those whose
affluence and prosperity depended on Saddam's rule. They all want
them to know that Saddam will be back. They are being told that
whoever is found cooperating with the coalition authorities, will
be dealt with in the true Baathist traditions.
Then there are nationalists, who want the Iraqis to forget differences
and to be Iraqis only and support them against the foreign invaders.
Sunnis are afraid that the liberated Iraq will be Shiite dominated.
Shiites have their own demons. Some of them are influenced by Khomeini's
radical anti-U.S. rhetoric. Some of them find it difficult to forget
how Americans had abandoned them to the armies of Saddam in the
aftermath of desert Storm. And quite a few of them are controlled
by ultra-radical clerics, who have their personal aggrandizement
more dear than the greater national interest. And none of them
want to be seen collaborating with the foreign "invaders."
One thing that seems to be common in all these factions is the
influence of anti-Semitism of radical Islam. Al-Qaeda ideology,
Al-Ansar philosophy and Jamaat Islami's anti-West jihadism is visibly
directing and controlling all these different currents in various
degrees. The protagonists of a universal Islamic state burning
with a desire to avenge the defeat of Khilafah are determined that
the last stand against the Judeo-Christian-Hindu civilization has
to be taken here in the land of Nebuchadnezzar. Baathist, Nationalists,
Islamists and Pan-Arabists have for the time being postponed their
long term plans and have joined hands in the short term objective
of defeating the Judeo-Christian Hubal. The whole Iraqi population
is divided among these various factions and power brokers.
Under these oppressive circumstances, a common Iraqi, whether
he agrees with this radical religiso-social-nationalist agenda
or not will have no choice but to go along with it. He has no choice.
Even the U.S. that promised to liberate them is preparing to run.
The daily declarations that U.S. will be handing over authority
to Iraqis only confirms the talk in the bazaar. It strengthens
the hands of the enemies. The ever increasing number of attacks
on coalition forces, the rising U.S. casualties and the storm of
anti-war statements, processions and demonstration in the U.S.
Europe and else where leaves little doubt in the mind of a common
Iraqi that the coalition is losing. The history is on the side
of the enemies. The U.S. does not have what it takes to overwhelm
the green giant. It will leave as it left Lebanon and Somalia.
I cannot see a possibility of an Iraqization of "Operation
Iraqi Freedom" under the prevailing circumstances. There are
voices who think that if the U.S. hands over political authority
to the Iraqis and moves out into the desert, calm will return and
the interests of the free world will be secured. I do not agree
with such a scenario. Whether the U.S. stays in sight or out of
sight, the enemy will always make it certain that its presence
remains a reality. And whomever the U.S. will transfer the power
to, will always be perceived as the front for the invisible occupiers.
The insurgency will continue and the chaos will persist. The people
will remain in a perpetual state of persecution just like the Palestinian
refugees. A deprived and persecuted population will be made to
believe that the U.S. is responsible for their destitution. A new
breeding ground for future homicide bombers will come into being.
The perception is more powerful than reality. And today, the perception
in the Muslim world is, that the U.S. has lost the war in Iraq.
The anti-war voices in the U.S., Europe and elsewhere have convinced
the Iraqi street that Saddam will be back. That's why, it is very
difficult for any Iraqi to side with a losing party. This is a
matter of survival for them. Under these circumstances, how can
they allow themselves to be seen defying the resistance.
Can Washington correct this perception? Not until it corrects
her own perception about the realities as they exist on the ground
in the Muslim world. Iraq is part of the Muslim world. And the
reality is that the Muslim world has no idea of the true U.S. intentions.
Their perception of the U.S. is based on the information supplied
to them by the enemies. They only know what they have been told
by Baathists, nationalists, Islamists, anti-Semitic, left, liberal,
anti-colonialists and Al-Qaeda die-hards. Another basis of their
perception is their experience with their U.S. imposed, U.S. supported
and U.S. endorsed rulers. All of these rulers have been corrupt
and plunderers. Because of them, all of the Muslim masses live
in a very sorry condition. They are convinced that the U.S. does
not want their welfare. So how can they see any good in any U.S.
mission. The war against terrorism cannot be won without winning
the war of perceptions. And as far as the Muslim world is concerned,
the U.S. is perceived as a "Great Satan" not a "great
liberator."
The U.S. involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq has finally provided
the U.S. a chance to correct this negative perception of herself.
I believe that the U.S. cannot leave Iraq without fixing the wrong.
It has to Finnish what it has started. Without delivering what
it promised to deliver, the U.S. will never be able to convince
the Islamist controlled world that it is their friend. It will
always remain a "Great Satan."
As far as I am concerned, there is only one way for the U.S. to
correct this perception. It has to stay in Iraq long enough to
deliver, justice, fairplay, stability, prosperity and peace. Only
the positive and people friendly results of U.S. presence in Iraq
will silence the enemy. I am convinced that if the U.S. succeeds
in establishing a just and democratic order in Iraq, this perception
of the U.S. being a "Great Satan" will be corrected for
good. The civilized world has to realize that if the radical Islam
is determined to make its final stand in Iraq, the free world will
also have to make this the final front.
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