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TOPIC: "Iraqis rule Iraq: Hope laced with danger" (Economist 12/24/09)


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"Iraqis rule Iraq: Hope laced with danger" (Economist 12/24/09)
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Middle East and Africa

Iraqis rule Iraq

Nov 13th 2009
From The World in 2010 print edition
By Xan Smiley

Hope laced with danger



ReutersOK girls, it's ours now

Nearly seven years after the Americans toppled Saddam Hussein, Iraq is still groping towards normality. If 2009 was its calmest year since the invasion, 2010 may mark the moment when it can claim to have fully recovered its independence.

The first big event of the year will be a general election due by the end of January. The second, if Barack Obama sticks to the timetable he adjusted after winning the presidency, will be the departure of most American troops by the end of August. By the end of 2010 it should become clearer whether Iraq can stand on its own feet both politically and militarily. The odds, just, are that it will do so. But it will be a year of danger and uncertainty as well as hope.

Much will depend on the smooth emergence of a new government and prime minister. Though shenanigans in late 2009 within the dominant Shia establishment cast doubt on the political survivability of Nuri al-Maliki, who became prime minister in 2006, he has a chance of keeping his post for the next few years. But he must decide whether to join an electoral list that embraces most of the main Shia religious parties, which together won the last general election four years ago, or whether he forges alliances with more secular-minded Shias and with Sunni Arabs of various stripes, including former Baathists once loyal to Saddam.

As before, the Kurds, though not as solid a block as they were, may hold the balance. Mr Maliki’s relations with Massoud Barzani, Kurdistan’s regional president, have been periodically poisonous, but it may be in the interest of both of them to kiss and make up in order to mould a coalition government at the federal centre.

Again as before, a dangerous period of post-election haggling may ensue, perhaps for three or four months, creating a mood of nervous uncertainty. Government may drift, opening a vacuum that violent groups may seek to fill. At this point Mr Maliki may be ousted.

In any event, the insurgency will persist, but at a far lower level than in its bloody heyday in 2005 and 2006, when in some months more than 3,000 civilians were being killed. The monthly average death toll in 2010 is likely to be less than a tenth of that. But that is still high enough to deter foreign investors and dissuade most of Iraq’s 2m refugees and 3m internally displaced people from going home.

All American troops must be out by the end of 2011

Several issues, if mishandled, could reignite a bloodier conflict all over again. A bitter dispute over the ownership of the oil-rich Kirkuk area, which the Kurds now dominate and insist on keeping, will probably not be solved; the longer the Kurds hold the upper hand, the harder it will be to dislodge them. Other points along what is known as the “trigger line” between Kurds and Arabs, especially in the Mosul area and its surrounding Nineveh province, are also dangerous. The Americans have proposed “three-way” patrols comprising themselves, Arabs and Kurds to cool the hottest spots. If things go violently wrong, Mr Obama, who has talked of keeping a reserve of not more than 50,000 troops in Iraq mainly as trainers (down from 125,000 or so at the end of 2009), may briefly try to reimpose peace.

But not for long. Under a “status of forces agreement” signed by George Bush, all American troops must be out by the end of 2011. There will be talk of the UN sending peacekeepers, but the world body will probably still deem such an operation too dangerous.

More . . .

 



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