Bad Politics Is Better Than No Politics

Why Iraq's bloody democracy isn't so terrible.

BY JAMES TRAUB | JULY 9, 2010

Remember Iraq? That war we used to have? Most of us have moved on to the savage melodrama of Afghanistan -- but not U.S. Vice President Joe Biden, who just returned from his fourth trip to Baghdad since taking office (and his 17th since the war began, as he reminds anyone within earshot). I was with Biden on his first vice-presidential trip there, also over the July 4th holiday, and news reports from this one sounded eerily familiar -- Biden swearing in new citizens among American troops in one of Saddam's gaudy palaces, exhorting Iraqis to heed the stirring lessons of American democracy and pluralism, and privately playing the go-between among political leaders who can't distinguish between compromise and surrender. My first thought was: This country has all four wheels stuck in the mud. But my second thought was: Yes, but unlike in Afghanistan, it's them, not us, behind the wheel. And that's good for Iraq, and good for the United States.

We talk a lot about leverage in these countries: about where we have it and how we can use it. The United States has about as much leverage in Afghanistan as it can have anywhere, because American soldiers defend the government and American taxpayers fund much of its budget. And yet the laws of physics barely seem to apply when American generals or policymakers try to convert that leverage into the changes they seek. President Hamid Karzai has to show the Afghan people that he stands behind the war effort there -- but he says that he's tempted to join the Taliban. Karzai has to take a stand against corruption -- but he lets his half brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai, run roughshod over the people of Kandahar, undermining his own legitimacy. All the leverage in the world cannot make Karzai act against his own perceived self-interest.

In Iraq, by contrast, where American troops are drawing down and giving way to the country's own security forces, the moment of maximum leverage has long passed. American diplomats cannot choose Iraq's political leaders, cannot compel compromise on tough issues, and cannot end the increasingly perilous stalemate among the major political blocs. When President BarackObama asked him last year to take on the Iraq portfolio, Biden said that he would be traveling there as often as every six weeks. In fact, he has visited only twice since last September. Given limited American influence, Biden seems content to operate like a tow truck, arriving on the scene only when Iraqi politicians have driven themselves into a ditch.

That doesn't mean the current stalemate in Iraq, or rather the current manifestation of the semipermanent stalemate, isn't potentially very grave -- it is, if only because no one is addressing the problems that are currently pitting Shiites, Sunnis, and Kurds against one another. The national election in March left four party coalitions with substantial representation in the 325-seat parliament, but none with anything close to a majority. Iraqiyya, led by Ayad Allawi, a secular Shiite and former prime minister, won 91 seats, and State of Law, led by current Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, won 89. The Iraqi National Alliance (INA), dominated by followers of the radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, came in third, and a Kurdish coalition was fourth. Two months ago, State of Law and the INA agreed to form an alliance, but the Sadrists refused to accept Maliki -- who routed their militia in 2008 -- as prime minister, while Maliki refused to accept the Sadrist candidate. Negotiations between the two broke off just as Biden reached Baghdad.

Obama administration officials view the INA as Iran's stalking horse in Iraq, and want to see Iraqiyya, which represents moderate Sunnis as well as Shiites, play a major role in the new government; they were delighted to see that Maliki would now have to negotiate with Allawi. Iraqiyya officials want to see Washington openly take their side. Still, Biden was careful to remain publicly neutral. "We did not tell them what to do," a senior administration official told me; Biden acted as "a sounding board and go-between."

But though the lyrics may have been noncommittal, the tune was unmistakable. When I asked about a scenario in which Allawi would take Iraq's presidency and accept Maliki as prime minister, while the Kurdish parties, which currently have the presidency, take the speakership instead, this official said, "All of this was discussed without him saying you should do this or that."

The leverage that Biden -- and Christopher Hill, the departing U.S. ambassador in Iraq -- have to exercise is less like the force majeure that Gen. David Petraeus has at his disposal in Afghanistan and more like what American negotiators deploy elsewhere in the Middle East, where the United States serves as an honest broker between parties who don't trust each other. It's a pretty flimsy instrument, as Obama's failure to persuade Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to make significant concessions to the Palestinians demonstrates.

John Moore/Getty Images

 

James Traub is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and author of, most recently, The Freedom Agenda. "Terms of Engagement," his column for ForeignPolicy.com, runs weekly.

EW66

7:09 PM ET

July 9, 2010

Well Said

Never liked Traub and I've almost always thought that his articles were way off base, if not missing the point entirely. But I must give credit where it's due and this is a decent article that's right on the money.

 

JAYDEE001

12:00 PM ET

July 12, 2010

It would be nice to see the comments without having to page down

It would be nice to see the comments without having to page down through a lot of advertisements from posters that have nothing to do with foreign policy or, in this case, the state of Iraqi politics.

Joe Biden may turn out to have been the only true realist about Iraq. Iraq may still become the loose confederation of ethnic and religious groups he once envision; it is more likely it will become a vassal state to Iran.

Certainly after more than 7 years of bearing the majority of the economic and military burden of creating a new Iraq, it is interesting that only a continued US presence beyond the scheduled 2011 removal of troops is considered a satisfactory guaranteed that "Iraqi democracy" can survive the factionalism and ethnic divides that still afflict their polity.

I sincerely hope we stick to the 2011 removal of our troops. Let the Iraqis take on their own state-building and let the chips fall when we are gone. The initial invasion and subsequent lengthy occupation was ill-concieved, based on a mountain of falsehoods, and has already cost more than it should have in lives and money. Time to cash in and get out.

 

MALIKA79

11:19 AM ET

August 5, 2010

All this hypocrisy. In the

All this hypocrisy. In the past 10 years, we have a very dirty foreign policy. Therefore, we are less and less popular in the world. Amanda from hidden object games news, crazy taxi tips, best mahjong solitaire clubs, hidden object games free.