The escalating sectarian civil war in Iraq is dangerously poised. Apart
from consequences for Iraq — a possible soft partitioning — there will
be repercussions for other countries in the region and elsewhere. This
constitutes a threat to international peace and security.
Decades ago, Western cartographers created an artificial country as part of a “division of spoils’. The exploding
sectarian faultlines in Iraq are umbilically linked to the crisis in
Syria, in which over 1,30,000 people have been killed since 2011. The
genesis of these developments can also be traced to the policy-induced
crisis in Libya, which resulted in UN Security Council Resolution 1973
and Nato military action.
The unbridled enthusiasm for the Arab
Spring in the West blinded governments to the dangers of arming militias
against established, even if tyrannical, regimes. The expectation that
the Arab Spring would unfold on the lines of a Western liberal
democratic template was mistaken, and acknowledged as such before long. A
lesson learnt over decades — that there are no good or bad militants —
was forgotten.
Colonel Gaddafi, much despised for good reason,
proved an easy first rallying point. The desire of the United States,
the United Kingdom and France to see him gone was understandable. Even
the Chinese and the Russians did not feel strongly enough to cast a
negative vote in the UN Security Council in March 2011. The Russian
permanent representative, Vitaly Churkin, said Russia abstained because
of its principled stand against the use of military force. The passion
of interventionists prevailed. The new members, all aspiring for
permanent status, Brazil, India and Germany, did not have the political
clout to alter the outcome. They tried to negotiate a “balanced”
resolution providing for a ceasefire and the possibility of mediation by
the African Union. But the ink was barely dry when the P3 chose to
invoke “all means necessary”, a euphemism for military action. Nato
action followed instantly. The other provisions of the resolution were
completely ignored.
Mainstream thinking in the West has a propensity
to rationalise policy-induced mistakes made by governments. Evidence in
the public domain, documented by the Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute, shows that rebels were being armed by countries in
the region acting on their own and as proxies. The arming of militias is
invariably accompanied by unintended consequences. Some turn rogue.
Worse still, others turn on their creators. The attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi in September 2012 is a case in point.
Advocates of the use of force and the right of intervention will find
it difficult to argue that military action in Iraq in 2003 and Libya in
2011 produced the desired outcomes. Regime change results in
destabilisation, which is even more difficult to handle.
Syria
continues to present an even more complex problem. Bashar al-Assad held
power with the support of a 12 per cent Alawite Shia minority aided by
another 6 per cent, or so, of other minority communities. He succeeded
in building a compact that enabled him to preside over a more than 75
percent Sunni population. The underlying sectarian tensions were
evident. Militias armed by countries in the region, predominantly Sunni,
came from diverse backgrounds — jihadists of different hues, al-Qaeda
elements and mercenaries from the West and elsewhere ready to join
battle for a consideration, monetary or otherwise. The fact that the
Assad regime itself unleashed brutal repression only exacerbated the
conflict. Jihadis and their supporters, having succeeded in bringing
about a regime change in Libya, were now in for disappointment. The
Security Council, particularly two of its permanent members, Russia and
China, were no longer willing to oblige. Efforts to seek Security
Council endorsement for even a watered-down resolution, short of action
under Chapter VII, resulted in three double vetoes during 2011-12, one
during India’s presidency of the council in August 2011. Syria no longer
represented a mismanaged domestic situation. The desire of the Saudis,
the Gulf states and the West to oust Assad was countered by support from
Iran and Russia.
The attempt to resolve the crisis — through a
ceasefire and a politically inclusive process involving all Syrians —
failed to take off. Assad’s detractors insisted on him stepping down
first. After the experience in Iraq and Libya, there was no appetite for
unilateral military action. Reluctance to supply arms to rebels, which
could have made a decisive difference, soon turned into outright refusal
because of apprehensions that those arms could be used against Israel
or other US allies.
Meanwhile, the Nouri al-Maliki government in
Baghdad, installed by the United States, was busy with its own
policy-induced blunders. Running a post-conflict state is difficult
enough. More so given the toxic and combustible sectarian divide. The
failure to co-opt non-Shia sections in governance proved catastrophic.
Sensing the changing mood in Washington towards Iran, Saudi Arabia
refused to accept membership of the Security Council in October 2013
after being elected. It said it would find it difficult to serve on the
council given the visible inaction against Syria. Attempts to reach an
agreement between Iran and the United States on the vexed nuclear issue,
for which a deadline of July 21 has been set, have contributed to
producing the present strategic landscape. Energy- and shale gas-related
issues may have played a part in the altered calculations, but this
will continue to remain a subject of speculation. The evolving situation
is further complicated by a major and influential player, Israel. It is
unlikely that it will sit by and do nothing if, in its assessment, the
nuclear deal with Iran does not succeed in capping its nuclear
capability. A quick fix and/ or a fudging of issues will also invite
criticism from the Republicans.
The Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant poses a threat not only to Baghdad but also to fellow militant
groups. A force reportedly consisting of no more than several thousand
combatants capturing large territories reaffirms the sectarian divide
and the lack of appetite to fight by adversaries. Given the military
involvement of Iran, Jordan and possibly the United States, which
may be left with no option but to go in for limited military action,
Baghdad may not fall. The destabilisation and chaos will, however,
intensify.
As the situation worsens, the immediate task of
retrieving nationals will be subsumed in larger issues raised by this
dangerous sectarian civil war, with all its consequences for the rest of
the world. Each stage has been marked by a failure to think the
consequences through and a series of policy-induced blunders.