Sectarian politics has ruled
Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003. Although the Americans are
widely blamed for institutionalizing this style of government, the Iraqi
opposition was already organizing themselves by sect and ethnicity in the
1990s. Since the U.S. invasion, every Iraqi government has been a national
unity one where all the winning lists have been given a seat, and top positions
are divided up using ethnosectarian quotas. Washington and others have argued
that this system was necessary to include all of Iraq’s diverse population, so
that they could work together to form a new democracy. In practice however, it
has only led to dysfunctional governments and corruption. To discuss the impact
and future of this form of rule is University of Miami Political Science
Professor Adeed Dawisha who specializes in democracy and politics in the Middle
East.
1. The United States started organizing the Iraqi
government along ethnosectarian lines with the Iraqi Governing Council that it
formed in 2003. The number of seats was handed out to each group based upon
their perceived population size, while also trying to include secular and religious
groups. What was the original argument the Americans made for dividing up the
council in that fashion?
After the massive conversion to Shiism among Iraq’s tribes
from the late 18th century onward, the ethnographic composition of
the country has been roughly 60% Shiites, 20% Sunnis, 18% Kurds, and 2% other
minority religions and beliefs. Yet throughout the same period Sunnis dominated
the political process. This imbalance was aggravated further, taking on violent
forms, during the Saddam era. So after the forcible removal of Saddam, the
general sentiment was for a more equitable distribution of political power,
something which Iraqis had not had for over two centuries—hence the allocation
of seats in the first Governing Council in accordance with the ethnographic
composition of Iraqi society.
2. In 2004 Iyad Allawi was named the interim prime
minister. He was a secular politician, yet he followed the same quota system,
and so did all the subsequent governments. Why did the Iraqis buy into this
system when they were in control?
Once a precedent is set, particularly one that is advertised
as based on fairness, it is difficult to break it. When you have a majority
group (Shiites), as well as a minority group (Kurds), who between them
constituted almost 80% of the population, believing that they’d had two
centuries of exclusion and persecution, and that they now have finally attained
a fair representation in government, no contrary argument, regardless of how
pertinent or justifiable it is, could have won the day.
3. Some believe that sect and ethnicity are
primordial divisions within Iraq that have always existed, while others have
argued that ethnosectarian politics only came to the fore when the state lost
legitimacy leading people to look towards other groups and identities for
protection. What is your opinion of why ethnosectarian politics became so
prominent in present day Iraq?
If the question is suggesting that the state lost legitimacy
after the invasion of Iraq, then I have major problem with such an
interpretation. The state under Saddam had little, if any, legitimacy among a
commanding majority of the country’s population. It was under Saddam’s rule,
particularly the last decade and a half, that ethno-sectarianism, tribalism and
sub-state identities came to the fore, overshadowing the more inclusive Iraqi
identity. What the Americans did was to institutionalize these identities. The
American move, as I said earlier, was undertaken with probably the best of
intentions, but unfortunately it proved to be an absolutely terrible decision
in terms of Iraq’s post-invasion political development.
4. You’ve argued that the quota system is the reason
why Iraq’s politicians run the ministries like personal fiefs. Can you explain
the connection between the two?
The apportionment of cabinet portfolios stems from the
original American decision to create ethno sectarian balance within the first
Governing Council. The practice was taken a step further when after the January
2005 elections, Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari apportioned cabinet seats not
only to the various ethnic and sectarian groups but also to different grouping
within the winning coalition. The result was that Jaafari’s authority over his
ministers became marginal at best. This continued through Maliki’s first term
(2006-2010) and right into his second term. The result was that ministries
became separate cantons in which the loyalty of the minister was directed more
to the leader of his party or his ethnosectarian group than to the prime minister.
From around the fall of 2011, Maliki has used the inevitable paralysis in the
cabinet to sideline the ministers and take unilateral decisions.
5. Federalism has been another problem for Iraq.
Originally, the U.S. wanted to devolve power away from Baghdad to the provinces
to try to prevent another dictatorship being formed. What the country ended up
getting was the recognition of the Kurds’ control of Irbil, Dohuk, and
Sulaymaniya. Provinces were also given the right to form their own federal
regions, and some tried recently, but were stopped by Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki. How could decentralization help with the governance of the country,
and why have the premier and other parties opposed it?
After years of centralized authoritarian politics, which
attained an absolutist form under Saddam, it was obvious to many analysts that
creating a federalist political structure, where power devolves away from the
center to the regions, was the best way to ensure that dictatorship does not
return. Post-Hitler Germany is the best illustration of this argument. But what
transpired in Iraq, mainly through purposeful Kurdish advocacy, was not the
kind of territorial federalism that had been suggested, but one that was based
on ethnosectarianism. This kind of federalism goes beyond creating a power
balance between center and regions; it encourages cultural separatism and
political division. The Kurdish region today is independent in everything but
name! On this issue, I sympathize with Maliki, because if southern Shiite
provinces and Sunni provinces in the middle of Iraq are allowed to follow in
the footsteps of the Kurds, then this probably would be the first steps to the
disintegration and demise of the state of Iraq.
6. For the last several years Prime Minister Maliki
has talked about forming a majority government. What would have to change in
Iraqi politics for the elite to give up on national unity coalitions, and
instead agree to ruling and opposition parties?
Many are waiting for the 2014 general elections as the
possible beginning of a new political era. The thesis is that the present
political elite will have recognized, after more than a decade of fruitless
governance, the bankruptcy of the idea of national unity government, and that
they’d be compelled to move to a majoritarian form of government, where a
strong and decisive government will be balanced by an equally strong
opposition. The problem here is twofold. One, Iraq’s proportional
representation electoral system (PR) is not conducive to majoritarian rule. PR
is geared toward producing coalition governments. So a drastic change of the
electoral law to a kind of constituency based, first past the post system would
be needed, and I very much doubt this would happen. Two, the party system (if
one can call it that) is fragmented, and has been in a state of constant flux,
with alliances continuously shifting. This is the worst environment for
creating a majoritarian system.
7. Another part of creating a democratic society is
rule of law and strong institutions. Iraq so far has neither, and instead the
elite like to rule through personal connections and patronage, something that
previous leaders have used such as Premier Nuri al-Sa’id from the monarchy
period. Why haven’t the political parties put more emphasis upon building
institutions?
If you examine the various parties, you would see that they
are not the kind of parties we associate with democratic systems. They are not
stable organizations that draw support from segments of society because of
clearly defined and articulated ideologies and/or political and economic
programs. In Iraq, parties are groupings that coalesce around personalities. Parties
are no more than labels created by individual leaders, and therefore, in stark
contrast to Western democracies, their status and coherence are completely
dependent on the leaders’ legitimacy, and his continued desire to keep the
party going. The State of Law has no credibility independent of Maliki. People
who vote for al-Ahrar are in fact voting for Sadr. If Maliki and/or Sadr were
to decide to move on to another label, their “parties” would instantly
disappear from Iraq’s political theater. And this is true of all parties. Once
politics is dominated by individuals, not rule-based organizations, then
personal interest is apt to supersede the national interest, and the energies
of various, and often bickering, individuals are expended not on building
national institutions, but on maneuvering and conspiring to achieve personal
power.
8. Finally, Iraqi politics are always hard to
predict, but what direction do you think things are heading?
I still believe strongly that Iraq today with all the near
chaos and uncertainty is a far better place than the supposedly “stable”
country under the malevolent rule of Saddam Hussein. That being said, it is sad
to say that when one looks into the future, one is hard put to find any real
indication of a palpable and meaningful political transformation over the
horizon. My main concern is that the same personalities, who so far have failed
miserably to reform the country, would be dominating Iraq’s politics over the
next one or two decades. There is a troubling dearth of new leaders within
these parties and grouping, or outside of them, who are emerging with new and
substantive ideas. Even if there is a pool waiting in the wings, its upward
trajectory would go through routes predetermined and controlled by the existing
system of patronage, and religious allegiances.
Given the resulting stagnation of the political process,
state institutions will continue to be ineffective. The party that has profited
most from the persistent weakness of central authority, and will thus continue
to benefit from such a circumstance, are the Kurds. For the rest of Iraq, it
might be a case of plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose.
SOURCES
Dawisha, Adeed, “Iraq: A Vote Against Sectarianism,” Journal
of Democracy, July 2010
- “The Unraveling of Iraq: Ethnosectarian Preferences and
State Performance in Historical Perspective,” Middle East Journal, Spring 2008
Dawisha, Adeed and Dawisha, Karen, “How to Build a
Democratic Iraq,” Foreign Affairs, May/June 2003
Ghanim, David, Iraq’s Dysfunctional Democracy, Santa
Barbara, Denver, Oxford: Praeger, 2011
Al-Qarawee, Harith, Imagining The Nation, Nationalism,
Sectarianism and Socio-Political Conflict in Iraq, Lancashire, Rossendale
Books, 2012
2 comments:
Joel:
Excellent interview by someone who deeply understands the topic.
There is far more to the issues in Iraq's internal, national and sub-national structure and cohesiveness than the US 2003 invasion, although our actions appear to have coalesced and/or reinforced structural problems that now stand in the way of progress for Iraq's people.
I was particularly struck by the reference to the cults of personality in lieu of institutions. This carries on the prior Ottoman traditions for far-outposts, which Iraq has been unable to transcend. As long as the leadership focused on personality versus services & performance, the goose remains cooked.
On that front, however, I believe the US (woulda, shoulda, coulda) focused more on delivery of services through functioning institutions---then and even now---in Iraq and other common circumstances, and that doing so is the key to a viable future. Yet, I really am amazed that Iraqis, as yet, have not seriously begun to focus on that which they do not have (services,institutions), and begun to seriously hold leaders to account.
Toynbee. Leaders stuck in the past issues and disputes, who do not take on the current problems, are always at risk---punctuated evolution suggests things do not go in straight lines.
Steve,
You're always good with the historical analogies.
I think the U.S. did try to build up Iraq's institutions, but got caught up in national and local personalities that wanted to divert everything to their own personal gain.
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