Review Dodge, Toby, Iraq
From War To A New Authoritarianism, London: International Institute for Strategic Studies, 2012
Professor Toby Dodge wrote Iraq From War To A New Authoritarianism with the goal of evaluating
the Bush administration’s war aims after the U.S. withdrew its armed forces at
the end of 2011. The White House said it wanted a stable and democratic Iraq
that would not be a threat to itself or its neighbors. Dodge believed the U.S.
fell far short of accomplishing that. Instead what it left behind was a weak
state that had lost its monopoly on force and allowed various groups, including
some connected to the government to use violence at will, and that was
vulnerable to interference from its neighbors. Iraq while holding elections was
governed by an elite bargain between exile and opposition parties that largely
excluded Sunnis, and was giving way to an authoritarian prime minister in Nouri
al-Maliki. That last element, which is only a fraction of the book, was what
actually made Dodge’s analysis of Iraq standout because he was one of the first
westerners to criticize Maliki and his concentration of power. Not even Dodge
however could predict how much of an impact Maliki would have upon the future
of Iraq.
Dodge goes through each issue starting with the spread of
violence in Iraq after 2003. He believes that actually began in the 1990s when sanctions
broke down society, there was a proliferation of weapons, and the standards
against using violence dissipated. Then after the U.S. took over it failed to
impose order that opened the door to the insurgency and political violence that
metastasize into the civil war. The Americans made the situation worse by
trying to push the new Iraqi security forces (ISF) into the forefront before
they were ready. The U.S. changed tactics in 2007 with the Surge, but part of
it was based upon ad hoc alliances with Sunnis such as the Anbar Awakening
which had no chance of being sustainable, and were eventually dismantled by the
Maliki government. Finally, Iraq’s ruling parties wanted to impose a new political
system that largely disenfranchised Sunnis and were willing to use force to
accomplish it via militias and the ISF. Stability would require those groups
that used violence to either be defeated or convinced to give up the gun. That
did not happen. When the civil conflict ended it greatly reducing the number of
casualties, but the insurgency was still around in 2011 and active throughout
central Iraq. Also none of the political parties gave up their militias which
all took part in the fighting. Today there are even more independent armed
groups, many of which were given official sanction under the Hashd al-Shaabi,
and the Islamic State, while down is not defeated.
The United States also failed to create a democratic system
that would ensure stability. Iraqi opposition parties such as the Kurds and
exile groups like Dawa and the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq created an
exclusive bargain to divide up the government and largely shut out Sunnis. The
U.S. was complicit in this by institutionalizing ethnosectarian quotas starting
with the Iraqi Governing Council created in 2003, which were then continued
when Iraq became sovereign again in 2005. The Sunnis responded with a boycott
of the first elections that year which backfired. The constitution was then drafted
by those same elites while only giving lip service to Sunni participation. This
all contributed to the insurgency, and the ensuing civil war was seen as a way
to impose this new system by force. Finally, when Iraqiya emerged in the 2010
elections as the victor that challenged ethnosectarianism, it was outmaneuvered
by the other parties that wanted to maintain the status quo. This system still
exists to this day, and its inability to fully integrate all elements of Iraqi
society was shown by the rise of the Islamic State. That led the Shiite and
Kurdish parties to once again impose a victor’s peace upon Sunnis with forced
displacements, destruction of towns and group punishments.
The Bush administration wanted to remove the threat Saddam Hussein
posed to the region. What it left behind was a weak state that couldn’t control
its borders, which opened it up to constant interventions by its neighbors.
Syria supported the insurgency and hosted the exiled Baath leadership, Iran
pushed its allies into the new Iraqi government and supported militias, Turkey
backed the Kurds to counter the growing power of Prime Minister Maliki. While
Iraq now has better relations with its neighbors it still has porous borders
and suffers from outside interference.
The last issue Dodge tackles was the growing
authoritarianism of Premier Nouri al-Maliki. The prime minister used his Office
of the Commander and Chief, regional operation commands, and direct orders to
officers to try to take control of the armed forces. He deployed those forces
to challenge the Kurds in the disputed territories rallying Arab Iraqis behind
him. He also used them against his Sunni opponents. When Diyala, Salahaddin and
Anbar pushed to become autonomous regions, something guaranteed in the
constitution he used force to crush them. He went after Vice President Tariq
al-Hashemi accusing him of political violence and forcing him into exile. He
got the Supreme Court to rule that all the independent commissions were under
the cabinet rather than the parliament and then got rid of many of the
directors of those offices. His power grab became so dangerous that other
elites attempted a no confidence vote against him, which failed. Dodge was one
of the first people to warn about Maliki’s attempt to become an autocrat.
Western governments saw Maliki as an important ally, and necessary to pass deals
such as the Status of Forces Agreement that was supposed to solidify the
U.S.-Iraq relationship into the future. Dodge noted that Maliki was attempting
to not only undermine Iraq’s fledgling democracy, but overturn the elite
bargain as well putting his Dawa party and himself above all others. This would
have long lasting effects past the publications of Dodge’s book. First, it
undid the growing move towards Iraqi nationalism and Sunni political
participation that began after the civil war ended. Maliki’s continued
persecution of Sunni figures would lead to protests across central Iraq, and
his crackdown on them facilitated the return of the insurgency and eventually
the Islamic State’s takeover of Mosul in 2014.
Dodge’s final assessment is that the U.S. failed in Iraq on
all counts. It didn’t create a stable Iraq as the following 15 years of
violence would show, and the causes of that instability still exist. That rests
in the elite bargain that shapes the government. While Iraq has regular
elections the ethnosectarian quota system makes it akin to Lebanon where
specific groups will always have certain positions and remain on top. Iraq also
continues to be a weak state in the region vis a vis its neighbors who continue
to interfere in its internal affairs. Finally, Dodge’s warnings about Maliki foreshadowed
the future perhaps even more than he imagined. Maliki undermined growing Sunni
participation in the government and a move away from sectarianism in the 2010
election, and his attacks upon Sunni elites would give way to the return of the
insurgency and the Islamic State. Iraq
From War To A New Authoritarianism is a quick read of the period from
2003-2011 with great insight into what came afterward.
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