Review of Iraq: Preventing a New
Generation of Conflict, edited by Markus E. Bouillon, David M.
Malone and Ben Rowswell (Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2007)
Iraq's Future: The Canadian Approach
An optimistic look at the longer view for this war-torn country
By ROLAND PARIS
The Literary Review of Canada (Jan.-Feb. 2008)
In May
2006, two enterprising Canadian diplomats organized an international
conference to discuss the crisis in Iraq and its possible solutions.
Given the political sensitivity of this topic and the Harper
government's willingness to muzzle its own officials, just gaining
ministerial approval to hold such a meeting seems like an
extraordinary accomplishment. But then again, the two meeting
organizers were far from ordinary. David Malone, a denizen of these
pages and a scholar of the United Nations, is currently Canada's
high commissioner to India. He was, in 2006, the senior official in
charge of "global issues" in the Ottawa headquarters of the
Department of Foreign Affairs. Ben Rowswell, a 30-something Oxford
graduate and rising star in the department, was sent to Baghdad to
serve as Canada's one-man diplomatic mission following the U.S.
invasion of Iraq in 2003. Two years later, he returned to Ottawa to
work for Malone.
Malone and Rowswell saw an opportunity and a need for more
"long-term thinking" on the Iraq crisis, and they decided to bring
together a group of 70 prominent Iraqis, Iraq experts,
representatives of multilateral institutions, Canadian academics and
officials to discuss "the prevention of future conflict in Iraq at a
time when civil war threatened to engulf the country and the region
in another generation of violence." The conference, organized in
conjunction with Markus Bouillon of the International Peace Academy,
the New York-based think tank that Malone directed for several years
in the 1990s, took place at the Pearson building in Ottawa.
Their book is a selection of 19 short essays by conference
participants. Rather than focusing on the U.S. invasion and
occupation, the contributors take a broader historical view. They
seek to explain the origins of instability in modern Iraq and to
look beyond the current crisis and toward the longer-term challenges
of reconstituting a functioning, peaceful Iraqi state.
That the volume pays relatively little attention to the American
invasion may surprise some readers, but Bouillon, Malone and
Rowswell construct a convincing case that the sources of instability
in Iraq long predate the arrival of American GIs. The country has
suffered from "chronic instability" for decades and it will continue
to do so, the editors argue, until there is progress toward the
negotiation of a new social contract among Iraqis and the
construction of government institutions that are viewed as
legitimate by its people.
These are ambitious aims, given the country's steady unravelling and
the gruesome daily toll of victims from suicide bombings and
intercommunal violence. But to its credit, the book does not
sugarcoat these challenges. Several chapters dissect the process by
which the Iraqi nation has disintegrated into factions and
subfactions. Phebe Marr, a prominent historian of Iraq, describes
how the series of elections in 2005 and 2006 revealed and
accelerated this process, empowering leaders who played to "ethnic
and sectarian identity to mobilize and organize a base" of electoral
support. Her essay is fittingly titled "Iraq's Identity Crisis."
A companion chapter by University of Windsor academic Abdel Salam
Sidahmed traces the complex, interacting histories of Iraqi
nationalism, Islamism and sectarianism, from the rise of the Baath
Party in 1968 to the present, while several other chapters examine
the principal divisions within the major Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish
communities. This is essential information for anyone who wants to
understand the unfolding conflict. Tensions within Iraq's major
ethnic and religious communities are often overlooked in media
reports, yet they are an increasingly important facet of the civil
war.
The book is better at describing the forces driving Iraq's
disintegration than explaining how to put these pieces back
together. This is not surprising, nor is it a serious criticism,
because there are no obvious solutions to the crisis. While many
prominent observers now argue that Iraq cannot be reconstituted as
unitary country, and that it should instead be partitioned into
three or more informally or formally independent states, the
contributors to this volume, to a person, reject the partition
option. They all seem to agree that the only hope for Iraq is to
build a united post-Saddam state based on inter-communal
accommodation and dialogue-although they differ on the details of
federal structures, constitutional arrangements, and the like.
Most of the contributors also oppose calls for a rapid withdrawal of
U.S. forces from Iraq on the grounds that this could, in the words
of James Dobbins, "make a bad situation even worse." Some kind of
major international presence-be it American or otherwise-will be
needed in Iraq for a long time, the editors suggest, because the
consequences of failing to stabilize the country "are too grave for
the international community to sit back and wring its hands in
despair." In spite of the fact that this crisis was provoked by the
Bush administration's reckless invasion of Iraq, Bouillon, Malone
and Rowswell believe that it is time to stop thinking about the
resulting mess in Iraq as a mainly American problem to fix. The
international community needs to play a larger role in helping to
stabilize the country-and what's more, the job is likely to take a
very long time.
But what exactly would this larger role entail? After making their
pitch for greater international involvement, the editors concede
that there would be little appetite among non-coalition states to
deploy military forces to Iraq and that the prospects for major
increases in financial assistance are also limited. In the end,
their prescription for a bigger international role amounts to a call
for more ambitious diplomatic efforts aimed at promoting
"constructive dialogue" among the Iraqi parties as well as among the
key states in the region. Furthermore, having the "international
community" involved more directly in this effort would introduce
"greater international legitimacy into the equation."
In fact, just a few weeks after this book was published last summer,
the United Nations decided to take on the task of encouraging
"national reconciliation" within Iraq and "regional dialogue"
between Iraq and its neighbours. The decision was significant for
many reasons. First, it represented a success for the Bush
administration, which had lobbied strongly for a larger UN role.
More precisely, it was a victory for traditional diplomats in the
administration over those who, for ideological reasons, have been
opposed to relying on the UN for anything. second, the decision may
be the first of several leading the world body back to the
diplomatic forefront of the Iraq crisis. Members of the security
Council seem newly willing to deal with the U.S. pragmatically on
the Iraq issue, after years of understandable anger.
How this new UN role will play out remains to be seen. The book
under review offers an excellent chapter by Bruce Jones, a Canadian
scholar at New York University, who maps out the various options for
international engagement, drawing lessons from Bosnia and elsewhere.
But the key difference between these past cases of post-conflict
peacebuilding and the current situation is that Iraq is not a
post-conflict state. The immediate priority (more than delivering
"reconstruction assistance") is to convince the Iraqi parties
themselves that it is in their interests to compromise with each
other, rather than continue to struggle over the helm of the Iraqi
ship of state as it sails into a maelstrom.
Yet there is little reason to believe that the UN is better placed
than the U.S. to bring about such a compromise. Of course, no effort
should be spared to promote reconciliation, including a larger UN
role, but the key diplomatic challenge is not just to bring the
parties to the negotiating table and to enjoin them to see reason.
It is, instead, to exercise leverage over these actors through a
combination of sticks and carrots, and thereby to change the
parties' own calculation of the costs and benefits of compromise
over continued struggle. That is the only basis for a settlement.
This is more or less how the war in Bosnia ended in 1995. The United
States and other outside powers manipulated the local balance of
power among Serbs, Muslims and Croats-specifically, by training and
arming the Croatians so that they, in combination with Bosnian
Muslims, were able to fight the Serbs to a standstill. Only then,
when the stalemate was clear to all, and following three years of
exhausting conflict, did the warring parties agree to a peace
settlement. Yes, international negotiators played an important role
in facilitating this negotiation, but their efforts were fruitless
until the power realities facing the combatants had shifted in
favour of a compromise.
The power realities in and around Iraq do not currently lend
themselves to compromise-either among the Iraqi parties or their
neighbours-and the UN itself does not have the ability to change
these conditions. The problem is not the absence of a legitimate
international mediator (in this region, it is worth recalling, the
legitimacy of the UN is deeply questioned in any event), but rather,
the continued presence of an American force that is too weak to
impose a peace and too strong to be ignored.
Unlike Afghanistan, where there is still a reasonable chance of a
stable outcome and where most citizens support their government and
its international backers in opposition to the Taliban, most Iraqis
have effectively taken sides in a civil war and view their
government and the presence of U.S. troops as illegitimate. Many
Iraqi groups (including, implausibly, some in the minority Sunni
community) seem to think that they could prevail if the U.S. left
Iraq. As long as they believe this, the prospect for achieving
national reconciliation will be vanishingly small. At some point,
settling this conflict will probably require America to get out of
the way-to remove the bulk of its troops, whose presence is
effectively freezing in place the current state of political limbo
and insecurity in Iraq.
If and when the United States makes this decision, the United
Nations could play an important role by convening regular meetings
of countries in the region, in the hopes that such discussions will
reduce suspicions among Iraq's neighbours and dissuade them from
pre-emptively intervening in the country to "protect" their
respective interests. And if and when the Iraqi parties reach a
workable compromise, the United Nations could also play a useful
role in facilitating post-conflict reconstruction efforts. For now,
however, it is far from clear how "internationalizing" the
management of this crisis will make the Iraqi and regional parties
any more amenable to a negotiated settlement than they already are.
Bouillon, Malone and Rowswell certainly know this already. In some
ways, their book is an expression of hope. The message is: Don't
give up on Iraq. One day the conflict will end, and when it does the
international community must help the Iraqi people build a
legitimate, functioning state that is not based on the dual
pathology of repressiveness and personalized rule. The vision of a
democratic, inclusive Iraq is tremendously appealing, but what
chance does it really have of coming to fruition? With more than
four million Iraqis displaced by the violence and many others
uncertain if they or their children will return home from a day's
outing, the simple desire for security through any means, including
"strong leadership," may trump aspirations for inclusive governance.
But all is not lost. Recent months have seen a modest improvement in
the security situation in Iraq: fewer attacks and bombings, and
declining monthly casualty rates. Needless to say, everything is
relative. In October 2007 alone, the Iraqi health ministry recorded
758 Iraqi civilian deaths from bombings, suspected sectarian attacks
and other war-related violence. That is the equivalent of a
9/11-size loss of civilians every four months. How could this
possibly be "good" news? In January 2007, the figure was 2,076 Iraqi
civilian war deaths per month, almost three times higher than in
October.
The big question now is whether Iraq's leaders can take advantage of
this "lull" to fashion some kind of deal that would allow for
effective Iraq government. Few observers are hopeful. Nevertheless,
Bouillon, Malone and Rowswell have provided a guidebook, of sorts,
to possible governance arrangements that could be pursued-if Iraq's
leaders ultimately choose to compromise with each other.
In its optimism, its focus on constitutional designs for good
governance in multi-ethnic societies, its emphasis on the United
Nations as a key player and its relative inattention to the grim but
unavoidable realities of power politics, this book has a distinctly
Canadian sensibility, even though most of its contributors are not
Canadian. And it is remarkably well written and engaging,
particularly for an academic volume.
Most of all, the book encourages reflection on Iraq's future,
including the role that the United Nations (and other international
actors) might play in responding to the turmoil in that country. For
too long, the question of what to do about Iraq over the longer term
has been overshadowed by the urgency of the day-to-day crisis in
that country. This volume forces us to step out of the present and
to look back and forward in time. It is exactly the type of research
and analysis that policy planners in foreign ministries should be
encouraging.
Roland Paris is the director of the Centre for International
Policy Studies at the University of Ottawa and the author of At
War's End: Building Peace after Civil Conflict (Cambridge University
Press, 2004).