From the Los Angeles Times
Looking to Anbar for Iraq's future
The
province's newfound stability is often cited as justification for U.S.
strategy. But some see perils in trying to replicate that model
elsewhere.
By Tina Susman
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 10, 2007
RAMADI, Iraq — The mood was celebratory. Dozens of tribal sheiks clad
in traditional finery gathered for a feast after the central government
promised $120 million to help Anbar province recover from years of
fighting between U.S. forces and insurgents.
An Iraqi government official watching the scene last week marveled at
how the Sunni Arab leaders who once backed insurgent groups had banded
together to get their province to this point.
"The next big step is when the same kind of cooperation occurs between
the Sunnis and the Shiites," he said wryly as cheeks were kissed and
fingers were plunged into communal platters of rice and roasted meat.
"That's a different story."
His comments illustrated the different prisms through which Anbar's
metamorphosis can be viewed. The western province that once was the hub
of the Sunni insurgency is now a region of relative stability. It is
likely to be featured in a progress report that Army Gen. David H.
Petraeus, commander of U.S. troops in Iraq, is due to give today to
Congress.
But is it an example of what can be achieved if President Bush's
military strategy continues? Or should it be regarded as a reminder of
how difficult it will be to make similar gains elsewhere? Military and
political leaders warn against resting hopes for all of Iraq on this
province, where U.S. forces are empowering, and even arming, the people
who once fought them.
Some say that the strategy could backfire by spawning new militias that
in the long term might wreak more havoc on the country. They also warn
that the situation here still could slide backward if the
Shiite-dominated central government does not live up to its promises of
support for the province's Sunni Arab leadership, such as the
$120-million package.
"There are too many unique variables," said Maj. Jeff Pool, a
spokesman for U.S. forces in Anbar, when asked if what has happened in
that region could be replicated.
"It's not exporting this model here that will solve Iraq's problems,"
Pool said. "It's local leaders elsewhere finding out what works in
their areas."
That requires local leaders to join forces as Anbar's leaders have
done, but this will be challenging in areas that are not as homogenous
and don't face the singular threat that galvanized Anbar's sheiks: the
influence of Islamic militant groups claiming allegiance to Al Qaeda in
Iraq.
"It's harder for them to buy into the idea of working with the
coalition in other areas because they have other threats: Shiite
threats, Kurdish influence," said Maj. Ed Sullivan, who is on his
second deployment in Anbar. He was first here in 2004-05.
"A lot of people look for a cookie-cutter theory -- the Anbar model.
There is no Anbar model," Sullivan said. Rather, a unique combination
of events ushered in change.
In 2004-05, the province was the heart of the Sunni-led insurgency and
one of the deadliest for U.S. forces in Iraq. Locals were more
supportive of the militants than the foreign forces. That changed in
2006, when Islamic militants declared the province part of their
self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq, and began imposing harsh laws
and brutal punishment for violators and opponents of their rule.
This drove the sheiks, who saw their local economies dying and their
influence waning, to reject the Al Qaeda-linked militants and cooperate
with U.S. and Iraqi forces.
"If it weren't for that, we would've been forcing them," Sullivan said.
"It wouldn't have worked."
Nearly 6,000 U.S. troops are spread across Anbar, including 4,000 sent
as part of Bush's deployment this year of an additional 28,500 troops
nationwide. Supporters of the strategy say the extra troops have made
it possible for the province to remain stable in the wake of the
sheiks' decision, putting it on the path to long-term recovery.
According to the military, daily attacks in the provincial capital,
Ramadi, have dropped from an average of nearly 30 a day to fewer than
one per day. Last year, Anbar accounted for 43% of all U.S. troop
deaths in Iraq. So far this year, it has accounted for about 20%,
according to icasualties.org.
In other parts of the country, the Anbar strategy is being applied in
varying degrees.
There are neighborhood watch groups in parts of Baghdad. In Diyala, the
Baqubah Guardians are patrolling the streets of the provincial capital,
a former militant stronghold. All of these groups comprise former
insurgents who have switched allegiance to U.S. and Iraqi forces. If
they pass security checks, they are trained and allowed to take up law
enforcement roles.
U.S. commanders in Diyala say the Guardians are helping turn around
Baqubah, a city that was largely in insurgent hands at the beginning of
the year. They man checkpoints in their khaki T-shirts and reflective
belts and have taken over abandoned houses, which they use as patrol
bases.
Residents say they feel safer, but U.S. troops acknowledge that it
is difficult to keep track of the different armed groups on the
streets. Occasional bursts of gunfire are routine in the city, and the
soldiers often have no idea who fired them.
Rivalries lead to periodic exchanges of fire among Guardians, police
and Iraqi soldiers. In one recent instance, tribal elders, police and
Guardian members met to discuss an incident in which celebratory
gunfire at a wedding led police to arrest some Guardians. But the
matter was resolved with kisses all around, one Guardian said.
Petraeus is expected to cite the formation of such groups, drawn from
tribes and fighters from insurgent groups such as the 1920
Revolutionary Brigade, as a sign of progress. Skeptics warn that unless
closely vetted, they could turn into militias once U.S. troops begin
leaving Iraq, and turn their guns on one another in a bid to expand
their power bases.
"Do we want armed tribes running this country?" asked Army Col. Patrick
Stackpole, commander of the 3rd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division in
ethnically mixed northern Iraq. "At the end of the day, we need Iraqi
police. We need Iraqi forces."
Vali Nasr, a Middle East expert at the Council on Foreign Relations,
said the attempt to replicate the Anbar model could backfire in the
long term by putting the majority Shiites on the defensive.
"Successes that the U.S. military claims in western Iraq have come
following the U.S. arming the Shiites' adversaries, Sunni tribes, most
likely raising rather than soothing Shiite anxieties," Nasr said.
A U.S. diplomat who has worked with some of the groups said they had
proved valuable at offering tips to troops about weapons caches, bombs
and insurgent activities. But the diplomat said most appeared to be
acting on behalf of local interests and were not guided by national or
exiled leadership.
Army Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, the day-to-day commander of U.S.
troops in Iraq, said this decentralization had caused splits within
some insurgent groups, such as the 1920 Revolutionary Brigade,
complicating the situation for U.S. forces who must decide whom to
trust.
"It's elements within elements," he said. "It's a very individual
and local thing we're doing, and it's really based on those
individuals' own decisions and then our assessments of them -- what are
their true intentions?"
Admirers of the Anbar strategy say the progress is promising but no
guarantee of wider success. The U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Ryan Crocker,
has called it "an essential prerequisite for reconciliation," but
insufficient to stabilize the entire country. That hasn't stopped
proponents of Bush's troop buildup from putting it center stage as they
fight demands in Washington for a timetable to withdraw.
Bush limited his Labor Day visit to Iraq to a stopover in Anbar. "In
Anbar you're seeing firsthand the dramatic differences that can come
when the Iraqis are more secure. In other words, you're seeing
success," he said.
Three days later, Democratic Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. of Delaware came
to Ramadi and attended the gathering of sheiks and national leaders at
which the $120-million promise was made. Biden, a presidential hopeful
who has advocated a decrease in U.S. troops in Iraq, made clear that he
was looking at Anbar from a more skeptical point of view.
Biden said Americans wanted the cooperation that was evident that day
-- around a long table crowded with robed sheiks, military leaders in
uniform and government officials in suits and ties -- to be seen on a
broader scale. Otherwise, he said, "we can say goodbye now."
The meeting took place in a newly opened building within the sprawling
provincial government compound in Ramadi. Early this year, the area
resembled an earthquake zone, reduced to rubble by ferocious fighting
between U.S. forces and insurgents. Just getting from the protective
armor of a Humvee to the front door of the governor's headquarters
required dodging barrages of gunfire, said Pool, the regional U.S.
commander.
Now, many U.S. troops walk between government buildings without helmets
or flak jackets.
In the last three months, several government buildings have been
rebuilt and repainted. The police headquarters is bright blue. The
provincial meeting hall is salmon pink and beige.
As the sheiks swept through the gates of the governor's headquarters
for the meeting, officials proudly pointed out the intricate mural on
the front of the building, its colorful symbols illustrating their
dedication to reconciliation. A small fountain gurgled in the middle of
the newly landscaped courtyard.
That same day, four U.S. Marines were killed in Anbar. In June, four
sheiks died in a bomb explosion at a Baghdad hotel. Last week, a
suicide bomber killed two Iraqi policemen in an attack not far from the
government complex, a fortified, 80-acre area comparable to Baghdad's
Green Zone. It is surrounded by concrete barriers, and the wide avenues
inside are off-limits to all but official vehicles.
Outside the barriers, much of Ramadi remains a blighted mess, something
local leaders hope they can change with the reconstruction money
promised by Baghdad.
Sullivan said long-term success in Anbar depends on the Baghdad
government keeping such promises and rewarding the provincial
leadership for its cooperation.
The U.S. diplomat said Prime Minister Nouri Maliki can't stop with the
sheiks in Anbar if he wants to ensure that others who have turned on
the insurgents do not turn back. He will need to provide jobs in the
security forces, salaries and other rewards.
"That's the big question mark we still have: Which way is Maliki going
to go?" he said. "I think he has close advisors on both sides of the
divide."
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times