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November 24, 2003,
U.S. Edition

Job One: Solve
The Sunni Problem
The
political problem the United States faces is simple: a significant element
of Iraqi society fears that it will do badly in the new Iraq
By
Fareed Zakaria
The
only thing Arabs understand is force: this is the central dictum that
has governed the Bush administrations foreign policy in the Middle
East, an old line peddled by traditionalist scholars of the region. But
it seems to be a better description of the Bush administration. Two months
ago, the administration heaped scorn on a European proposal to transfer
power more quickly to Iraqis. "They are not ready," administration
officials explained, outlining what they said was a more orderly process
of transfer. Two months of escalating attacks against American forces,
however, and suddenly the administration has discovered that the Iraqis
are ready for self-rule after all. This does not bode well for a democratic
Iraq; it is not even likely to solve Americas most urgent problemwinning
the guerrilla war.
It has become increasingly
clear that the resistance in Iraq is not the work of a small band of dead-enders,
but is in fact a more widespread movement. We can tell this because still,
months after the attacks began, we know very little about them. Gen. John
Abizaid says that the enemy is 5,000 strong. A leaked CIA report puts
the number at 50,000. One day, an administration official says the attacks
are the work of Baathists. The next we are told foreign fighters are the
culprits. The reason for this lack of information must be that the guerrillas
are able to merge back into the population, and that the locals are not
actively informing on them.
A purely military
response, while necessary, will not address this problem. In fact, it
exacerbates it. The purpose of guerrilla warfare, the Brazilian guerrilla
leader Carlos Marighella once explained, is to force the occupying army
to militarize its presence, to engage in reprisals and roundups, to show
force, to patrol in tanks. These measures alienate the population and
generate sympathy among the population for the guerrillas. In recent days,
American forces have been dropping bombs, taking prisoners and generally
showing more force. In other words, the strategy--the guerrillas' strategy,
that is--might be working.
The political problem
the United States faces is simple: there is a significant element of Iraqi
society that fears that it will do badly in the new Iraq. These are the
people who are not helping the Army hunt down the guerrillas. What compounds
this problem is that these people, the Sunnis, have been Iraqs governing
elite for 500 years.
For months before
the war, the United States (intentionally or unintentionally) signaled
its support for the Shiites and Kurds of Iraq. It made clear it was comfortable
with the fact that a democratic Iraq was likely to be a Shiite Iraq (the
Shiites make up 60 percent of the country). It cozied up to exiles, almost
all of whom are Shiites. It assured the Kurds that they would retain the
autonomy that they had developed under the umbrella of American and British
air power.
All these are perfectly
understandable, honorable and intelligent goals. (One certainly would
not want a Shiite problem in Iraq!) But the effect has been to make the
Sunnis of Iraq believe that they will be the victims of the new order.
When the Sunnis hear the phrase "Iraqi democracy," they probably
think "tyranny of the Shiites."
The Sunnis have good
reason to be worried. They know a thing or two about tyranny, having ruled
Iraq for all of its modern existence. (And before that, they were the
favored sons under two colonial administrations: the British and the Ottomans.)
But they are also a key to stability, a powerful and well-connected element
in Iraqi society that for centuries has produced the majority of politicians,
generals, merchants, professors and doctors. They can help--and they can
certainly spoil--the chances of building a new Iraq.
Beyond effective
counter-insurgency operations, the United States will have to develop
a political strategy to bring Sunni leader--tribal, religious and political--into
the new order. This might involve political promises, bribes, spending
projects in Sunni areas and some symbolic gestures, such as appointing
a figurehead Sunni president (to balance the real head of government,
a Shiite prime minister). The military historian John Keegan noted last
Saturday in The Daily Telegraph that the British have done better
in their sector than the Americans because, in part, they have accommodated
themselves to Iraqi society rather than trying to reconstruct it along
ideological lines. Washington will have to strike a balance because, rightly,
it wants to change Iraq, not accommodate itself to it. But first it must
end the war. And to do that, it must solve its Sunni Problem.
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