(Note: It is an Important analysis about the situation in Iraq..But It is also (only) for non-Experts, Like me)
The Source:
http://www.brookings.edu/blogs/up-front/posts/2014/06/14-iraq-military-situation-pollack
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The following is meant to provide an overview of the military situation in Iraq for non-experts.
Caveat. It
is exceptionally difficult to understand the dynamics of ongoing
military operations. Oftentimes, the participants themselves do not know
why they are winning or losing, or even where they are in control or
where their troops are. For non-participants, it is often equally
difficult to gain more than a rudimentary sense of the combat without
access to the sophisticated intelligence gathering capabilities—overhead
imagery, signals intercepts, human reporting, etc.—available to the
United States and some other governments. As one of the CIA’s Persian
Gulf military analysts during the 1990-91 Gulf War, I noted the
difficulty that many outside analysts had in gauging the capabilities of
the two sides and following the course of operations because they did
not have access to the information available to us from U.S. government
assets. Consequently, readers should bring a healthy dose of skepticism
to all such analyses of the current fighting in Iraq, including this
one.
Likely Next Steps in the Fighting
What
appears to be the most likely scenario at this point is that the rapid
Sunni militant advance is likely to be stalemated at or north of
Baghdad. They will probably continue to make some advances, but it seems
unlikely that they will be able to overrun Baghdad and may not even
make it to the capital. This scenario appears considerably more likely
than the two next most likely alternative scenarios: that the Sunni
militants overrun Baghdad and continue their advance south into the Shia
heartland of Iraq; or that the Shia coalition is able to counterattack
and drive the Sunnis out of most of their recent conquests.
It
is not a coincidence that the Sunni militants made rapid advances
across primarily Sunni lands. That’s because it is not surprising that
the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) would crumble in those areas. As Baghdad
has (rightly) observed, several of the divisions in the north were
disproportionately composed of Kurds and Sunni Arabs, many of them
frustrated and alienated by Prime Minister Maliki’s harsh consolidation
of power and marginalization of their communities. They were never going
to fight to the death for Maliki and against Sunni
militants looking to stop him. Similarly, the considerable number of
Shia troops in the north understandably saw little point to fighting and
dying for principally Sunni cities like Mosul, Tikrit, Bayji, etc.
Baghdad
could be another matter entirely. First, it is a vast city of almost 9
million people compared to Mosul with less than 2 million. Moreover, the
Sunni militants only secured the western (Sunni Arab) half of Mosul,
leaving the eastern (Kurdish-dominated) half alone. Conquering a city
the size of Baghdad is always a formidable undertaking when it is
defended by determined troops.
After
the battles of the 2006-2008 civil war, Baghdad is also now a more
heavily Shia city—probably 75-80 percent of its population, although it
is very difficult to know for certain. While it is understandable, even
predictable, that Shia troops would not fight and die for Sunni cities,
many are likely to find their courage when they are defending their
homes and families in Baghdad and the other Shia-dominated cities of the
south.
In
addition, as has been well-reported, the (largely-Shia) remnants of the
ISF are being reinforced by Shia militiamen and bolstered by
contingents of Iranian Revolutionary Guards. Although many of the Shia
militiamen will be new recruits answering Ayatollah Sistani’s call to
defend their community, others are hardened veterans of the fighting in
Iraq in 2006-2008 and Syria since 2011.
Thus,
the Sunni militants are likely to come up against a far more determined
and numerous foe than they have confronted so far. The most likely
outcome of that fighting will be a vicious stalemate at or north of
Baghdad, basically along Iraq’s ethno-sectarian divide. That is also not
surprising because it conforms to the pattern of many similar
intercommunal civil wars. In Syria today, in Lebanon in the 1980s,
Afghanistan in the 1990s, and elsewhere, that is where the frontlines
tend to stalemate. They can shift here and there in small ways, but
generally remain unchanged for years. That’s because militias in civil
wars find it far easier to hold territory inhabited by the members of
their identity group than to conquer (and hold) territory inhabited by
members of a rival identity group. It’s one reason they typically try to
“cleanse” any territory they have conquered of members of the rival
identity group.
If
military developments in Iraq conform to this most likely scenario,
they could lead to a protracted, bloody stalemate along those lines. In
that case, one side or the other would have to receive
disproportionately greater military assistance from an outside backer
than its adversary to make meaningful territorial gains. Absent that,
the fighting will probably continue for years and hundreds of thousands
will die.
Watch Anbar.
So far, the Sunni militants in Anbar are the dog that hasn’t barked, at
least not yet. Obviously, the Sunni militants have significant strength
in Anbar, including considerable numbers of ISIS fighters. It is
militarily obvious that they should seek to develop a complimentary
offensive out of Anbar. Doing so would allow them to (1) open another
axis of advance against Baghdad and catch it in a classic pincer
movement, or (2) develop a direct advance against the great Shia
religious cities of Karbala and Najaf (the most sacred sites in Shia
Islam), and/or (3) force the Shia to divert military assets away from
the north-south Sunni advance and potentially overstretch their manpower
and command and control.
Consequently,
the fact that no such offensive has yet materialized is noteworthy. It
may be that Sunni militant forces in Anbar were so badly beaten up in
the fighting with the ISF around Fallujah and Ramadi that they are not
capable of mounting such an attack. Alternatively, they may be preparing
to do precisely that.
In
short, Anbar bears watching because a Sunni offensive there will
further stress the Shia defenses. It is a key variable that could
undermine the Shia defense of Baghdad. So if you are looking for
something that would push Iraq from the most likely scenario (a bloody
stalemate in or north of Baghdad) to the second most likely scenario (a
continued Sunni advance through and beyond Baghdad) a successful Sunni
offensive from Anbar would be one such variable.
Watch Iran.
Given the various problems on the Shia side (demoralization,
fragmentation, politicization of the ISF), the variable that would be
most likely to advantage the Shia and push Iraq from the most likely
scenario (a bloody stalemate in or north of Baghdad) to the third most
likely scenario (a Shia counteroffensive that eliminates most of the
Sunni gains) is Iranian participation. On their own, it is unlikely that
even the larger and more motivated Iraqi Shia forces now assembling to
defend Baghdad would be able to retake the Sunni-dominated north. What
would make that far more possible would be much greater Iranian
involvement, particularly much larger commitments of Iranian ground
combat formations.
So
far, Iran appears only to have committed three battalion-sized groups
of Quds force personnel. Quds force personnel are typically trainers and
advisers, not line infantrymen. They are the “Green Berets” of Iran,
who help make indigenous forces better rather than fighting the fight
themselves. That would make sense for the current situation in Iraq, and
those personnel will help stiffen the Shia defense of Baghdad. However,
they are unlikely to improve Shia capabilities to the point where they
can develop a major offensive to take back the North. Only the
commitment of large numbers of Iranian line formations—infantry, armor
and artillery—could do that. Consequently, were we to see a large
Iranian commitment of such ground combat units, it would signal that the
third-most likely scenario was becoming far more likely.
The Combatants, Part I: The Sunni Militants
It is important to understand a few key points about the Sunni militant side of the new Iraqi civil war.
It’s a Coalition, not a Single Group.
First, ISIS (the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) is essentially the
“lead dog” of a larger Sunni militant coalition—hence my preference for
the latter, more accurate description. ISIS has been fighting in
conjunction with a number of other Iraqi Sunni militant groups.
Effectively the entire rogue’s gallery of Sunni militias from the
2006-2008 civil war have been revived by Prime Minister Maliki’s
alienation of the Sunni Arab community since 2011. AQI, the Naqshbandis,
the Ba’th, Jaysh al-Muhammad, Ansar al-Sunnah, and all of the rest are
back in operation in Iraq, in at least tacit cooperation with a number
of Sunni tribes.
These
groups are key members of the Sunni militant coalition. They have done a
great deal of the fighting, dying and occupying. Often they are
indistinguishable from one another to outsiders or even Iraqis who are
not themselves Sunni militants.
It’s an Iraqi Entity, not a Foreign Invasion.
While the Iraqi government has emphasized the foreign elements in ISIS,
their indigenous, Iraqi component is of far greater importance. ISIS
has been part of the violence in Iraq for over a year. Many of its
personnel are Iraqis. Even before last weeks operations, it had an
extensive network in Iraq which both conducted terrorist attacks across
the length and breadth of the country, and has been engaged in a
conventional battle for Ramadi and Fallujah with the ISF for over six
months. Moreover, it is busily engaged in recruiting and training
additional Sunni Iraqis which is simply reinforcing the Iraqi nature of
the group. Finally, as noted above, ISIS is only one piece (albeit, the
central piece) in a larger array of Sunni groups that are overwhelmingly
Iraqi.
This
is important because Prime Minister Maliki and his apologists have
tried to paint ISIS as a group of foreigners who were waging the Syrian
civil war and suddenly decided to launch an invasion of neighboring
Iraq. If that narrative were true, it would suggest that a pure (and
immediate) military response were warranted since such a group would
have a great deal of difficulty holding territory conquered in Iraq. It
would obviate the need for far-reaching political changes, which Maliki
seeks to avoid.
Consequently,
it is critical to understand that ISIS is as much an Iraqi group as it
is Syrian or anything else, and its success is largely a product of its
ability to capitalize on Iraq’s political problems and to be accepted
(if only grudgingly) by many Iraqi Sunnis as a champion in the fight
against what they see as an oppressive, partisan Shia regime.
These are Militias First and Foremost, Terrorists only a Distant Second.
Here as well, Prime Minister Maliki and his apologists like to refer to
the Sunni militants as terrorists. Too often, so too do American
officials. Without getting into arcane and useless debates about what
constitutes a “terrorist,” as a practical matter it is a mistake to
think of these groups as being principally a bunch of terrorists.
The
problem there is that that implies that what these guys mostly want to
do is to blow up building or planes elsewhere around the world, and
particularly American buildings and planes. While I have no doubt that
there are some among the Sunni militants who want to blow up American
buildings and planes right now, and many others who would like to do so
later, that is not their principal motivation.
Instead,
this is a traditional ethno-sectarian militia waging an intercommunal
civil war. (They are also not an insurgency.) They are looking to
conquer territory. They will do so using guerrilla tactics or
conventional tactics—and they have been principally using conventional
tactics since the seizure of Fallujah over six months ago. Their entire
advance south over the past week has been a conventional, motorized
light-infantry offensive; not a terrorist campaign, not a guerrilla
warfare campaign.
And
right now, they are completely consumed with continuing to wage this
conventional offensive against the Shia forces arrayed against them.
That is likely to remain their pre-occupation for some time to come.
Somewhere down the road, they probably will begin to mount terrorist
attacks against other countries from their secure areas in Iraq and
Syria, precisely as the intelligence community warned. But that will be
an adjunct to their waging of the new Iraqi civil war.
That
is important because defining the Sunni militants as terrorists implies
that they need to be attacked immediately and directly by the United
States. Seeing them for what they are, first and foremost a sectarian
militia waging a civil war, puts the emphasis on where it needs to be:
finding an integrated political-military solution to the internal Iraqi
problems that sparked the civil war. And that is a set of problems that
is unlikely to be solved by immediate, direct American attacks on the
Sunni militants. Indeed, such attacks could easily make the situation
worse.
The Combatants, Part II: The Shia Coalition
A few points are also in order regarding the other side of the fight, the Shia.
Of
greatest importance, we need to recognize that the Iraqi Security
Forces are fast becoming little more than a Shia militia. This trend
began 3-4 years ago when Prime Minister Maliki began to push Sunni and
Kurdish officers out of the armed forces, to replace them with loyal
Shia officers. As a result, even before the current debacle, the ISF had
become far more Shia than it had been, with fewer and fewer Sunnis and
Kurds. Even before the dramatic events of last week, most Sunnis and
Kurds referred to the ISF as “Maliki’s militia.” Since last Tuesday, we
have seen large numbers of Sunni Arab and Kurdish soldiers desert the
ISF, leaving an even more homogeneously Shia force. There are still
Sunnis and Kurds in the ranks and in the officer corps, but that seems
likely to dissipate over time.
This
is a trend that is common to these kinds of intercommunal civil wars.
The “Syrian Armed Forces” of today are nothing more than the Asad
regime’s militia, heavily comprised of Alawis and other minorities
aligned with the regime. All throughout the Lebanese civil war, there
was an entity called “the Lebanese Armed Forces” (LAF) that wore the
uniforms, lived on the bases and employed the equipment of Lebanon’s
former army. But they had become nothing but a Maronite Christian
militia (after all of the Muslims and Druse deserted in the late 1970s),
and their commanders nothing but Maronite Christian warlords. The same
is already happening with the ISF and that trend is likely to continue.
This
is important because one of the worst mistakes the United States made
in the 1980s was to assume that the Lebanese Armed Forces were still a
neutral, professional armed force committed to the security of the
entire state. That was a key piece of the tragic U.S. mishandling of
Lebanon. When the Reagan Administration intervened in Lebanon in 1983,
one of its goals was shoring up the LAF so that it could stabilize the
country. Everyone else in Lebanon—and the Middle East—recognized that
the LAF had devolved into a Maronite militia and so they saw the U.S.
intervention as the (Christian) United States coming to aid the
(Christian) Maronite militia. That is why all of the other warring
groups in Lebanon immediately saw the American forces not as neutral
peacemakers, but as partisans—allies of the Maronites—and so started to
attack our forces. It led directly to the Beirut barracks blast and the
humiliating withdrawal of our troops.
There
is the same danger in Iraq. If we treat the ISF as an apolitical,
national army committed to disinterested stability in Iraq, and provide
it with weapons and other military support to do so, we will once again
be seen as taking a side in a civil war—even if we are doing so
inadvertently, again. Everyone else, including our Sunni Arab allies,
will see us as siding with the Shia against the Sunnis in the Iraqi
civil war. That perspective will only be reinforced by the ongoing
nuclear talks with (Shia) Iran. It
is why any American military assistance to Iraq must be conditioned on
concrete changes in Iraq’s political structure to bring the Sunnis back
in and limit the powers of the (Shia) prime minister, coupled with a
thorough depoliticization of the ISF. That is the only way we may be able to convince the Sunnis that we have not simply taken the side of Maliki and the Iranians.
What happened to the ISF? Many
have been asking what happened to the Iraqi Security Forces that
brought them from the successes of 2007-2008 to the collapse of their
units in northern Iraq last week. Obviously, a definitive answer to that
question will only be provided by historians at some future date, but a
number of factors have been known about the ISF for some time and these
undoubtedly caused the collapse in part or whole.
First,
it is important to recognize that the ISF built by the U.S. military in
2006-2009 had only very modest military capabilities (primarily in
counterinsurgency/counterterrorism/population control operations).
Throughout the modern era, Arab militaries have never achieved more than
middling levels of military effectiveness and on most occasions, their
performances were dreadful. Iraq was no exception. (Those looking for
additional information on this may want to read the chapter on modern
Iraqi military history in my book, Arabs at War.)
This was largely a product of factors inherent in Arab culture,
education and economics. With enormous exertions, a small number of Arab
militaries overcame these problems to perform at a mediocre level.
However, whenever Arab regimes politicized their armed forces to try to
prevent a military coup against themselves, the performance of their
armies dropped from bad to abysmal.
American
military trainers and advisors were able to marginally improve the
military effectiveness of the ISF by introducing rigorous, Western-style
training programs and partnering closely with Iraqi forces in ways that
allowed U.S. personnel to get to know their Iraqi counterparts. As a
result of this familiarity, over the course of many months, the
Americans figured out who were the good Iraqi soldiers and who were the
bad. Who was connected to the terrorists or militias, who was connected
to organized crime, who was smart and brave, who was lazy or cowardly.
And the U.S. military then went about systematically promoting the best
Iraqis, and pushing out the bad ones.
The
greatest impact of these American efforts with the ISF in 2006-2009
were to depoliticize it, both to modestly increase its combat
effectiveness and to make it professional, apolitical and therefore
accepted as a stabilizing force by all Iraqis. Again, this was largely
performed by promoting professional, patriotic Iraqi officers and
removing the sectarian chauvinists. The U.S. also pressed Baghdad to
accept more and more Sunni and Kurdish officers and enlisted personnel
into the ranks. As a result, the ISF became a far more integrated force
than it had been, led by a far more apolitical and nationalistic officer
corps than it had been before. Indeed, in 2008, when Prime Minister
Maliki sent heavily-Sunni brigades from Anbar down to Basra to fight the
Shia militia, Jaysh al-Mahdi, the Shia of Basra welcomed the ISF
brigades and fought against the Shia militiamen.
Unfortunately,
despite the boost it gave him, Prime Minister Maliki saw this largely
apolitical and professional military as a threat to himself. He feared
that it was overrun by Ba’thists (he sees far too many Sunnis as closet
Ba’thists), unwilling to follow his orders (despite the fact that it had
always done so), and looking to oust him at the first excuse. So,
beginning in 2009-2010, he began to remove the capable, apolitical
officers that the United States had painstakingly put in place
throughout the Iraqi command structure. Instead, he put in men loyal to
himself, often because they had been the ones passed over or removed by
the Americans. The result was a heavily politicized and far less
competent officer corps.
Perhaps
not surprisingly, Maliki’s officers saw little need for the rigorous
training programs the Americans had put in place. They closed many of
the training facilities we built and allowed training to fall by the
wayside. Not surprisingly, when these formations got into action
again—both in some skirmishes with the Kurds and more bloody fights
against Sunni militants—they did very poorly, undercutting morale.
Finally,
beginning in 2011 immediately after the departure of the last American
soldiers, Maliki began to use his new, politicized ISF to go after his
political rivals, many of them leading (moderate) Sunni leaders. This
was a critical element in his alienation of Iraq’s Sunni community, and
further demoralized the Sunni Arab, Kurdish, and other minority
personnel in the ISF. It also disappointed many of the Shia soldiers and
officers who preferred to be part of an apolitical, national military
and had never wanted to become part of “Maliki’s militia.”
Not
surprisingly, when this force came under tremendous stress, it
fractured. As noted above, it is now being rebuilt, but not as a
national army; as a Shia militia. And the U.S. should only be providing
it with aid if we are given the right and the ability to turn it back
into an apolitical, national army.
-
Kenneth M. Pollack is an expert on Middle Eastern political-military affairs, with particular emphasis on Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the other nations of the Persian Gulf region. He is currently a senior fellow in the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution. He served as the director of the Saban Center from 2009 to 2012, and its director of research from 2002 to 2009. His most recent book isUnthinkable: Iran, the Bomb, and American Strategy.
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