November 14, 2007:
The
centuries old battle between Sunni and Shia Moslems in Iraq has just shifted
gears. Sunni Arab groups that have been fighting since 2003 to regain power,
have renounced their 2004 alliance with al Qaeda and sought to eliminate al
Qaeda militias in their territory. What is unclear, both to foreigners and the
Shia dominated government of Iraq, is what the Sunni Arab warlords will do
next.
From the 1920s until 2003, the
Sunni Arab minority controlled Iraq. Before that, back to the 16th century, the
Sunni Turks had relied on the Baghdadi Sunni Arabs to help run things in what
is now Iraq. Britain had to re-occupy Iraq during World War II, because the
Sunni Arab government (not the king) tried to ally itself with the Nazis. At
the time, many Arabs admired Nazism. The Brits again conquered country, using
three divisions and taking three weeks to do it. The Brits found another bunch
of Sunni Arab notables and told them they could run things if they stayed away
from the Nazis. That lasted for about a decade, until the Sunni Arab
politicians and generals decided that this democracy stuff wasn't working for
them. The royal family was massacred and parliament purged of disloyal
elements. The Sunni Arabs were back in charge, via a series of dictators, until
Saddam Hussein was deposed in 2003.
Saddam was a particularly
brutal dictator, killing hundreds of thousands of Iraqis (mostly Shia and
Kurds), and terrorizing nearly everyone. After being run out of Kuwait in 1991,
and barely surviving another Shia rebellion, he made peace with the Sunni Arab
tribal leaders, and unleashed yet another terror campaign on the Shia Arabs.
The Kurds were now independent, protected by British and American warplanes.
Now, this is the critical
thing that many Americans don't understand, or even know. When Saddam was
deposed in 2003, most (well, many) Sunni Arabs believed they would only be out
of power temporarily. This sort of thing you can pick up on the Internet (OK,
mostly on Arab language message boards, but it's out there). Saddam's followers
(the Baath Party) and al Qaeda believed a few years of terror would subdue the
Shia, and the Sunni Arabs would return to their natural state as the rulers of
Iraq. U.S. troops quickly figured out what was going on . That's because, since
Sunni Arabs were the best educated group, most of the local translators the
troops used were Sunni Arabs, and even these guys took it for granted that,
eventually, the Sunni Arabs would have to be in charge if the country were to
function. The Sunni Arabs believed the Shia were a bunch of ignorant,
excitable, inept (and so on) scum who could never run a government.
Four years later, the Shia
have proved the Sunni Arabs wrong. Now many Sunni Arabs want to make peace, not
suicide bombs. But there are still basic differences about how the country
should be run. Many Iraqis believe only a dictator can run the country, and
force all the factions to behave. However, a majority of Iraqis recognize that
dictatorships tend to be poor and repressive, while democracies are prosperous
and pleasant. The problem is that the traditions of tribalism and corruption
(everything, and everyone, has their price) do not mesh well with democracy. This
doesn't mean democracy can't work under these conditions, many do. It does mean
that it takes more effort, and the results are not neat and clean, as Americans
expect their democracies to be.
The Shia parties, tribes and
militias are also growing up. Fearful of Iranian domination (because both share
the same Shia beliefs, and Iran ruled the country for centuries before the
Sunni Turks marched in nearly five centuries ago), the Shia are starting to
sort out their differences. The Sunni are also divided between democrats (who
would take their chances with the Shia), religious conservatives (who want a
religious dictatorship) and nationalists (who still believe in Sunni Arab
supremacy.) All of these groups are cooperating with the government, for now,
mainly to get rid of al Qaeda, and renegade warlords. But once these threats
are eliminated, no one is sure what the Sunni Arabs will do next. Logic
indicates that Sunnis will try to work with the government, and democracy. But
logic doesn't always apply in this part of the world. Moreover, the Sunni Arabs
are aware that many Shia hate them, and want the Sunni Arabs expelled from
Iraq. While the government can't officially back that, many government officials
have looked the other way in the past, or even supported Shia death squads in
their attacks on Sunni Arabs. How this will play out should be clear early next
year. If the Sunni Arabs don't play ball, or if too many Shia turn on the
Sunni, American troops will still be needed to cope with the potential
slaughter of Sunni Arabs.