“Iraq Endgame” by George Friedman

It’s a good analysis, but as usual for Stratfor — as with most analysis by US geopolitical experts — it shows astonishing blindness to our interests in Iraq.  Reading it, one would think we are philanthropists.  Sort of a hybrid with the best qualities of the Red Cross and the Wehrmacht.  Most notably, no mention of those permanent-looking, massive bases.  Or our persistent efforts to get Iraq to approve the most generous (to foreigners) oil law in the world.

Also note the sensitive writing, avoiding any hint that our adventures in Iraq have produced few benefits for America.  Such as saying

“The Shiite-dominated government led by Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is no puppet of Iran, but at the same time, it is not Iran’s enemy.”

What a wonderfully diplomatic way of not saying its a close ally of Iran. 

So read it carefully, mining the many insights it contains.  But watch for leaps of logic and bizarre assumptions.

Iraq Endgame“, George Friedman, Statfor, 18 August 2009 — posted with permission.

Though the Iraq war is certainly not over, it has reached a crossroads. During the course of the war, about 40 countries sent troops to fight in what was called “Multi-National Force-Iraq.” As of this summer, only one foreign country’s fighting forces remain in Iraq — those of the United States. A name change in January 2010 will reflect the new reality, when the term “Multi-National Force-Iraq” will be changed to “United States Forces-Iraq.” If there is an endgame in Iraq, we are now in it.

The plan that U.S. President Barack Obama inherited from former President George W. Bush called for coalition forces to help create a viable Iraqi national military and security force that would maintain the Baghdad government’s authority and Iraq’s territorial cohesion and integrity. In the meantime, the major factions in Iraq would devise a regime in which all factions would participate and be satisfied that their factional interests were protected. While this was going on, the United States would systematically reduce its presence in Iraq until around the summer of 2010, when the last U.S. forces would leave.

Two provisos qualified this plan. The first was that the plan depended on the reality on the groundfor its timeline. The second was the possibility that some residual force would remain in Iraq to guarantee the agreements made between factions, until they matured and solidified into a self-sustaining regime. Aside from minor tinkering with the timeline, the Obama administration — guided by Defense Secretary Robert Gates, whom Bush appointed and Obama retained — has followed the Bush plan faithfully.

The moment of truth for the U.S. plan is now approaching. The United States still has substantial forces in Iraq. There is a coalition government in Baghdad dominated by Shia (a reasonable situation, since the Shia comprise the largest segment of the population of Iraq). Iraqi security forces are far from world-class, and will continue to struggle in asserting themselves in Iraq. As we move into the endgame, internal and external forces are re-examining power-sharing deals, with some trying to disrupt the entire process.

There are two foci for this disruption. The first concerns the Arab-Kurdish struggle over Kirkuk. The second concerns threats to Iran’s national security.

The Kurdish Question

Fighting continues in the Kirkuk region, where the Arabs and Kurds have a major issue to battle over: oil. The Kirkuk region is one of two major oil-producing regions in Iraq (the other is in the Shiite-dominated south). Whoever controls Kirkuk is in a position to extract a substantial amount of wealth from the surrounding region’s oil development. There are historical ethnic issues in play here, but the real issue is money. Iraqi central government laws on energy development remain unclear, precisely because there is no practical agreement on the degree to which the central government will control — and benefit — from oil development as opposed to the Kurdish Regional Government. Both Kurdish and Arab factions thus continue to jockey for control of the key city of Kirkuk.

Arab, particularly Sunni Arab, retention of control over Kirkuk opens the door for an expansion of Sunni Arab power into Iraqi Kurdistan. By contrast, Kurdish control of Kirkuk shuts down the Sunni threat to Iraqi Kurdish autonomy and cuts Sunni access to oil revenues from any route other than the Shiite-controlled central government. If the Sunnis get shut out of Kirkuk, they are on the road to marginalization by their bitter enemies — the Kurds and the Shia. Thus, from the Sunni point of view, the battle for Kirkuk is the battle for the Sunni place at the Iraqi table.

Turkey further complicates the situation in Iraq. Currently embedded in constitutional and political thinking in Iraq is the idea that the Kurds would not be independent, but could enjoy a high degree of autonomy. Couple autonomy with the financial benefits of heavy oil development and the Kurdish autonomous region of Iraq becomes a powerful entity. Add to that the peshmerga, the Kurdish independent military forces that have had U.S. patronage since the 1990s, and an autonomous Kurdistan becomes a substantial regional force. And this is not something Turkey wants to see.

The broader Kurdish region is divided among four countries, Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria. The Kurds have a substantial presence in southeastern Turkey, where Ankara is engaged in a low-intensity war with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), members of which have taken refuge in northern Iraq. Turkey’s current government has adopted a much more nuanced approach in dealing with the Kurdish question. This has involved coupling the traditional military threats with guarantees of political and economic security to the Iraqi Kurds as long as the Iraqi Kurdish leadership abides by Turkish demands not to press the Kirkuk issue.

Still, whatever the constitutional and political arrangements between Iraqi Kurds and Iraq’s central government, or between Iraqi Kurds and the Turkish government, the Iraqi Kurds have a nationalist imperative. The Turkish expectation is that over the long haul, a wealthy and powerful Iraqi Kurdish autonomous region could slip out of Baghdad’s control and become a center of Kurdish nationalism. Put another way, no matter what the Iraqi Kurds say now about cooperating with Turkey regarding the PKK, over the long run, they still have an interest in underwriting a broader Kurdish nationalism that will strike directly at Turkish national interests.

The degree to which Sunni activity in northern Iraq is coordinated with Turkish intelligence is unknown to us. The Sunnis are quite capable of waging this battle on their own. But the Turks are not disinterested bystanders, and already support local Turkmenin the Kirkuk region to counter the Iraqi Kurds. The Turks want to see Kurdish economic power and military power limited, and as such they are inherently in favor of the Shiite-dominated Baghdad government. The stronger Baghdad is, the weaker the Kurds will be.

Baghdad understands something critical: While the Kurds may be a significant fighting force in Iraq, they can’t possibly stand up to the Turkish army. More broadly, Iraq as a whole can’t stand up to the Turkish army. We are entering a period in which a significant strategic threat to Turkey from Iraq could potentially mean Turkish countermeasures. Iraqi memories of Turkish domination during the Ottoman Empire are not pleasant. Therefore, Iraq will be very careful not to cross any redline with the Turks.

This places the United States in a difficult position. Washington has supported the Kurds in Iraq ever since Operation Desert Storm. Through the last decade of the Saddam regime, U.S. special operations forces helped create a de facto autonomous region in Kurdistan. Washington and the Kurds have a long and bumpy history, now complicated by substantial private U.S. investment in Iraqi Kurdistan for the development of oil resources. Iraqi Kurdish and U.S. interests are strongly intertwined, and Washington would rather not see Iraqi Kurdistan swallowed up by arrangements in Baghdad that undermine current U.S. interests and past U.S. promises.

On the other hand, the U.S. relationship with Turkey is one of Washington’s most important. Whether the question at hand is Iran, the Caucasus, the Balkans, Central Asia, the Arab-Israeli conflict, Afghanistan, Russia or Iraq, the Turks have a role. Given the status of U.S. power in the region, alienating Turkey is not an option. And the United States must remember that for Turkey, Kurdish power in Iraq and Turkey’s desired role in developing Iraqi oil are issues of fundamental national importance.

Now left alone to play out this endgame, the United States must figure out a way to finesse the Kurdish issue. In one sense, it doesn’t matter. Turkey has the power ultimately to redefine whatever institutional relationships the United States leaves behind in Iraq. But for Turkey, the sooner Washington hands over this responsibility, the better. The longer the Turks wait, the stronger the Kurds might become and the more destabilizing their actions could be to Turkey. Best of all, if Turkey can assert its influence now, which it has already begun to do, it doesn’t have to be branded as the villain.

All Turkey needs to do is make sure that the United States doesn’t intervene decisively against the Iraqi Sunnis in the battle over Kirkuk in honor of Washington’s commitment to the Kurds.

In any case, the United States doesn’t want to intervene against Iraq’s Sunnis again. In protecting Sunni Arab interests, the Americans have already been sidestepping any measures to organize a census and follow through with a constitutional mandate to hold a referendum in Kirkuk. For the United States, a strong Sunni community is the necessary counterweight to the Iraqi Shia since, over the long haul, it is not clear how a Shiite-dominated government will relate to Iran.

The Shiite Question

The Shiite-dominated government led by Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is no puppet of Iran, but at the same time, it is not Iran’s enemy. As matters develop in Iraq, Iran remains the ultimate guarantor of Shiite interests. And Iranian support might not flow directly to the current Iraqi government, but to al-Maliki’s opponents within the Shiite community who have closer ties to Tehran. It is not clear whether Iranian militant networks in Iraq have been broken, or are simply lying low. But it is clear that Iran still has levers in placewith which it could destabilize the Shiite community or rivals of the Iraqi Shia if it so desired.

Therefore, the United States has a vested interest in building up the Iraqi Sunni community before it leaves. And from an economic point of view, that means giving the Sunnis access to oil revenue as well as a guarantee of control over that revenue after the United States leaves.

With the tempo of attacks picking up as U.S. forces draw down, Iraq’s Sunni community is evidently not satisfied with the current security and political arrangements in Iraq. Attacks are on the upswing in the northern areas — where remnants of al Qaeda in Iraq continue to operate in Mosul — as well as in central Iraq in and around Baghdad. The foreign jihadists in Iraq hope such attacks will trigger a massive response from the Shiite community, thus plunging Iraq back into civil war. But the foreign jihadists would not be able to operate without some level of support from the local Sunni community. This broader community wants to make sure that the Shia and Americans don’t forget what the Sunnis are capable of should their political, economic and security interests fall by the wayside as the Americans withdraw.

Neither the Iraqi Sunnis nor the Kurds really want the Americans to leave. Neither trust that the intentions or guarantees of the Shiite-dominated government. Iraq lacks a tradition of respect for government institutions and agreements; a piece of paper is just that. Instead, the Sunnis and Kurds see the United States as the only force that can guarantee their interests. Ironically, the United States is now seen as the only real honest broker in Iraq.

But the United States is an honest broker with severe conflicts of interest. Satisfying both Sunni and Kurdish interests is possible only under three conditions. The first is that Washington exercise a substantial degree of control over the Shiite administration of the country — and particularly over energy laws — for a long period of time. The second is that the United States give significant guarantees to Turkey that the Kurds will not extend their nationalist campaign to Turkey, even if they are permitted to extend it to Iran in a bid to destabilize the Iranian regime. The third is that success in the first two conditions not force Iran into a position where it sees its own national security at risk, and so responds by destabilizing Baghdad — and with it, the entire foundation of the national settlement in Iraq negotiated by the United States.

The American strategy in this matter has been primarily tactical. Wanting to leave, it has promised everyone everything. That is not a bad strategy in the short run, but at a certain point, everyone adds up the promises and realizes that they can’t all be kept, either because they are contradictory or because there is no force to guarantee them. Boiled down, this leaves the United States with two strategic options.

First, the United States can leave a residual force of about 20,000 troops in Iraq to guarantee Sunni and Kurdish interests, to protect Turkish interests, etc. The price of pursuing this option is that it leaves Iran facing a nightmare scenario: e.g., the potential re-emergence of a powerful Iraq and the recurrence down the road of the age-old conflict between Persia and Mesopotamia — with the added possibility of a division of American troops supporting their foes. This would pose an existential threat to Iran, forcing Tehran to use covert means to destabilize Iraq that would take advantage of a minimal, widely dispersed U.S. force vulnerable to local violence.

Second, the United States could withdraw and allow Iraq to become a cockpit for competition among neighboring countries: Turkey, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Syria — and ultimately major regional powers like Russia. While chaos in Iraq is not inherently inconsistent with U.S. interests, it is highly unpredictable, meaning the United States could be pulled back into Iraq at the least opportune time and place.

The first option is attractive, but its major weakness is the uncertainty created by Iran. With Iran in the picture, a residual force is as much a hostage as a guarantor of Sunni and Kurdish interests. With Iran out of the picture, the residual U.S. force could be smaller and would be more secure. Eliminate the Iran problem completely, and the picture for all players becomes safer and more secure. But eliminating Iran from the equation is not an option — Iran most assuredly gets a vote in this endgame.

Afterword

Please share your comments by posting below.  Per the FM site’s Comment Policy, please make them brief (250 words max), civil, and relevant to this post.  Or email me at fabmaximus at hotmail dot com (note the spam-protected spelling).

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For more information from the FM site

To read other articles about these things, see the FM reference page on the right side menu bar.  Of esp interest these days:

Posts about the war in Iraq:

  1. The Iraq insurgency has ended, which opens a path to peace, 13 March 2007
  2. Beyond Insurgency: An End to Our War in Iraq, 27 September 2007
  3. Iraq, after the war, 20 May 2008
  4. Slowly the new Iraq becomes visible, 18 July 2008
  5. Brief update about events in Iraq, 8 April 2009
  6. If we won in Iraq, what did we win? Was it worth the cost?, 15 July 2009
  7. “Colonizing Iraq”, by Michael Schwartz, 25 July 2009

8 thoughts on ““Iraq Endgame” by George Friedman”

  1. Just put off balance at the moment. They are simply trying to come up with alternative tactics. Bit ‘timely’ all those bombs going off in Iraq, just after the US troops are forced of the streets into their bases. Reminds of the plain clothes SAS troops caught in Basra a few years ago by the Iraqis, with a boot load of explosives. My guess, manufacture a crisis and then send the boys back into the streets again to ‘restore order’.

    FM you know my thesis. The destruction of Iraq was deliberate. This was a forced colonisation bid. Basically an ‘Indian (US one that is) War’ again. There were no compromises to the Iraqi population. Even the, many, bases were built with foreign labour.

    Their future were to be landless peasants in their own land, going through the rubbish tips from the US bases and hopefully avoiding the torture factories. Remember the original plan … 70 bases. Might get freedom back again when the oil ran out, again remember the original ‘oil agreement’ put to the Iraqis? Google it, it was basically all the oil was owned by foreign companies, mostly US with a bone or 2 thrown to the UK. Remember (forgot which neo-con clown) the high US official, before the war, saying in public that the Iraqi oil would pay for the war so it would cost the US nothing? He was wrong on several fronts, not the least that it has cost the US a couple of trillion dollars.

    Idiots, they could have had reasonable influence in Iraq (maybe even some, though not all bases) if they had ended the sanctions and cut a deal with Hussain .. for a fraction (decimal points actually) of the cost. The curse of Bill Lind’s ‘maximalist objectives’ again.
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    Fabius Maximus replies: I think this is exaggerated, to an extent that makes it easy for people to disregard the underlying truth.

    “Their future were to be landless peasants in their own land, going through the rubbish tips from the US bases and hopefully avoiding the torture factories.”

    There is no evidence that we planned to take all, most, or even much of the land in Iraq. The original oil law was grossly tilted towards foreign interests, but hardly colonial-like exploitation.

    As I have written so often during the past 5 years, citing documents by the US government and its advisors (e.g., Kilcullen), we intended to dominate Iraq — hence we disbanded its armed forces almost immediately. Bases to maintain control and dominate the region. An oil law benefiting our oil companies. Massive contracts to US companies to rebuild and operate Iraq. It’s called neo-colonialism.

  2. Oldskeptic: “Their future were to be landless peasants in their own land, going through the rubbish tips from the US bases and hopefully avoiding the torture factories.”

    Sorry, I’m confused. Are you talking about Iraqis in Iraq…or Americans in America?

  3. The curious thing is that there’s really not a whole lot of difference between the two strategic options, reached as a conclusion. As should be expected Iranian interests figure heavily into both options, although its hard to see that a 20k residual force (mentioned in option 1) is going to guaranty Kurdish and Sunni interests, who also happen to be at odds with each other.It also seems that, because such a plan would be such a dire threat to Iran (nightmare scenario) that the author appears to be suggesting something akin to returning Sunni political domination – which at this point, having lost the civil war and a large chunk of its elites in permanent exile, is patently absurd. Not to mention that the Kurds are remain politically allied to the Shiite UIA, and would have nothing to do with a Sunni resurgence.

    In my view, the strategic outcome in Iraq has remained the same and constant ever since it was decided that democracy based upon proportional quota’s would determine political enfranchisement. And as a result, we have been, and will remain in the bizarre position of inflating our already overblown enemy, Iran, at our own expense.
    I believe it was David Wormser who had the original fever dream, that must have been facilitated into policy – that by empowering the Sistani, quietist brand of Shiism in Iraq, that it would create discord and eventually rebellion in activist clerical controlled Iran.

    Nice idea, but no cigar in the real world, unless you believe the recent political unrest in Iran is based on jealousy of whats going on in Iraq.

  4. 1. Should relabel Sunni vs Shia . The issues between them are secular , the behavior of the extremists is unIslamic. ( as in, N Ireland , Catholic , Protestant , issues were secular , behavior unChristian.)
    2. Justice .
    What happens to you or me if oil is found in our garden ? Does it belong to the finder ,squatter ,tenant ,landowner, village , city , country or the world ? There must be national and international rulings on this somewhere .
    In my country , the ownership of a piece of land is documented for at least the last 150 years . Since some Palestinians hold land documents ( for land in Israel ) tracing way back , I’d imagine it was not unusual, in the Arab world ,for scribes to document changes in land rental or ownership . Therefore , it may be possible to prove who has a legal right to own chunks of Kirkut , etc .

  5. Are we surprised Iraq is in opening days of civil war. Local Sunnis cooperated with us to get rid of AlQ — paid for by Saudis, supported by Syria and supplied from North Africa and Saudi. Now the locals want power. Total? Who knows. Iraq Shia not pro-Iranian. Recall it is mostly Shia who killed a million Iranians in the War That Should Have Gone on Forever until RReagan, the most overrated President of memory, stopped it– and was not even considered for the Nobel. Will there be ethnic war to the finish? Most likely the new Iraqi military will cough up a new dictator. The question then is: what about the Kurds? Doubt they have any interest in giving up their autonomy. Can they hold out? Do we support or abandon them? And what of the Turks, who have the only military forces in the region that can make a difference. Does Obama withdraw and let it happen? Do Americans care? I think not.
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    Fabius Maxmus replies: You would not be surprised if you read the FM site.
    * The Iraq insurgency has ended, which opens a path to peace, 13 March 2007
    * Beyond Insurgency: An End to Our War in Iraq, 27 September 2007
    * Iraq, after the war, 20 May 2008
    * Slowly the new Iraq becomes visible, 18 July 2008

  6. Burke G Sheppard

    OK, it’s deja vu all over again. We leave a force in Kurdistan, and we’re protecting the Kurds again, except now, instead of protecting them from Saddam, we’ll be protecting them from the government we installed, or the consequences of their own idiocy if they start something with the Turks, or whatever.

    The problem here is not that we’re looking at the endgame. The problem is that we’re trying to figure out how to remain players in the game after we remove our troops. The Kurds want this, the Turks want that, Baghdad wants the other thing, and the Iranians want something else altogether. After we leave, all these factions will proceed to do their thing, whatever that thing is.

    So rather than withdraw and accept the consequences of that choice, or stay and accept the consequences of that choice, we consider a third, much more clever alternative. We leave a smaller force in place, and hope that it gives us the same degree of influence as the larger force did, without in the process drawing us into armed confrontation with (Insert Random Faction Here) when our interests conflict.

    Depending on how it shakes out, this could give us range of outcomes somewhere between Beirut and the Chosin Reservoir.
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    Fabius Maximus replies: I don’t understand this comment. We have no bases in Kurdistan. I have seen no evidence that the Kurds will allow bases in Kurdistan.

    On another level, I doubt that the US plans to withdraw all forces from Iraq. Perhaps all “combat forces”, a fig-leaf defining forces in a few large bases to remain. Bases from which we can project power across the region. Whether the Iraq peoples will allow this remains to be seen.

  7. Burke G Sheppard

    The Stratfor piece to which you refer considers the possibility that “First, the United States can leave a residual force of about 20,000 troops in Iraq to guarantee Sunni and Kurdish interests, to protect Turkish interests, etc.” I was considering the possible consequences of doing so. I do not consider this to be a wise course of action.

    The Stratfor piece does not go into the question of whether or not the Iraqis will permit us to leave a residual force, nor did I, although it certainly is an issue.

  8. I have an idea… why dont you withdraw completedly, go back home and rethink your entire foreign policies. Its your policies that have made this world so tragic.
    US interests have destabilised the region and have caused so much anti US feeling one doesnt even know where to start.
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    Fabius Maximus replies: There are two views which tend to dominate these discussions. America is Atlas, bearing the responsibility of the world on our shoulders. America is Satan, source of all evil. These are caricatures, of course.

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