The current escalating sectarian violence between the
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and Iraqi
forces and the unending civil war in Syria are now
intertwined and neither can be resolved without the
other, which requires a dramatic change in the
political and military landscape in Syria and Iraq.
What is happening in Iraq today, and how the unfolding
events may play out in the coming months or years, is
directly related to three central developments:
First is President Bush's misguided Iraq war, which
has precipitated the violent conflict between the
Shiites and the Sunnis in the region. Second is
President Obama's failure to reach a security
arrangement with Iraq before the complete withdrawal
of American forces and conditioning continued American
support of Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki on the
establishment of an inclusive government of
reconciliation. Finally is the unwillingness of the US
to provide the rebels in Syria early on with the kind
of military hardware needed to blunt Assad's
onslaught. All combined have brought about the
convergence of Al-Qaeda and Islamic jihadist groups
into Iraq and subsequently into Syria, causing the
unfolding horror we are witnessing today.
The legacy of the Iraq war has finally forced the
Obama administration to reassess its involvement, or
lack thereof, in the raging violent conflicts both in
Iraq and Syria, and it must now develop a strategy
that might help marginalize ISIS in both countries.
There is no clear-cut solution. The bloody conflict in
the neighboring countries transcends ISIS' aspiration
to establish an Islamic Sunni state encompassing Iraq
and Syria. There will be continuing violence embedded
between the Sunnis and Shiites for many years. It has
now reached a new peak as Shiite-dominated Iran and
Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia assumed the leadership of
their respective sects and are waging a proxy war in
both Syria and Iraq, determined to preserve their
hegemony if not the survival of their regimes.
For these reasons, the US ought to now pursue a
multi-pronged strategy that must first deal with the
urgent need to stop the advancement of ISIS toward
Baghdad, and then move to the second tier to address
the long-term Sunni-Shiite conflict that plagues the
region.
In connection with Iraq, the US is left with no choice
but to take the lead and orchestrate a military
response against ISIS forces. Such an effort must be
conditional upon Maliki's full cooperation on the
military front and agreeing to form a new government
of reconciliation that must include Kurds and Sunnis.
Moreover, to show goodwill and entice Sunni tribal
leaders to support the efforts against ISIS, the US
must insist that Maliki release thousands of Sunni
prisoners who have been incarcerated for years without
trial, and stop exhorting (alongside Grand Ayatollah
Ali Sistani) young Shiites to form militias against
ISIS, which is a recipe for an intensified sectarian
war and chaos.
Since Maliki is not likely to step down on his own
volition, during the next few months the US ought to
quietly encourage other Iraqi Shiite leaders, who are
unhappy with the corrupt authoritarian Prime Minister
and are committed to establishing a government of
reconciliation, to push him out of power. This will be
necessary to change the domestic political outlook and
encourage the Kurds and the Sunnis, who deeply resent
and distrust him, to cooperate in the longer term.
The US should also make every effort to contain the
mutual animosity between Iraq and Saudi Arabia, as
both governments need to realize that the danger at
hand must first be addressed.
Whereas Iraq holds "the Saudi government…responsible
for the dangerous crimes committed by these terrorist
groups," the Saudis blame Iraq for the ‘sectarian and
exclusionary policies implemented in Iraq over the
past years that threaten its stability and
sovereignty.'
As it appears that Obama is seriously considering
enlisting Iran politically and militarily to help
Maliki stem the advances of ISIS towards Baghdad, the
US should keep in mind that in whichever capacity
Iran's involvement in Iraq may be, it will only
strengthen its hold on Iraq and further advance its
regional ambition to become the dominant power.
For this reason, Iran's involvement must be
conditioned upon Tehran's commitment in words and
deeds to end its support of the Assad regime and help
bring about the end of the horrifying civil war in
Syria. Iran's "professed" desire to engage its
neighbors constructively and contribute to regional
stability stands in total contrast to its continued
support of the murderous Assad regime.
As long as the civil war in Syria persists, and even
if ISIS is defeated in Iraq and loses much or even all
of its territorial gains, it still occupies massive
land swaths in Syria to which it can retreat and
continue to fight from to realize its goal.
It is also important that while the enmity between
Saudi Arabia and Iran is not likely to recede any time
soon, there is a temporary common interest between the
two. A commitment by Iran to assist in ending the
civil war in Syria and eventually allow the emergence
of a representative government in Damascus could ease
the tension between Saudi Arabia and Iran and
de-intensify the Sunni-Shiite divide.
The Saudis are as fearful of the spread of extremist
Jihadists and are particularly concerned about ISIS'
intention to target the monarchy as much as Iran is
concerned that ISIS' potential success will lead to
the establishment of an extremist Sunni state governed
by strict Sharia law next door. These two common
concerns may well create a thaw between the two
countries.
Finally, the use of American military forces against
ISIS is no longer avoidable. Without American military
support, Iraq and the entire region will face a long
period of violence and instability, which could draw
other countries into the conflict with menacing
implications.
Being that ISIS is on the move and is adept at
guerilla warfare, it will be extremely difficult to
bomb ISIS targets particularly because they hide among
civilians. This may necessitate some American special
forces on the ground, but the bulk of the forces will
have to come from the Iraqi military.
Paradoxically, the current conflict in Iraq and the
changing geopolitical dynamics could accelerate the
process of ending the civil war in Syria. To that end,
the US must seize upon this opening and spearhead the
delivery of weapons to the rebels to stop Assad from
continuing his indiscriminate bombing of rebel
hideouts while killing thousands of civilians in the
process.
For this reason, once the US commits to preventing
ISIS from achieving its goal, it cannot do so
incrementally. All countries in the region have a
common interest to bring an end to ISIS' unseemly
ambition. They must now set aside their differences
and rally under American leadership to achieve their
common objective.