The Missing Context:
‘Islamic State’ Sectarianism Is Not Coincidental
Consider this comical
scene described by Peter Van Buren, a former US diplomat, who was
deployed to Iraq on a 12-month assignment in 2009-10:
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Peter Van Buren. |
Peter Van Buren led two
Department of State teams assigned with the abstract mission of the
"reconstruction" of Iraq, which was destroyed in the US-led
wars and sanctions. He describes the reconstruction of Iraq as such:
"In practice, that
meant paying for schools that would never be completed, setting up
pastry shops on streets without water or electricity, and conducting
endless propaganda events on Washington-generated themes of the week
(‘small business,’ ‘women’s empowerment,’ ‘democracy
building.’)"
As for the comical scene:
"We even organized awkward soccer matches, where American
taxpayer money was used to coerce reluctant Sunni teams into facing
off against hesitant Shiite ones in hopes that, somehow, the chaos
created by the American invasion could be ameliorated on the playing
field."
Of course, there is
nothing funny about it when seen in context. The entire American
nation-building experiment was in fact a political swindle engulfed
by many horrifying episodes, starting with the dissolving of the
country’s army, entire official institutions and the construction
of an alternative political class that was essentially sectarian.
Take the Iraqi Governing
Council (IGC), which was founded in July 2003 as an example. The
actual ruler of Iraq was the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA),
headed first by General Jay Garner, then by Paul Bremer, who,
effectively was the governor of Iraq. The figureheads of the IGC were
mostly a conglomerate of pro-US Iraqi individuals with a sinister
sectarian past.
This is particularly
important, for when Bremer began mutilating Iraqi society as dictated
to him from Washington, the IGC was the first real sign of the
American vision for Iraq with a sectarian identity. The council was
made of 13 Shias, five Sunnis, five Kurds, a Turkmen and an Assyrian.
One would not dwell on the
sectarian formation of the US-ruled Iraq if such vulgar sectarianism
were embedded in the collective psyche of Iraqi society. But, perhaps
surprisingly, this is not the case.
Fanar Haddad, author of
Sectarianism in Iraq: Antagonistic Visions of Unity, like other
perceptive historians, doesn’t buy into the "ancient hatred"
line between Sunnis and Shia. “The roots of sectarian conflict
aren’t that deep in Iraq,” he said in a recent interview.
Between the establishment
of the modern Iraqi state in 1921 and for over 80 years, “the
default setting (In Iraq) was
coexistence.” Haddad argues that "Post-2003 Iraq ..identity
politics have been the norm rather than an anomaly because they’re
part of the system by design."
That "design"
was not put in place arbitrarily. The conventional wisdom is that the
US army is better seen as a “liberator” than an invader. The Shia
community was supposedly being liberated from an oppressive Sunni
minority. The “liberated” were armed and empowered to fight the
“Sunni insurgency” throughout the country. The "Sunni
discourse," laden with such terminology as the "Sunni
Triangle" and "Sunni insurgents" and such, was a
defining component of the American media and government perception of
the war. In fact, there was no insurgency per se, but an organic
Iraqi resistance to the US-led invasion.
The design had in fact
served its purposes, but not for long. Iraqis turned against one
another, as US troops mostly watched the chaotic scene from behind
the well-fortified Green Zone. When it turned out that the US public
still found the price of occupation too costly to bear, the US
redeployed out of Iraq, leaving behind a broken society. By then,
there were no more Shia vs. Sunni awkward football matches, but
rather an atrocious conflict that had claimed too many innocent lives
to even be able count.
True, the Americans didn’t
create Iraqi sectarianism. The latter always brewed beneath the
surface. However, sectarianism and other manifestations of identity
politics in Iraq were always overpowered by a dominant sense of Iraqi
nationalism, which was violently destroyed and ripped apart by US
firepower starting March 2003. But what the American truly founded in
Iraq was Sunni militancy, a concept that has, till recently been
alien to the Middle East.
Being the majority among
Muslim societies as a whole, Sunnis rarely identified as such.
Generally, minorities tend to ascribe to various group memberships as
a form of self-preservation. Majorities feel no such need. Al-Qaeda
for example, seldom made such references to being a Sunni group, and
its targeting of Shia and others was not part of its original
mission. Even its violent references to other groups were made in
specific political contexts: they referred to the "Crusaders"
when they mentioned US military presence in the region, and to Jews,
in reference to Israel. The group used terror to achieve what was
essentially political objectives.
But even al-Qaeda identity
began changing after the US invasion of Iraq. One could make the
argument that the link between the original al-Qaeda and current
group known as the Islamic State (IS) is Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. The
Jordanian-born militant was the founder of al-Tawhid wa al-Jihad
group, and didn’t join al-Qaeda officially until 2004. A merger had
then taken place, resulting in the creation of al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI)
While Zarqawi’s move to
Iraq had originally targeted the US occupation, the nature of his
mission was quickly redefined by the extremely violent sectarian
nature of the conflict. He declared "war" on the Shia in
2005, and was killed a few months later at the height of the civil
war.
Zarqawi was so violent in
his sectarian war to the extent that al-Qaeda leaders were allegedly
irritated with him. The core al-Qaeda leadership which imposed itself
as the guardians of the Muslim ummah (nation) could have been wary
that a sectarian war would fundamentally change the nature of the
conflict – a direction they deemed dangerous.
If these dialectics ever
existed, they are no longer relevant today. The Syrian civil war was
the perfect landscape for sectarian movements to operate, and, in
fact, evolve. By then, AQI had merged with the Mujahideen Shura
Council resulting in the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI), then the Levant
(ISIL), which eventually declared a Sunni-centered Caliphate on land
it occupied in Syria and, more recently in Iraq. It now simply calls
itself the Islamic State (IS).
Sunni militancy (as in
groups operating on the central premise of being Sunni) is a
particularly unique concept in history. What makes IS an essential
sectarian phenomenon with extremely violent consequences is that it
was born into an exceptionally sectarian environment, and could only
operate within the existing rules.
To destroy sectarian
identities prevalent in the Middle East region today, the rules would
have to be redesigned, not by Paul Bremer type figures, but through
the creation of new political horizons, where fledgling democracies
are permitted to operate in safe environments, and where national
identities are reanimated to meet the common priorities of the Arab
peoples.
While the US-led coalition
can indeed inflect much damage on IS and eventually claim some sort
of victory, they will ultimately exasperate the sectarian tension
that will spill over to other Middle Eastern nations.
Credit to Ramzy, you know the madness of the Mid East Crisis over the decades, hope to meet you on my next trip to Jurusalem.
Ramzy Baroud
(www.ramzybaroud.net) is a media consultant, an
internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of
Palestine Chronicle.com. His latest book is My Father was A Freedom
Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story
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