Displaced Sunni people, who fled the violence in the city of Ramadi, arrive at the outskirts of Baghdad, April 17, 2015. Iraqi security forces fought Islamic State militants at the gates of the western city of Ramadi on Friday, and local authorities warned it was in danger of falling unless reinforcements arrived soon. REUTERS/Stringer
Christine van Den Toorn, Foreign Policy: High Noon in Iraq’s Wild West
The Islamic State is finally being forced out of the country, but anarchy is taking over.
The liberation of towns from the Islamic State has had the surprising effect on my Iraqi friends of making them more despondent than they were before. When they are asked when things will turn around, they shrug and say Allah karim, akin to the English expression “when pigs fly.” Just after Sinjar was “liberated,” my former student from there sent me pictures of his family’s Friday lunch spread before and after they devoured it, labeling them Sinjar “before liberation” and “after liberation.”
Iraq is now face-to-face with the classic “day after” dilemma. Many of its towns are demolished and there is no money to rebuild. There is no agreement on which groups should secure and govern the areas and who gets to go back. The most visceral and volatile barrier is the newfound distrust among the local populations of liberated areas, who see one another as collaborators, bystanders or victims of the Islamic State. Left unattended, these “day after” dynamics will — and have already — lead to internecine conflict and political gridlock that will undermine battlefield victories, similar to what happened in 2010 when military successes of the Sahwa, or Sunni Awakening militias, against Al Qaeda in Iraq were squandered due to a lack of lasting national and local political deals.
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WNU Editor: Absent any political - sectarian reconciliation ... peace is impossible. Sighhh .... the sad reality of much of the Middle East.
2 comments:
Why is separatism not an answer here? Why does the west insist on colonial borders that do not work. Wouldn't they make more money in a peaceful middle east than one racked with war and death? Even the mafia knows that.
The Mafia dumps toxins in the watershed for a quick buck.
Do you want an East & West Baghdad?
It could have worked but now separate countries may be the only way.
Were the Ottoman Turks divisions any better?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Administrative_divisions_of_the_Ottoman_Empire
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