Beware the ides of March

OK. Looks like the March 1 war timetable fer shootin’ is slip­ping thanks to those pesky French and Turk­ish demands to see some ID with Pres­i­dent Bush’s check(s). It’s now look­ing more and more like March 15 or so, as George over at War­blog­ging argued.
National Secu­rity Adviser Con­doleeza Rice appar­ently agrees, say­ing that Bush is “will­ing to wait until Hans Blix, one of two United Nations chief weapons inspec­tors, reports on Iraqi com­pli­ance on March 7.” A vote would come the next week, and then Bush can have his war, or, as the Times put it, “other offi­cials strongly hinted that mil­i­tary action could come imme­di­ately there­after.“
I still think I would have been right, call­ing March 1 as the start of hos­til­i­ties. I just didn’t expect the Turks to hold out like they did.

Some emails from the front and what the hell is happening with the opposition?

iraqmap.jpg

Over the week­end, I heard from a cou­ple of friends in the region about goings on there. The first is from a jour­nal­ist buddy based in Iraqi Kur­dis­tan work­ing for a major news­magazine. (I don’t want to scotch his access, so I won’t print his name.) The sec­ond is from Aykut Uzun, my dri­ver, trans­la­tor and fixer when we were being tailed by the Turk­ish police south of Diyarbakir.
My journo buddy tells me that I’m “not miss­ing much so far.” Also, the Kurds are over­whelm­ingly pro-war. “Talk to the Kurds about the reck­less geopo­lit­i­cal games W is play­ing and you are met with a blank stare and a story about Hal­abja,” he writes. “Ask the KDP, PUK or INC about the same thing and you get a lec­ture about the nefar­i­ous inter­ests of the French.“
He also pro­vides good logis­ti­cal infor­ma­tion and some alarm­ing news. The Syr­ian and Turk­ish bor­ders are closed right now, which I knew, but the route through Iran is open — for freak­ishly huge bribes. (He men­tions $5,000.) There’s also a rumor that Turkey is about to open the bor­der, but that is, as yet, just a rumor.
Aykut in Ankara is more pes­simistic. He works mostly as a tour guide, for which he got a four-year degree and it’s usu­ally good money, since tourism is the biggest indus­try in Turkey. Not now.
“Due to this fuc…g war, tourism busi­ness is very bad in Turkey now,” he writes. “So I can’t say that per­son­ally I am doing well.” He does men­tion the rumor that Turkey will open the bor­der, but it may be only for five days. Then he comes to the Turk­ish prepa­ra­tions for war and America’s deal-making.
“I don’t give any chance to the pos­si­bil­ity of Turkey’s rejec­tion of U.S. troops,” he writes. (Well, it looks like he’s right. Mon­day may see the deal con­sum­mated.) “If she [Turkey] doesn’t allow, the eco­nomic pro­gram that has been con­tin­ued with IMF after the last cri­sis in 2001 will be dam­aged very badly. As every­body knows, the U.S. is very effi­cient [he means influ­en­tial] with the IMF, and Turkey needs the help of it.“

It seems Turkey is about to over­es­ti­mate U.S. patience, but still I believe U.S. needs Turkey for this war. The other pos­si­bil­i­ties are much more expen­sive and dif­fi­cult… Some ana­lysts claim that U.S. can do the oper­a­tion with­out Turkey, but this would cost 40 or 50 bil­lion dol­lars more to her. So you see we are fair. We want half of this… Turkey is dri­ving such a hard bar­gain, because we took a big les­son [I think he means “loss”] from the first Gulf War. U.S. had promised us to reim­burse our losses which would occur after the war. You are the one who knows Turkey’s losses. You talked with the peo­ple in south­east Turkey. Now the Turk­ish gov­ern­ment wants a “writ­ten agreement.”

After he wrote this email, the Turks and Amer­i­cans seemed close to an agree­ment that would give Turkey $5 bil­lion grants and $10 mil­lion in loans, with a bridge loan imme­di­ately avail­able to help pump the Turk­ish econ­omy once the shoot­ing starts.
It’s worth not­ing that the cash fig­ures men­tioned in the Times story are less than were being reported ear­lier this week. And the story never comes out and says a deal for Iraqi Kur­dis­tan is in the works, but con­sid­er­ing the quotes from Turk­ish For­eign Min­is­ter Yasar Yakis, it’s pretty obvi­ous that’s what’s hap­pen­ing.
“A Kur­dis­tan should not be set up,” Yakis said. The Times also heav­ily reports Turk­ish con­cerns regard­ing Iraqi Kur­dis­tan. Two con­cerns were that U.S. weapons don’t fall into Kur­dish hands and that Turk­ish troops be under Turk­ish com­mand (This is a big one, and con­tra­dicts reports from ear­lier this week that Turk­ish troops would be under Amer­i­can com­mand.)
Things are quickly get­ting nasty in Iraqi Kur­dis­tan.

No one wants another fight, of course,” Hoshi­yar Zebari, spokesman for the Kur­dish Demo­c­ra­tic Party, one of the two main Kur­dish polit­i­cal groups, told reporters in Arbil on Sun­day.
“But if there’s a forced incur­sion, done under the pre­text of ‘I’m going to give you forced aid’, then believe me there will be uncon­trolled clashes,” he said.
“And it will be bad for the image of the United States, Britain and other coun­tries who want to help Iraq, to see two of their allies, Turkey and Kur­dis­tan, at each other’s throats.“
In Tehran, Iran­ian Kurd par­lia­men­tar­i­ans also voiced con­cern about Turk­ish inten­tions in Iraq and accused Ankara of seek­ing to con­trol Kirkuk and Mosul, once part of the Ottoman empire.
The 22-strong Iran­ian Kur­dish par­lia­men­tary fac­tion wrote to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Euro­pean Union lead­ers and Iran­ian Pres­i­dent Moham­mad Khatami.
“Who in the world does not know that Turks have a desire for Kirkuk oil and annex­a­tion of Kirkuk and Mosul to their soil?” the let­ters said. “Autho­riz­ing a Turk­ish mil­i­tary pres­ence in Iraqi Kur­dis­tan means autho­riz­ing geno­cide and ter­mi­na­tion of Iraq’s ter­ri­to­r­ial integrity.”

And as things get nas­tier in Kur­dis­tan, Iraqi National Con­gress front­man Ahmed Cha­l­abi is get­ting increas­ingly bit­ter over what looks to be a rapidly decreas­ing role for him­self and his orga­ni­za­tion.
Two weeks ago, the White House said Cha­l­abi will be leader of a tran­si­tional coali­tion gov­ern­ment that will take over from Gen. Tommy Franks when the shoot­ing stops. How­ever, the Wash­ing­ton Post reported a few days ago that “Once secu­rity was estab­lished and weapons of mass destruc­tion were located and dis­abled, a U.S. admin­is­tra­tor would run the civil­ian gov­ern­ment and direct recon­struc­tion and human­i­tar­ian aid.” Cha­l­abi is, pre­dictably, dis­tressed by this turn of events. In an op-ed for Daily Tele­graph, he wrote, “The lead­er­ship and gov­er­nance of Iraq is, with­out excep­tion, an exclu­sive right of the Iraqi peo­ple … There must be no gap in the sov­er­eignty over Iraq by Iraqis. We reject notions of for­eign mil­i­tary gov­ern­ment or United Nations admin­is­tra­tion for Iraq.“
He con­tin­ues and writes that his tran­si­tional gov­ern­ment should assume sov­er­eignty “the moment” Sad­dam is removed, but admit­ted that his gov­ern­ment would be will­ing to work with the U.S. mil­i­tary to estab­lish order, secure the bor­der, etc. He dis­misses the idea of Iraq as an Arab Yugoslavia as a “myth” borne of the “con­ve­nient pre­con­cep­tion that fits the West­ern image of unruly and war­ring tribes.“
“There is no record in the his­tory of our land of a Shia vil­lage attack­ing a Sunni vil­lage or an Arab quar­ter attack­ing a Kur­dish quar­ter,” he writes. (Yes, but there is a lot on record about Kurds attack­ing other Kurds when the PUK and the KDP warred over smug­gling tar­iffs in 1995 – 96.)
It should be noted that the Guardian story reports him as angry over the instal­la­tion of a mil­i­tary gov­er­nor, pre­sum­ably Franks. If the Iraqi oppo­si­tion objects to a mil­i­tary gov­er­nor post-Saddam, they likely will be even less happy with a U.S. civil­ian admin­is­tra­tor as a fur­ther step to be taken before the coun­try is handed over to the INC.
Aya­tol­lah Moham­mad Baqir al-Hakim, leader of the Iran-backed Supreme Coun­cil of Islamic Rev­o­lu­tion in Iraq (SCIRI), who recently ordered 5,000 SCIRI troops into Iraqi Kur­dis­tan, said Iraqis would resist, per­haps vio­lently, any attempt to impose a gov­ern­ment on them.
“If the Amer­i­cans do this, they will dis­cover this is a mis­take,” Hakim said.
So what’s the White House’s game? Why are these “plans” and “blue­prints” get­ting leaked espe­cially when the media reports of the plans are send­ing the Iraqi oppo­si­tion into a grand mal tizzy?
The Iraqi oppo­si­tion, divided as it is, doesn’t appear qual­i­fied enough to run a taco stand, much less run a coun­try that’s been dev­as­tated by two, com­ing up on three, wars and 12 years of sanc­tions since 1980. And that’s pretty much been the State Department’s objec­tion to the Iraqi oppo­si­tion all along. Fur­ther­more, Cha­l­abi is dis­trusted by the Depart­ment of State, the CIA and most of the rest of the for­eign pol­icy estab­lish­ment. He seems a bit too eager, for some­one con­victed in Jor­dan of finan­cial fraud and sen­tenced to 22 years of hard labor, to get his hands on the levers of power — and the purse strings — of oil-rich Iraq. But the civil­ian hawks run­ning the war plan­ning, such as Paul Wol­fowitz and Richard Perle, are big-time back­ers of Cha­l­abi. Could the leak­ing of the rebuild­ing ideas be part of the ongo­ing war between Colin Pow­ell at State and Rums­feld, Wol­fowitz at the DoD and Perle at the Defense Pol­icy Board? Since the admin­is­tra­tion of Iraq would, pre­sum­ably, fall to the State Depart­ment after the mil­i­tary is done with it, per­haps the goal may be to dis­credit the INC — and Cha­l­abi in par­tic­u­lar — so that State, which never wanted this headache to begin with, can have a freer hand in run­ning the place with­out hav­ing to deal with the INC.

War pushed back to mid-March?

The Wash­ing­ton Times is report­ing that war plan­ners have pushed back the start of Gulf War Redux to mid-March due to diplo­matic snags and dif­fi­culty in mov­ing heavy infantry divi­sions.
In addi­tion to the road­blocks thrown up by France and Ger­many, as well as con­tin­ued foot-dragging by other mem­bers of the U.N. Secu­rity Coun­cil, NATO ally Turkey is upping its demand for aid in return for the sta­tion­ing of up to 40,000 Amer­i­can troops in a north­ern front.
Wash­ing­ton has report­edly offered Ankara grants of $6 bil­lion and loans of up to $20 bil­lion in exchange for its sup­port, and has expressed frus­tra­tion over Turkey’s fail­ure to accept the deal. U.S. Sec­re­tary of State Colin Pow­ell has said he wants an answer by the end of the day.
The Turks are being excep­tion­ally savvy, how­ever.
“We have found the fig­ures insuf­fi­cient and we are not look­ing favourably at the offer,” Econ­omy Min­is­ter Ali Baba­can told the Cumhuriyet news­pa­per. He also con­cern that while the Wash­ing­ton has told Ankara that any war would be short, con­gres­sional approval for the grants and loans could take between six and eight weeks.
“What if the oper­a­tion is over before the com­ple­tion of the con­gres­sional process and Con­gress tells us ‘Sorry’?” he said. “That is why a writ­ten deal is a must.“
The Turks prob­a­bly watched how the United States dealt with Pak­istan. In exchange for help in Afghanistan and against Al Qa’ida, Pak­istan was rewarded with ter­ror attacks and the con­tin­u­a­tion of strict lim­its on Pakistan-made clothes. Mind you, this was after Bush per­son­ally promised Gen. Mushar­raf that the United States would lift import restric­tions. Instead, Bush dropped the plan in Dec. 2001 when, fac­ing immi­nent defeat in the House of his broad pack­age of trade leg­is­la­tion, he decided to woo six law­mak­ers from tex­tile states by promis­ing them he would stiff Pak­istan.
The Wash­ing­ton Times says time is of the essence for the Amer­i­cans, how­ever, because heavy armor must be shipped across the Atlantic. I’ve been told how­ever, that much of the heavy armor used has been pre-positioned through­out the 1990s in order to avoid this kind of broadly telegraphed buildup. I’m not sure what to make of this bit of data.

Houston, we have a problem”

texas.gifA cou­ple of days ago, I men­tioned that Bagh­dad was code named “Phase-1 Hous­ton.” Well, addi­tional sources in the gov­ern­ment and mil­i­tary have told me that all tar­gets in Bagh­dad have code names based on places in … Texas.
I’ll let that sink in for a moment.
Still with me? if it doesn’t worry you, if it doesn’t call into ques­tion the seri­ous­ness of the war plan­ners, it should.
Obvi­ously, there’s noth­ing wrong with code names for tar­gets. It’s SOP for the mil­i­tary and Omaha Beach at Nor­mandy is prob­a­bly the most famous, I’d guess. But you really have to won­der at either the imma­tu­rity or the pro­found polit­i­cal tone deaf­ness of war plan­ners who code name tar­gets in Bagh­dad after places in the commander-in-chief’s home state. Pres­i­dent Bush already suf­fers around the world, and espe­cially in the Arab world, from the per­cep­tion that he’s fin­ish­ing his father’s busi­ness, that this is a per­sonal vendetta against the man who tried to kill his dad.
Vendet­tas are fine, I sup­pose, if you live in 17th cen­tury France where per­sonal slights were set­tled by duels, but they aren’t kosher when you’re the pres­i­dent of the United States com­mand­ing a ter­ri­ble arse­nal.
OK. Let’s assume this isn’t some kind of Hat­fields and McCoys with mus­taches (well, one mus­tache, any­way.) Let’s assume this really is about the secu­rity of the United States. If you’re at all con­cerned about world opin­ion, espe­cially in the region you’re about to bomb the hell out of and kill thou­sands of inno­cent peo­ple, shouldn’t you be a lit­tle more, I don’t know, con­cerned about how this all looks?
I know, I know. Mil­i­tary tar­get codes aren’t for pub­lic con­sump­tion and polit­i­cal con­sid­er­a­tions don’t really enter into it. OK, then. Obvi­ously, nam­ing the Ba’athist Party HQ after Austin or Saddam’s palace after Nacog­doches is a lit­tle nod to your commander-in-chief. It’s a lit­tle, “Hey! We’re think­ing of ya!” from the plan­ners. In short, it’s an inside joke.
War is no joke. Peo­ple will die, prob­a­bly in the thou­sands, and the places where they will soon be incin­er­ated are a bit of a bon mot to the CinC.
At the peace protests over the week­end, I saw signs that read, “Bomb Texas — It Has Oil Too.” I found it clever; now I just feel sick.

U.S. to conquered Iraqis: Pay up

You know, every night I go to sleep think­ing that the events of the day had pissed me off to such an extent that there was no way I could get more dis­grun­tled at the venal­ity of the Bush admin­is­tra­tion. And every morn­ing I get up, read the news­pa­pers and wires and I’m inevitably proven wrong.
The White House has said Iraq’s oil wealth will be used to pay for its own recon­struc­tion fol­low­ing a U.S. inva­sion.
“Iraq, unlike Afghanistan, is a rather wealthy coun­try,” said White House spokesman Ari Fleis­cher. “Iraq has tremen­dous resources that belong to the Iraqi peo­ple. And so there are a vari­ety (of) means that Iraq has to be able to shoul­der much of the bur­den for their own recon­struc­tion.“
Iraq has tremen­dous resources that belong to the Iraqi peo­ple. Yes, and why should the Iraqis be forced, in effect, to pay for the bombs that will soon rain down upon their heads? And this nugget from Fleis­cher: “It is, of course, the inten­tion of the United States gov­ern­ment to make cer­tain the peo­ple of Iraq are not the vic­tims in a war that would have been started by their lead­ers.“
I stand, mouth agape, at the audac­ity of the empha­sized quote. Last time I checked, Bush was argu­ing for “pre-emptive defense,” which sure sounds like a ratio­nale for start­ing a war.
But I digress. “Fleis­cher also pointed out that once Iraq is dis­armed and Sad­dam is out of office, there will be no rea­son to con­tinue to impose eco­nomic sanc­tions on Bagh­dad and trade will be reopened with Iraq.“
What he actu­ally said was, “Once sanc­tions are lifted from Iraq, that pro­vides a lot more means for the rebuild­ing and the recon­struc­tion of Iraq.“
This is a exactly what the Iraqi oppo­si­tion does not want. As Feisal al-Istrabadi, a found­ing mem­ber of the Iraqi Forum for Democ­racy said last Mon­day at Colum­bia, the U.N. should not lift the sanc­tions but instead sus­pend them. The ulti­mate lift­ing of the sanc­tions is the incen­tive for Iraq to truly democ­ra­tize.
Note that Fleis­cher didn’t say “sus­pend;” he said “lifted.” And the give and take of the press con­fer­ence yes­ter­day, at which all of this came about, leaves one with the impres­sion that the White House is all about lift­ing the sanc­tions as opposed to sus­pend­ing them. This is a cru­cial point, obvi­ously, because the sanc­tions allow for the United Nations to man­age the finances of Iraq as a trust. While Sad­dam has man­aged to squir­rel away bil­lions, by and large the national bud­get is not fully con­trolled by his gov­ern­ment.
Istra­badi wants to avoid mak­ing the pro­vi­sional gov­ern­ment, pre­sum­ably headed by financier Ahmed Cha­l­abi, “pro­vi­sional” in the Iraqi sense of the word — i.e., in power for years and years. (Since 1968, the con­sti­tu­tions gov­ern­ing Iraq have been pro­vi­sional con­sti­tu­tions and not per­ma­nent. Thus, there is no per­ma­nent rule of law.) By lift­ing the sanc­tions imme­di­ately, you grant a tem­po­rary gov­ern­ment access to bil­lions in oil rev­enues, pre­sum­ably to do with what they will.
“You can­not hand over the purse strings of Iraq,” Istra­badi warned. “Sad­dam did not imme­di­ately rule by fear. He co-opted the elite dur­ing the 1960s and ?70s by drown­ing them in cash.“
So let’s look at the smoke sig­nals from Wash­ing­ton and other places:

  1. Cha­l­abi is in Iraq and pre­pared to declare a pro­vi­sional gov­ern­ment in Erbil;

  2. The Kurds (and oth­ers) are under the impres­sion that there will be no democ­racy imme­di­ately forth­com­ing; (Peter W. Gal­brait has his thoughts on this sub­ject here. He basi­cally blames the Turks);
  3. Fleischer’s advo­cacy for lift­ing the sanc­tions, in order to get the Iraqi oil wells online quickly so that Iraq can pay for its own recon­struc­tion, will deliver the funds pre­cisely to the peo­ple with a shady his­tory finan­cial his­tory and a high stake in reman­ing in power since they’ve been in the polit­i­cal wilder­ness for 20+ years (in the case of Chalabi.)

Fleis­cher deftly side­stepped just this ques­tion of oil money and Iraqi gov­ern­ments in this exchange:

Q If the Iraqi peo­ple are going to largely be respon­si­ble for pay­ing for their own recon­struc­tion, will they be given a lot of free­dom, in terms of how that recon­struc­tion is going to be car­ried out? Or are we going to kind of guide them and tell them what needs to be done?
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, I think what’s going to emerge will be a gov­ern­ment of the Iraqi peo­ple that comes from both inside Iraq and out­side Iraq. There are no short­age of peo­ple who are ded­i­cated to a dif­fer­ent route for Iraq. And I think also one of the great issues that will be seen — if this does come to war — is how, when peo­ple have the abil­ity to be free, they exer­cise that right to be free. The Iraqi peo­ple have lived under tyranny and under dic­ta­tor­ship. And as the nations of East Europe have shown us just recently, when the yolk of dic­ta­tor­ship is removed, people’s God-given rights to free­dom emerge. And the Pres­i­dent believes that that will be the case in Iraq.

Fleischer’s dodge and the pre­vi­ous points add up a weak pup­pet gov­ern­ment eas­ily con­trolled, depen­dent upon the United States and democ­rac­tic in name only. Hardly the bea­con of free­dom to the rest of the Mid­dle East that the White House claims Iraq can become. But then, a bea­con of free­dom and self-determination doesn’t fit neatly with the administration’s plans for the region.