December 07, 2006

ISG Excerpts (I)

The Gelb-Biden approach rejected (p. 39)

The costs associated with devolving Iraq into three semiautonomous regions with loose central control would be too high. Because Iraq’s population is not neatly separated, regional boundaries cannot be easily drawn. All eighteen Iraqi provinces have mixed populations, as do Baghdad and most other major cities in Iraq. A rapid devolution could result in mass population movements, collapse of the Iraqi security forces, strengthening of militias, ethnic cleansing, destabilization of neighboring states, or attempts by neighboring states to dominate Iraqi regions. Iraqis, particularly Sunni Arabs, told us that such a division would confirm wider fears across the Arab world that the United States invaded Iraq to weaken a strong Arab state.

While such devolution is a possible consequence of continued instability in Iraq, we do not believe the United States should support this course as a policy goal or impose this outcome on the Iraqi state. If events were to move irreversibly in this direction, the United States should manage the situation to ameliorate humanitarian consequences, contain the spread of violence, and minimize regional instability. The United States should support as much as possible central control by governmental authorities in Baghdad, particularly on the question of oil revenues.

Posted by Gregory at December 7, 2006 02:52 AM
Comments


This would have been a good place to include some pious cant to the effect that Iraq is a sovereign state and should be allowed to determine it's internal political structure without outsided interference. In other words, plans for 'devolving Iraq into three semiautonomous regions' should have been rejected, not only or primarily as 'bad idea', but primarily as 'not our business'.

American political discourse frequently takes for granted that the internal affairs of weak, non-Western states are ours to dispose of as we see fit. I think most Americans underestimate the negative impact of such discourse.

Posted by: David Tomlin at December 7, 2006 05:29 PM | Permalink to this comment Permalink

About Belgravia Dispatch

Gregory Djerejian, an international lawyer and business executive, comments intermittently on global politics, finance & diplomacy at this site. The views expressed herein are solely his own and do not represent those of any organization.


More About the Author
Email the Author
Recent Entries
Search



The News
The Blogs
Foreign Affairs Commentariat
Law & Finance
Think Tanks
Security
Books
The City
Epicurean Corner
Archives
Syndicate this site:
XML RSS

Belgravia Dispatch Maintained by:
www.vikeny.com

Powered by