This article
was written by Rafe al-Essawi and Atheel al-Nujaifi. Rafe al-Essawi is a former finance minister
and deputy prime minister of Iraq. Atheel al-Nujaifi is the governor of
Nineveh, a northern Iraqi province.
(Watchman comment: the situation in our
world is reminiscent of the 1930s. Friends, we are being swept up by a raging,
flooding river and being swept down stream. Soon the End Times will be upon us
and most people will be dumb struck when they realize what hit them…….as in the
days of Noah. I pray that Yeshua comes back now because if He doesn’t there
will be no Christians left in North Africa or the Middle East. This is indeed
our Holocaust.)
The situation in Iraq today is perilous,
particularly for Sunni Muslim Arabs. Their prospects for inclusion in Iraq’s
government and fair treatment from it have been declining since 2010, when Iraqiyya, the
nonsectarian coalition to which we belonged, drew more votes than any other
parliamentary bloc but was denied a chance to form a government. We might not
have succeeded, but letting us try would have built public trust in democracy.
Instead, Iran and the United States used
their influence to insist that Nuri Kamal al-Maliki remain prime minister. A
sectarian-minded Shiite Muslim with authoritarian tendencies, he also pressured
Iraq’s judiciary to decide in his favor. Since then, Mr. Maliki has detained
thousands of Sunnis without trial; pushed leading Sunnis out of the political
arena by accusing them of terrorism; stopped paying members of the Sunni
Awakening, the movement that fought Al Qaeda in Iraq in 2007; and labeled all
Sunnis as terrorists.
A request by provincial councils in
Salahuddin, Diyala and Nineveh to hold votes on how to reorganize as more
autonomous regions — as the Constitution allows — was rejected, and for a year
peaceful Sunni protests were met by violence. As Iraqi security forces killed
dozens of unarmed protesters, Mr. Maliki again bent the judiciary to his will,
leaving Sunnis to feel they could not receive justice.
Now the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria
(ISIS) has burst onto the stage well organized and funded: In Falluja early
this year, then Mosul last month, it seized territory, claiming to defend
Sunnis against Mr. Maliki’s Iranian-backed government.
The group’s ideology is a perversion of
Islam and an affront to our culture. Yet the group gets local support. The Sunni
tribes defeated Al Qaeda in Iraq, its predecessor, less than a decade ago.
Today, they cooperate with ISIS (which now calls itself the Islamic State) —
not as fanatics, but because they see it as the lesser of two evils, compared
with Mr. Maliki.
Meanwhile,
the government murders Sunni detainees and bombs civilian areas. The killing of
Sunnis by Iranian-backed Shiite militias and the presence of Iranian military
advisers on the ground deepen suspicion that Iraq’s government serves Iran, not
Iraqis. This pushes more Sunnis toward ISIS, increasing the threat it poses to
Iraq’s people and neighbors.
But Iraqis can change that. First, we need
a new prime minister. The Shiite parties must nominate a replacement for Mr.
Maliki; there are a number of capable candidates. Iraqi politicians also must
agree on a new balance between central authority and regional autonomy. The
formula should include arrangements satisfactory to Iraq’s Kurds, who already
have considerable local power; increased decentralization for the rest of the
country; and a new arrangement for managing and sharing the proceeds of Iraq’s
natural resources, particularly oil. Any agreement must include amnesty for the
tens of thousands of Sunnis detained without trial, the release from detention of
the Sunni politician Ahmed
al-Alwani, the end of the counterproductive de-Baathification program,
and the repealing of the counterterrorism law, which has been used as a pretext
to arrest Mr. Maliki’s Sunni rivals.
In addition, Parliament must reverse Mr.
Maliki’s politicization of the security forces and establish new local forces
to safeguard the population in Sunni areas, modeled after the Kurdish pesh
merga. Only Sunni forces, with local support, can defeat ISIS in the areas it
has seized.
The only armed forces permitted in Iraq
would be those officially sanctioned by the government. ISIS would be banned as a terrorist group; so
would Iranian-backed Shiite militias like Asaib al-Haq, Kataib Hezbollah and
the Badr Corps.
America’s support is crucial. A senior
American official — someone who has worked with our politicians, tribes and
reconcilable insurgent groups — should be appointed to reach out to Iraqi Sunni
leaders in and outside the country. We also need assistance to reform the Iraqi
security forces, in which America invested so heavily. The framework remains,
but the command and control structure must be restored. Americans can also help
vet Sunni recruits for the local forces.
(Watchman
comment: American help isn’t coming. Our recent history reflects that Americans
like to fight useless wars that waste our blood, treasure and reputation. Then
when we pull out we throw our friends to the wolves. Some examples are the Shah
of Iran, Vietnam and now Iraq? The Bushes and Obama help to de-stabilize Libya,
Syria and Iraq. Obama has moved on to new places to de-stabilize like the
Ukraine and our border with Mexico. Obama has left Iraq and Syria to Qatar,
Saudi Arabia and Iran to battle over. Don’t forget to follow the money these
wars are about natural resources, oil, natural gas and pipelines. Israel just
granted vast resources to George Soros and Rupert Murdoch in the Golan Heights
and other areas.)
Lastly, a regional conference should
address the threat to nation-states like Iraq caused by nonstate forces like
the ISIS and Shiite militias. Another concern is the hundreds of thousands of
displaced Iraqis. The government has given help to displaced Shiites but not to
Sunnis, who have gotten help from Saudi Arabia and the Kurdish regional
government.
Above all, we must move quickly. ISIS keeps
recruiting in Nineveh, and threatening anyone who won’t pledge loyalty. It has
displaced Christians from a province where they lived peacefully with Muslims
for over 1,400 years. But our diverse peoples can live together in harmony, as
they have in the past, and it is imperative that Iraq’s leaders start now to
build institutions to assure that.
Despite the horrors of our recent history,
we can pass through this difficult period — with help from our American
friends.
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