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electronicIraq.net
Opinion/Editorial
The Enigmatic Second Battle of Basra
Reidar Visser, Historiae
Mar 29, 2008
On the surface, the story may look plausible enough. A provincial
city rich in oil degenerates into mafia-style conditions affecting the
security of citizens as well as the national oil revenue; the central
government intervenes to clean up. This is how many in the media have
been reporting the latest clashes between government forces and
militiamen in Basra: the Maliki government has launched a security
operation with the single aim of getting rid of unruly militias.
Pundits with ties to the Bush administration have added that these are
essential “preparations” for this autumn’s provincial elections, or
moves to forestall Iranian influence in Basra, or both.
But on closer inspection, there are problems in these accounts.
Perhaps most importantly, there is a discrepancy between the
description of Basra as a city ruled by militias (in the plural) –
which is doubtless correct – and the battlefield facts of the ongoing
operations which seem to target only one of these militia groups, the
Mahdi Army loyal to Muqtada al-Sadr. Surely, if the aim was to make
Basra a safer place, it would have been logical to do something to also
stem the influence of the other militias loyal to the local competitors
of the Sadrists, the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI), as well as
the armed groups allied to the Fadila party (which have dominated the
oil protection services for a long time). But so far, only Sadrists
have complained about attacks by government forces.
Others may suggest that rather than having to do with the rule of
law, this is part of a wider operation in which Maliki in alliance with
ISCI are doing their best to marginalize their political enemies
locally – in preparation for local elections in October 2008, or with a
view to dominate the process of forming federal entities (which could
start next month, in April). Maybe it has been supported by Washington,
as compensation for the bitter pill which Dick Cheney brought with him
in the shape of a demand for early provincial elections? But whereas
that sort of interpretation certainly seemed valid during the first battle of Basra
(when Maliki arrived in Basra in late May 2006 and enforced a new
security regime that was applauded by ISCI and denounced by Fadila), it
does not quite make sense today.
Firstly, if the motive was the provincial elections or the
federalism question, the target should have been Fadila and not the
Sadrists. Basra is an exceedingly complex city (Shiite factions,
Shaykhis, Christians, secularists, Sunnis, tribal groups etc.), and the
overall electoral potential of the Sadrists there is probably
considerably less than what many analysts have predicted. In the
federalism question, the Sadrists are entirely on the sidelines, with
the director of the Sadrist office in the city recently complaining
that he was being kept in the dark about the project to make Basra a
stand-alone federal unit (as propagated by Fadila and some of the
secular leaders in the city in a scheme that challenges ISCI’s vision
of a single Shiite federal entity).
Secondly, there have been too many recent instances of conflict
between Maliki and ISCI on these issues for that interpretation to make
perfect sense. Increasingly, Maliki has associated himself with a more centralist current
in Iraqi parliamentary politics, sometimes challenging ISCI directly,
as seems to have happened during the process of adopting a law for the
existing (non-federated) governorates. Whereas ISCI since early 2008
has been more outspoken in its attack on any interference by the
central government in local affairs (much on the Kurdish pattern),
Maliki has often defended the vision of a reasonably coherent and
potent central government. In early March, ISCI demonstrators
criticised Maliki’s two security chiefs in Basra, General Mohan
al-Firayji and Abd al-Jalil Khalaf, the police commander.
A less obvious explanation that may nevertheless be worth pursuing
is Nuri al-Maliki’s attempts to build an independent power base in the
security services, to bolster his stature as prime minister (which ISCI
repeatedly has attacked), and to compensate for his Daawa party’s lack
of strong militias. While the media over the last days have reported
disagreements between Maliki and his two top security officials in
Basra (and even suggested their imminent dismissal), and despite the
fact that top brass commanders from Baghdad are now in charge of
operations, it may be more significant that for several weeks, both
General Mohan and Khalaf (the police chief) have been talking about a
forthcoming crackdown on militias (and on some occasions have singled
out the Sadrists for criticism.) Prior to the current manoeuvres
(codenamed “the attack of the knights” or sawlat al-fursan) there were more limited operations against Mahdist followers
of Ahmad al-Hasan in Basra back in January. Success in this kind of
moves against internal Shiite enemies could conceivably make Maliki
more immune against challenges to his premiership from ISCI (and also
an attractive partner in other governorates where the Sadrists are a
more formidable challenge), but it does not resolve the contradiction
between his own centralism (where the Sadrists would be a logical
partner) and the decentralism of ISCI. Also, the conciliatory
statements by several Sadrist parliamentarians and directors of the
provincial Sadrist offices in the first part of 2008 suggested that
many of them would prefer politics to battlefield; it seems like a
miscalculation by Maliki to spurn these overtures.
Still, there are probably few spots on this planet where the search
for mono-causality is more futile than Basra. One key player that has
so far refrained from showing its hand is Fadila, which controls the
governor position. Back in 2007 the party frequently criticised
Maliki’s security operatives in Basra, at one point even signalling
reluctance to the prospect of a handover from the British to the Iraqi
forces. (The party may have feared that Maliki’s attempt to oust them
from positions of power locally – an attempt that was also supported by
ISCI – would come to fruition as soon as the British forces were gone.)
But then, after the December 2007 handover to Iraqi control and a
subsequent “pact” between Basra’s main political parties, the surface
of local politics turned remarkably calm for a while. In January 2008,
Fadila publicly supported the crackdown on the Mahdists, but the party
has made no statement yet on the recent operations (although it is
reported that the Basra governor, Muhammad al-Waili, has recently met
with Maliki) and very recently reiterated its preference for a non-sectarian form of small-scale federalism.
Perhaps the most useful approach is to
compare the narratives of the parties involved. Maliki says this is a
clampdown on illegal militias involved in “oil smuggling”. ISCI also
highlights oil smuggling and expresses support for “the state”. The
British and the Americans seem to agree with this (even if it is truly
risky to engage in this sort of thing on the eve of the
Petraeus/Crocker hearings next month). The Sadrists complain about
highhandedness by a government allied to “the occupation”. This could
all suggest that Maliki and ISCI – fundamental ideological tensions
notwithstanding – have temporarily agreed to disagree about the
question of federalism and instead resolved that the Sadrists are their
common enemy. But until Fadila speaks, we will not know the true
significance of the second battle of Basra, what the implications are
for the local balance of power, and what this in turn means in terms of
the impact on the federalism issue and the question of Iranian
influence.
Reidar Visser, research fellow at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs. This piece originally appeared at Historiae.org.
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