Partition
of Iraq and Syria into Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish
Mini-states
US-backed Iraqi forces recapture Ramadi from ISIS
By James Cogan
December 29, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "WSWS
" -- The Iraqi government and its prime minister,
Haider al-Abadi, have announced that its troops,
backed by US air strikes, have driven Islamic State
of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) out of Ramadi, the capital
of the country’s western province of Anbar.
Abadi’s
boasting on Twitter of the “liberation” of Ramadi,
combined with celebrations on state media, follows
months of intense bombardment by US war planes and
weeks of street-to-street fighting by US armed and
trained Iraqi special forces units.
US military
spokesman Colonel Steven Warren revealed in a press
statement that at least 630 air strikes had been
launched against ISIS targets in Ramadi since July.
More than 30 were carried out in the past week to
support Iraqi troops as they pushed toward the main
government complex in the city centre.
No official
estimates have been released of either government or
ISIS casualties, or the death toll among the Ramadi
residents who had not fled. As few as 400 ISIS
fighters were estimated to be defending the city,
seeking to prevent the government advance with
little more than explosives and sniper fire. Reuters
was told that 93 government troops were admitted to
Baghdad hospitals on Sunday alone.
The city
itself is in ruin. Even the sanitised media footage
shows utter devastation to blocks of residential
housing. A spokesman for the government-endorsed
Anbar provincial council, Eid al-Karboly, told the
Washington Post: “All the infrastructure of
the city has been destroyed. It will take years to
return life to the city.” Karboly estimated that 80
percent of all homes are damaged to some degree.
Many of the
buildings that have been destroyed in the current
efforts to retake Ramadi were only rebuilt in the
last seven years, after being reduced to rubble
during the US occupation of Iraq.
Anbar
province was one of the centres of resistance to the
US invasion. Both Ramadi and Fallujah, the other
major city in the province, were bloody battlefields
between American troops and Iraqi insurgents on
repeated occasions between 2004 and 2007. Fighting
was only brought to an end by the so-called
“Awakening” policy of the US military, which
effectively involved buying off the tribal leaders
of many of the insurgents and placing tens of
thousands of resistance fighters on the US-funded
Iraqi government payroll.
The growth
of support for ISIS in western Iraq stemmed in large
part from the decision by the Baghdad government,
which is dominated by religious-based Shiite
parties, to systematically reduce support for the
predominantly Sunni militias in Anbar after the US
withdrawal at the end of 2011. Sunni-based political
parties and Anbar tribal leaders were subsequently
persecuted.
Amid
hostility toward the sectarian policies of the
Shiite government, areas of Fallujah and Ramadi were
taken over by fighters declaring allegiance to ISIS
in early 2014. At the time, the actions of the
extremist Sunni movement against the Baghdad regime
enjoyed the tacit sympathy, if not overt support, of
many of the tribal leaderships that had enlisted
into the US “Awakening.” Former US-funded tribal
fighters provided much of the manpower and military
expertise that ISIS employed to capture most of
Anbar and the key northern Iraqi city of Mosul in
July 2014, where they routed tens of thousands of
poorly-motivated, US-trained government troops.
The last
sectors of Ramadi came under complete ISIS control
in May 2015. As in Mosul, government forces
retreated in disarray, provoking US Secretary of
Defense Ashton Carter to publicly denounce the Iraqi
Army for “a lack of will to fight.”
The
recapture of the city appears linked to a new set of
deals and pay-offs that US officials have struck
with the Anbar tribal leaderships, who either have
been alienated by ISIS or have concluded it is a
lost cause. Daniel Byman, an American analyst of
Islamic extremist movements, told the New York
Times yesterday that the Anbar tribes “want a
high degree of independence, but they also want to
be on the side of the winners.”
The Iraqi
government has stressed that the forces used to
assault Ramadi were not made up of the largely
Shiite troops, some commanded by Iranian officers,
which have borne the brunt of defending Baghdad and
surrounding areas from ISIS over the past year.
Instead, they were a combination of units that have
been “retrained” over recent months by US and
Australian advisors and what the Wall Street
Journal described as a US-backed
“thousands-strong force of local Sunni tribal
fighters.”
Preparations are now underway for offensives by the
same forces to seize back control of Fallujah, as
well as, ultimately, Mosul and other ISIS-held towns
and villages in the northern province of Nineveh.
Reports
indicate that the Sunni tribal force will be handed
control of Ramadi once it is fully cleared of ISIS
fighters and that the Iraqi Army will withdraw. Such
a policy dovetails with the widespread discussion in
US and European military and strategic circles that
the only way to maintain control over the oil-rich
Middle East—after more than a decade of military
setbacks and debacles for US policy—is the partition
of Iraq and Syria into Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish
mini-states.
US-Israeli
strategist Barak Mendelsohn bluntly headlined a
comment in the November edition of Foreign
Affairs magazine, “Divide and Conquer in Syria
and Iraq: Why the West Should Plan for a Partition.”
Mendelsohn declared that the US and the European
powers should carve out an “independent Sunni state
that would link Sunni-dominated territories on both
sides of the border,” while leaving the Russian and
Iranian-backed Syrian government of President Bashar
al-Assad in control of a small Shiite and Christian
enclave centred on Damascus.
Other
proposals include carving out the majority
Kurdish-populated northern provinces of both Iraq
and Syria into another statelet—a prospect that is
ferociously opposed by the Turkish and Iranian
governments, which fear an upsurge of separatist
sentiment in their Kurdish regions.
The
divisions that were fomented by the US occupation in
Iraq to weaken resistance, and then to provoke civil
war in Syria against the Assad government, are
already responsible for the deaths of hundreds of
thousands and forcing millions in both countries to
flee their homes. The fact that American and
European strategists are contemplating redrawing
borders, entrenching sectarian and ethnic conflicts
and, most likely, triggering new wars, is testimony
to the sheer criminality of imperialist policy in
the Middle East.
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