by Daryl » Wed 11 Jan 2006, 10:14:24
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('evilgenius', 'w')hy didn't they use a proxy instead of so totally placing the geo-political future of the US on the line?
I reckon the only proxy they wanted to back was the only proxy they couldn't back. I think they wanted to back the Iraqi Sunnis, the natural ally to the US's non-Jewish state best friend in the region - Saudi Arabia.
Good question. I don't know if it is really answerable. The Kurds were the natural choice to conduct an Afghanistan-style proxy coup. It could have been done, despite really, really pissing off Turkey. The problem is that almost any way you prosecuted the war with Iraq you were going to be facing the possibility of civil war. I think right away the US decided to throw in with the Shia because it played in better with the liberation, democracy propaganda. This was especially important as no WMD were found. Also, if you think the Sunni insurgency is tough, it's nothing compared to the chaos the Shia could have put together. Right now, 80 per cent of the country is pacified. We are facing a terrorist-style-only insurgency without a real cause (restoration of Bathism?). If it wasn't for the consistent terrorist acts timed to the 24 hours news cycle, flamed by the anti-Bush press, things wouldn't seem so dire to folks.
There are still alot of bad outcomes possible in Iraq. A real shooting civil war with US troops getting cut down in the crossfire. A Iranian tilting Shia theocracy that invites US troops out. Both would be not good for US standing and PR. Even in the case of those bad outcomes in Iraq, the US has still accomplished some important long term strategic goals.
For example, they repositioned several armored divisions and their supply chain permanently from European and US bases to bases in the Persian Gulf. Don't underestimate how difficult this is to do. You may remember it took the US military a full year to accomplish this, and that was moving double-time. Hopefully, the actual troop levels can be drawn down drastically, but the equipment and infrastructure for rapid redeployment will remain indefinitely. Whether these bases end up being located in Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar or "Kurdistan" isn't a critical issue. Although it would be a major accomplishment if they could remain outside the borders of Saudi Arabia. Keeping infidels out of the Holy Land severly undermines Al Queda and greatly reduces the threat of a Wahhabist coup in SA. This is an underappreciated accomplishment of the Iraq War already. It was one of the major unstated rationales for the invasion of Iraq, IMHO.
I don't think the "geopolitical future", as you say, of the US can be evaluated just on the basis of what government ends up ruling Iraq. I think the US was looking 20, 30, 50 years out when they initiated this policy. They know Peak Oil is going to send oil prices much, much higher. The amount of wealth pouring into the region is going to increase exponentially. The area needs to be actively policed or some very bad people are going to end up controlling that wealth. We should have woken up in 91 when Saddam made a grab for the whole pie. Especially with the Wahhabists around and a nuclear armed Israel close by. Talk about a powder keg. Again, the lesson of 9-11 was that if you stick your head in the sand and pretend everythings going to be OK, you get screwed anyway. Maybe the ME intervention will end in tears, but its better to go down fighting.