Strong analytical article on Iraq from Patrick Cockburn in the UK Independent:
Americans         and rebels begin talks on timetable for withdrawal from Iraq
         American officials are talking to negotiators from the anti-US         resistance in Iraq, whom they have denounced in the past as foreign         fighters and remnants of Saddam Hussein's regime.
         Insurgent leaders and Pentagon officials have confirmed to Time magazine         that talks have taken place for the first time in the heavily fortified         Green Zone in Baghdad.
         The Sunni guerrillas want a timetable for a US withdrawal, first from         Iraqi cities and then from the country as a whole. American officials         aim to see if they can drive a wedge between nationalist guerrillas and         fanatical Islamist groups.
         Abu Marwan, a resistance commander, is quoted as saying that the         insurgents want to "fight and negotiate". They are modelling         their strategy on that of the IRA and Sinn Fein in Northern Ireland.         This means creating a united political organisation with a programme         opposed to the US occupation.
         US military commanders are now dubious about the chances of winning an         outright military victory over the Sunni rebels who have a firm core of         supporters among the five million-strong Sunni Muslim community. The US         military has lost 1,479 dead and 10,740 wounded in Iraq since the         invasion began in March 2003.
         The talks so far are tentative but they indicate a recognition on the         part of the US that it will need a political solution. Those willing to         sit down with US diplomats and officials are "nationalists"         composed primarily of former military and security officers from         Saddam's Hussein's government.
         The Iraqi resistance is highly fragmented and regionalised. Groups often         only exist in a single city. In guerrilla warfare this may be an         advantage since no command structure can be penetrated or disrupted.
         The speed with which the insurgents became so effective after the         American invasion is explained by many of the fighters being         professional soldiers, and their being unemployed after the Iraqi army         was dissolved in May 2003.
         The Islamist groups, of which the most notorious and heavily publicised         is that led by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, have no intention of talking and         have threatened to kill those who do. The cells behind the devastating         suicide-bombing campaign are openly sectarian, targeting the Shia Muslim         community as they pray or march in religious processions.
         The fundamentalist militants believe that Iraq is an ideal location to         fight the US. They have local sympathisers and can use the long, open         borders with Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Syria which are impossible to         police. They are also well financed in a deeply impoverished country.
         The slaughter of Shia civilians by suicide bombers has made it very         difficult for the resistance to claim that it is a nationalist         insurgency representing all Iraqis against the occupation. After six         months of suicide bombings orchestrated from Fallujah against young army         and police recruits, most Shia Muslims in Baghdad were delighted when         the US Marines largely destroyed the city last November.
         A problem for the US and the interim Iraqi government is that it is         unclear if self-declared leaders of the resistance possess the authority         that they claim. No less than 38 Sunni groups have said that they have         carried out attacks on US forces. Many have only a shadowy existence.
         There are signs that the different groups are trying to combine         militarily and politically. Just as the US Marines were storming         Fallujah in November the fighters in the largely Sunni Arab city of         Mosul united to take it over. When the US Army counter-attacked, they         did not stand and fight but melted away. Some nationalist groups in         Mosul went out of their way to show that they were not sectarian by         freeing a Christian businessman held by kidnappers. But, when the US         Army damaged two mosques, another resistance cell responded by blowing         up two Christian churches.
         The new Iraqi government about to take office after the election on 30         January will be ambivalent about talks between the US and the         resistance. A Shia-Kurdish administration is unlikely to have much         sympathy with Sunni fanatics and former Baath party officials who         persecuted them for years.
         The new Iraqi army reflects this political make-up, being reliant on         Kurds and Shias. It is too weak to withstand the onslaught of the         insurgents without the backing of the US Army. It will therefore be         impossible for the US to withdraw as the resistance demands.                                                                                                                                       
As I've been arguing for awhile, probably the best solution would be to split the "nationalist" Sunnis from the small number of foreigners by promising to withdraw, team up with the "nationalist" Sunnis to hunt down and exterminate the outsiders, then skedaddle. (Of course, they aren't real nationalists, they are Sunniists.)
But now democracy is going to get in the way of sensible realpolitik, since the winners in the election like to see Sunnis die, but, as we saw at Fallujah, they don't seem willing to take the risk of killing them themselves, so their attitude toward us seems to be, "Let's you and him fight."
The fundamental problem is that there are three main groups in Iraq but only two oil regions, so somebody is likely to wind up without oil at some point. And since the GDP per capita of Iraq not counting oil is roughly sub-Saharan, well, that encourages each group to try very hard not to wind up the odd man out with no oil.
There may well be a good solution to this chess puzzle, but I haven't figured it out yet.
 
 
 
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