IRAQ - Jan 29 - Iraq Sliding Into Civil War, Report Warns.
Iraq is rapidly sliding into an all-out civil war that is likely to
spill over into neighbouring countries, resulting in mass deaths and
refugee flows, serious disruption of Gulf oil supplies and a drastic
decline in US influence in the region. This grim forecast is set out in
Things Fall Apart, a 130-page report released today by the Brookings
Institution's Saban Center for Middle East Policy, which also
recommends how the US might contain the disastrous consequences of
"spillover". The Washington think-tank distils what it says
are the lessons learned from other civil wars, laying out the case
histories of Afghanistan, Congo, Lebanon, Somalia and Yugoslavia.
Kenneth Pollack, a former Clinton administration official and CIA
analyst who co-authored the report with Daniel Byman, told the FT they
were looking for a "Goldilocks solution" - somewhere between
"stay the course" and "getting all out". "It
was arrogance in the face of history that led us to blithely assume we
could invade without preparing for an occupation, and we would do well
to show greater humility when assimilating its lessons about what we
fear will be the next step in Iraq's tragic history", the
report says. Brookings identifies six patterns from other civil wars
that are already manifesting themselves in Iraq: large refugee flows,
the breeding ground of new terrorist groups, radicalisation of
neighbouring populations, the spread of secessionism, regional economic
losses, and intervention by neighbours. Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Kuwait and
Turkey are said to be "scrambling to catch up" with rival
Iran. Among the report's recommendations are "don't try
to pick winners", as proxies often fail or turn against their
masters; avoid active support for partition; "don't dump the
problem on the UN"; pull back from Iraqi population centres despite
the horrific consequences; bolster regional stability by revitalising
the Israeli-Palestinian peace process; set up an international contact
group including Syria and Iran; and consider setting up "safe
havens" for refugees along Iraq's borders. Brookings estimates
that 50,000 to 150,000 Iraqis have died already since the US invasion in
2003 and cites UN figures of 1m Iraqis who have subsequently fled their
country. Pollack, who previously was an outspoken proponent of the
invasion, says the lessons of past full-blown civil wars reveal nearly
all efforts by states to minimise or contain spillover have failed. The
report will be read with deep concern by the US administration, which is
projecting an increasingly discordant picture of how it evaluates Iraq,
even while speaking of the serious consequences of failure. Pres Bush
calls it the "nightmare scenario". Analysts outside Brookings
say officials are working on "what next?" strategies in the
event that the 21,500 troop reinforcements announced this month fail to
halt the sectarian chaos. Bush has conceded that the US is not winning
the war. In contrast, Dick Cheney, his vice-president, asserted last
week that the US had achieved "enormous successes" in Iraq.
Both reject assertions that Iraq is in a state of civil war. Cheney told
Newsweek that by sending a second aircraft carrier group to the Gulf,
the US demonstrated to its allies it would stay in the region and had
the capabilities, working with international organisations, "to
deal with the Iranian threat". But Pollack is concerned that the US
is stoking a wider conflict and is "careening" into provoking
a war with Iran. Even in his "best-case scenario" for Iraq,
Pollack fears hundreds of thousands of deaths.
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