AKC 6 General – Spring Term 2010 – Conflicts & Conflict Resolution 28/02/11 AKC 6 – 28 February 2011 Conflicts & Conflict Resolution Lecture 6: The Surge & Reduction of Conflict in Baghdad Mr. Nick Krohley, Teaching Fellow, Middle East and Mediterranean Studies, KCL Key Questions: What were the origins of the sectarian war in/for Baghdad? How/why did it begin? What were its operational dynamics? Who fought/killed/displaced whom? How & to what end? Why did fighting abate from 2007 onwards? What lessons does “the Iraq model” hold for our understanding of conflict & conflict regulation? The Roots of Sectarianism in Iraq Competing paradigms: Essentialism vs. opportunistic/calculating instrumentalism. When was “the beginning”, and how did sectarianism come to dominate modern Iraqi politics? 7th Century? Late-18th Century? WWI? 1950s? 1991? The sanctions era? 2003? 2005? Post-Saddam Politics Dominant networks/aspirants to power: SIIC, Da’wa, Sadrists, former regime factions (military, security services, Ba’th Party, etc…), “tribal” networks. Main competitors for power defined themselves in sectarian terms – and fought/mobilized along sectarian lines. Why? Might something different have happened? Did Iraq’s political networks reflect the fabric/aspirations/views of Iraqi society? Could they have? The legacy of modern Iraqi history – socio-political organization/mobilization in a post-totalitarian society. The Sectarian War Begins Circa 2004/2005, “resistance” against the new order gives way to competition over its form/content. Run up to 2005 elections sees Shi’a political solidarity and AQI-led Sunni violence & rejectionism. A reflection of essentialist popular hostility/hatred or of modern political calculations? Through 2005 the cycle of violence escalates, AQI & “the Sunni insurgency” vs MoI & Mehdi Army. The Dynamics of Sectarian War Army/militia vs. Army/militia? “The Shi’a” vs. “the Sunnis”? Networks vs. civilians… Guerrilla warfare – the pursuit of locality & conquest of territory. Iraqi al-Qaeda & Mehdi Army as umbrella organizations for local groups, yet core networks drive violence. Who joins? Who fights? The revenge of the displaced? Meanwhile, the government is a participant – not a mediator. The Sectarian War Peaks February 2006 – al-Askari mosque bombed in Samarra. “A psychological turning point” (V. Nasr) – dramatic escalation of violence but overall continuity of processes. How “local” did Jaysh Mehdi or AQI become? Who was active in what? What are the connotations/after-effects of complicity? To what extent was sectarian hatred among ordinary civilians a driver of the fighting or a result of it? The Decline of Sectarian Fighting in Baghdad Why did it happen when it did (from early-2007)? 1. It had run its course – Baghdad was segregated. Did the fighting end because “the Shi’a” won? 2. Its main protagonists were betrayed – the Awakening undercut AQ & PM Maliki turned on the Medhi Army. How/why did this happen? What had happened in the areas conquered by the Mehdi Army and al-Qaeda affiliated groups? To what extent had “the Shi’a” or “the Sunnis” been grateful to their “saviors”? 3. The Surge & Counterinsurgency – US & Iraqi units established order in a divided city. What was the Surge? What is “COIN”? Establish law & order, foster development, build government capacity, “protect the population”. Aggressive targeting of individuals/networks behind the violence – AQI & Medhi Army. Barrier emplacement – was not a question of keeping “the masses” from one another’s throats. What if it had been? How divided is Baghdad? Lessons from Iraq? The pitfalls of post-totalitarian politics? Was democracy part of the problem? How/when/why were occupying forces decisive? Who had the initiative? The importance of specificity regarding the roots & functional dynamics of conflict… Suggested Reading The Old Social Classes & Revolutionary Movements of Iraq, Hanna Batatu, Saqi Books, 2004 Republic of Fear, Kanan Makiya, University of California Press, 1998 A History of Iraq, Charles Tripp, Cambridge University Press, 2000 http://www.understandingwar.org/iraq-project http://www.crisisgroup.org/en/regions/middle-east-north-africa/iraq-syria-lebanon/iraq.aspx http://www.brookings.edu/saban/iraq-index.aspx The AKC Examination will take place on Friday, 1st April between 14.30 and 16.30. If you have a problem attending the exam, please contact Elizabeth (akc@kcl.ac.uk) by Friday 26th February. AKC Exam Registration has now closed. Last year’s exam paper is online at http://www.kcl.ac.uk/about/structure/dean/akc/archive The AKC eLearning Pages are on your Blackboard with course code: NS-0ZDOAKC1-3 10~11 Associate of King’s College