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The Reasoning Of The Violence in Iraq
Graham E. Fuller is a former vice chairman of the National Intelligence Council at the CIA (This Guy at least has some credentials). This is not heavily edited for length. It appeared in today’s LA Times, which unfortunately requires a short registration to access entire article.

Still, the salient point is...that the violence isn’t pointless, and what is most worrisome to me is that, just beyond the reach of my normal consciousness, this thesis makes some sense...and there is the worry that the war in Iraq will in fact result in a growing Hegemony within Islam...Which like the war itself, over time, may prove out to be good or bad for the West. It is simply too early to tell if a Hegemonic tendency will develop within Islam...but even if so, greater internal control could be beneficial. Though, all in all, I think that I prefer a fragmented Islam...lol
As Iraq descends into ever greater bloodletting — mostly now visited by Iraqis and outsiders upon other Iraqis — it is tempting to describe all this violence as "mindless," a spasm of senseless nihilism. Yet, sadly, there is a fairly coherent rationale behind these ugly events and their ruthless perpetrators. And even though, fortunately, fewer Americans are dying these days, there can be no doubt that Washington itself is the sole focus of the campaign, regardless of how many Iraqis die.

From day one of the American occupation, radicals — both secular/nationalist and Islamist — had two strategic choices. The first was to limit their targets to U.S. forces and facilities in Iraq, making it abundantly clear that the United States is the sole overwhelming threat to Iraq and the Muslim world. The second was to attack anyone and anything that facilitated any aspect of the U.S. operation, even if it was providing benefits to the Iraqi public. Thus the United Nations and the Red Cross became valid targets, not for their services but because they furthered the broader American game plan for power in the region. In the same vein, Iraqi-staffed police and security officials became part of the American infrastructure of power and control and now are being targeted. Clearly, this second strategy has prevailed — an astonishingly bloody-minded vision that says a lot about the current defensive state of mind of the region as a whole. But regardless of who the actual targets are, it’s clearly a message being directed at the United States. The bolder the scope of the U.S. master plan — quite bluntly described by top U.S. policymakers as a bid to "remake the face of the Middle East" — the harsher the response from the radicals. It makes no difference to them whether innocent Iraqi civilians pay the ultimate price for associating with the U.S. The whole point is to make sure that the U.S. learns that such interventionist projects are flights of dangerous folly. Radicals seek to drive home the point that Americans should never contemplate for even a moment the ambition of visiting American military force against the Muslim world ever again. If Iraq has to twist in the wind in tortured chaos for a year, so be it if that is what it takes to ensure that the U.S. will be permanently traumatized by messing with Islam.
And this remains my real problem...Will the results of this Iraqi War limit the ability of the United States to act in the future? (You can say all you want that Kerry is a weasel, Bush is Strong, ect, ect, but these seeds are being planted now, in the manner this war was fought and way the peace, whatever that may be, is secured.
Sadly, this entire rationale and state of mind may now be taking root across the region. If this happens, the radicals will have won a truly major victory. In their calculus, the price paid by a few thousand sad victims might be relatively modest if the long-range result is to crimp any future American plans for invasion and occupation of Muslim lands anywhere. What bigger victory could the radicals hope for? How many in the West, especially in the U.S., will be eager for a reprise of the Iraq experience? Once the United States is deterred from its efforts to control the region, then Muslims can set about dealing with their own regimes and building their own future. But in the radical view, the building phase can come only after the region is cleansed of foreign power, whatever the attendant human costs.

Vicious and bloody-minded, yes, but this vision is hardly nihilistic. It represents a radical reading of the course of contemporary history in the Middle East. It helps turn fashionable debate over a "clash of civilizations" into a self-fulfilling prophecy. Few if any Muslims wish to perpetuate a Pax Americana in the region, even if they deplore the violence of Iraqis upon Iraqis. And even though discomfited by the ugliness of such radical tactics, nearly everyone understands the rationale for rejection of the invader. Sadly, Muslims don’t have to be terrorists to have some sympathy for keeping the U.S. out of their face, even if they flinch at the cost.
It is still entirely possible that the interim Iraqi Constitution and government will hold good through the elections scheduled for early 2005. The elections may even go well and the violence will abate somewhat. I have been sympathetic to the "Cut and Run," arguments made against Bush&Co...but, I could be wrong, it may be time to exit as gracefully as possible and hope that the New Iraqi Government will not prove to be only a replay of the Weimar experience in Germany after WWI, (a weak Government only giving cover for the rise of a Virulent Fascism...which, heaven knows, Islam already has a marked tendency toward).
Posted by: Traveller 2004-03-11
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=27862