Obama’s Anti-ISIL Strategy Lacks a Political Goal
September 24, 2014President Obama’s response to U.S. missteps in Iraq and Syria appears to be “let’s break some more stuff.”
On Sept. 23, the United States and its coalition partners attacked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) targets inside Syria for the first time. The strikes follow president Barack Obama’s announcement on Sept. 10 that the U.S. would expand its airstrikes against ISIL from Iraq into Syria. The administration’s determination to stay out of the Syrian conflict and withdraw from Iraq has ultimately proven untenable. Obama might not admit this, but as former Secretary of State Colin Powell might say, the U.S. “broke” Iraq, but remains reluctant to “own it.” The same holds true for Syria: having supported the rebellion against Bashar al-Assad’s regime, the Obama administration failed to provide game-changing military and political support to the Syrian opposition when they needed it most.
In an attempt to roll back the clock, the U.S. and its allies have now launched another war without really “owning” the mistake or without addressing what is essentially a political question. To be sure, in both Syria and Iraq, the ISIL threat is an urgent security challenge that needs to be tackled on the ground. But the crucial question is what comes next? Without a clear-eyed strategy for putting Iraq and Syria back together, the conditions that paved a way for the group’s rise following U.S. withdrawal from Iraq (and blithely turned aside at the height of the Syrian civil war) will exist long after ISIL is defeated.
In other words, Obama’s response to U.S. missteps in Iraq and Syria appears to be “let’s break some more stuff.”
There’s little doubt that U.S. airstrikes have been effective in rolling back some of ISIL’s gains in northern Iraq. The supply of western arms to Iraqi Kurds has been key to halting ISIL’s advance and has strengthened the Iraqi government’s hold on Baghdad. But ISIL’s inevitable defeat is not a prescription for “victory,” particularly if, in its aftermath, Iraq’s Sunni heartland remains disaffected and Syria’s northeast remains ungovernable.
Moreover, Obama’s purely military response has unforeseen consequences that could further complicate political problems in the region. For one, the U.S.-led intervention may increase ISIL’s internal cohesion and broaden its regional appeal despite the political cover provided by the Gulf allies. It may also deepen the exasperation of Iraq’s Sunni tribes who were promised a broader role in the new government in Baghdad, which we have yet to see materialize. While Obama’s campaign will certainly degrade and may even destroy ISIL, it will do nothing to resolve the growing disenfranchisement in Iraq’s Anbar province, which led to ISIL’s resurgence in the first place. Empowering Baghdad
militarily may even be counter-productive in the way of achieving reconciliation among Iraq’s political groups. And without a political solution, the disconnect between Baghdad and Iraq’s Sunni tribes will only deepen. The U.S. needs to ensure that Iraq’s new leaders will not repeat former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s mistakes by failing to create an inclusive government.The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera America's editorial policy.
This analysis by Kadir Ustun was originally published on Al Jazeera America on September 24, 2014.