Death cult. There's a certain catharsis in
saying it, isn't there? Somehow, when you're confronted with the jawdropping
atrocities Islamic State churns out with gruesome frequency,
"terrorist" seems puny, unsatisfactory. We're looking for something
that distils our rage and drips with disdain. So, death cult: it implies a kind
of unhinged violence directed to no rational purpose; a group beyond
comprehension that appeals only to those on the limits of sanity. So, for
instance, when three young Englishwomen skip the country to join, we have no
explanation other than that they were brainwashed, or that their decision, in
Julie Bishop's phrase, "defies logic". That, after all, is the nature
of cults.
If only it were true. If only IS were a
small, tightly controlled group under the command of a single charismatic
leader on whom everything depends. If only it were destined to go the way of so
many cults, burning destructively but briefly before disappearing with little
trace in some tragic implosion. But it isn't. It's an expanding group forged in
the collapsing politics of the Middle East. IS's plain barbarism shouldn't
obscure this fact. Its existence is not harebrained. It is deeply political,
and those who support, or even merely tolerate it, have political reasons for
their decisions.
Iraqi
soldiers in Mosul simply abandoned their posts when IS rolled into town last
year
Which brings
me to Tony Abbott's announcement this week that we'd be sending another tranche
of troops to Iraq in our ever-expanding military campaign. They'll be the
latest soldiers trying valiantly to train the Iraqi Army. In some ways, there's
less to this than meets the eye. We already have troops in Iraq doing this job,
and it reflects precisely the strategy we're pursuing against IS: bombard them
from the air and get local groups – including the Iraqi Army – to fight them on
the ground. Once you've committed to that, there's nothing particularly
controversial about increasing troop numbers doing the job.
The trouble,
though, is that it seems to be the only card we have to play. Outraged by IS,
we'll send soldiers. Concerned they aren't retreating in the way we'd like,
we'll send more. That, it seems, is the strategy.
But we've
been failing at this strategy for nearly a dozen years. America spent something
like $US40 billion on the task. Soon, it became a NATO project. Naturally,
Australia helped out. So did Jordan, South Korea and Romania. Iran, too, struck
similar deals with the Iraqi government. And more than a decade of
multi-national training later, Iraqi soldiers in Mosul simply abandoned their
posts when IS rolled into town last year. Precisely why we think a few hundred
extra Australian soldiers will succeed where years of grander, more expensive
efforts so miserably failed, remains unexplained.
But the
bigger problem is that the approach remains a narrow military one. It has no
obvious political dimension to it: no clearly explained account of why IS has
grown so rapidly, how it took major Iraqi cities with so little resistance, and
why it might prove so difficult to dislodge. But it is precisely these things
that have the most to teach us.
It's easy to
forget that IS is scarcely the unstoppable force of our nightmares. It spread
through the Sunni areas of Syria and northern Iraq mainly because no one in
those regions particularly wanted to stand in their way. That included the
Iraqi military, whose Sunni representatives clearly had little fidelity to the
Iraqi cause. In brief, IS succeeded because it carried more good will in the
regions it conquered than the Iraqi state. Not because Iraqi Sunnis are blood-loving
nihilists – indeed, it was the Iraqi Sunnis who had expelled IS's
predecessor organisation, al-Qaeda in Iraq. It is rather a story of just how
rent Iraq truly is; just how colossal a failure its reconstruction after we
invaded it has been. And it is a story of monstrous Sunni resentment at the
pro-Shiite excesses of the Iraqi state.
Perhaps our
greatest mistake in this regard was to disband Saddam Hussein's military
machine entirely, letting it become instead the largely incompetent,
Shiite-dominated muscle for an increasingly Shiite-supremacist nation under
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. With the Americans gone, Sunni protests were
violently quashed, Sunni politicians hounded from office and Shiite death
squads marauded far too freely. This, we watched from afar, apparently unmoved
by the fact that Iraqi Sunnis were now looking for someone – anyone – prepared
to stand up for them. While we were watching, IS made that offer.
What's our
counter offer? Because if we're serious about defeating IS, we'll have to
do more than train an Iraqi military widely regarded by Iraqi Sunnis as a tool
of Shiite oppression. We'll have to find a way to win over the Sunni tribes of
northern Iraq with a political future they can believe in; a future that just
might inspire them to turn on IS the way they turned on al-Qaeda in Iraq.
That means a
more inclusive Iraqi state, and on this score Iraq's new Prime Minister Haider
al-Abadi is making some positive noises. We're also helped considerably by the
astonishing scale of IS's barbarism, which is causing many Sunnis living under
its regime de la terreur a severe case of buyer's remorse. But if our
only plan is to bomb IS into history, we might just lose these
advantages. We also might leave something worse in its place, just as IS
took the place of al-Qaeda after we'd tried bombing them. The question we face
now is not as simple as: more or less war? It is: what else? What's our
political strategy? And I'm not sure the death cult paradigm delivers us
an answer.
Waleed Aly is a Fairfax Media columnist and
winner of the 2014 Walkley award for best columnist. He lectures in politics at
Monash University.
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