A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, January 8, 2015
What Comes After the Islamic State Is Defeated?
![What Comes After the Islamic State Is Defeated?](https://foreignpolicymag.files.wordpress.com/2015/01/460975664_iraq1.jpg)
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President Barack Obama’s withdrawal of American forces in 2011 after
failing to win a security agreement with Iraq has already been undone by
Obama ordering as many as 3,100 troops to help train the Iraqi military
to take on the Islamic State, also known as ISIS. But even if U.S. and
Iraqi forces defeat the militant group, preventing a disintegration of
Iraq along sectarian and religious lines may require a long-term
presence of U.S. forces, former American officials and defense analysts
say.
“You cannot get the goal you want of a stable Iraq and a permanently
defeated” Islamic State, “or a son of ISIS,” without a long-term
American presence, said James Jeffrey, who served as U.S. ambassador to
Iraq from 2010 to 2012. “Even if they’re promised the moon, only if we
have a presence will the Kurds and Sunnis buy into a Baghdad that’s
dominated by the Shiites and indirectly by Iran.”
Jeffrey said that moves to establish a peacekeeping or monitoring force
should be led by the U.N. but backed by U.S. military power. That means a
modest American force should plan on remaining in Iraq and eventually
in Syria once the Islamic State is defeated, he said.
More than 2,000 American troops are helping retrain the Iraqi military
to fight back against the Islamic State on the ground, even as U.S.
drones and jet fighters have carried out hundreds of airstrikes,
yielding some earlysuccesses by halting the militant group’s advances.
A major ground offensive against the militant group won’t be launched
for several months. But experts say that in order to avoid a repeat of
the American withdrawal in 2011, which allowed Iran to become a dominant
power, thus marginalizing Sunnis and leading to the birth of the
Islamic State, it’s time to plan for what comes after the militant group
is defeated or sufficiently contained. One option gaining currency is
an international force that can keep the region’s Kurds, Sunnis, and
Shiites at peace and prevent the breakup of Iraq along ethnic and
religious lines.
For starters, Obama may have to allow American troops a deeper role in
fighting the Islamic State along with Kurdish Peshmerga forces and Sunni
tribes, as well as giving both those groups “some guarantee that we’d
be there for the long term,” said Jeffrey, now a fellow at the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
Even if the Kurds and Sunni tribes fully commit to taking on the Islamic
State, once the fight against the militants is over, “the Kurds and
Sunnis will be open to the same temptation as before: Kurds would want
to go independent and the Sunnis may make common cause with the next
jihadi group,” Jeffrey said.
The United States has 2,140 troops in Iraq out of the 3,100 that Obama
has authorized, according to Army Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon
spokesman. The remainder of the troops will head to Iraq in the coming
weeks.
About 800 of the troops are there to protect the American Embassy in
Baghdad and other U.S. personnel, while the rest are training Iraqi
military forces, Warren said. A small group of 20 Marines are at al-Asad
air base in Iraq’s Anbar province — a stronghold of the Islamic State —
and are drawing almost daily fire from the militant group, Warren told
reporters Jan. 5.
Many of the Sunni tribes the United States is trying to woo now to take
on the Islamic State were once critical to the so-called Anbar Awakening
that helped the United States defeat al Qaeda in Iraq back in 2006. The
tribes later turned on the government of Iraq’s then-Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki — a Shiite — who refused to pay the fighters or fold
them into the standing Iraqi military after the violence subsided,
setting the stage for the emergence of the Islamic State.
While Iraq’s current prime minister, Haider al-Abadi — a Shiite with
close ties to Iran — has, unlike his predecessor Maliki, publicly
committed to running an inclusive government, in private meetings with officials he has voiced skepticism about trusting Sunni tribal leaders, according to U.S. and European officials.
Even if the militant group were defeated or just degraded, the impact of
such an outcome will be limited “unless the U.S. can also work with the
key factions in Iraq, and its allies, to create a stable structure for
cooperation between Shiite Arab, Sunni Arab, and Kurds,” Anthony
Cordesman, a national security scholar at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, said in an email. “It is far from clear that this
is possible.”
But such political accommodation between the different groups is
essential to prevent the “next millennial Islamist movement from gaining
a new foothold,” Jeffrey wrote in an article published in late December on the Washington Institute’s website.
Although Iraq has allowed some autonomy to Kurds in the north, letting
the country’s Sunnis enjoy similar freedoms in the Sunni Arab areas of
the country “will require internal cultural change, international
guarantees, and an outside monitoring force,” Jeffrey wrote.
U.S. military and State Department officials said there are currently no
discussions about such a peacekeeping or monitoring force.
The Obama administration has said that as many as 60 countries are
involved in the coalition against the Islamic State, including several
Arab nations, such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the United Arab
Emirates, and Kuwait.
Although Arab countries in the coalition see the predominantly Sunni
Islamic State as a threat to their own well-being, they also “still
deeply distrust the Shiite-dominated Iraqi Central Government and this
tends to push it into the hands of Iran,” the Shiite power in the
region, Cordesman said.
A U.N.-backed international peacekeeping force has precedent.
The international body has led such an effort in the past, with the U.N.
Mission in Kosovo in 1999. The U.N. Security Council in June 1999
authorized NATO to station 50,000 troops after the end of the war to
stop Serbian human rights violations and clashes between the Kosovo
Liberation Army and Yugoslav forces. About 4,500 NATO troops from 30
countries currently remain in Kosovo to keep the peace.
Unlike in the Balkans in the late 1990s, the long-term presence of
American troops in Iraq may produce its own backlash, said Nicholas
Heras, a researcher at the Center for a New American Security.
A U.S. role “in such a peacekeeping force would likely be highly
controversial, considering the baggage that the U.S. has in the Middle
East region and the anger in the region toward the U.S. occupation of
Iraq from the last decade,” Heras said.
Such a stabilizing force may make more sense in Syria, serving “as a
guarantor of security in a post-Assad transitional period,” he said,
referring to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. There, a multinational
force could oversee the “disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration
of militias, and prevent the return of ISIS in eastern and northern
Syria, once ISIS is removed from those areas of the country,” he said.
But the Obama administration’s policy toward Syria remains so incoherent
that moderate rebel forces have been weakened and extremist ones have
gained the upper hand. No credible peacekeeping force is likely to
control the conflicting pressures, and there’s “no clear way that anyone
can as yet predict whether, much less how, these various conflicts will
end,” Cordesman said.
MOHAMMED SAWAF/AFP