In an interview on the PBS NewsHour last Wednesday, Joe Biden was unwilling to contradict the official narrative of the Iraq War that Gen. David Petraeus and the Bush surge had turned Iraq into a good war after all. That interview serves as a reminder of just how completely the Democratic Party foreign policy elite has adopted that narrative.
The Iraq War story line crafted by the Petraeus and the new counterinsurgency elite in Washington assures the public that U.S. military power in Iraq brought about the cooperation of the Sunnis in Anbar Province, ended sectarian violence in Baghdad and defeated Iranian-backed Shi’a insurgents.
In reality, of course, that’s not what happened at all. It’s time to review the relevant history and deconstruct the Petraeus narrative which the Obama administration now appears to have adopted.
The Sunni decision to cooperate in the suppression of al Qaeda in Iraq had nothing to do with the surge. The main Sunni armed resistance groups had actually turned against al Qaeda in 2005, when they began trying to make a deal with the United States to end the war.
At an Iraqi reconciliation conference in Cairo, November 19-21, 2005, leaders of the three major Sunni armed groups (one of which was a coalition of several resistance organization) told U.S. and Arab officials they were willing to track down al Qaeda leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and deliver him to Iraqi authorities as part of a negotiated agreement with the United States. The Sunni insurgent leaders were motivated not only by hatred of al Qaeda but by the fear that a Shi’a-dominated government would consolidate power and exclude the Sunnis permanently unless the United States acted to rebalance its policy in Iraq.
Two months later, U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad actually entered into secret negotiations with the three major Sunni insurgent groups 2006, as later reported by the Sunday Times and confirmed by Khalilzad. The Sunni leaders even submitted a formal peace proposal to Khalilzad. They insisted on a “timetable for withdrawal” as part of the deal, but it was “linked to the timescale necessary to rebuild Iraq’s armed forces and security services”, according to Sunday Times.
Khalilzad cut off the negotiations in February 2006, because such an agreement would have conflicted with a broader strategy of standing up a Shi’a army to suppress the Sunni insurgency.
The major Shi’a factions, determined to eliminate any possible threat to its power from the Sunnis in Baghdad, unleashed death squads, mostly from the Mahdi Army, in Sunni neighborhoods across the entire city in 2006 and early 2007.
The result was the defeat of the Sunni insurgents’ political-military bases in Baghdad, and the transformation of the capital from a mixed Sunni-Shi’a city into an overwhelmingly Shi’a city, as shown dramatically in this series of maps, based on U.S. military census data.
As a result, by late 2006, the Sunni leaders were feeling much more vulnerable to Shi’a power. Col. Sean McFarland, U.S. Army brigade commander in Al Anbar province throughout 2006, found Sunni sheiks expressing “[a] growing concern that the U.S. would leave Iraq and leave the Sunnis defenseless against Al-Qaeda and Iranian-supported militias….”
It was that fear of the Shi’a power that drove local Sunni decisions to join U.S.-sponsored Sunni neighborhood armed groups in Anbar.
The sectarian violence in Baghdad began to abate by August 2007, but not because of additional U.S. troops as the official narrative of the war suggests. It was because the Shi’a had accomplished their aim of confining the Sunni population to relatively small enclaves in Baghdad. That relationship between the achievement of that aim and the reduced violence was noted by the September 2007 National Intelligence Estimate.
The main Petraeus conceit about his strategy in Iraq is that it defeated a Shi’a insurgency that represented an Iranian “proxy war” in Iraq. But the main premise on which that claim was based — that Iran was backing “rogue elements” of Moqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army — was simply a psywar ploy by Petraeus and his staff. The objective of the “rogue elements” line was to divide the Mahdi Army, as military and intelligence officials admitted to pro-war blogger Bill Roggio.
The official narrative suggested that Iran exerted political influence in Iraq by supporting armed groups opposing the government. In fact, however,Iran’s key Iraqi allies had always been the two Shi’a factions with which the United States was allied against Sadr — the Supreme Council of Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s Dawa Party. They had both gotten Iranian support and training during the war against Saddam, and the fiercely nationalist Sadr had criticized SCIRI leaders as Iranian stooges.
The al-Maliki government had no problem with Iranian training and financial support of the Mahdi Army in 2006, when the Mahdi Army was eliminating the Sunni threat from Baghdad. But once it was clear that the Sunnis had been defeated, the historical conflict between Sadr and the other Shi’a factions reemerged in spring 2007.
The Iranian interest was to ensure that the Shi’a-dominated government of Iraq consolidated its power. Iran’s “supreme leader” Ali Khamenei told al-Maliki in August 2007 that Iran would support his taking control of Sadr’s strongholds. Later that same month, al-Maliki went to Karbala and gave the local police chief “carte blanche” to attack the Sadrists there. After two days of violence, Sadr declared a six-month “freeze” on Mahdi Army military operations August 27, 2007.
By late 2007, contrary to the official Iraq legend, the al-Maliki government and the Bush administration were both publicly crediting Iran with pressuring Sadr to agree to the unilateral ceasefire – to the chagrin of Petraeus.
Al-Maliki launched the attack on Mahdi Army forces in Basrah in March 2008 in the knowledge that Iran would back him against Sadr. And when it went badly, he turned to Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard official in charge of day-to-day Iraq policy, to force a ceasefire on Sadr. Soleimani told Iraqi President Talibani that Iran supported al-Maliki’s efforts to “dismantle all militias”, and Sadr agreed to a ceasefire within 24 hours of Iran’s intervention.
So it was Iran’s restraint — not Petraeus’s counterinsurgency strategy — that effectively ended the Shi’a insurgent threat.
It was Soleimani who had presided over the secret April 2006 meeting of Shi’a leaders that had chosen al-Maliki as Prime Minister, after having been smuggled into the Green Zone without telling the Americans. And that was only one of a several trips Soleimani made to the Green Zone over a two-year period without U.S. knowledge.
But Biden doesn’t want to know this and other historical facts that contradict the official narrative on Iraq. For the Democratic foreign policy elite, staying ignorant of the real history of the Iraq War allows them to believe that deploying U.S. military forces in Muslim countries can be an effective instrument of U.S. power.



65 Comments







Dear Mr. Porter,
You Rule.
Sincerely,
I’ll second that…! ;-)
Gareth Porter and reporters like him (of which there may be a handful) persist in sticking pins in and deflating the Obama administration’s icons, like Gen. St Petraeus. Such behavior on Porter’s part undoubtedly gives aid and comfort to those to the left of Obama, and to the left of the Democratic Party (the Professional Left). The Professional Left is the sworn and targeted enemy of the administration and of Congress, to wit. the US government. Giving aid and comfort to the enemies of the government is defined as treason in the Constitution. More than two persons have witnessed such acts of treason by Porter in the columns of FDL.
Who will rid us of this troublesome scribbler?
You forgot the snark tags St. Michaelfishman
I fear it was not a snark.
Thank you, Mr Porter, for your patriotism and heroism in a time of great danger to all who speak the truth in America, including humble posters like myself.
Watch your back.
And watch your back, Kassandra.
Trying to, trying to.
And I’m sure it’s a back well worth watching.
/s, LOL, :)
Thank you. I feel so much better now with that out of my system.
I just have to reply to this: Michael; treason is NOT against the government, that is totalitarian thinking; when the government decides it IS the people. Treason is against the nation and it’s PEOPLE.
Therefore, look instead at who and what has been working to destroy our Constitution and our nation.
there, got that off my chest.
I could probably make out a good case that trying to distinguish the government from the country is treasonable in itself, but my daughter’s coming in today, and I have to clean house.
Here is where I type: My country right or wrong is a surefire way of getting a wrong country.
Well said.
Fanned!
OH I’m not on HP…)))))blush((((
My government right or wrong is also a way to get the wrong government. Which we’ve been getting for the last 30 years.
Thank you. Now, do you have a formula for getting the right country?
Nice academic exercise in futility.
Hey Gareth. Listen to your Scott Horton interviews, every single one of them. Welcome to the Lake.
Biden’s just full of foreign policy brilliance. I may be wrong about some of these, but wasn’t he the one who thought (along with Peter I’ve-got-a-financial-interest-in-it Galbraith) that outsiders should decided that Iraq should be divided into 3 parts? Isn’t Biden the peacenik on Pakistan, who argued that drone attacks (on civilians, but let’s not talk about that) will do the job, instead of a full scale invasion? Isn’t he the one who convinced O to give the nod to Netanyahu to attack Iran, because, of course, that would mean the U.S. wouldn’t be accused of attacking Iran?
Omnium Bactrium in tres partes divisa est.
Surgical precision.
The enemy of my enemy is my front-man.
I doubt the narrative can be changed except over time. It has been absorbed into the DNA. Hear something so many times you get to believe it,just like the tea baggers. The narratives are both relentless. Unfortunately, we have become a country that seems to love war and the glory it brings – - until the time comes when it doesn’t. To be sure, not everyone buys into it but enough do that it is generally accepted, Bush was a freaking genius, I guess. Iran is next on the glory trail.
don’t forget Yemen and Somalia (isn’t it time for a do-over?)
U.S. can’t have too many wars in countries with oil or pipelines. Can’t buy oil on the market, ya know, becuz markets don’t work. (Oooops, where did that idea come from.) Gotta control the oil in order to be an empire.
Funny, isn’t it. Some want to start a war to get oil. Then someone notices our dependency (again) and wants to build an alternative fuel. But we never quite get there b/c there’s always another war or terrorist to go after. We are at once militaristic and fearful of any form of threat economic or terror. Self reinforcing.
Oil alternatives are out of the question for the U.S. Too contrary to the oil-military complex and the pols it controls.
Yes, the America is not a peace-loving country. We need to own that and see how we like the image, including the risks our behavior creates….Very ugly. The W-Cheney gift that keeps on giving, although they were not the 1st.
1. The Iraq war is over, and Iran won.
2. The American public understanding of events is fairy tale– again.
3. The same myths about Iraq will now become accepted narrative to be applied in Afghanistan, tragically.
Don’t get mad, get even. Vote third party in November or stay home. A vote for a Democrat is a vote for the continuation of Bush’s policies.
I wish the right would agree to a general boycott of all/any “elections”. I wonder what woudl happen if people just stopped participating in this sham of a democracy.
How would they spin the numbers? Just show old tapes of people voting, like Bush did with Osama?
I’m sure they would but it would be interesting.
Voters have already given up on the laughingly-referred-to-as U.S. democracy. Voter turnout in the U.S. is about the lowest of any so-called democracy in the world. And even those who still vote unnerstan that their votes don’t matter.
I really wonder at what point our votes stopped counting? I feel sure it was way before Bush stole 2000.
Winner-take-all voting system has a lot to do with that, as does giving disproportionate representation to small states. U.S. voting system really really sucks.
WHOA!
I love it! –an election with no voters. That would be a thing to behold. I might even watch the Sunday talk shows after that election just to see them get all twisted up trying to explain it. Of course, we all know they would reach the wrong conclusions.
The Tea Party Beck Palinistas are not going to sit this one out. They are inspired. They’ve got to stop Socialism. They don’t know what it is, but they’ve got to stop it.
That’s an interesting thing to think about. If 1% of eligible voters turned out in an election, how would the “elected” politicians have any legitimacy? Then again, they have no legitimacy now but that doesn’t stop the megalomania.
peace is for fags. not the gay kind.
Way too early to be talking about the narrative being changed. People still think there were actually two incidents in the Gulf of Tonkin and that as a result of an illusory second attack initiated by the North Vietnamese American lives were at risk. That lie still sells along with all the bullshit about the Communists marching from Nicaragua to Texas unless Ortega was stopped.
The Democrats tell the same story and their president even praises the war criminal who preceded him.
Thanks for the post.
Biden’s being very careful. He’s walking a tightrope.
If, as it looks now, we get hammered in the mid-terms, then Barack Obama is going to be one of the lamest lame duck preznints we’ve ever had. He had no interest in confronting the republicans with those big majorities; what’s he going to do when they’re reduced by half (if he’s lucky…)?
I admit, it’s a rhetorical question, with an obvious answer: He’s going to be Jimmy Carter. Is Obama going to grow a ton of political courage and go for the trickle-UP solutions that are needed? Would anyone on here like to bet that he will? I didn’t think so.
So: I look for two more years of jellyfish “leadership” with the corporate agenda continuing to be well-protected, but there is that little thingy of elections, as we’re about to see in a few weeks. I think that a few months before the 2012 election the democrats will take a look at the likelihood of their being reduced to historical status of a rump party (they seem to like it…) and quietly inform Obama that he needs to do the statesmanlike thing and pass on a second term. I expect he’ll do it, and leave Biden with another shot at the Oval Office, nemmind that he’s tarred with the same “centrist” brush as Obama. And that scenario is the one that has Biden treading very carefully around the rightwingers on whom Obama has so successfully done rehab.
carter is a good man obama is not. This debacle in the making is by design and rham and company will be able to get legislation that they really want through with ease.
Any body paying attention to the anti-Muslim hysteria going on now?
those people are actaully running ads to say they are Americans and love America too.
they have a holiday coming up which will coincide with 911 this year and are very concerned that their celebrations will provoke angry mobs of right wingers….egged on by Beck et al, of course.
Oh, wait, he’s found GAWD now and is no longer preaching hate.
Mr. Peabody explains Iraq to Sherman.
Biden is a total AIPAC whore. What else did you expect?
See that Obama wants to invest 50 billion on rail, roads and airplanes. The U.S. certainly needs massive infrastructure upgrades and it’s a start but given the fact that China is investing 292 billion on high speed rail alone I can’t help but think that once again the U.S. is playing catch up. Besides, the Republicans could care less about infrastructure unless it’s upgrading the electronic gates to their enclaves. The U.S. public has no idea that the U.S. is falling further and further behind other advanced countries.
First of all, the $50 billion won’t happen. It’s just words coming out of O’s mouth. Usually he does the opposite of what he sez, meaning we should look for a downsizing of infrastructure spending.
But my more important point is, what do you mean U.S. playing catch up? When has the U.S. ever caught up since, oh let’s say Reagan but it could go back farther? U.S. just gets more & more behind any intl comparison you care to choose. Well, except for starting wars, of course.
A little something for folks like Glenn Beck, Dove World Outreach Center and other pretend Christians:
M K Gandhi
I’m sure glad he said it….since I’m not man, I should be A-OK ;^)
There are clear reasons for Biden’s position. They may not appear as headlines in U.S. newspapers, but they can be mined from reports around the globe however.
Peak oil is a myth invented by the industry in the 1930s (or maybe the 1950s; I forget which) to raise the price of oil when the U.S. industry was in a depression. It is regularly trotted out when some U.S. PTB needs an excuse for controlling someone else’s oil. Greg Palast makes a good case that the invasion of Iraq was to keep Iraq’s oil off the market, since oil corps make more profits by selling less oil at higher prices.
Thom Hartmann sure believes it.
Oil is a finite resource. People may disagree on when peak oil is reached, but it is only a matter of when, not if.
If peak oil is a myth why are we trying to get oil from tar sands and fraking for gas? Those methods ruin the fresh water supply.
dredd, thats an interesting report you linked to – from Germany on peak oil, and Bluetoe@31 said Obama wants to invest 50 billion on rail, roads and airplanes. This stimulus is a belated and puny measure. None of it pushes renewable energy -all these things keep us stuck on the oil track. I read somewhere the last stimulus he ended up cutting in half and giving out tax breaks and only 3% actually went to shovel ready projects.
michaelfishman was snarking.. (St. Patreaus)
Got more tomatoes & nectarines to preserve, so I’m off. Be well.
Like Republicans,
Democrats warmonger the War On Terror, start wars, legalize assassinations, appoint or retain Republicans in positions of power, wiretap its citizens and increase the Military Budget.
Democrats conceive or assist the cover up largest Oil Disaster in American history.
Democrats seek to continue Trickledown economics and endeavor to retain historically low Bush era tax cuts for millionaires.
Democrats create the largest public handout to Insurance and Pharmaceutical companies in history.
Democrats promote austerity measures for the public, with clandestine planning to eliminate Social Security and give it to Wall Street.
Excellent article, but I still am having some difficulty (cognitive or lack of coffee??) as to why Shi’a are being allowed to take control of the country. I understand Petraeus’s duplicity, he does want to be Warrior-King (president) after all, and Biden has always been a rather uninspiring water carrier imho…but we have made such a mess of Iraq that now as the (indigenous) sharks are feeding why is our sworn enemy (Iran) being allowed to consolidate the Baghdad govt?
I thought this was about oil, and Israel, in that order. Are our corporate masters deciding that oil is more important than Israel?
Have an excellent Labor Day all. I am off to the Labor Rally/Picnic in Wilmington.
Stop bashing union teachers!
delete please
Gareth Potter…interesting summation thank you.
Sunnis’s were American allies for decades against Iran Shites. So now USA gives Shites the reins of power as we hipe the danger of Iran. Seem strange to spend all thr MIC resources to set up the sworn enemy. Help me out…what am I missing here?
Strategery. Strategery. Strategery. You can’t fix intelligence and have an understanding of the battlefield that will lead to success.
Some inbred elites were playing checkers when everyone else was playing chess..
Thank you Gareth for reminding us of the real history. It’s greatly needed.
Good piece. It is important to remember that there were always two Iraq war narratives, that put out by the Bush Administration and what was actually happening in Iraq. The Bush one went from a war fought on the cheap and being greeted with rose petals, to an insurgency increasingly violent because it was increasingly “desperate” to a surge that was necessary despite probably a dozen “turning points” declared by Bush and Rumsfeld. Then despite the failure of the surge to achieve its stated goal of a general political settlement between Sunni, Shia, and Kurd, it was declared a success anyway because violence levels decreased. Now fit this narrative over Gareth’s.
The only thing I would add to what Gareth said is the role of the US funding the Sons of Iraq, the Sunni militia. It tamped down violence outside of Baghdad and it was surprisingly cheap to do so. Maliki resisted this and I believe still refuses to fund them because this also gave and legitimized a limited Sunni power base in the country.
We can see the failure of a general political settlement in the inability of the Iraqis to form a government half a year after elections, the March 7 elections themselves being much delayed. In its absence, there still remains a significant potential for Shia-Sunni and Shia-Kurd civil wars. We also see fault lines among the Shia, between the pro-Iranian Maliki who doesn’t want to give up power and other Shia power blocs who are more nationalistic, like the secularists and the Sadrists.
J. Biden, B. Obama and H. Clinton are just three more lying imperial American war criminals.
Iraq was a quiet, well-run (dictatorship) secular prosperous Middle Eastern country until Bush I. sucked Saddam into invading Kuwait. Our post-war punitive sanctions caused the deaths of hundreds of thousands, if not millions of innocent Iraqi civilians. Heck of a job of genocide, Bush I and W. Clinton. Bush 2 attacked and caused massive devastation in Iraq, without justification. One million Iraqis dead, hundreds of thousands wounded and maimed. Millions of Iraqis forced to flee for their lives. Electricity, water systems, health care, agriculture, all trashed by Bush. Heck of a job, worthless lying war criminal Bush.
And now war criminal Obama is privatizing our ongoing criminal occupation of Iraq. Each private contractor costs American taxpayers five to ten times as much as our military men and women. Heck of a brilliant move, war criminal Obama…
I know a lot of Iraqi’s who are pissed off. They’d much rather be living with Saddam and Uday running the show than Maliki.
Look who is whipping up the fake Al Qaeda and Muslim narrative.
Losing on purpose, or at the least, never winning or losing (forever occupation) was and remains the goal of the US Shadow Government.
The narrative is just cynical noise in the channel, as well understood by the elites, Zionists and their Generals.
Fake Al Qaeda, Fake war – real deaths.