The United
States has refused to launch airstrikes against Sunni Islamist militants in
Iraq, if Baghdad does not form an inclusive government. Shiite Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki's days could be numbered.
Deutsche Welle, 25 June 2014
US
Secretary of State John Kerry has ruled out airstrikes against the rapidly
advancing Islamist State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) unless Baghdad forms a more
inclusive government, upping the political pressure on Nouri al-Maliki to work
with the Sunnis and Kurds, or step aside as prime minister.
"It
would be a complete and total act of irresponsibility for the president to just
order a few strikes," Kerry told CBS News on Tuesday. "But there's no
government, there's no backup, there's no military - there's nothing there that
provides the capacity for success."
"The
president reserves the right to use force as he does anywhere in the world, if
it is necessary," Kerry said. "But he wants to do so … with knowledge
that there's a government in place that can actually follow through and
guarantee that what the United States is working toward can actually be
achieved."
But Prime
Minister al-Maliki, a Shiite, rejected calls on Wednesday for a national unity
government with Sunnis and Kurds, saying such a step would amount to a coup.
Maliki's State of Law alliance won the most seats in parliamentary elections
last April, but fell short of the majority needed to form a government without
help from rival parties.
"The
call to form a national salvation government constitutes a coup against the
constitution and the political process," Maliki said in a televised
address.
Calls for
Maliki resignation
But there's
nothing in the Iraqi constitution that would prevent a national unity
government from being formed under the current circumstances, according to Iraq
expert Eric Davis, who called Maliki's assertion "ridiculous." Iraq's
new parliament meets on the first of July and is set to begin the process of
forming a government.
"What
people have been suggesting is not a constitutional coup," Davis, a
professor at Rutgers University, told DW. "They're [suggesting] the same
thing that happened in 2006 when Ibrahim al-Jaafari, also a member of Maliki's
Dawa party, stepped aside for Maliki."
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| Washington has deployed the USS George H.W. Bush to the Persian Gulf to prepare for possible military action |
Tariq Nejm
and Abdil Abdul-Mahdi have both been floated as possible successors to Maliki,
according to Davis. Nejm is an adviser to Maliki, while Abdul-Mahdi is a French
trained economist and former finance minister. Both are members of the Dawa
party and are said to have better ties with the Sunni community.
"The
Sunnis continue to say that these actions against Maliki have nothing to do
with Sunnis and Shiites, it's their marginalization," Davis said.
"We
could see the whole country go to hell in a hand basket, and it seems to me
that one individual able to gum up all the works is a very problematic
situation," he added.
According
to Andrew Bacevich, Washington's repeated claims that it's not meddling in
Iraq's internal politics amount to little more than rhetoric.
"The
public comments that choosing Iraqi leaders is the business of the Iraqi people
is exclusively for public consumption," Bacevich, a professor at Boston
University and retired US Army colonel, told DW via email. "The US
government is not the only government working behind the scenes to influence
Iraqi politics."
US promises
'intense, sustained' support
If Baghdad
does not take steps to address Sunni grievances, it makes little sense for the
US to launch airstrikes, according to Noussaibah Younis, an Iraq expert at Harvard's
Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.
"Bombing
targets in Sunni dominated areas of Iraq without a concurrent political process
taking place to include Iraq's Sunnis…may serve only to further strengthen ISIS
support," Younis wrote in an email to DW.
But
Bacevich believes that the White House is likely to act regardless of what
happens in Baghdad.
"[...]Yesterday
Kerry promised 'intense' and 'sustained' US support," he said. "My
sense is that if ISIS continues to advance we are likely to see US military
action even if the political situation in Baghdad remains unresolved."
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