Tag Archive for: 9/11

ASPI’s decades: Exiting Iraq

ASPI celebrates its 20th anniversary this year. This series looks at ASPI’s work since its creation in August 2001.

Approaching Australia’s 2007 election, the Liberal government and Labor opposition were sharply divided over how to depart from the military commitment in Iraq. The Liberal position was condition-based; Labor’s was time-based.

The Liberal government had ‘made clear that it is in no hurry to withdraw Australian forces’, Rod Lyon wrote, while Labor would withdraw troops after consultation with Washington:

So far, broadly speaking, we’ve seen Iraq as the US’s game; so the most likely exit point has been one virtually of Washington’s choosing. If we want to move to a more ‘independent’ sense of our exit point, then our exit point logically depends on us reaching one of two decisions about the conditions in Iraq:

– either we judge that we have achieved what we wanted out of our engagement or

– we judge that what we wanted is no longer attainable at a sensible price.

In the 2007 federal election campaign, Labor’s Kevin Rudd argued that the scale of the Iraq disaster showed it was the wrong war: Australia should withdraw and concentrate on Afghanistan. Rudd’s case was that Australia could leave Iraq while holding firm to the US alliance.

Security issues had helped deliver two election wins for John Howard. The 9/11 attack was an element in his victory in 2001. In the 2004 election, the Iraq and Afghanistan involvements—with only one Australian military death in Afghanistan at that point—were still a relative plus for Howard when weighed against the scepticism of the Labor leader, Mark Latham, about the US.

By the 2007 election, though, Iraq weighed on the Howard government and was part of Rudd’s effort to define Howard as yesterday’s man. Issues of war and peace were central to those three elections of 2001, 2004 and 2007.

As he took office in December 2007, Rudd announced that Australia’s 550 troops serving in Iraq would be withdrawn by the middle of 2008.

Following Rudd’s timetable, Australia departed, leaving a fragile Iraqi government and sectarian conflict.

Writing about trends in the Middle East in 2013, Lydia Khalil described a region ‘at best in flux and at worst in turmoil’, pointing to:

  • a marked uptick in sectarianism and sectarian violence
  • a crisis within political Islam and a widening rift between secular and Islamist political forces
  • the gradual disengagement and declining influence of the US in the Middle East.

By the middle of 2014, Islamic State controlled significant territory in Syria and Iraq, and thousands of young men and women were flocking to be part of its proclaimed ‘caliphate’. IS had consolidated its grip on much of Syria and mounted military operations in Iraq, capturing the country’s second largest city, Mosul. A quarter of the Iraqi Army had collapsed and IS forces had reached a position 60 kilometres north of Baghdad.

In October 2014, Australia was one of the first to join the US coalition to ‘degrade’ IS, committing planes for airstrikes and troops to train Iraqi security forces. In the same month, a former chief of the Australian Army, Peter Leahy, published an ASPI paper on the long war of the 21st century:

Australia is involved in the early stages of a conflict that may last for the rest of the century and potentially beyond. Terrorism is but a symptom of a broader conflict in which the fundamental threat is from radical Islamists who are intent on establishing Islam as the foundation of a new world order. It’s a conflict between radical Islamists and modern secular, mostly Western, states. The likely duration of the conflict is due to the intrinsic and widespread appeal of the underlying ideology, the youth of those currently involved, their fervour and the inability of those under attack to either realise or accept the true nature of the threat. While the violence, so far, is mostly confined to Islamic lands, some of the radicals are engaged in a direct war against Western secular nations.

When Einat Wilf looked out across the century, the conflict she saw was within Islam. The story of the Middle East for decades to come would be the battle for the hegemony of Sunni Islam, she wrote, especially in the Arab world, and of the efforts by non-Sunni Muslims and non-Muslims to ensure that no dominant Sunni power was capable of uniting the Sunni Arab world:

Ultimately, Australia and other Western countries have to come to terms with their limited role in shaping the outcomes of the battle for hegemony in the Arab Middle East. This doesn’t mean that there’s nothing to be done, but those outside the region must clinically and dispassionately consider their interests in the region and what they can reasonably expect to achieve.

By the end of 2017, the military defeat of IS by the Iraqi Security Forces was at hand. An Australian Army major, Andrew Maher, wrote of tactical success in the Iraq war but strategic ambiguity. IS, he said, might be abandoning its territorially based identity for a virtual caliphate:

In the process of liberating Mosul, coalition airpower delivered more than 5,075 weapons in support of ISF over the month of August 2017 alone. That’s an average of one aerially delivered weapon every 10 minutes. A total of 98,532 weapons have been delivered in Operation Inherent Resolve, in Syria and Iraq. For a force estimated to consist of around 30,000 fighters in 2015, that is both frighteningly inefficient and has devastated Iraq’s Sunni and Turkomen populations. The current short-term focus on the military defeat of IS belies the reality that Iraq will retain fragile governance, making it vulnerable to violent extremism.

Maher judged that the combination of battle damage, disaffected youth and the potential for sectarian and political misrepresentation suggested that the seeds had been sown for the next war in Iraq.

Isaac Kfir pointed to Iran’s efforts to make Iraq a client state. In the early 2000s, he wrote, Tehran preferred that both Iraq and Afghanistan should remain in a state of manageable chaos that kept the Americans occupied and unable to focus on Iran: ‘Now the regime wants a pro-Tehran government in Baghdad. That would give Iran a safe western border, allow it to influence oil prices (Iraq has the world’s fifth-largest proven oil reserves with 140 billion barrels), and enable Tehran to continue to challenge Saudi dominance in the region.’

In 2021, Amin Saikal judged that Iraq was still at a crossroads between stability and instability, security and insecurity, peace and conflict:

The US toppled Saddam Hussein’s regime, but in the process also dismantled the administrative and security structures which were pivotal to holding the mosaic that was Iraq together as a functioning state. It ultimately failed to empower the Iraqi people to rebuild their lives and country and engaged in processes geared to benefit Washington’s ideological and geopolitical preferences rather than to endow Iraq with the appropriate foundations for stability and security in a very difficult neighbourhood.

The result was political, social and sectarian fragmentation, and transformation of the country from a strong state with suppressed societies to a weak state with strong societies. This opened the space for a plethora of not only domestic clusters but also outside forces to engage in power struggles to shape Iraq’s future.

Drawn from the book on the institute’s first 20 years: An informed and independent voice: ASPI, 2001–2021.

National security wrap

The Beat

Pre-crime stoppers

Technology consulting group Upturn last month released a report examining the use of predictive policing in the US and its ramifications. (Predictive policing utilises sophisticated computer algorithms to interpret crime data and generate forecasts on future crime patterns.) The report takes a measured view on predictive policing, arguing that the strategy could ‘improve policing practices’ but the research also noted exaggerated capability claims and the potential of predictive policing to ‘reinforce disproportionate and discriminatory policing practices.’ The recommendations advocated greater public consultation and independent validation of predictive techniques to refine the strategy. The report comes amidst an ongoing debate around US policing practices, with constitutional rights violations, civil asset forfeiture and police militarisation the main concerns for civil society stakeholders.

QLD organises against crime

Queensland’s state government is looking to overhaul organised crime laws, introducing the Serious and Organised Crime Amendment Bill to Parliament on Tuesday. The legislation creates new offences and strengthens penalties for drug trafficking, child exploitation and financial fraud. The LNP has indicated it won’t support the new legislation, meaning Labor will need the support of independents and Katter’s Australian Party to pass the bill.

CT Scan

Remembering 9/11

Last Sunday marked the 15th anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Center in New York. To mark the anniversary, several analysts have taken stock of the West’s ongoing efforts to combat terrorism. Despite the US$5 trillion price tag for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, jihadist groups remain active across the world. The US House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill last Friday that would allow victims of the attacks to sue the Saudi government. Despite opposition from President Obama, there are concerns that Congress will override a potential veto. Analysts warn the bill could weaken norms on sovereign immunity, paving the way for citizens of foreign governments to sue the US.

Duterte wants US out

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte made headlines again this week, calling for the remaining US military advisors to leave the country’s southern region. He followed up the comments by instructing officials to buy equipment from China and Russia to assist in combating the country’s drug and insurgency problems. Since 2002, US special forces have advised the Philippines’ military in Mindanao, where the government has fought several Islamist groups, including the 12,000 strong Moro Islamic Liberation Front and the Daesh-linked Abu Sayyaf Group.

Checkpoint

Trumpian policy comes to Calais

Following up on UK–French border news from earlier this month, the UK will begin construction of a wall in Calais to block migrants attempting to enter Britain via the Channel Tunnel or ferries. The wall, which will be four metres high and one kilometre long, will line each side of the highway leading into the port of Calais and cost British taxpayers an estimated £2.3 million.

In other European border news, EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker has told Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov that the EU will help strengthen security along Bulgaria’s external border. Bulgarian leaders have been critical of the EU’s handling of the ongoing refugee crisis thus far—the country shares a 259 kilometre border with Turkey and views the refugee crisis as a top national security concern.

Trouble aboot US-Canadian border

In a change of pace, US border tensions are emanating from the north. Canadian Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale has criticised the US Customs and Border Protection service (USCBP) for denying entry to Canadians who admit to illicit recreational marijuana use. It’s common practice for the USCBP to bar entry to travellers who admit to committing a crime, even if they haven’t been criminally convicted. Goodale acknowledged the US’s sovereign right to enforce border rules, but described the situation as ‘ludicrous’ and drew attention to the fact that several US states have legalised marijuana.

First Responder

Climate change exacerbates conflict

The Climate and National Security Forum 2016 took place on Wednesday 14 September in Washington DC. The forum featured senior retired military, defence, and foreign policy experts discussing the national security implications of climate change. The forum’s participants join several officials who have recently sounded the chorus on this issue. Speaking to an audience in Brussels earlier this year, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg noted that climate change can cause and exacerbate conflict, ‘it can really change also the conditions for where people live, create new migrant and refugee crises and scarce resources, water, and can fuel new conflicts’. US Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, speaking at the Intelligence & National Security Summit last week, reiterated climate change’s ability to amplify conflict across the globe. Speaking at the 2016 Chief of Army’s Exercise in Adelaide last week, Lt Gen Angus Campbell stressed the need for a greater understanding of Defence’s contribution to managing the consequences of climate change.

Disaster strikes the hermit kingdom

North Korea has been hit by significant flooding over the last two weeks, after powerful Typhoon Lionrock made landfall in nearby Japan on 30 August. The devastating floods have left at least 138 dead, more than 400 missing, and 140,000 in need of assistance, according to UN agencies. Deforestation and poor infrastructure has left the country particularly vulnerable to flooding. This latest disaster adds to the country’s already dire humanitarian situation—a result of years of mismanagement, repression, and international sanctions. The country’s request for help comes as UN representatives warn that the onset of winter may aggravate the situation and cause widespread food shortages.