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Voluntary Ethnic Relocation in Iraq?
Los Angeles Times, August 27, 2006Originally
published with the title: Break Up Iraq To Save It
With the Iraq
mission on the brink of outright failure, some analysts are contemplating a
"Plan B" - pulling out and trying to prevent the war from spreading to other
countries. But rather than accept complete disaster, outright civil war and the
likelihood of genocide, we should try to develop a strategy for achieving some
minimal level of stability, even if it requires discarding our loftier aims for
Iraq.
There is what might be called a "Plan A-" option - facilitating
voluntary ethnic relocation within Iraq while retaining a confederal governing
structure. We should offer individuals who want to protect themselves and their
families the chance to move to an Iraq territory more hospitable to their
ethnicity and/or religion.
To a substantial extent this is happening
already, but the 100,000 or more internally displaced Iraqis have received scant
help or protection to date. With Plan A- as a policy, not an accident, the
international community and Iraqi government could help offer housing and jobs
to those wishing to move, as well as protection en route. Houses left behind
would revert to government ownership, to be offered to individuals of other
ethnic groups who wanted them, in what would largely become a program of
swapping. Funds for some new home construction would be needed as well.
Obviously, this idea would only work if Iraq's government, through a
strong consensus of its Sunni Arabs, Shiites and Kurds, endorsed it. Most
Iraqis, in fact, still say they want an integrated country, but if the civil war
gets much worse, that option may no longer exist. In that case, reluctant Sunnis
could be persuaded if it was made clear that the confederal governing body would
distribute all Iraqi oil revenue equitably on a per capita basis, not by
geography. Former Baathists, up to a certain rank in the party, also should be
quickly "rehabilitated" and allowed to hold jobs and run for office.
For
Americans who cherish the notion of multiethnic democracy, actively facilitating
voluntary ethnic segregation would be a tough pill to swallow. Some might even
go so far as to claim it unethical, making a mockery of the moral purpose we
claimed to be furthering when we liberated Iraq from Saddam Hussein's cruel
rule.
But what would truly mock our initial goals would be outright
defeat followed by genocide - perhaps similar to what happened in Bosnia in the
early 1990s. There, 200,000 people died; in Iraq, which has five times the
population, the death toll could be much worse.
Although we should
generally favor and support multiethnic democracy, it is not our most important
objective - especially not in today's Iraq, where it may no longer even be
achievable. For people trying to cope with the country's daily perils, staying
alive is a higher priority than living in a diverse neighborhood.
This
proposal shares many elements with those that have favored the partitioning of
Iraq. But partitionists have never explained how we would get to their preferred
solution without massive and violent ethnic cleansing. Confederacy, along with
safe passage, property swapping, job-creation programs and oil revenue sharing,
provides at least a plausible path forward while in fact avoiding formal
partition and holding out hope that the country could someday regain its
cohesiveness.
The Bosnia experience is again instructive. We declared a
victory of sorts there in 1995, even though a previously diverse society was
ultimately divided into three ethnically homogenous pieces through a terribly
violent war.
Iraq still has a chance to turn out better, even if our
current strategy fails. If we can encourage future ethnic relocation to occur
voluntarily and peacefully, rather than through murder, rape and intimidation,
we can still salvage an imperfect but real success that ultimately leaves most
Iraqis better off than they were under Hussein. And in contrast to Bosnia, where
land swaps occurred only after the civil war had largely run its course, Iraq
might use such a policy to nip a broader war in the bud.
To move in this
direction, no one need immediately decide that Iraq will heretofore be a land of
three or four major segregated populations. Rather, individuals can decide
themselves where they feel most secure. To the extent that many take up the
offer of government help in relocating, the program could be expanded. Much of
the resettlement is likely to be within Baghdad, with many Sunnis relocating to
neighborhoods west of the Tigris River while Shiites head east.
Radical
solutions far different - and far more promising - than "stay the course" need
to be designed now. "Give up hope" is not one of them.
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