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ADDENDUM / April 9, 2006
U.S. Study Paints Somber Portrait of Iraqi Discord / By ERIC SCHMITT and EDWARD
WONG
WASHINGTON, April 8 — An internal staff report by the United States Embassy
and the military command in Baghdad provides a sobering province-by-province
snapshot of Iraq’s political, economic and security situation, rating
the overall stability of 6 of the 18 provinces “serious” and one “critical.” The
report is a counterpoint to some recent upbeat public statements by top American
politicians and military officials. The report, 10 pages of briefing points
titled “Provincial Stability
Assessment,” underscores
the shift in the nature of the Iraq war three years after the toppling of Saddam
Hussein . Warnings of sectarian and ethnic frictions are raised in many regions,
even in those provinces generally described as nonviolent by American officials.
There are alerts about the growing power of Iranian-backed religious Shiite
parties, several of which the United States helped put into power, and rival
militias
in the south. The authors also point to the Arab-Kurdish fault line in the
north as a major concern, with the two ethnicities vying for power in Mosul,
where
violence is rampant, and Kirkuk, whose oil fields are critical for jump-starting
economic growth in Iraq. The patterns of discord mapped by the report confirm
that ethnic and religious schisms have become entrenched across much of the
country, even as monthly
American fatalities have fallen. Those indications, taken with recent reports
of mass
migrations from mixed Sunni-Shiite areas, show that Iraq is undergoing a de
facto partitioning along ethnic and sectarian lines, with clashes — sometimes
political, sometimes violent — taking place in those mixed areas where
different groups meet.
The report, the first of its kind, was written over a six-week period by a
joint civilian and military group in Baghdad that wanted to provide a baseline
assessment
for conditions that new reconstruction teams would face as they were deployed
to the provinces, said Daniel Speckhard, an American ambassador in Baghdad
who oversees reconstruction efforts. The writers included officials from the
American Embassy’s political
branch, reconstruction agencies and the American military command in Baghdad,
Mr. Speckhard
said. The authors also received information from State Department officers
in the provinces, he said.
The report was part of a periodic briefing on Iraq that the State Department
provides to Congress, and has been shown to officials on Capitol Hill, including
those involved in budgeting for the reconstruction teams. It is not clear how
many top American officials have seen it; the report has not circulated widely
at the Defense Department or the National Security Council, spokesmen there
said.
A copy of the report, which is not classified, was provided to The New York
Times by a government official in Washington who opposes the way the war is
being conducted
and said the confidential assessment provided a more realistic gauge of stability
in Iraq than the recent portrayals by senior military officers. It is dated
Jan. 31, 2006, three weeks before the bombing of a revered Shiite shrine in
Samarra,
which set off reprisals that killed hundreds of Iraqis. Recent updates to the
report are minor and leave its conclusions virtually unchanged, Mr. Speckhard
said.
The general tenor of the Bush administration’s comments on Iraq has been
optimistic. On Thursday, President Bush argued in a speech that his strategy
was working despite rising violence in Iraq. Vice President Dick Cheney , on
the CBS News program “Face the Nation,” suggested
last month that the administration’s positive views were a better reflection
of the conditions in Iraq than news media reports. “
I think it has less to do with the statements we’ve made, which I think
were basically accurate and reflect reality,” Mr. Cheney said, “than
it does with the fact that there’s a constant sort of perception, if you
will, that’s created because what’s newsworthy is the car bomb
in Baghdad.”
In their public comments, the White House and the Pentagon have used daily
attack statistics as a measure of stability in the provinces. Maj. Gen. Rick
Lynch,
a senior military spokesman in Baghdad, told reporters recently that 12 of
18 provinces experienced “less than two attacks a day.”
Gen. Peter Pace, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said on the NBC
News program “Meet the Press” on March 5 that the war in Iraq was “going
very, very well,” although a few days later, he acknowledged serious
difficulties.
In recent interviews and speeches, some administration officials have begun
to lay out the deep-rooted problems plaguing the American enterprise here.
At the
forefront has been Zalmay Khalilzad, the American ambassador, who has said
the invasion opened a “Pandora’s box” and, on Friday, warned
that a civil war here could engulf the entire Middle East. On Saturday, Mr.
Khalilzad and Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the senior military commander in Iraq,
issued a statement praising some of the political and security
goals achieved in the last three years, but also cautioning that “despite
much progress, much work remains.”
Mr. Speckhard, the ambassador overseeing reconstruction, said the report was
not as dire as its assessments might suggest. “Really, this shows there’s
one province that continues to be a major challenge,” he said. “There
are a number of others that have significant work to do in them. And there
are other parts of the country that are doing much better.” But the report’s
capsule summaries of each province offer some surprisingly gloomy news. The
report’s formula for rating stability takes into account
governing, security and economic issues. The oil-rich Basra Province, where
British troops have patrolled in relative calm for most of the last three years,
is now
rated as “serious.”
The report defines “serious” as having “a government that
is not fully formed or cannot serve the needs of its residents; economic development
that is stagnant with high unemployment, and a security situation marked by
routine
violence, assassinations and extremism.” British fatalities have been
on the rise in Basra in recent months, with attacks attributed to Shiite insurgents.
There is a “high level of militia activity
including infiltration of local security forces,” the report says. “Smuggling
and criminal activity continues unabated. Intimidation attacks and assassination
are common.”
The report states that economic development in the region, long one of the
poorest in Iraq, is “hindered by weak government.”
The city of Basra has widely been reported as devolving into a mini-theocracy,
with government and security officials beholden to Shiite religious leaders,
enforcing bans on alcohol and mandating head scarves for women. Police cars
and checkpoints are often decorated with posters or stickers of Moktada al-Sadr
,
the rebellious cleric, or Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, a cleric whose party is very
close to Iran. Both men have formidable militias. Mr. Hakim’s party controls
the provincial councils of eight of the nine southern provinces, as well as
the council in Baghdad.
In a color-coded map included in the report, the province of Anbar, the wide
swath of western desert that is the heart of the Sunni Arab insurgency, is
depicted in red, for “critical.” The six provinces categorized
as “serious” — Basra,
Baghdad, Diyala and three others to the north — are orange. Eight provinces
deemed “moderate” are in yellow, and the three Kurdish provinces
are depicted in green, for “stable.” The “critical” security
designation, the report says, means a province has “a government that
is not functioning” or that is only “represented
by a single strong leader”; “an economy that does have the infrastructure
or government leadership to develop and is a significant contributor to instability”;
and “a security situation marked by high levels of AIF [anti-Iraq forces]
activity, assassinations and extremism.”
The most surprising assessments are perhaps those of the nine southern provinces,
none of which are rated “stable.” The Bush administration often
highlights the relative lack of violence in those regions. For example, the
report rates as “moderate” the two provinces at
the heart of Shiite religious power, Najaf and Karbala, and points to the growing
Iranian political presence there. In Najaf, “Iranian influence on provincial
government of concern,” the report says. Both the governor and former
governor of Najaf are officials in Mr. Hakim’s religious party, founded
in Iran in the early 1980’s. The report also notes that “there
is growing tension between Mahdi Militia and Badr Corps that could escalate” — referring
to the private armies of Mr. Sadr and Mr. Hakim, which have clashed before.
The report does highlight two bright spots for Najaf. The provincial government
is able to maintain stability for the province and provide for the people’s
needs, it says, and religious tourism offers potential for economic growth.
But insurgents still manage to occasionally penetrate the tight ring of security.
A car bomb exploded Thursday near the golden-domed Imam Ali Shrine, killing
at least 10 people and wounding dozens. Immediately to the north, Babil Province,
an important strategic area abutting Baghdad, also has “strong Iranian
influence apparent within council,” the
report says. There is “ethnic conflict in north Babil,” and “crime
is a
major factor within the province.” In addition, “unemployment
remains high.”
Throughout the war, American commanders have repeatedly tried to pacify northern
Babil, a farming area with a virulent Sunni Arab insurgency, but they have
had little success. In southern Babil, the new threat is Shiite militiamen
who are
pushing up from Shiite strongholds like Najaf and Karbala and beginning to
develop rivalries among themselves. Gen. Qais Hamza al-Maamony, the commander
of Babil’s 8,000-member police
force, said his officers were not ready yet to intervene between warring militias,
should it come to that, as many fear. “They would be too frightened to
get into the middle,” he said in an interview. If the American troops
left Babil, he said, “the next day would be civil
war.”
Eric Schmitt reported from Washington for this article, and Edward Wong from
Baghdad. Jeffrey Gettleman contributed reporting from Hilla, Iraq, and Abdul
Razzaq al-Saiedi from Baghdad.