Rice and Gates Divided over Iran's Role in Iraq


By Gareth Porter, IPS News
Posted on January 4, 2008, Printed on January 4, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/72664/


A State Department official's assertion in late December that Iran had
exerted a restraining influence on Iraqi Shiite militia violence signaled a
major divergence of views between Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates over how to portray Iran's role in Iraq.

In an interview with the Washington Post published Dec. 23, David
Satterfield, a senior adviser to Rice and coordinator for Iraq, attributed
to Iran a deliberate decision to help calm the situation in Iraq rather than
to inflame it. Satterfield told the Washington Post that the decline in the
number of attacks by Mahdi Army militiamen since August "has to be
attributed to an Iranian policy decision" and suggested that the policy
decision had been made "at the most senior level."

Satterfield did not say that the new Iranian policy line was permanent, but
he insisted that there had been such a "consistent and sustained diminution
in certain kinds of violence by certain kinds of folks" that it could not be
explained solely on the basis of internal factors in Iraq.

U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker also told the Post that "the freeze on
JAM [the Iraqi acronym for the Mahdi Army] operations that began four months
ago would not exist without Iranian approval."

Those positive descriptions of the recent Iranian role in Iraq came just
after Defense Secretary Gates had refused to endorse such an assessment. At
a press conference on Dec. 21, Gates was asked whether he had "seen any
additional or more current information to suggest maybe Iran is playing a
more constructive role in trying to seal its border from arms shipments and
so on?"

He replied, "No, not yet."

Significantly, however, Gates also passed up the opportunity to say that
Iran was playing a "destabilizing role" in Iraq. Instead he said simply that
the "jury is out" on the issue.

Gates mentioned the success of military operations against the Mahdi Army as
well as the "ceasefire that has been put in place" as factors in the decline
in attacks and said, "[W]e don't have a good feeling.or any confidence in
terms of how to weigh these different things."

These differing views on whether Iran has been playing a positive role in
Iraq are the first clear evidence of a split between Gates and Rice over how
to deal with Iran. Rice's State Department is now leaning toward treating
Iran as something other than an outright enemy in regard to Iraq, whereas
Gates is not ready to soften the administration's position of casting
suspicion on Iranian intentions.

Gates was the last administration official to denounce Iran in harsh terms
over Iraq, declaring in a speech at a Persian Gulf security conference in
Bahrain Dec. 8, "Everywhere you turn, it is the policy of Iran to foment
instability and chaos, no matter the strategic value or cost in the blood of
innocents."

That rhetoric was almost certainly aimed, however, at avoiding a stampede
away from the administration's efforts to pressure Iran on its uranium
enrichment program in the wake of the stunning publication of the national
intelligence estimate's conclusion that Iran had abandoned covert nuclear
weapons work in 2003.

Gates hinted in comments to reporters when he arrived in Bahrain that he was
much less certain of the Iranian intention than his rhetoric at the
conference would have suggested. He mentioned the call by Shiite Mahdi Army
leader Muqtada al-Sadr for a ceasefire as a key factor in the improved
security in the Baghdad area, along with the reduction in attacks by
armour-piercing rounds which had long been blamed on Iran.

Gates appeared to suggest that he did not rule out an Iranian contribution
to the improvement, saying it was "too early to tell" whether the reduction
in militia attacks since August was due to successful military efforts to
disrupt Mahdi Army networks or "what the Iranians may or may not be doing".

The State Department's decision to acknowledge that Iran has contributed to
the reduction in violence in Iraq has no doubt been influenced by Iranian
political figures and officials who work closely with the U.S. Embassy to
oppose the Mahdi Army and who have been insisting for months that Iran was
helping to restrain Sadr.

Iraqi Islamic Council Chairman Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, whose party is the key
Shiite political ally in the U.S. effort to weaken the Madhi Army, met with
Rice Nov. 30 and told her that Iran plays a positive role in establishing
security in Iraq, according to the Tehran Times. Al-Hakim was quoted as
saying, "There are documents proving that Iran has supported Iraq."

Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, who had argued both publicly and
privately last fall that Iran was behind Sadr's Aug. 29 ceasefire, met with
Rice two days before the Satterfield and Crocker interviews.

The implication of the advice of the anti-Sadr, pro-Iranian Iraqis is that
the United States can use Iran to further weaken Sadr and the Madhi Army.

The State Department strategy recognises that the Madhi Army, which poses
the main threat to the George W. Bush administration's plan to maintain an
indefinite U.S. military presence in the country, is too strong to be
suppressed by U.S. or Iraqi military forces. And it would seek an end to the
accusations against Iran regarding Iraqi Shiite militias that have been
issued regularly by U.S. civilian and military officials throughout 2007.

Crocker told the Post he was prepared to make the inference of a helpful
Iranian role in the reduction of operations by the Shiite militias when he
meets with Iran in the next round of talks.

The Defense Department's view of Iranian policy is influenced primarily by
the perspective of the U.S. military command in Baghdad. Gen. David Petraeus
also recognizes that there must be a political strategy to weaken Sadr's
forces.

However, he and his staff have been focusing more on the fact that the Madhi
Army is continuing to attack U.S. and Iraqi security forces in the Shiite
provinces of Qadisiyah, Babil and Dhi Qar, as stated in the latest Pentagon
report.

The military command continues to insists that the "Shi'a extremists and
rogue elements" of the Mahdi Army are "Iranian-backed."

That analysis clearly implies that the United States should not back away
from the accusations of Iranian export of weapons to and manipulation of
Shiite militias that the U.S. command has been making for nearly a year.

Given President Bush's penchant for letting agencies with conflicting
policies work things out themselves rather than impose a policy decision,
the State and Defense Departments may continue to carry out their own policy
lines on the subject of Iran's role in Iraq until a new development resolves
the differences. That will introduce another layer of contradictions into an
extraordinarily murky policy toward the Iran-Iraq complex of issues. 

Gareth Porter is an investigative historian and journalist specialising in
U.S. national security policy. His latest book, "Perils of Dominance:
Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam", was published in June
2005. 


C 2008 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/72664/


 



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