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The Three-State Solution
New York Times ^ | November 25, 2003 | LESLIE H. GELB

Posted on 11/25/2003 3:32:10 PM PST by OESY

President Bush's new strategy of transferring power quickly to Iraqis, and his critics' alternatives, share a fundamental flaw: all commit the United States to a unified Iraq, artificially and fatefully made whole from three distinct ethnic and sectarian communities. That has been possible in the past only by the application of overwhelming and brutal force.

President Bush wants to hold Iraq together by conducting democratic elections countrywide. But by his daily reassurances to the contrary, he only fans devastating rumors of an American pullout. Meanwhile, influential senators have called for more and better American troops to defeat the insurgency. Yet neither the White House nor Congress is likely to approve sending more troops.

And then there is the plea, mostly from outside the United States government, to internationalize the occupation of Iraq. The moment for multilateralism, however, may already have passed. Even the United Nations shudders at such a nightmarish responsibility.

The only viable strategy, then, may be to correct the historical defect and move in stages toward a three-state solution: Kurds in the north, Sunnis in the center and Shiites in the south.

Almost immediately, this would allow America to put most of its money and troops where they would do the most good quickly — with the Kurds and Shiites. The United States could extricate most of its forces from the so-called Sunni Triangle, north and west of Baghdad, largely freeing American forces from fighting a costly war they might not win. American officials could then wait for the troublesome and domineering Sunnis, without oil or oil revenues, to moderate their ambitions or suffer the consequences.

This three-state solution has been unthinkable in Washington for decades. After the Iranian revolution in 1979, a united Iraq was thought necessary to counter an anti-American Iran. Since the gulf war in 1991, a whole Iraq was deemed essential to preventing neighbors like Turkey, Syria and Iran from picking at the pieces and igniting wider wars.

But times have changed. The Kurds have largely been autonomous for years, and Ankara has lived with that. So long as the Kurds don't move precipitously toward statehood or incite insurgencies in Turkey or Iran, these neighbors will accept their autonomy. It is true that a Shiite self-governing region could become a theocratic state or fall into an Iranian embrace. But for now, neither possibility seems likely.

There is a hopeful precedent for a three-state strategy: Yugoslavia after World War II. In 1946, Marshal Tito pulled together highly disparate ethnic groups into a united Yugoslavia. A Croat himself, he ruled the country from Belgrade among the majority and historically dominant Serbs. Through clever politics and personality, Tito kept the peace peacefully.

When Tito died in 1980, several parts of Yugoslavia quickly declared their independence. The Serbs, with superior armed forces and the arrogance of traditional rulers, struck brutally against Bosnian Muslims and Croats.

Europeans and Americans protested but — stunningly and unforgivably — did little at first to prevent the violence. Eventually they gave the Bosnian Muslims and Croats the means to fight back, and the Serbs accepted separation. Later, when Albanians in the Serb province of Kosovo rebelled against their cruel masters, the United States and Europe had to intervene again. The result there will be either autonomy or statehood for Kosovo.

The lesson is obvious: overwhelming force was the best chance for keeping Yugoslavia whole, and even that failed in the end. Meantime, the costs of preventing the natural states from emerging had been terrible.

The ancestors of today's Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds have been in Mesopotamia since before modern history. The Shiites there, unlike Shiites elsewhere in the Arab world, are a majority. The Sunnis of the region gravitate toward pan-Arabism. The non-Arab Kurds speak their own language and have always fed their own nationalism.

The Ottomans ruled all the peoples of this land as they were: separately. In 1921, Winston Churchill cobbled the three parts together for oil's sake under a monarch backed by British armed forces. The Baathist Party took over in the 1960's, with Saddam Hussein consolidating its control in 1979, maintaining unity through terror and with occasional American help.

Today, the Sunnis have a far greater stake in a united Iraq than either the Kurds or the Shiites. Central Iraq is largely without oil, and without oil revenues, the Sunnis would soon become poor cousins.

The Shiites might like a united Iraq if they controlled it — which they could if those elections Mr. Bush keeps promising ever occur. But the Kurds and Sunnis are unlikely to accept Shiite control, no matter how democratically achieved. The Kurds have the least interest in any strong central authority, which has never been good for them.

A strategy of breaking up Iraq and moving toward a three-state solution would build on these realities. The general idea is to strengthen the Kurds and Shiites and weaken the Sunnis, then wait and see whether to stop at autonomy or encourage statehood.

The first step would be to make the north and south into self-governing regions, with boundaries drawn as closely as possible along ethnic lines. Give the Kurds and Shiites the bulk of the billions of dollars voted by Congress for reconstruction. In return, require democratic elections within each region, and protections for women, minorities and the news media.

Second and at the same time, draw down American troops in the Sunni Triangle and ask the United Nations to oversee the transition to self-government there. This might take six to nine months; without power and money, the Sunnis may cause trouble.

For example, they might punish the substantial minorities left in the center, particularly the large Kurdish and Shiite populations in Baghdad. These minorities must have the time and the wherewithal to organize and make their deals, or go either north or south. This would be a messy and dangerous enterprise, but the United States would and should pay for the population movements and protect the process with force.

The Sunnis could also ignite insurgencies in the Kurdish and Shiite regions. To counter this, the United States would already have redeployed most of its troops north and south of the Sunni Triangle, where they could help arm and train the Kurds and Shiites, if asked.

The third part of the strategy would revolve around regional diplomacy. All the parties will suspect the worst of one another — not without reason. They will all need assurances about security. And if the three self-governing regions were to be given statehood, it should be done only with the consent of their neighbors. The Sunnis might surprise and behave well, thus making possible a single and loose confederation. Or maybe they would all have to live with simple autonomy, much as Taiwan does with respect to China.

For decades, the United States has worshiped at the altar of a unified yet unnatural Iraqi state. Allowing all three communities within that false state to emerge at least as self-governing regions would be both difficult and dangerous. Washington would have to be very hard-headed, and hard-hearted, to engineer this breakup. But such a course is manageable, even necessary, because it would allow us to find Iraq's future in its denied but natural past.

Leslie H. Gelb, a former editor and columnist for The Times, is president emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: albanians; baathists; bush; churchill; croats; iran; iraq; kosovo; kurds; muslims; ottomans; saddam; serbs; shiites; sunnis; syria; tito; turkey; unitednations; yugoslavia

1 posted on 11/25/2003 3:32:12 PM PST by OESY
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To: OESY
Will wonders never cease, an informed, non Bush bashing piece on Iraq, complete with facts and a plausible solution.
Doesn't he know he writing for the NY Times?
2 posted on 11/25/2003 3:35:53 PM PST by don'tbedenied
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To: don'tbedenied
This Gelb was a breed apart.
3 posted on 11/25/2003 3:48:26 PM PST by OESY
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To: OESY
That makes perfect sense. The only thing we'd have trouble with is keeping the three countries from constantly being at each others' throats. If they'd agree to each stay on their side of the fence, this would be wonderful...but when has virtually anyone in the Middle East shown that they could do that?

}:-)4
4 posted on 11/25/2003 4:13:42 PM PST by Moose4 ("The road goes on forever, and the party never ends." --Robert Earl Keen)
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To: OESY
They could do it as a referendum. Let the people in those regions vote on whether to secede, so to speak. The results would probably be predictable and it would be a huge show of democracy in action.
5 posted on 11/25/2003 4:18:56 PM PST by GraniteStateConservative ("We happy because when we switch on the TV you never see Saddam Hussein. That's a big happy.")
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To: OESY
This is glossing over the reason Iraq was created in the first place: it'd be quite a pity to have 2 concentrations of oil wealth so close to each other yet splintered into separate administrative units. If Washington envisioned a post-Saddam environment where Iraq's 110 billion barrels of petro reserves could all be tapped from Baghdad and internally shipped with minimal restriction, it's easy to see why a 3-state solution will never be seriously considered.

More importantly, splitting Iraq makes very little strategic sense. What we need is a single state capable of standing by itself so we wouldn't have to stay permanently. Chopping Iraq in 3 is a virtual invitation for Iran to flex its muscles in the south, for Turkey to choke off the Kurds in the north, for Syria to throw in its lot with the Sunni center. A 3-state solution isn't sustainable unless there's always a 4th state - ourselves - always present to maintain balance.
6 posted on 11/25/2003 4:19:00 PM PST by Filibuster_60
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To: Moose4
The same thing will apply as the current plan-- for the US to be invited guests of the host government of Iraq (except it would be presences in the three regions, not the whole nation). We will enforce the new borders.
7 posted on 11/25/2003 4:20:32 PM PST by GraniteStateConservative ("We happy because when we switch on the TV you never see Saddam Hussein. That's a big happy.")
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To: Filibuster_60
We will stay in Iraq for as long as we "stayed" in Germany.

: )
8 posted on 11/25/2003 4:23:03 PM PST by GraniteStateConservative ("We happy because when we switch on the TV you never see Saddam Hussein. That's a big happy.")
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To: GraniteStateConservative
The same thing will apply as the current plan-- for the US to be invited guests of the host government of Iraq (except it would be presences in the three regions, not the whole nation). We will enforce the new borders.

In other words we'll have a major presence in the Mideast for an indefinite period. . . I doubt that's what Bush intends.

There are major problems you're overlooking. First is Turkey's opposition to Kurdish autonomy - the Turks will do everything in their power to stifle Kurdish development, even to the extent of cooperating with our enemies Iran and Syria toward that end. Free Kurdistan will then be surrounded on all sides by hostile elements - the Iranians, Syrians, Turks, Sunni Iraqis. That doesn't make them a viable state, even with our support.

The other big question is, how are we sure the Shiites won't be more pro-Iran than pro-America? Among the most influential figures in post-Saddam Iraq are Shiite ayatollahs with close ties to Iran's theocracy. At least some form of Islamic government is favored by many if not most Shiites. They're pro-American today to the extent that they fear the return of Sunni dominance, but give them their own state and you're taking away the main basis of that sentiment.

Splitting Iraq should be a last resort - only a last resort.

9 posted on 11/25/2003 4:33:00 PM PST by Filibuster_60
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To: OESY
"For decades, the United States has worshiped at the altar of a unified yet unnatural Iraqi state."

I've heard nothing from the Bush administration about any Iraq other than a "federal state", with appropriate autonomy for the three sectors.

Gelb is playing a little fast and loose with the truth of the policy here.

10 posted on 11/25/2003 4:58:44 PM PST by okie01 (www.ArmorforCongress.com...because Congress isn't for the morally halt and the mentally lame.)
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To: Moose4
Why not let them got their separate ways? The Kurds seemed to be pro-American.
11 posted on 11/25/2003 6:07:43 PM PST by Ukiapah Heep (Shoes for Industry!)
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To: OESY
This is probably what will happen in 2005.

And it would be the straw that broke the camel's back..
12 posted on 11/25/2003 8:34:33 PM PST by a_Turk (Temperance, Fortitude, Prudence, and Justice..)
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To: OESY


Mr. Gelb (Yellow in German).
13 posted on 11/25/2003 8:37:15 PM PST by a_Turk (Temperance, Fortitude, Prudence, and Justice..)
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To: OESY
Funny how the same folk who are full of bitterness about the colonial detritus of "artificial borders" are the very first people to revere those borders as sacrosanct.

If the Palestinians should have their own state, then how can one possibly suggest that the Kurds need be stateless?

14 posted on 11/25/2003 9:03:07 PM PST by cookcounty
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To: Filibuster_60
More importantly, splitting Iraq makes very little strategic sense.

It might make sense to return things to the way they always were if there's a possibility it could work:

The Ottomans ruled all the peoples of this land as they were: separately. In 1921, Winston Churchill cobbled the three parts together for oil's sake under a monarch backed by British armed forces. The Baathist Party took over in the 1960's, with Saddam Hussein consolidating its control in 1979, maintaining unity through terror and with occasional American help.

15 posted on 12/01/2003 7:19:13 AM PST by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: OESY
Yeah, this solution is working soooo nicely in the Balkans.
16 posted on 12/01/2003 7:20:39 AM PST by Pietro
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To: Green Mountain Boy; dirtboy; Yehuda; Modernman; Verginius Rufus; bagman; familyofman; ...
Ping: "The Three-State Solution in Iraq"

The Ottomans ruled all the peoples of Iraq as they were: separately. In 1921, Winston Churchill cobbled the three parts together for oil's sake under a monarch backed by British armed forces. The Baathist Party took over in the 1960's, with Saddam Hussein consolidating its control in 1979, maintaining unity through terror and with occasional American help.

17 posted on 12/01/2003 7:41:31 AM PST by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: Dr. Scarpetta
I just can't make the three-state solution work. I keep looking to the east and seeing Iran. Splitting up Iraq, which certainly seems attractive, will make Iran all that more powerful, which is, IMHO, a very bad idea.
18 posted on 12/01/2003 9:57:47 AM PST by bagman
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To: bagman; Dr. Scarpetta
The three traditional states are going to be a mess but are inevitable and, according to Senator Lugar, the prediction of all the experts who testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
19 posted on 12/01/2003 5:29:47 PM PST by caltrop
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