Oprørsbekæmpelse og orientalisme: Amerikansk Counter-Insurgency I Irak og strategien mod Islamisk Stat

  • Lars Erslev Andersen

    Research output: Articles: Journal and NewspaperJournal ArticleResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    The situation in Iraq and Syria in 2015 cannot be fully understood without
    looking back on the war against Iraq launched by the USA and
    the so-called Coalition of the Willing in March 2003, as well as considering
    on the way in which the war and Iraq’s new political dynamics
    – local and regional – were handled in the aftermath of the invasion.
    This article assesses the long-term political consequences of the
    „turn to the local“ in U.S. counterinsurgency (COIN) strategy by critically
    interrogating the so-called „Anbar-awakening“ in Iraq. Facing
    a steady increase in violence and insurgency in the Anbar province in
    Iraq 2006 despite comprehensive kinetic US military operations, the
    US Command in Iraq decided to shift shifting strategy, and adopted
    the COIN approach that came to be known as the Surge. Sunni Muslim
    communities in Anbar province were the base for the insurgency,
    and especially Fallujah was then seen as the center for al-Qaeda
    operations. The locals were squeezed between al-Qaeda insurgency
    groups, the Iraqi Army, Iraqi Shia militias, and US invasion forces that
    all transformed the cities in Anbar into battlefields.
    A group of tribal leaders--The Awakening Sheikhs (Sahwat al-Anbar /
    Sahwa movement)--offered to cooperate with the US forces in fighting
    al-Qaeda. This offer lead the new US Chief of Command David Petraeus
    and his adviser, the Australian colonel and anthropologist David
    Kilcullen, to change US strategy from killing enemies to protecting
    the locals by training local militias and providing them with logistical
    and intelligence support as well as weapons. Apparently these alliances
    succeeded in hunting down al-Qaeda, but the Sheikhs were never
    included in the political process in Baghdad and the militias were refused
    inclusion in the Iraqi Army. In 2014 many of these trained, but
    politically marginalized, locals were supporting Islamic State (IS) in
    Iraq. Based on US Army documents and secondary literature as well as
    Iraqi sources, this article deconstructs the narrative of the Surge and
    analyses the political context after the Surge in order to explain what
    went wrong with the COIN strategy 'turning to the local’ in Iraq. The
    article offers an in-depth examination of the unintended political and
    military consequences resulting from the incorporation of local political
    actors into COIN operations that links the shift in strategy in Iraq
    and the fight against al-Qaeda with the contemporary „rise“ of IS.
    Original languageDanish
    JournalHistorisk Tidsskrift
    Volume115
    Issue number1
    Pages (from-to)117-145
    Number of pages28
    Publication statusPublished - 24 Nov 2015
    EventUS Counterterrorism and Counterinsurgency: The Anbar Awakening in Iraq and the Rise of Islamic State - University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
    Duration: 10 Dec 201510 Dec 2015
    http://humanities.ku.dk/calendar/2015/december/us_counterterrorism/

    Seminar

    SeminarUS Counterterrorism and Counterinsurgency
    LocationUniversity of Copenhagen
    Country/TerritoryDenmark
    CityCopenhagen
    Period10/12/201510/12/2015
    Internet address

    Keywords

    • Iraq
    • United States
    • Strategy
    • Islamic State (IS)
    • Al-Qaeda
    • Counter insurgency (COIN)

    Cite this