Middle-east Arab News Opinion | Asharq Al-awsat

Opinion: The US and the liberation of Mosul | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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A Kurdish peshmerga fighter flashes the sign for victory after re-capturing the village of Tel Asquf from Islamic State (IS) militants on the eastern outskirts of Mosul Dam, near the northern city Mosul, on August 18, 2014. (AFP PHOTO/AHMAD AL-RUBAYE)


It is wonderful that every time the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) shows up or advances towards the outskirts of Mosul, particularly near the Iraqi Kurdistan region, it is swiftly targeted by the US air force. This is unlike the situation in the western Anbar province where the US response to even more dangerous situations has been lukewarm to the extent that it has angered residents, raising doubts among them and questions that amount to conspiracy theories.

A few weeks ago, US officials began to talk about plans to liberate Mosul by next spring. They even went further by describing the operation as being “imminent,” something that runs against intelligence traditions and calculations.

“Imminent” is the designation given to operations or plans that are carried out within hours or a couple of days maximum. In reality, there is no indication pointing to such a degree of progress being achieved. The number of local volunteers is below the required level and their capabilities are extremely modest. While Iraqi forces are busy on multiple fronts. There are also far more significant targets than Mosul both strategically and in terms of security, such as the Salah Al-Din governorate and the area west of Baghdad, more specifically in the Anbar province.

So, what is the secret behind the US passion for Mosul?

In principle, and according to the information, liberating Mosul serves neither the project nor the aspirations of the Kurdistan Regional Government President Massoud Barzani as it will ease the pressures on the Iraqi government at a time when tensions between the two sides, particularly the one relating to article 140 of the constitution about “disputed areas,” remain unresolved. Moreover, liberating Mosul and southwestern Kirkuk will lead to the resumption of oil being exported from Kirkuk to Turkey through the national pipeline instead of temporarily transferred through Kurdish ones that are not under the control of Baghdad. This is not to mention the historical sensitivity felt by the people of Mosul as far as the growing Kurdish influence in their governorate is concerned, especially after the Peshmerga forces refused to raise the Iraqi flag during its operations, and Barzani’s emphasis that the current borders were drawn by blood, a statement that reveals dangerous intentions that might create frictions.

So what explains the US insistence on liberating Mosul? It probably emanates from its commitment not to expose the Kurdistan region to a sudden threat from ISIS. This logical line of argument may convince Barzani. But on the part of the central government in Baghdad, it sounds suspicious because the previous protests in Mosul escalated to a degree that some administrative officials from the city harbored intentions to demand the internationalization of their cause. Some even went further by demanding to “internationalize the cause of Sunni Arabs as part of a Muslim Brotherhood project targeting the unity of Iraq.” I have noticed this tune being played by several players, which may threaten Iraq’s unity and lead to a devastating war.

On the other side, resolving the situation in Anbar will strengthen security in Baghdad in particular and the strategic security of Iraq in general, help eliminate pockets of terrorism and secure Iraq’s borders with Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. This will also achieve a strategic superiority against ISIS in Mosul. The people of Mosul have shown no form of armed resistance against ISIS thus far. No anti-ISIS operation has been recorded within the city of two million people. While the people of Anbar, who have never ceased to fight ISIS, offering thousands of victims, should be rewarded by giving them precedence in terms of aid.

Although the Nineveh province and its capital Mosul are close to the hearts of Iraqis, its liberation should be carried out by those who believe in the sanctity of the unity and future of Iraq. This requires that those behind the recent failures and defeats not be handed any responsibility for fear they would negatively impact the psychological and administrative situation of the province.

Their return will bring back confusion to the scene and perhaps rekindle the state of rivalry with the center either in coordination with the presidency of the Kurdistan Regional Government or by neighbors. Thus, triumph over ISIS may bring another problem that may prove more dangerous.

While the danger of ISIS is obvious and short-lived, fragmentation is more dangerous because it can be endorsed by simple people, those with sectarian agendas or those in charge. Therefore, the central government should be committed to formulating a clear vision.