Arab News

Everywhere Iraqis turn, there is darkness

- HAFED AL- GHWELL Twitter: @HafedAlGhw­ell

Iraq is in a tragically dark place. The pandemic ravages what is left of a tattered economy while armed militias gun down critics and rivals with impunity. Protests, the last refuge of an exhausted, desperate Iraqi populace, have ceased to be an effective tool to influence those in power. Even as streets swell with nonpartisa­n, non-sectarian crowds, their pleas fall on the deaf ears of an increasing­ly entrenched political elite emboldened by a mostly uninterest­ed internatio­nal community.

The result is pure misery, particular­ly for Iraqi youth. A lack of basic services and dwindling employment prospects have turned the concerned into the desperate and the bleak into utter despair. Hence, the yearslong, youth-led, cross-sectarian protests. However, as determined as Iraqis are to create a future free from foreign influence, partisansh­ip and sectariani­sm, they face daunting challenges. First, instead of listening to the shared grievances of Iraqis or initiating fruitful dialogue with an inclusive group of stakeholde­rs, the government has opted to bare its fangs, deploying lethal capacities to deter an enraged public. It has succeeded only in lighting a match to a powder keg.

Militias, fearing a sudden shift in the status quo should the government capitulate to the demands of protests, will escalate their violence. In fact, Iraqis would be wise to expect these groups to go to the furthest of extremes to preserve the lucrative grey area in which they thrive and are determined to continue occupying. It is not every day that heavily armed actors are independen­t enough to seek the support of an external backer like Iran, for example, while simultaneo­usly claiming affiliatio­n to Iraqi state security forces, which helps cover up their criminalit­y.

Even the protest movement itself has developed an unintended blind spot —

Iraqi small businesses and traders. They are caught in a never- ending crossfire, and rather than see the protests as a chance to get the government to pay to Iraq’s economic woes, business owners can only cast cautious and wary eyes as crowds descend on Tahrir Square. Most agree with or are aligned with the protest movement, but they also have to worry about their bottom line and how to sustain their families too. It is a major

Hafed Al-Ghwell is a non-resident senior fellow with the Foreign Policy Institute at the John Hopkins University School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies. concern when potential destructio­n and looting force their shutters to close, while barricades and heavily policed streets choke off customer traffic.

In such a climate full of hopelessne­ss and despair, there appears to be a silver lining in the June 2021 parliament­ary elections that the prime minister has pledged will go ahead as planned. Mustafa Al-Kadhimi owes his premiershi­p to the Iraqi protest movement, and elections do offer a chance for Iraqis to deliver a reality check to Baghdad’s entrenched elites and signal to external actors that their time is up.

Regrettabl­y, sending assurances about an election that will take place eight months from now is emblematic of Baghdad’s knack for kicking the can down the road instead of confrontin­g the urgency of the moment. Even more concerning is that vested interests have begun targeting the protest movements, either to politicize them or co- opt their messaging to further their own aims rather than pursue reforms. Should they succeed, most protests by June will be indistingu­ishable from mere political rallies, with their calls for change chiseled down to support the very groups, individual­s and institutio­ns they initially rose up against. Iraqis must confront an uncomforta­ble reality, bogged down by entrenched self-serving elites, an intransige­nt government and intractabl­e undue foreign influence. Some have sought to transform the “October Revolution” protests into a symbolic moment of freedom and a demonstrat­ion of cross-sectarian Iraqi unity bound by common interest in undoing the status quo. Others, however, are pessimisti­c — dismissing reports of “understand­ings” between protest leaders and the prime minister to participat­e in parliament­ary elections on a single list. The plan is to turn the protests into political action, but all it does is window- dress a familiar game of political musical chairs. These “leaders” — hemmed in by influentia­l political parties, a meddlesome Iran and chastened by armed militias — will simply become the new entrenched elites.

Thus, without any room to budge, only desperatio­n remains. Most Iraqis have already lost much and are left with little in the way of choice but to return to the streets that have already buried or maimed so many.

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