Let Iraqis Decide US Pullout
By
Abigail A. Fuller and Neil Wollman
ccun.org, June 5, 2008
Give us three minutes and we can find an op-ed piece in a U.S.
newspaper calling for the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq, or
arguing that they should stay.
The arguments are varied and numerous: If the
U.S. leaves, anarchy will ensue. Occupation forces are a target for
foreign terrorists. Bush should set a timetable for withdrawal.
Setting a timetable would embolden those using violence in Iraq. And
so on.
What is missing from this picture? Any
discussion of what the Iraqi people themselves want.
The opinions of those most affected by this war
should count the most. A nationwide referendum should be conducted
in Iraq on the question of whether U.S. troops should stay or go, in
which every Iraqi can vote directly.
What the U.S. public wants is much discussed in
the media -- nearly every week poll results are announced indicating
how many people believe the United States should withdraw all or
some troops from Iraq (63 percent, according to the latest USA
Today/CNN Gallup Poll) and how many believe the United States made a
mistake in sending troops to Iraq (59 percent, from the same poll).
As U.S. citizens we certainly have an interest
in whether the troops stay. Our tax money funds the U.S. military
presence, and our young men and women are being killed and injured
there. So our opinions matter.
But what about the Iraqis?
There are inherent difficulties in polling in an
unstable, war-torn environment. Furthermore, most polls of Iraqi
public opinion ask such ambiguous questions as, "Do you think the
country is headed in the right direction?" -- to which a "yes"
answer could mean any number of things, from a belief that the
insurgents are defeating the occupation forces and that's a good
thing, to a belief that a democratic government will be established
soon in part due to the U.S. presence.
Neither is it sufficient to simply allow the
Iraqi government to determine whether or not U.S. troops stay.
Thirty-seven percent of Iraqis, a significant minority, feel that
the Iraqi National Assembly does not serve the interests of all
Iraqis (according to an International Republican Institute poll in
July 2005).
Some polls have asked Iraqis specifically about
the presence of U.S. troops, and guess what: they want us to leave.
A February poll by the U.S. military, cited by
the Brookings Institution, found that 71 percent of Iraqis "oppose
the presence of Coalition Forces in Iraq." This poll was taken only
in urban areas, but others have found much the same sentiment.
According to a January 2005 poll by Abu Dhabi
TV/Zogby International, 82 percent of Sunni Arabs and 69 percent of
Shiite Arabs favor the withdrawal of U.S. troops either immediately
or once an elected government is in place.
But an opinion poll does not carry the weight of
a referendum, in which all Iraqis could clearly and definitively
vote on whether or not U.S. troops should remain in their country.
It can be done: Kurdish activists organized a
referendum on independence during the January national elections in
Iraq, which found that over 90 percent of Kurd voters want
independence for the region. On Oct. 15 Iraqis voted in another
referendum, ratifying a new constitution.
It appears that we as a nation are so
self-absorbed that both the hawks and the doves among us have
forgotten to ask what those most affected by the war -- the Iraqi
people themselves -- want.
Let us remedy this situation by supporting a
referendum and then abiding by the results. Let the Iraqi people
decide.
--
This is an updated version of an article published by the
authors at the UPI in 2005.
(Abigail A. Fuller and Neil Wollman work at
Manchester College in North Manchester, Ind. She is associate
professor of sociology and social work and he is professor of
psychology and senior fellow of the Peace Studies Institute there.)
Neil Wollman; Ph. D.; Senior Fellow,
Bentley Alliance for Ethics and Social Responsibility; Bentley
College; Waltham, MA, 02452;
NWollman@Bentley.edu
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