The following is an article published on Oct. 22 written by
O'Brien Browne, professor of Middle Eastern history and politics at
Schiller International University and inter-cultural communication at
Heidelberg University: "Virtually all of Iraq's present
troubles stem from one thing: rulers. Not the human rulers who wield
political, economic, or military power - although they cause mischief
enough - but the humble ruler itself, commonly used by schoolchildren
and draftsmen.
"As surprising as it may be, the continual fighting in Iraq
has little to do with East vs. West, Islam vs. Christianity, or even
Shi'ite vs. Sunni. But it has everything to do with rulers. Which
is exactly why Iraq should be allowed to separate into three distinct
nations - one Sunni, one Kurd, and one Shi'ite. Moreover, none of
these entities should even go by the name of 'Iraq', which is
little more than a colonial sobriquet.
"Almost a century ago, rulers - those seemingly harmless
instruments of precision - were brandished like swords by European
colonial map-drawers, slashing, hacking, and defining the present-day
frontiers of not only Iraq but almost the entire Middle East. With a few
strokes, this modest yet mighty weapon created not only countries but a
host of vexing problems as well. If you want to discover hot spots on
this globe, look for long straight border lines. You'll find them
across the Middle East and Africa.
"Iraq's straight-edge boundaries - slicing through
ethnic, linguistic, and religious areas - are particularly egregious. No
naturally developed nation-state has such clean-cut frontiers, with the
exception of the US and Canada, but that was another historical process
altogether, involving like-minded European settlers rationally dividing
a stretch of land, in which the original inhabitants had been destroyed.
"Organically developed nations are commonly delineated by
deserts, rivers, lakes, seas, mountain ranges, or forests. They tend to
be marked by wiggly, curvaceous lines and oddly shaped - Vietnam or
Austria, for instance. Such boundaries became established after hundreds
of years of settlement and fighting, resulting in similar ethnic,
linguistic, cultural, and religious groups binding together because of
one basic fact: People want to live among their own. Once they have
sorted out their internal and external affairs, they can live in harmony
among other nations or chose to make war for their own national reasons
and purposes.
"Mesopotamia, as the region that includes Iraq was called
until recently, had never been a 'country' or
'nation' in the modern senses of these words. The wise and
largely benign rulers of the Ottoman Empire, who reigned over this land
for centuries, realised that no outside force could ever rule this area
by foisting pre-conceived notions of nationhood on the population, whose
loyalties lay with family, tribe, linguistic grouping, and religious
orientation. More important, the Ottomans understood that these diverse
groups simply didn't want to live together.
"After World War I, however, Mesopotamia got a new master. The
British whipped out their rulers to draw a new nation, labeling it
'Iraq'. The result has been intransigent tribal, ethnic, and
religious tensions and violence.
"Historically, diverse ethno-religious groups have lived side
by side peacefully when they were crushed together by the steel fist of
an authoritarian ruler. Former Yugoslavia serves as a prime example.
Bound together by Tito, a heavy-handed leader, this artificial creation
incorporated such different peoples as Croats, Serbs, Armenians,
Montenegrins, Bosnians, and Albanians. This incendiary mixture imploded
on Tito's death and the collapse of the Soviet Union. Immediately,
groups began fighting it out to redraw boundaries.
"Unfortunately, this meant that wars had to be fought. Though
vicious, cruel, and bloody, this process was vital. Its beneficial
results can be seen on a modern map of the region: New countries such as
Croatia have the telltale odd shape and wiggly lines of older,
established, stable countries. Gone are those artificial border lines,
the unreal trappings of a federation that should never have existed.
Gone, for the most part, too, is the explosive anger that exists when
ethnic groups are unwillingly thrown together. Instead, although Serbs,
Croats, and the other groups do not love one another, they can now live
alongside one another in relative harmony. Where this is not the case,
as in Kosovo, ethnic tensions continue to bubble.
"Regardless of the US and coalition presence in Iraq, there
will be peace in the region only when historical forces are allowed to
play out. Indeed, this process has already begun in the northern Kurdish
areas, largely spared of suicide bombings and sectarian beheadings
because the Kurds there have already begun the process of righting
colonial wrongs. The borders of the still unborn state of Kurdistan are
appropriately not ruler-straight. Of equal import, its people are bound
by linguistic, cultural, religious, and ethnic ties. They should have
little to fight about, except securing their own independence.
"The long-term solution to ending the warfare in Iraq lies in
letting the fighting develop into a three-way war of national identity
and national independence. Outsiders should not interfere, although in
reality this is virtually impossible to prevent. Only then can concepts
such as democracy be considered. Peace will only come to this ancient
land once the artificial grouping delineated by those absurdly straight
borders has been sorted out.
"Present-day Iraqis should be allowed to right the wrong done
by foreign rulers wielding rulers and form nation-states of their own
design. Only then will they and, hopefully, the world community be able
to live in a more stable and peaceful world.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Input Solutions Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.