Ten
Years of Police Training in Iraq
Invited Article: History
News Network 2013
Martha
K. Huggins
Ten years ago, in the aftermath of the invasion
of Iraq and that country's descent into anarchy, the United States began
assisting, training, and equipping the Iraqi police.
In doing so, it was following a grand -- and
deeply morally unsettling -- historical tradition. The United States had
already been arming and training foreign police throughout the world for over
eighty years -- especially in Latin America. One of the major components in
these foreign police programs is assisting in the creation of heavily armed,
paramilitary, SWAT-type police units, which left recepient nations with police
forces with military mentalities deeply ingrained in their institutional
culture.
In Iraq, this counterinsurgency-type training of
police for military-style operations still scarrs the landscape ten years after
the outbreak of war.
As a scholar of Latin America, especially Brazil
during its military period, and a historical sociologist of U.S. assistance to
Latin American police, I continue to be struck by the similarities between
police training in Iraq between 2003 and 2013 and police training programs in
Latin America from the 1950s through the 1980s -- the era of Argentina's "Dirty War" (making headlines again thanks to the new pope).
U.S. assistance to foreign police has been more
harmful than positive, both to recipient nations and to the United States -- in
Afghanistan today, relations between U.S. advisors and the Afghan police gone well beyond the breaking point. It has failed to implant the rule of
law, partially because American police advisors have had to break U.S.
laws and conspired to hide those illegal activities from Congress and the
press to keep police programs funded --even though much of such funding is
black-booked for national security purposes anyway.
Of course, international police assistance is
lucrative -- greasing career mobility for academics who get government grants,
for private contract corporations providing labor and material for police
assistance, and for U.S. military and intelligence officials who "activate"
such programs. Power, status, and income are derived from the business of
police assistance. Ironically, those in the police assistance industry need not
succeed at implementing law and order to be successful. In fact, a failure to
implant even the roots of the rule of law has been the most consistent outcome
of previous police assistance initiatives.
The sculptors of Iraq’s counterinsurgency
program, a quadrumvirate of long-time U.S. government counterinsurgency
promoters -- Vice President Dick Cheney,
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Colonel James Steele, and General (and now disgraced ex-CIA
director) David Petraeus, a mentee of Steele in El Salvador -- ignored
this history. In what was dubbed the “Salvadorization” of Iraq -- which in the 1980s had been labeled,
the “Vietnamization” of El Salvador—made Steele and Petraeus the go-to men for
creating a national commando force in Iraq Interestingly, the U.S. had
historically acted in Haiti, Nicaragua, the Dominican Republic, Germany, and
Japan to break up national police organizations, seen as vulnerable to political
manipulation by indigenous national leaders. Therefore, the Iraqi commando
forces, initially dubbed “Special Police Commandos” (SPCs) and officially subordinated to Iraq’s
Central Interior Ministry, represented a break with some prior traditions.
In any case, when police assistance is first
initiated in a country, "old guard" police are usually discharged;
thereafter there is a U-turn in which selected violent "old guard"
police are reinserted into the police system. In Iraq, members of Saddam
Hussein’s Ba’ath Party were first expelled from the Special Police Commando
units and then selectively reinserted as social conflict increased in Iraq
beyond the ability of U.S. and Iraqi internal security forces to control
it.
An increasing inability to reduce conflict is
usually followed by creating additional paramilitary forces -- Iraq is now said
to have at least twenty-seven brigades of Special Police Commandos, all
recruited and trained by the United States Yet even with -- or more
likely due to -- an emphasis on commando paramilitary police, internal conflict
and violence continue to increase. Rebel units and militias (the latter
usually with Iraqi police collaboration) continue to challenge U.S.-linked
internal security forces.
Trained in counterinsurgency, the SPCs -- now
designated “National Police” -- have set up clandestine detention centers where
torture has been regularly carried out. The tortures and atrocities that go on in
those detention centers has been well-documented by The Guardian and by the Oregonian, in its series on the Oregon National Guard troops who saw Iraqis
being tortured at an Iraqi prison in Baghdad and intervened to protect and
medically treat victims. When the National Guardsmen’s actions were reported to
senior U.S. officers, the guardsmen were ordered leave and keep what they had
seen a secret. Evidence of torture and assassinations by the U.S.-assisted
police and commando forces inevitably leak out, followed by U.S. government and
military denials.
Increased armed security is launched to address
a recipient country’s “insecurity,” with each move generating counter-moves by
violent actors. U.S. government and military officials discredit evidence
of wrong-doing by U.S.-trained police -- even as this continues to become
public. Congressional hearings vet claims of police violence and, in some
cases, accept such evidence, leading to the temporary shutdown of police and
associated counterinsurgency assistance. But such assistance usually continues
under different institutional rubrics, tightly concealed by the secrecy
legitimized by “national security.” This formula applies just as well to Iraq
during the ten years that the U.S. has been involved in creating ‘new’ Iraqi
police forces, as it did for Latin America, especially between the 1960s and
the end of the 1980s. Police assistance to an already divided society has
resulted in deeper divisions within the population, as one sectarian Islamist
group is played off against another.
As The Guardian documented, in Iraq “the long-term impact of [US] funding and arming [of the
commando] paramilitary force was to unleash a deadly sectarian militia that
terrorized the Sunni community and helped germinate a civil war that claimed
tens of thousands of lives. At the height of that sectarian conflict, 3,000
bodies a month were strewn on the streets of Iraq.”
This is the status of Iraq after ten years of
training and operational collaboration between Iraqi counterinsurgency forces and
U.S. advisors. What lessons can be derived from the history of US assistance to
other nations’ police? A country deemed important to US interests is said to be
a experiencing a threat -- it matters not if the threat is real or a WMD-like fabrication. Ideological justifications for providing
police assistance are then promoted nationally and internationally.
Today, Iraq remains in the throes of a
low-intensity war and most people’s personal security is lacking. The
majority of Iraqis distrust their police and prospects for democratic policing
and the rule of law are grim. The damage to Iraq from ten years of
American police assistance, and the lives ruined by torture at the hands of
American-affiliated Iraqi police, has left its scar on victims and on U.S.
legitimacy. Will the lessons of this history be remembered and applied?
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