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scenes and on the ground, however, there was a strong sense of trepidation that conditions
were only set to deteriorate. The government and security forces were weak and the situation
fragile. Small ripples, of which there were many in the country and wider region, could
quickly destabilise the post-US environment in Iraq.
In the end, though, it was domestic developments as much as external forces that triggered
the crisis that Iraq faced in 2014. The government took action comparable in style to the
divisive tactics of recently deposed leaders in the Arab world: it targeted a minority
community and became increasingly authoritarian. Arrest warrants were issued for opposition
political figures (some within days of the withdrawal of the last US combat troops) while
hundreds of Sunni men were rounded up throughout the central provinces on grounds of
alleged terrorism. The inefficient court system, subject to patronage and corruption, was
excruciatingly slow to deal with these cases, detaining family breadwinners for months while
their families grew both desperate and angry with the authorities. They began to demonstrate
against the government on a regular basis from December 2012.
The seeds of discontent had been sown, but the security forces were both strong enough to
contain most of the unrest and populated by Shi'ah soldiers and officers. This meant that
some sort of internal uprising or mutiny against the government was much less likely than in
other parts of the region. The sectarian nature of the country had provided it with a crude and
temporary form of stability. However, it was not to last. Iraq does not exist in a vacuum and
when neighbouring Syria became the next victim of an Arab Spring uprising it had a gradual
but profound impact.
If Iraq had appeared outwardly stable in the months following the US withdrawal, it was from
a comparative perspective only. The country still experienced terrorist attacks on a daily
basis, albeit at a lower rate than during the more difficult years between 2003 and 2008.
Mosul in the north of the country saw regular incidents, accounting for a significant
proportion of the country's violence. Then, for two weeks in February 2012 something
changed. The city fell eerily quiet for a short, almost imperceptible spell. It was speculated
that the strong militant presence in the city was up to something. The suspicion was that the
militants had spotted an opportunity in Syria as the situation escalated and that they had sent
fighters across the border to build relationships. Their aim would be to foster support, recruit
followers, create alliances and trade goods and weapons.
It was a very gradual process, often eclipsed by atrocities and fast-paced developments on
both sides of the border. Nonetheless, through the volatility, what was then the Islamic State
of Iraq (ISI) and later the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) or the Islamic State of
Iraq and ash-Sham/Syria (ISIS) began to build its networks and entrench its position.
In the same month, Iraq experienced a profound and highly destabilising shift in the security
environment. Sunni residents had been demonstrating and holding mass sit-ins protesting
against perceived marginalisation by the Iraqi government on a regular basis since December
2012. The protests were most pronounced in urban parts of Anbar province, such as in
Fallujah and Ramadi. However, in April 2013 wider unrest was triggered not in the central
part of the country, but in the northern town of Hawijah. Personnel from the Iraqi security
forces stormed a protest camp in the town, sparking an exchange of small arms fire. Several
of the demonstrators were shot dead, prompting a rapid and violent backlash from armed
fighters across Sunni parts of the country.
What cannot be ascertained is the proportion of those fighters who were members of ISIL,
rather than just angered local residents with access to firearms. What is clear, however, is that
levels of violence escalated considerably from this point. The frequency of attacks went from
an average of just under 60 per week prior to the Hawijah incident to almost 110 by the end
of 2013. It is therefore very likely that Islamist militants were seeking to capitalise on the
discontent and build on the momentum of the violence, escalating their attacks against the
Iraqi state and military in the hope of earning the sympathy of disgruntled members of the
Sunni population.
A campaign of assassinations also began singling out members of the security forces in places
such as Mosul. Everyone from soldiers and policemen to senior officers and retired generals
were killed, either in bombings targeting patrols and convoys, or surreptitious shootings
targeting the victims whilst off-duty or at home. This gradually reduced both the capability
and the morale of the Iraqi security forces, something which became a major defining point
of the battleground in 2014.
On one night in early June, Islamists staged a brazen assault on the city of Samarra in Salah
ad-Din province. Noteworthy for its revered Shiah mosque, the bombing of which catalysed
a major escalation in sectarian killings in 2006, the city was supposed to have relatively high
levels of security, not least to protect the site. However in the middle of the night residents
awoke to streams of militants parading through the citys streets. They withdrew again before
dawn, but the move, both a publicity stunt and a testing of the security response, set the stage
for the next militant operation.
On 10 June Islamist fighters streamed into the northern city of Mosul. The security forces,
demoralised and ill-equipped, fled the city within hours. Key buildings fell, dozens were
killed and the civilians who failed to flee in the darkness found themselves trapped, including
dozens of Turkish nationals taken hostage at the countrys consulate in the city. Maintaining
the momentum of the operation, the militants were able to drive out the security forces from
numerous towns and villages, moving south through the provinces of Ninawa, Tamim
(Kirkuk), Salah ad-Din, Anbar, Diyala and even on to Babil, at one stage threatening the Iraqi
capital with strangulation.
The rapid, high-profile success of the move was a major PR coup for the militants, giving
them instant worldwide credibility and thus making it easier for them to recruit more fighters.
Within weeks the group had renamed itself the Islamic State and declared the territory under
its control to be an Islamic caliphate. They were also able to raid local banks, seize significant
oil and gas assets and have since raised finance through the smuggling of oil products. The
group also centralised control over the distribution of food and medicine and generally began
fashioning itself in the image of a more recognisable state entity, albeit an extreme, violent
and repressive one. The fact that it has been able to confront the Iraqi state demonstrates both
its power and the weakness of governance in Iraq, highlighting once again the inherent
relationship between Arab Spring unrest and areas of poor governance.
At the time of writing the Iraqi security forces are only managing to counteract Islamic State
militants with international support and the use of unaccountable Shiah militias, who on
numerous occasions have been accused of criminal activities and extrajudicial violence.
Iraqs own institutions are not able to provide one of the most important responsibilities of a
state: security.
As such, Iraq is not as much a victim of the Arab Spring, but rather a victim of the poor levels
of governance which triggered the Arab Spring uprisings in other countries. The only way
that things will improve in the country and the wider region will be the development of more
efficient, accountable and resilient institutions, but that will likely take years. As such, the
instability and turbulence witnessed in the wider region is likely to persist at least for the
foreseeable future. Unless Iraq continues to strive for greater institutional proficiency, it will
remain as vulnerable to the unrest as the other states shaken over the past five years.