[From nobody Sat Dec 21 13:51:07 2024
From: &quot;Tara Swift&quot; &lt;tara_swift@lycos.co.uk&gt;
To: &quot;Iofadmin&quot; &lt;iofadmin@lists.riseup.net&gt;
Subject: The case for withdrawal
Date: Tue, 23 Jan 2007 18:04:12 -0600
Message-ID: &lt;20070124000415.036AF15001@cmcodec02.st1.spray.net&gt;
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: multipart/related;
 boundary=&quot;----=_NextPart_000_0106_01C74206.9D7388A0&quot;
X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2900.3028
X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2900.3028
Thread-Index: Acc/S0/2/1DsS2lhTQK0OHGegSXzRQ==
X-Lycos-AS: 1.20
X-Lycos-AV: OK
X-Lycos-IS: NO
X-AOL-IP: 212.78.202.66

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

------=_NextPart_000_0106_01C74206.9D7388A0
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
	boundary=&quot;----=_NextPart_001_0107_01C74206.9D7388A0&quot;


------=_NextPart_001_0107_01C74206.9D7388A0
Content-Type: text/plain;
	charset=&quot;iso-8859-1&quot;
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraq/withdrawal_4264.jsp
 The United States in Iraq: the case for withdrawal 
  &lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/bullets/clsd_3399cc.gif&gt; Zaid Al-Ali
&lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/author/Zaid_Al-Ali.jsp&gt;  
19 - 1 - 2007 




  &lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/blank.gif&gt; 
The post-2003 occupation is only the latest chapter in Washington's long,
disastrous involvement in Iraq. Zaid Al-Ali tracks a bitter history and
draws a lesson. 
  &lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/blank.gif&gt; 

 ------------------------------------------
&lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/hrs/3399cc.gif&gt; 

  &lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/blank.gif&gt;
&lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/blank.gif&gt; 	
	
The explosion &lt;http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,21073242-401,00.html&gt;
at Mustansiriyah University that killed more than seventy people on 16
January 2007 sent a clear message: no one is safe in today's Iraq. The Iraqi
government has reacted to the atrocity in a typically lethargic and
dishonest manner, offering empty promises of swift justice and increased
security. Meanwhile, very few observers remain hopeful that the escalation
&lt;http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/01/20070110-7.html&gt;  that the
George W Bush administration announced on 10 January - involving the
deployment of around 21,500 additional United States troops in Iraq - will
improve the desperate current situation. 

It is time for policymakers in the US to face up to the fact that the US
occupation &lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraq/worse_4161.jsp&gt;  will
never be able to achieve victory in Iraq, no matter how that goal is defined
and what pattern of behaviour it entails. 

This article argues that there is a clear and ineluctable causal link
between the mere presence of the occupation authorities and the failure to
reestablish law and order in the country. The only viable course of action
is therefore that the US army should withdraw from Iraq as soon as possible.
The article ends by offering some suggestions as to what measures can be
taken to ensure that the country's post-occupation phase will be as peaceful
and successful as possible.
A failure of reconstruction 

The prerequisite to recommending a specific course of action is to offer an
honest diagnosis of what has happened in Iraq since March-April 2003.
Fortunately, most commentators now agree that the US occupation of Iraq,
after apparent military success in the war that preceded it, got off to a
very bad start. By virtue of a series of misguided administrative decisions
- including the dissolution of the Iraqi army and blanket de-Ba'athification
- the occupation authorities managed to destroy the Iraqi state in one fell
swoop. One of the consequences of these blunders is that the US created
enough space for armed groups
&lt;http://www.versobooks.com/books/cdef/c-titles/cockburn_p_the_occupation.sht
ml&gt;  of all kinds to mushroom across Iraq within a short period. 

But this is only one part of the story. The combined effect of the US's
policies in 2003 was the dismantling of the entire Iraqi state. The effect
of everything that has happened since then, however, is even more
disturbing. Despite all the efforts that have been made and all the monies
that have been squandered, the US has clearly failed
&lt;http://us.penguingroup.com/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,9781594201035,00.html&gt;
in the most important task that it had set itself: to put the pieces back
together and rebuild a functioning state in Iraq. 

Baghdad is now but a shadow of its former self, resembling Mogadishu
&lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraqi_war/article_1126.jsp&gt;  more
than anything else. In many areas of the country, the state is completely
absent. Where the state does make its presence felt, the services that it
provides have continued to deteriorate since 2003 - as if there is a cancer
eating away at the heart of the state itself. The Bush administration often
cites the December 2005 parliamentary elections
&lt;http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2006/02/iraq-election-chief-certifies
.php&gt;  and the drafting of the new constitution
&lt;http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/12/AR200510120
1450.html&gt;  as positive developments, but they at best represent a
distraction. A combination of reasons is often cited - sabotage, insurgency,
corruption - to explain the failure to reconstruct the state, but the cause
is more fundamental: it can be found in the nature of the occupation itself.


Whenever a society is occupied, the way in which it will interact with the
occupying forces will be determined by a number of different factors. For
example, it should be obvious that no occupation comes into existence in a
historical vacuum. Indeed, the factual context in which an occupation comes
into existence will have a major effect on the way the occupied society will
react. 

In that sense, the fact that the US occupation of Japan took place after one
of the most violent wars in human history and after the use of overwhelming
force against the occupied country was one of the major reasons why there
was no post-war Japanese resistance to speak of (see John Dower, &quot;A warning
&lt;http://www.bostonreview.net/BR28.1/dower.html&gt; from history&quot;, Boston
Review, February/March 2003). By contrast, the circumstances leading up to
the American occupation of Vietnam led the people of that country to assume
that the US was intending to replace France as a colonial power. 

In that context, it is surprising how little attention observers,
commentators and policymakers alike have paid to the incredibly sordid
history of involvement in Iraq prior to its occupation of that country. The
US has been involved in internal
&lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraqivoices/article_825.jsp&gt; Iraqi
affairs in different ways for at least half a century, and the more involved
it has become the more disastrous the results for ordinary Iraqis
&lt;http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=21241&amp;Cr=iraq&amp;Cr1&gt; . The
details are often difficult to face up to, considering that we are talking
about what should be the world's most important exporter of democracy and
prosperity. From the start however, the US policy in relation to Iraq has
been characterised by blind self-interest, inhumanity and racism. 

A sordid history 

Although it first became involved in Iraqi affairs through covert operations
in the late 1950s, the US made its interests in the country abundantly clear
during the Iraq-Iran war, when it offered billions of dollars in
agricultural credits to the Iraqi regime, which was then able to divert
monies to fund its costly war effort
&lt;http://www.crimesofwar.org/thebook/iran-iraq-war.html&gt;  (1980-88) against
Iran. 

The US also provided Iraqi generals with military support during the war. On
a number of occasions it supplied them with advance warning of Iranian troop
movements in order to facilitate the Iraqi war effort. This was done despite
the fact that the Reagan administration was already
&lt;http://www.commondreams.org/headlines02/0818-02.htm&gt; aware at that point
that the Iraqis were preparing to use chemical weapons on the battlefield,
which is somewhat problematic considering the US's insistence that the rules
of war should be respected at all times. 

When Saddam Hussein invaded
&lt;http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A52241-2002Dec29?language=printer&gt;
Kuwait in 1990, the US seized on the opportunity to launch a full-scale war
against the Iraqi people. Hussein was given five months to withdraw, and
during that time, thirty countries, led by the US, massed their armies along
the Saudi-Iraqi border and in the Gulf. 

In one of the negotiation sessions, James A Baker made the notorious
announcement to Tariq Aziz that Iraq was going to be &quot;bombed in the stone
age&quot;. That is exactly what happened. In violation of just about every rule
of war imaginable, the US and its allies destroyed every piece of
infrastructure, every industrial plant, and every governmental institution
within their reach, whether civilian or not. Within a few weeks, the Iraqi
economy was utterly devastated - the US managed to knock Iraq, which had
previously been considered a middle-income economy, back into third-world
status. 

To make matters worse, and in complete contempt for the people that it
supposedly cared so much for, the US military for the first time used
depleted uranium (DU), a type of nuclear waste, in its munitions. DU is one
of the heaviest substances known to man, and it was used in order to
increase the efficiency of anti-tank shells. 

Southern Iraq was the main battlefield during the course of the war and it
bore witness to a number of massacres: thousands of Iraqi tanks were laid to
waste with DU munitions, even as they withdrew from Kuwait. The effect is
that a vast swathe of southern Iraq has been transformed into a toxic
wasteland. Its land and water will be contaminated for many thousands of
years. 

In the meantime, cancer rates and the number of malformed births amongst the
already poor and downtrodden indigenous people of that area have skyrocketed
&lt;http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/10/1
0/ED44718.DTL&amp;type=printable&gt; . Prior to 2003, US officials dismissed the
appeals by local Iraqi doctors as Ba'athist propaganda; the fact that these
same doctors have continued their campaign against DU in the post-Ba'athist
era has apparently left officials in the US unimpressed (see Zaid Al-Ali,
&quot;Iraq: the  &lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/debates/article-2-114-2143.jsp&gt;
lost generation&quot;, 7 November 2004). 

The next chapter of US-Iraqi relations proved even more deadly for the Iraqi
people. After the initial invasion of Kuwait took place in August 1990, the
United Nations Security Council imposed the most comprehensive sanctions
regime ever devised on Iraq in order to coerce it to withdraw from the
country. The rules of the sanctions regime were simple: Iraq could not
import or export anything for whatever reason. The effect on Iraq's economy
- which was heavily dependent on food imports and on revenues generated by
its oil industry - was devastating. 

After the war, the sanctions were maintained in order to encourage the Iraqi
state to destroy its arsenal of non-conventional
&lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraq/article_1351.jsp&gt; weapons. Iraq
did this within months and - contrary to allegations by US officials -
Iraq's non-conventional weapons programmes were never reconstructed.
Nevertheless, the US decided that the sanctions should be maintained at all
costs, regardless of the price that the Iraqi people would have to pay. It
therefore blocked all efforts by the international community to have the
sanctions lifted. 

It was clear from the start of the sanctions regime that it was utterly
inhuman and could not  &lt;http://www.casi.org.uk/&gt; continue without causing
the death of hundreds of thousands of poor Iraqis. But that is precisely
what happened: after the 1991 war, poverty rates continued to increase at
incredible rates, and an increasing number of Iraqis were dying from
preventable diseases because of a lack of access to basic medicines. 

After a significant amount of pressure, the US acquiesced in the creation of
the oil-for-food programme
&lt;http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/middle_east/02/iraq_events/html/oil_f
ood.stm&gt; . This mechanism was in theory designed to alleviate the suffering
of poor Iraqis, but in fact just prolonged their misery. It allowed the
Iraqi government to sell a limited amount of oil in order to purchase basic
necessities for its population. 

These limits were set according to what was calculated to be the minimum
amount that each Iraqi required to survive. After it was discovered that
Iraqis were still starving despite the program, the limit on the sale of oil
was doubled. Then it was found that this still meant that UN sniffer-dogs
were better fed than the average Iraqi, and the limit was lifted altogether.
But the decision came years too late for hundreds of thousands of Iraqis who
perished as a result of the hardships imposed on them. Each time, the US was
the one to set the limits of the programme. 

The latest chapter in the story of US-Iraqi relations started in 2003, when
the US launched its unprovoked and unjustified attack on Iraq. It is now
commonly accepted that the occupation that followed has served to bring yet
new miseries to the most vulnerable Iraqis. 

A state of corruption

Most people living in the west tend to forget this history as they were
never directly affected by it. Iraqis however are acutely aware of the way
that they have been violently oppressed with the connivance, complicity, or
direct exercise of power by successive US administrations. In light of this
knowledge, and given the context that Iraqis are living through, it is worth
considering what type of person would accept to collaborate with the
occupation forces in Iraq. It was clear from the start, and the way the
situation has played out in practice has proven beyond any shred of a doubt,
that the Iraqi government is populated by officials who are morally corrupt.


It is commonly accepted that what was left of Iraq in 2003 has now fallen
apart, but insufficient attention has been paid to the fact that one of the
main culprits behind this state of affairs is the Iraqi government itself.
Most analysts, most notably the Iraq  &lt;http://www.usip.org/isg/&gt; Study
Group, have accepted the superficial narrative according to which the Iraqi
government is a &quot;government of national unity&quot; that is &quot;broadly
representative of the Iraqi people&quot;. Others have realised that the
government has failed to satisfy its obligations to reestablish the rule of
law, but have instinctively attributed this failure to a lack of initiative
on the part of senior Iraqi officials. 

It should be obvious from the way the Iraqi state has evolved in the past
three years that this narrative is completely mistaken. If Iraq has become
the most corrupt &lt;http://www.lrb.co.uk/v28/n21/harr04_.html&gt;  country in the
middle east it is not because the government is not capable of dealing with
the issue - it is because the senior government officials are actually
amongst the most corrupt people in the country. If violence is increasing,
it is not because the government is unable to combat it, but because it is
in fact involved in promoting it. If Iraq is not rife with sectarianism, it
is not because Iraqis are inherently that way - far from it. It is because
it was the only system on offer by a political class that depends on
sectarianism to be relevant. 

If the reconciliation process is failing, it is not because Iraqis are
barbarians, as western commentary often suggests or implies - it is because
senior politicians prefer to eliminate their opponents than to compromise.
If public services are continuing to deteriorate, it is not because the
government doesn't have sufficient expertise to repair them - it is because
senior officials are not affected in any way, and so they don't care. And if
3,000 Iraqis continue to leave the country every day, the government fails
to act not because it is incapable, but because they are disinterested -
their families already live comfortably abroad anyway. 

What is to be done?

There is clearly only one option available: the Iraqi government must go.
But the solution cannot merely be to replace it with a different group of
individuals, whether through elections or through an appointment process
similar to what took place in 2004. 

It is not a coincidence that the Iraqi government has evolved in the way
that it has - it was unavoidable given the presence of the US occupation.
And as long as the occupation remains in place, any individual Iraqi that
will accept to work in government will much more likely than not be of the
same stock as the individuals currently in power. The presence of the US
army in Iraq has a deeply corrosive influence on Iraqi society, and this is
what policy makers in the US should come to terms with. In order for Iraq to
function, the US military should withdraw from the country as soon as
possible. 

There are many Iraqis who are competent, honest, and non-sectarian and who
would be willing to rebuild their country, so long as the circumstances are
correct. What this means in practice is that the US army must leave in order
to create enough space for these people to contribute. Hussein al-Muayed,
Jawad al-Khalissi, Abdul Hussein Sha'ban and many others have been waiting
in the wings for the past four years and will continue to boycott the
political process so long as the occupation remains in place. They are all
household names in Iraq, respected for their integrity, their intelligence,
and their non-sectarian credentials, but they remain largely unknown in the
west precisely because they refuse to collaborate with the occupation. 

Some would no doubt argue that a withdrawal of US troops in Iraq would
merely lead to an increase in violence. I would suggest that the alternative
- staying the current course and maintaining the presence of US forces in
Iraq - is much more likely to lead to more violence. A withdrawal will force
a realignment of political forces in Baghdad. The government would probably
collapse - not an unattractive proposition - and because truly competent and
honest political forces would accept to participate in the post-occupation
phase, there is a strong likelihood that the political wrangling that would
ensue would lead to a more effective and non-sectarian government. 

In any event, if the US does decide to withdraw, it could do so and still
play a constructive role by implementing certain measures that would reduce
the potential for violence. It could start by offering to take all
collaborators with them as they withdraw from Iraq, in the way that
President Ford did when US forces withdrew from Vietnam. In that case,
150,000 Vietnamese were resettled in the US. In Iraq, the numbers would
necessarily be far lower considering that the apparatus established in
Baghdad is nowhere near the size of what it was in Saigon. This initiative
could be financed merely by redirecting a small fraction of what it is
costing
&lt;http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-warcost14jan14,1,22561
41.story?coll=la-headlines-nation&gt;  the United States to maintain the
occupation in place. 

Today, there are no good solutions to the catastrophe
&lt;http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraq/iraq_deaths_4011.jsp&gt;  that the
US has created in Iraq. There are only those options that we know will lead
to a further escalation of the conflict, and those that have a chance of
leading to a positive conclusion. At this stage, it is certain that the
deployment of additional US troops to Iraq will merely lead to more death
and suffering. On the other hand, a unilateral and immediate withdrawal of
US troops offers the possibility and some hope that an effective and
non-sectarian system of government may emerge in the aftermath. 

After all, and in the final analysis, what the Iraqi people need now is not
more armies, more war, and more violence. What they need is to recover their
independence and to be given the space to govern themselves, by themselves.
What they want and what they need is to be free once and for all.

 


------=_NextPart_001_0107_01C74206.9D7388A0
Content-Type: text/html;
	charset=&quot;iso-8859-1&quot;
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

&lt;!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC &quot;-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN&quot;&gt;
&lt;HTML&gt;&lt;HEAD&gt;
&lt;META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D&quot;text/html; =
charset=3Diso-8859-1&quot;&gt;
&lt;META content=3D&quot;MSHTML 6.00.5730.11&quot; name=3DGENERATOR&gt;
&lt;STYLE&gt;&lt;/STYLE&gt;
&lt;/HEAD&gt;
&lt;BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff&gt;
&lt;DIV&gt;&lt;FONT face=3DArial size=3D2&gt;&lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraq/withdrawal_4264.jsp&quot;&gt;h=
ttp://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraq/withdrawal_4264.jsp&lt;/A&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;=
/DIV&gt;
&lt;DIV&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;&lt;FONT face=3DGeorgia size=3D4&gt;&nbsp;The United States in =
Iraq: the case=20
for withdrawal &lt;BR&gt;&lt;IMG height=3D9   =
src=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/bullets/clsd_3399cc.gif&quot; =
width=3D10   align=3Dbottom border=3D0&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/STRONG&gt; &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/author/Zaid_Al-Ali.jsp&quot;&gt;Zaid =
Al-Ali&lt;/A&gt;=20
&lt;BR&gt;&lt;FONT class=3DtxtDate face=3Dverdana,arial,sans-serif =
color=3D#3399cc size=3D3&gt;19 -=20
1 - 2007 &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/DIV&gt;&lt;TR&gt;&lt;TD&gt;
&lt;DIV&gt;
&lt;TABLE cellSpacing=3D0 cellPadding=3D0 border=3D0&gt;
  &lt;TBODY&gt;
  &lt;TR&gt;
    &lt;TD&gt;&lt;FONT class=3DtxtDate face=3Dverdana,arial,sans-serif =
color=3D#3399cc         size=3D3&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;BR&gt;
      &lt;DIV&gt;&lt;IMG height=3D3 alt=3D&quot;&quot; =
src=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/blank.gif&quot;         width=3D1 =
border=3D0&gt;&lt;/DIV&gt;&lt;FONT class=3DtxtBody face=3Dverdana,arial,sans-serif   =
      size=3D3&gt;&lt;B&gt;The post-2003 occupation is only the latest chapter in =

      Washington's long, disastrous involvement in Iraq. Zaid Al-Ali =
tracks a=20
      bitter history and draws a lesson. &lt;/B&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;
      &lt;DIV&gt;&lt;IMG height=3D3 alt=3D&quot;&quot; =
src=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/blank.gif&quot;         width=3D1 =
border=3D0&gt;&lt;/DIV&gt;&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;&lt;/TBODY&gt;&lt;/TABLE&gt;&lt;/DIV&gt;&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;&lt;TR&gt;&lt;TD&gt;
&lt;DIV&gt;&lt;IMG height=3D1 alt=3D------------------------------------------   =
src=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/hrs/3399cc.gif&quot; width=3D566 =
vspace=3D2   border=3D0&gt;&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt; &lt;!--=20
 ...........................BODY=20
--&gt;&lt;TR&gt;&lt;TD&gt;&lt;/DIV&gt;
&lt;DIV&gt;
&lt;TABLE cellSpacing=3D0 cellPadding=3D0 width=3D566 border=3D0&gt;
  &lt;TBODY&gt;
  &lt;TR&gt;
    &lt;TD width=3D8&gt;&lt;IMG height=3D8 =
src=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/blank.gif&quot;         width=3D8 =
border=3D0&gt;&lt;/TD&gt;
    &lt;TD width=3D558&gt;&lt;IMG height=3D1         =
src=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/blank.gif&quot; width=3D558 =
border=3D0&gt;&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;
  &lt;TR&gt;
    &lt;TD&gt;&lt;/TD&gt;
    &lt;TD&gt;&lt;FONT class=3DarticleTxtBody&gt;&lt;!-- start modules --&gt;&lt;A =
name=3D0&gt;&lt;/A&gt;
      &lt;P&gt;The &lt;A =
href=3D&quot;http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,21073242-401,00.html&quot;       =
  target=3D_blank&gt;explosion&lt;/A&gt; at Mustansiriyah University that killed =
more=20
      than seventy people on 16 January 2007 sent a clear message: no =
one is=20
      safe in today's Iraq. The Iraqi government has reacted to the =
atrocity in=20
      a typically lethargic and dishonest manner, offering empty =
promises of=20
      swift justice and increased security. Meanwhile, very few =
observers remain=20
      hopeful that the &lt;A         =
href=3D&quot;http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/01/20070110-7.html&quot; =
        target=3D_blank&gt;escalation&lt;/A&gt; that the George W Bush =
administration=20
      announced on 10 January - involving the deployment of around =
21,500=20
      additional United States troops in Iraq - will improve the =
desperate=20
      current situation. &lt;/P&gt;
      &lt;P&gt;It is time for policymakers in the US to face up to the fact =
that the=20
      US &lt;A         =
href=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraq/worse_4161.jsp&quot;&gt;occupa=
tion&lt;/A&gt;=20
      will never be able to achieve victory in Iraq, no matter how that =
goal is=20
      defined and what pattern of behaviour it entails. &lt;/P&gt;This article =
argues=20
      that there is a clear and ineluctable causal link between the mere =

      presence of the occupation authorities and the failure to =
reestablish law=20
      and order in the country. The only viable course of action is =
therefore=20
      that the US army should withdraw from Iraq as soon as possible. =
The=20
      article ends by offering some suggestions as to what measures can =
be taken=20
      to ensure that the country's post-occupation phase will be as =
peaceful and=20
      successful as possible.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;&lt;/TBODY&gt;&lt;/TABLE&gt;&lt;/DIV&gt;
&lt;DIV&gt;&lt;FONT class=3DarticleTxtBody&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;A failure of reconstruction &lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The prerequisite to recommending a specific course of action is to =
offer an=20
honest diagnosis of what has happened in Iraq since March-April 2003.=20
Fortunately, most commentators now agree that the US occupation of Iraq, =
after=20
apparent military success in the war that preceded it, got off to a very =
bad=20
start. By virtue of a series of misguided administrative decisions - =
including=20
the dissolution of the Iraqi army and blanket de-Ba'athification - the=20
occupation authorities managed to destroy the Iraqi state in one fell =
swoop. One=20
of the consequences of these blunders is that the US created enough =
space for &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.versobooks.com/books/cdef/c-titles/cockburn_p_the_occu=
pation.shtml&quot;   target=3D_blank&gt;armed groups&lt;/A&gt; of all kinds to =
mushroom across Iraq within a=20
short period. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;But this is only one part of the story. The combined effect of the =
US's=20
policies in 2003 was the dismantling of the entire Iraqi state. The =
effect of=20
everything that has happened since then, however, is even more =
disturbing.=20
Despite all the efforts that have been made and all the monies that have =
been=20
squandered, the US has clearly &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://us.penguingroup.com/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,9781594201035,0=
0.html&quot;   target=3D_blank&gt;failed&lt;/A&gt; in the most important task that it =
had set itself: to=20
put the pieces back together and rebuild a functioning state in Iraq. =
&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Baghdad is now but a shadow of its former self, resembling &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraqi_war/article_1126.jsp&quot;=
&gt;Mogadishu&lt;/A&gt;=20
more than anything else. In many areas of the country, the state is =
completely=20
absent. Where the state does make its presence felt, the services that =
it=20
provides have continued to deteriorate since 2003 - as if there is a =
cancer=20
eating away at the heart of the state itself. The Bush administration =
often=20
cites the December 2005 &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2006/02/iraq-election-chief=
-certifies.php&quot;   target=3D_blank&gt;parliamentary elections&lt;/A&gt; and the =
drafting of the new &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/12/A=
R2005101201450.html&quot;   target=3D_blank&gt;constitution&lt;/A&gt; as positive =
developments, but they at best=20
represent a distraction. A combination of reasons is often cited - =
sabotage,=20
insurgency, corruption - to explain the failure to reconstruct the =
state, but=20
the cause is more fundamental: it can be found in the nature of the =
occupation=20
itself. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Whenever a society is occupied, the way in which it will interact =
with the=20
occupying forces will be determined by a number of different factors. =
For=20
example, it should be obvious that no occupation comes into existence in =
a=20
historical vacuum. Indeed, the factual context in which an occupation =
comes into=20
existence will have a major effect on the way the occupied society will =
react.=20
&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;In that sense, the fact that the US occupation of Japan took place =
after one=20
of the most violent wars in human history and after the use of =
overwhelming=20
force against the occupied country was one of the major reasons why =
there was no=20
post-war Japanese resistance to speak of (see John Dower, &quot;&lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.bostonreview.net/BR28.1/dower.html&quot; target=3D_blank&gt;A =
warning=20
from history&lt;/A&gt;&quot;, &lt;EM&gt;Boston Review&lt;/EM&gt;, February/March 2003). By =
contrast,=20
the circumstances leading up to the American occupation of Vietnam led =
the=20
people of that country to assume that the US was intending to replace =
France as=20
a colonial power. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;In that context, it is surprising how little attention observers,=20
commentators and policymakers alike have paid to the incredibly sordid =
history=20
of involvement in Iraq prior to its occupation of that country. The US =
has been=20
involved in &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraqivoices/article_825.jsp=
&quot;&gt;internal=20
Iraqi affairs&lt;/A&gt; in different ways for at least half a century, and the =
more=20
involved it has become the more disastrous the results for &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=3D21241&amp;Cr=3Dira=
q&amp;Cr1&quot;   target=3D_blank&gt;ordinary Iraqis&lt;/A&gt;. The details are often =
difficult to face up=20
to, considering that we are talking about what should be the world's =
most=20
important exporter of democracy and prosperity. From the start however, =
the US=20
policy in relation to Iraq has been characterised by blind =
self-interest,=20
inhumanity and racism. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;A sordid history &lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Although it first became involved in Iraqi affairs through covert =
operations=20
in the late 1950s, the US made its interests in the country abundantly =
clear=20
during the Iraq-Iran war, when it offered billions of dollars in =
agricultural=20
credits to the Iraqi regime, which was then able to divert monies to =
fund its=20
costly &lt;A href=3D&quot;http://www.crimesofwar.org/thebook/iran-iraq-war.html&quot; =
  target=3D_blank&gt;war effort&lt;/A&gt; (1980-88) against Iran. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The US also provided Iraqi generals with military support during the =
war. On=20
a number of occasions it supplied them with advance warning of Iranian =
troop=20
movements in order to facilitate the Iraqi war effort. This was done =
despite the=20
fact that the Reagan administration was &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.commondreams.org/headlines02/0818-02.htm&quot; =
target=3D_blank&gt;already=20
aware&lt;/A&gt; at that point that the Iraqis were preparing to use chemical =
weapons=20
on the battlefield, which is somewhat problematic considering the US's=20
insistence that the rules of war should be respected at all times. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;When Saddam Hussein &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A52241-2002Dec29?languag=
e=3Dprinter&quot;   target=3D_blank&gt;invaded&lt;/A&gt; Kuwait in 1990, the US seized =
on the opportunity to=20
launch a full-scale war against the Iraqi people. Hussein was given five =
months=20
to withdraw, and during that time, thirty countries, led by the US, =
massed their=20
armies along the Saudi-Iraqi border and in the Gulf. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;In one of the negotiation sessions, James A Baker made the notorious=20
announcement to Tariq Aziz that Iraq was going to be &quot;bombed in the =
stone age&quot;.=20
That is exactly what happened. In violation of just about every rule of =
war=20
imaginable, the US and its allies destroyed every piece of =
infrastructure, every=20
industrial plant, and every governmental institution within their reach, =
whether=20
civilian or not. Within a few weeks, the Iraqi economy was utterly =
devastated -=20
the US managed to knock Iraq, which had previously been considered a=20
middle-income economy, back into third-world status. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;To make matters worse, and in complete contempt for the people that =
it=20
supposedly cared so much for, the US military for the first time used =
depleted=20
uranium (DU), a type of nuclear waste, in its munitions. DU is one of =
the=20
heaviest substances known to man, and it was used in order to increase =
the=20
efficiency of anti-tank shells. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Southern Iraq was the main battlefield during the course of the war =
and it=20
bore witness to a number of massacres: thousands of Iraqi tanks were =
laid to=20
waste with DU munitions, even as they withdrew from Kuwait. The effect =
is that a=20
vast swathe of southern Iraq has been transformed into a toxic =
wasteland. Its=20
land and water will be contaminated for many thousands of years. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;In the meantime, cancer rates and the number of malformed births =
amongst the=20
already poor and downtrodden indigenous people of that area have &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/chronicle/archi=
ve/2002/10/10/ED44718.DTL&amp;type=3Dprintable&quot;   =
target=3D_blank&gt;skyrocketed&lt;/A&gt;. Prior to 2003, US officials dismissed =
the appeals=20
by local Iraqi doctors as Ba'athist propaganda; the fact that these same =
doctors=20
have continued their campaign against DU in the post-Ba'athist era has=20
apparently left officials in the US unimpressed (see Zaid Al-Ali, &quot;&lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/debates/article-2-114-2143.jsp&quot;&gt;Iraq=
: the=20
lost generation&lt;/A&gt;&quot;, 7 November 2004). &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The next chapter of US-Iraqi relations proved even more deadly for =
the Iraqi=20
people. After the initial invasion of Kuwait took place in August 1990, =
the=20
United Nations Security Council imposed the most comprehensive sanctions =
regime=20
ever devised on Iraq in order to coerce it to withdraw from the country. =
The=20
rules of the sanctions regime were simple: Iraq could not import or =
export=20
anything for whatever reason. The effect on Iraq's economy - which was =
heavily=20
dependent on food imports and on revenues generated by its oil industry =
- was=20
devastating. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;After the war, the sanctions were maintained in order to encourage =
the Iraqi=20
state to destroy its arsenal of &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraq/article_1351.jsp&quot;&gt;non-=
conventional=20
weapons&lt;/A&gt;. Iraq did this within months and - contrary to allegations =
by US=20
officials - Iraq's non-conventional weapons programmes were never =
reconstructed.=20
Nevertheless, the US decided that the sanctions should be maintained at =
all=20
costs, regardless of the price that the Iraqi people would have to pay. =
It=20
therefore blocked all efforts by the international community to have the =

sanctions lifted. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;It was clear from the start of the sanctions regime that it was =
utterly=20
inhuman and &lt;A href=3D&quot;http://www.casi.org.uk/&quot; target=3D_blank&gt;could =
not=20
continue&lt;/A&gt; without causing the death of hundreds of thousands of poor =
Iraqis.=20
But that is precisely what happened: after the 1991 war, poverty rates =
continued=20
to increase at incredible rates, and an increasing number of Iraqis were =
dying=20
from preventable diseases because of a lack of access to basic =
medicines. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;After a significant amount of pressure, the US acquiesced in the =
creation of=20
the &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/middle_east/02/iraq_events/=
html/oil_food.stm&quot;   target=3D_blank&gt;oil-for-food programme&lt;/A&gt;. This =
mechanism was in theory designed=20
to alleviate the suffering of poor Iraqis, but in fact just prolonged =
their=20
misery. It allowed the Iraqi government to sell a limited amount of oil =
in order=20
to purchase basic necessities for its population. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;These limits were set according to what was calculated to be the =
minimum=20
amount that each Iraqi required to survive. After it was discovered that =
Iraqis=20
were still starving despite the program, the limit on the sale of oil =
was=20
doubled. Then it was found that this still meant that UN sniffer-dogs =
were=20
better fed than the average Iraqi, and the limit was lifted altogether. =
But the=20
decision came years too late for hundreds of thousands of Iraqis who =
perished as=20
a result of the hardships imposed on them. Each time, the US was the one =
to set=20
the limits of the programme. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;The latest chapter in the story of US-Iraqi relations started in =
2003, when=20
the US launched its unprovoked and unjustified attack on Iraq. It is now =

commonly accepted that the occupation that followed has served to bring =
yet new=20
miseries to the most vulnerable Iraqis. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;A state of corruption&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Most people living in the west tend to forget this history as they =
were never=20
directly affected by it. Iraqis however are acutely aware of the way =
that they=20
have been violently oppressed with the connivance, complicity, or direct =

exercise of power by successive US administrations. In light of this =
knowledge,=20
and given the context that Iraqis are living through, it is worth =
considering=20
what type of person would accept to collaborate with the occupation =
forces in=20
Iraq. It was clear from the start, and the way the situation has played =
out in=20
practice has proven beyond any shred of a doubt, that the Iraqi =
government is=20
populated by officials who are morally corrupt. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;It is commonly accepted that what was left of Iraq in 2003 has now =
fallen=20
apart, but insufficient attention has been paid to the fact that one of =
the main=20
culprits behind this state of affairs is the Iraqi government itself. =
Most=20
analysts, most notably the &lt;A href=3D&quot;http://www.usip.org/isg/&quot; =
target=3D_blank&gt;Iraq=20
Study Group&lt;/A&gt;, have accepted the superficial narrative according to =
which the=20
Iraqi government is a &quot;government of national unity&quot; that is &quot;broadly=20
representative of the Iraqi people&quot;. Others have realised that the =
government=20
has failed to satisfy its obligations to reestablish the rule of law, =
but have=20
instinctively attributed this failure to a lack of initiative on the =
part of=20
senior Iraqi officials. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;It should be obvious from the way the Iraqi state has evolved in the =
past=20
three years that this narrative is completely mistaken. If Iraq has =
become the=20
most &lt;A href=3D&quot;http://www.lrb.co.uk/v28/n21/harr04_.html&quot;   =
target=3D_blank&gt;corrupt&lt;/A&gt; country in the middle east it is not because =
the=20
government is not capable of dealing with the issue - it is because the =
senior=20
government officials are actually amongst the most corrupt people in the =

country. If violence is increasing, it is not because the government is =
unable=20
to combat it, but because it is in fact involved in promoting it. If =
Iraq is not=20
rife with sectarianism, it is not because Iraqis are inherently that way =
- far=20
from it. It is because it was the only system on offer by a political =
class that=20
depends on sectarianism to be relevant. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;If the reconciliation process is failing, it is not because Iraqis =
are=20
barbarians, as western commentary often suggests or implies - it is =
because=20
senior politicians prefer to eliminate their opponents than to =
compromise. If=20
public services are continuing to deteriorate, it is not because the =
government=20
doesn't have sufficient expertise to repair them - it is because senior=20
officials are not affected in any way, and so they don't care. And if =
3,000=20
Iraqis continue to leave the country every day, the government fails to =
act not=20
because it is incapable, but because they are disinterested - their =
families=20
already live comfortably abroad anyway. &lt;/P&gt;&lt;FONT =
class=3DarticleTxtBody&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;What is to be done?&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;There is clearly only one option available: the Iraqi government must =
go. But=20
the solution cannot merely be to replace it with a different group of=20
individuals, whether through elections or through an appointment process =
similar=20
to what took place in 2004. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;It is not a coincidence that the Iraqi government has evolved in the =
way that=20
it has - it was unavoidable given the presence of the US occupation. And =
as long=20
as the occupation remains in place, any individual Iraqi that will =
accept to=20
work in government will much more likely than not be of the same stock =
as the=20
individuals currently in power. The presence of the US army in Iraq has =
a deeply=20
corrosive influence on Iraqi society, and this is what policy makers in =
the US=20
should come to terms with. In order for Iraq to function, the US =
military should=20
withdraw from the country as soon as possible. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;There are many Iraqis who are competent, honest, and non-sectarian =
and who=20
would be willing to rebuild their country, so long as the circumstances =
are=20
correct. What this means in practice is that the US army must leave in =
order to=20
create enough space for these people to contribute. Hussein al-Muayed, =
Jawad=20
al-Khalissi, Abdul Hussein Sha'ban and many others have been waiting in =
the=20
wings for the past four years and will continue to boycott the political =
process=20
so long as the occupation remains in place. They are all household names =
in=20
Iraq, respected for their integrity, their intelligence, and their =
non-sectarian=20
credentials, but they remain largely unknown in the west precisely =
because they=20
refuse to collaborate with the occupation. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Some would no doubt argue that a withdrawal of US troops in Iraq =
would merely=20
lead to an increase in violence. I would suggest that the alternative - =
staying=20
the current course and maintaining the presence of US forces in Iraq - =
is much=20
more likely to lead to more violence. A withdrawal will force a =
realignment of=20
political forces in Baghdad. The government would probably collapse - =
not an=20
unattractive proposition - and because truly competent and honest =
political=20
forces would accept to participate in the post-occupation phase, there =
is a=20
strong likelihood that the political wrangling that would ensue would =
lead to a=20
more effective and non-sectarian government. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;In any event, if the US does decide to withdraw, it could do so and =
still=20
play a constructive role by implementing certain measures that would =
reduce the=20
potential for violence. It could start by offering to take all =
collaborators=20
with them as they withdraw from Iraq, in the way that President Ford did =
when US=20
forces withdrew from Vietnam. In that case, 150,000 Vietnamese were =
resettled in=20
the US. In Iraq, the numbers would necessarily be far lower considering =
that the=20
apparatus established in Baghdad is nowhere near the size of what it was =
in=20
Saigon. This initiative could be financed merely by redirecting a small =
fraction=20
of what it is &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-warcost14jan=
14,1,2256141.story?coll=3Dla-headlines-nation&quot;   =
target=3D_blank&gt;costing&lt;/A&gt; the United States to maintain the occupation =
in place.=20
&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Today, there are no good solutions to the &lt;A   =
href=3D&quot;http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraq/iraq_deaths_4011.jsp&quot;&gt;=
catastrophe&lt;/A&gt;=20
that the US has created in Iraq. There are only those options that we =
know will=20
lead to a further escalation of the conflict, and those that have a =
chance of=20
leading to a positive conclusion. At this stage, it is certain that the=20
deployment of additional US troops to Iraq will merely lead to more =
death and=20
suffering. On the other hand, a unilateral and immediate withdrawal of =
US troops=20
offers the possibility and some hope that an effective and non-sectarian =
system=20
of government may emerge in the aftermath. &lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;After all, and in the final analysis, what the Iraqi people need now =
is not=20
more armies, more war, and more violence. What they need is to recover =
their=20
independence and to be given the space to govern themselves, by =
themselves. What=20
they want and what they need is to be free once and for all.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&nbsp;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/DIV&gt;&lt;/TD&gt;&lt;/TR&gt;&lt;/BODY&gt;&lt;/HTML&gt;

------=_NextPart_001_0107_01C74206.9D7388A0--

------=_NextPart_000_0106_01C74206.9D7388A0
Content-Type: image/gif;
	name=&quot;clsd_3399cc.gif&quot;
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
Content-Location: http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/bullets/clsd_3399cc.gif

R0lGODlhCgAJAIABADOZzP///yH5BAEAAAEALAAAAAAKAAkAAAIPjI+AC7rWHIsvykPrTe8UADs=

------=_NextPart_000_0106_01C74206.9D7388A0
Content-Type: image/gif;
	name=&quot;blank.gif&quot;
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
Content-Location: http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/blank.gif

R0lGODlhAQABAJEAAAAAAP///////wAAACH5BAUUAAIALAAAAAABAAEAAAICVAEAOw==

------=_NextPart_000_0106_01C74206.9D7388A0
Content-Type: image/gif;
	name=&quot;3399cc.gif&quot;
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
Content-Location: http://www.opendemocracy.net/pix/hrs/3399cc.gif

R0lGODlhNgIBAIAAADKazv///ywAAAAANgIBAAACFwyOqcvtD6OctNqLs968+w+G4kiWJhIUADs=

------=_NextPart_000_0106_01C74206.9D7388A0--
]