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An interesting article (as always) from Naomi
Klein.
Published in The guardian (UK) (24/01/2004) Here
Find more Naomi Klein's articles at her web site Here
by Naomi Klein > January 22 2004
“The people of Iraq are free,” declared U.S. President George W. Bush in
Tuesday’s State of the Union. The day before, 100,000 Iraqis begged to differ.
They took to the streets of Baghdad shouting “Yes, yes to elections. No, no to
selection.”
According to Iraq occupation chief Paul Bremer, there really is no difference
between the White House’s version of freedom and the one being demanded on the
street. Asked Friday whether his plan to form an Iraqi government through
appointed caucuses was headed towards a clash with Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani ’s
call for direct elections, Bremer said he had no “fundamental disagreement
with him.”
It was, he said, a mere quibble over details. “I don't want to go into the
technical details of refinements… There are — if you talk to experts in
these matters — all kinds of ways to organize partial elections and caucuses.
And I'm not an election expert, so I don't want to go into the details. But
we've always said we're willing to consider refinements.”
I’m not an election expert either, but I’m pretty sure there are differences
here than cannot be refined. Al-Sistani’s supporters want every Iraqi to have
a vote and for the people they elect to write the laws of the country — your
basic, imperfect, representative democracy.
Bremer wants his Coalition Provisional Authority to appoint the members of 18
regional Organizing Committees. The Organizing Committees will then select
delegates to form 18 Selection Caucuses. These selected delegates will then
further select representatives to a Transitional National Assembly. The Assembly
will have an internal vote to select an executive and ministers who will form
the new government of Iraq. This, Bush said in the State of the Union,
constitutes “a transition to full Iraqi sovereignty.”
Got that? Iraqi sovereignty will be established by appointees appointing
appointees to select appointees to select appointees. Add to that the fact that
Bremer was appointed to his post by President Bush and that Bush was appointed
to his by the U.S. Supreme Court, and you have the glorious new democratic
tradition of the Appointocracy: rule by appointee’s appointee’s
appointees’ appointees’ appointees’ selectees.
The White House insists that its aversion to elections is purely practical:
there just isn’t time to pull them off before the June 30 deadline. So why
have the deadline? The most common explanation is that Bush needs a
“braggable” on the campaign trail: when his Democratic rival raises the
spectre of Vietnam, Bush will reply that, the occupation is over, we’re on our
way out.
Except that the U.S. has absolutely no intention of actually getting out of
Iraq: it wants its troops to remain, and it wants Bechtel, MCI and Halliburton
to stay behind and run the water system, the phones and the oil fields. It was
with this goal in mind that, on September 19, Bremer pushed through a package of
sweeping economic reforms that The Economist described as a “capitalist
dream.”
But the dream, though still alive, is now in peril. A growing number of legal
experts are challenging the legitimacy of Bremer’s reforms, arguing that under
the international laws that govern occupying powers — the Hague Regulations of
1907 and the 1949 Geneva Conventions — the CPA can only act as a caretaker of
Iraq’s economic assets, not as its auctioneer. Radical changes such as
Bremer’s Order 39, which opened up Iraqi industry to 100 per cent foreign
ownership, violate these laws and could therefore be easily overturned by a
sovereign Iraqi government.
This prospect has foreign investors seriously spooked, and many are opting not
to go into Iraq. The major private insurance brokers are also sitting it out,
having assessed Iraq as too great an expropriation risk. Bremer has responded by
quietly canceling his announced plan to privatize Iraq’s 200 state firms,
instead putting up 35 companies for lease (with a later option to buy). For the
White House, the only way for its grand economic plan to continue is for its
military occupation to end: only a sovereign Iraqi government , unbound by the
Hague and Geneva Regulations, can legally sell off Iraq’s assets.
But will it? Given the widespread perception that the U.S. is not out to rebuild
Iraq but to loot it, if Iraqis were given the chance to vote tomorrow, they
could well immediately decide to expel U.S. troops and to reverse Bremer’s
privatization project, opting instead to protect local jobs. And that
frightening prospect — far more than the absence of a census — explains why
the White House is fighting so hard for its appointocracy.
Under the current U.S. plan for Iraq, the Transitional National Assembly would
hold onto power from June 30 until general elections are held “no later”
than December 31, 2005. That’s 17 leisurely months for a non-elected
government to do what the CPA could not legally do on its own: invite U.S.
troops to stay indefinitely and turn Bremer’s capitalist dream into binding
law. Only after these key decisions have been made will Iraqis be invited to
have their say. The White House calls this “self-rule.” It is, in fact, the
very definition of outside-rule, occupation through outsourcing.
That means that the world is once again facing a choice about Iraq. Will its
democracy emerge still born, with foreign troops dug in on its territory,
multinationals locked into multi-year contracts controlling key resources, and
an entrenched economic program that has already left 60-70 per cent of the
population unemployed? Or will its democracy be born with its heart still
beating, capable of building the country Iraqis choose?
On one side are the occupation forces. On the other are growing movements
demanding economic and voter rights in Iraq. Increasingly, occupying forces are
responding to these forces by using fatal force to break up demonstrations, as
British soldiers did in Amarah earlier this month, killing six. Yes, there are
religious fundamentalists and Saddam loyalists capitalizing on the rage in Iraq,
but the very existence of these pro-democracy movements is itself a kind of
miracle: after 30 years of dictatorship, war, sanctions, and now occupation, it
would certainly be understandable if Iraqis met further hardships with fatalism
and resignation. Instead, the violence of Bremer’s shock therapy appears to
have jolted hundred of thousands into action.
This courage deserves our support. Last week, at the World Social Forum in
Mumbai, India, author and activist Arundhati Roy called on the global forces
that opposed the Iraq war to “become the global resistance to the
occupation.” She suggested choosing “two of the major corporations that are
profiting from the destruction of Iraq” and targeting them for boycotts and
civil disobedience.
In his State of the Union Address, President Bush said, “I believe that God
has planted in every heart the desire to live in freedom. And even when that
desire is crushed by tyranny for decades, it will rise again.” He is being
proven right in Iraq every day — and the rising voices are chanting “No, no
U.S.A. Yes, yes elections.”