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Another
article from Naomi Klein publish in the Guardian
Again some critic to US administration for the way it
handle Iraq reconstruction effort. An interesting feature of this article is to
show the low compatibility of building democracy using corporation.
Surprisingly, the article end by calling for support of GWB previous declarations...
Democracy and robbery
Washington wants to outsource Iraqi sovereignty, but its grip on
the country is growing weaker
Naomi Klein
Tuesday February 10, 2004
The Guardian
If you believe the White House, the future government of Iraq is being designed
in Iraq. If you believe the Iraqi people, however, it is being designed in the
White House. Technically, neither is true; Iraq's future government is being
engineered in an anonymous research park in suburban North Carolina.
On March 4 last year, with the military
campaign just 15 days away, the United States agency for international
development asked three American firms to bid for a unique job; after Iraq had
been invaded and occupied, one company would be charged with setting up 180
local and provincial town councils in the rubble.
This was newly imperial territory for firms
that were more accustomed to the friendly NGO-speak of "public-private
partnerships", and two of the three companies decided not to apply. The
"local governance" contract, worth $167.9m in the first year and up to
$466m in total, went to the Research Triangle Institute (RTI), a private
non-profit-making body best known for its drug research. None of its employees
had been to Iraq in years.
At first, RTI's Iraq mission attracted little
public attention. Next to Bechtel's inability to turn the lights on, and
Halliburton's wild overcharging, RTI's "civil society" workshops
seemed rather benign. No more. It now turns out that the town councils RTI has
been quietly setting up are the centrepiece of Washington's plan to hand over
power to appointed regional caucuses - a plan that has been so widely rejected
in Iraq, it could end up bringing the occupation to its knees.
Last week, I visited the RTI vice-president
Ronald W Johnson, the director of the Iraq project, at the firm's offices near
the North Carolina town of Durham (down the block from IBM, around the corner
from GlaxoSmithKline). Johnson insists that his team is focused on the
"nuts and bolts" and has nothing to do with the epic battles over who
will rule Iraq. "There really is not a Sunni way to pick up the garbage
versus a Shiite way," he tells me. Perhaps, but there is a public and
private way - and, according to a July report last July from the Coalition
Provisional Authority (CPA), RTI is pushing the latter, establishing "new
neighbourhood waste collection systems" that "will be arranged through
privatised kerbside collection".
Nor are the councils that RTI has been setting
up uncontroversial. On the same day that Johnson and I were calmly discussing
the finer points of local democracy, the US-appointed regional council in
Nasiriya, about 200 miles south of Baghdad, was surrounded by gunmen and angry
protesters. On January 28, as many as 10,000 residents marched on the council
offices demanding direct elections and the immediate resignation of all the
councillors, whom they accused of being pawns of the occupying forces. The
provincial governor called in bodyguards with rocket- propelled grenade
launchers and proceeded to flee the building.
Poor old RTI; the appetite for democracy among
Iraqis keeps racing ahead of the plodding plans for "capacity
building" that it drew up before the invasion. In November, the Washington
Post reported that when RTI's people arrived in the province of Taji, armed with
flowcharts and ready to set up local councils, they discovered that "the
Iraqi people formed their own representative councils in this region months ago,
and many of those were elected, not selected, as the occupation is
proposing". The Post quoted what one local man told a RTI contractor:
"We feel we are going backwards."
Johnson denies that the previous council was
elected and says, moreover, that RTI is only "assisting the Iraqis",
not making decisions for them. Perhaps, but it doesn't help that Johnson
compares Iraq's councils to "a New England town meeting" and quotes
another RTI consultant, who observed that the challenges in Iraq are "the
same thing I dealt with in Houston". So is this Iraqi sovereignty -
conceived in Washington, outsourced to North Carolina, modelled on Massachusetts
and Houston and then imposed on Basra and Baghdad?
The United Nations, now that it has gone back
to Iraq, must somehow carve out a role for itself in all this mess. A good
start, if it decides that direct elections are impossible before the White
House's deadline of June 30, would be to demand that the deadline be scrapped.
However, the UN will have to do more than just monitor elections; it will have
to stop a robbery in progress - the American attempt to rob Iraq's future
democracy of the power to make meaningful decisions. And it all hinges on the
powers of the transitional government.
Washington wants a transitional body in Iraq
with the full powers of sovereign government, able to lock in decisions that an
elected government will inherit. To that end, Paul Bremer's CPA is pushing ahead
with its illegal free-market reforms, counting on these changes being ratified
by an Iraqi government that it can control. For instance, on January 31 Bremer
announced the awarding of the first three licences for foreign banks to operate
in Iraq. A week earlier, he had sent members of the Iraqi Governing Council to
the World Trade Organisation (WTO) to request observer status - the first step
to becoming a WTO member. And Iraq's occupiers have just negotiated an $850m
loan from the International Monetary Fund, giving the lender its usual leverage
to extract future economic "adjustments".
In other countries that have recently made the
transition to democracy - from South Africa to the Philippines and Argentina -
this transition between regimes is precisely when the most devastating betrayals
took place: backroom deals to transfer illegitimate debts, commitments made to
maintain "macro-economic continuity". Again and again, newly liberated
people arrive at the polls only to discover that there is precious little left
to vote for.
But in Iraq, it's not too late to block this
process. The key is to confine the mandate of any transitional government to
matters directly related to elections: the census, security, protection for
women and minorities.
And here's the really surprising thing: it
could actually happen. Why? Because all Washington's reasons for going to war
have evaporated; the only excuse left is President Bush's deep desire to bring
democracy to the Iraqi people. Of course, this desire is as much a lie as the
rest - but it is a lie that we can use. We can harness Bush's weakness on Iraq
to demand that the democracy lie become a reality, that Iraq be truly sovereign:
unshackled by debt, unencumbered by inherited contracts, unscarred by American
military bases, and with full control over its resources, from oil to
reparations.
Washington's hold on Iraq is growing weaker by
the day, while the pro-democracy forces inside the country grow stronger.
Genuine democracy could come to Iraq, not because Bush's war was right, but
because it has been proven so desperately wrong.
·
A version of this article first appeared in the Nation
www.nologo.org