As Bechtel Goes
By PAUL KRUGMAN
11/03/06 "New York Times" -- -- Bechtel, the giant engineering company, is
leaving Iraq. Its mission — to rebuild power, water and sewage
plants — wasn’t accomplished: Baghdad received less than six
hours a day of electricity last month, and much of Iraq’s
population lives with untreated sewage and without clean water.
But Bechtel, having received $2.3 billion of taxpayers’ money
and having lost the lives of 52 employees, has come to the end
of its last government contract.
As Bechtel goes, so goes the whole reconstruction effort.
Whatever our leaders may say about their determination to stay
the course complete the mission, when it comes to rebuilding
Iraq they’ve already cut and run. The $21 billion allocated for
reconstruction over the last three years has been spent, much of
it on security rather than its intended purpose, and there’s no
more money in the pipeline.
The failure of reconstruction in Iraq raises three questions.
First, how much did that failure contribute to the overall
failure of the war? Second, how was it that America, the great
can-do nation, in this case couldn’t and didn’t? Finally, if
we’ve given up on rebuilding Iraq, what are our troops dying
for?
There’s no definitive way to answer the first question. You can
make a good case that the invasion of Iraq was doomed no matter
what, because we never had enough military manpower to provide
security. But the lack of electricity and clean water did a lot
to dissipate any initial good will the Iraqis may have felt
toward the occupation. And Iraqis are well aware that the
billions squandered by American contractors included a lot of
Iraqi oil revenue as well as U.S. taxpayers’ dollars.
Consider the symbolism of Iraq’s new police academy, which
Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq
reconstruction, has called “the most essential civil security
project in the country.” It was built at a cost of $75 million
by Parsons Corporation, which received a total of about $1
billion for Iraq reconstruction projects. But the academy was so
badly built that feces and urine leak from the ceilings in the
student barracks.
Think about it. We want the Iraqis to stand up so we can stand
down. But if they do stand up, we’ll dump excrement on their
heads.
As for how this could have happened, that’s easy: major
contractors believed, correctly, that their political
connections insulated them from accountability. Halliburton and
other companies with huge Iraq contracts were basically in the
same position as Donald Rumsfeld: they were so closely
identified with President Bush and, especially, Vice President
Cheney that firing or even disciplining them would have been
seen as an admission of personal failure on the part of top
elected officials.
As a result, the administration and its allies in Congress
fought accountability all the way. Administration officials have
made repeated backdoor efforts to close the office of Mr. Bowen,
whose job is to oversee the use of reconstruction money. Just
this past May, with the failed reconstruction already winding
down, the White House arranged for the last $1.5 billion of
reconstruction money to be placed outside Mr. Bowen’s
jurisdiction. And now, finally, Congress has passed a bill whose
provisions include the complete elimination of his agency next
October.
The bottom line is that those charged with rebuilding Iraq had
no incentive to do the job right, so they didn’t.
You can see, by the way, why a Democratic takeover of the House,
if it happens next week, would be such a pivotal event:
suddenly, committee chairmen with subpoena power would be in a
position to investigate where all the Iraq money went.
But that’s all in the past. What about the future?
Back in June, after a photo-op trip to Iraq, Mr. Bush said
something I agree with. “You can measure progress in megawatts
of electricity delivered,” he declared. “You can measure
progress in terms of oil sold on the market on behalf of the
Iraqi people.” But what those measures actually show is the
absence of progress. By any material measure, Iraqis are worse
off than they were under Saddam.
And we’re not planning to do anything about it: the U.S.-led
reconstruction effort in Iraq is basically over. I don’t know
whether the administration is afraid to ask U.S. voters for more
money, or simply considers the situation hopeless. Either way,
the United States has accepted defeat on reconstruction.
Yet Americans are still fighting and dying in Iraq. For what?