Dr. Dahlia Wasfi - Life in Iraq Under U.S.
Occupation
Must Watch Video
Shortages; lack of electricity; potable water; tanks rolling
through the streets night and day; gunfire and explosions.
Iraqi health care in shambles. 200 bodies turn up daily in
the Baghdad morgue. For Iraqis, it's 9/11 every day.
07/07/07
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Originally posted 2/22/07 at Information Clearing
House Blog
By Dr. Sadiq H. Wasfi and Dahlia Wasfi
“For the poor throughout history who have suffered violence,
death, hunger, sickness, and indignity at the hands of
powerful oppressors who would not respect their humanity,
and especially for the Iraqi, Arab, and other victims of the
fire this time—with a call for action to end the scourge of
war, economic exploitation, and poverty.”—Ramsey Clark
Dedication for The Fire This Time: U.S. War Crimes in the
Gulf. Thunder’s Mouth Press, New York 1992.
The region of Mesopotamia—modern-day Iraq —has been a magnet
for greedy conquerors for thousands of years. Time and
again, thieving invaders coveting her rich natural resources
and advanced society have pillaged “the land between two
rivers.” Time and again, the invaders were defeated and
expelled. The Americans led by “leaders” comprised of rich
oil barons and neo-conservative Zionists are the latest in a
long line of imperialists. If they had only read history,
however, they could have predicted that they, too, would
suffer great losses from an unwavering resistance. They
could have predicted that they, too, will have to leave. In
the words of Yogi Berra, they “made the wrong mistake.” But
while imperialism in Western Asia is nothing new, our
weaponry and war crimes may put Americans in the history
books as Iraq ’s most barbaric invaders ever.
Throughout the last hundred years, Iraqis have experienced
much social, political, and economic turmoil. The British
occupied the region in the early 20th century, and installed
a puppet monarchy to serve the interests of the Empire. King
Faisal, with pro-British agents Nuri Al-Said and Saleh Jabr,
traded Iraq ’s wealth and their own dignity for power and
greed.[i] Many Iraqis identified them as traitors, as
evidenced by demonstration slogans: “Nuri Al-Said, Al-Qundara;
Saleh Jabr, Al-Qeetanheh” (“Al-Said is the shoe, Jabr is its
shoelace.”) On July 14th, 1958 (marked as Iraq ’s first
Independence Day), a coup lead by General Abdul Karim Qasim—
Iraq ’s self-proclaimed “only leader”—resulted in the
dissolution of the “Kingdom” of Iraq . The royal family was
assassinated, and the “ Republic of Iraq ” was born—a
development that took Western powers by surprise.
Iraqis had suffered greatly under the exploitation of the
British and their Indian and Nepalese “Gurkha” militias.
With the end of the Kingdom, they hoped conditions would
improve, and for a brief time, they did. General Qasim,
influenced by his allies in the Iraqi Communist Party,
introduced sweeping socio-economic reforms to distribute the
nation’s wealth more equitably. Also, in 1959, he withdrew
Iraq from the U.S.-orchestrated Baghdad Pact, established to
confront the Soviet Union . However, pan-Arab nationalists
(including members of the Ba’ath Socialist Party) led by
Qasim’s second-in-command, Abdul Salam Arif, wanted Iraq to
move in a different direction. At the time, they sought to
join Iraq with Egypt and Syria in the United Arab Republic (UAR).
In October 1959 during a failed coup, there was an attempt
on Qasim’s life by a group of militant Ba’athists, including
one young Iraqi from the town of Tikrit named Saddam
Hussein.[ii]
Qasim’s rule lasted only until 1963, when he was
assassinated by his former deputy
Abdul Salam Arif. According to the late King Hussein of
Jordan , the American CIA backed this coup and fed the
rebels information on leftist intellectuals and communists,
who were summarily executed by the rising Ba’athists.[iii]
Arif’s rule, however, also was short-lived; he died in a
plane crash in 1966 while visiting Basra . His brother,
Abdul Rahman Arif, succeeded his rule, but yet another coup
was simmering.
In 1968, former General Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr and Saddam
Hussein—leaders of Iraq ’s Ba’ath Party—toppled Arif to
become President and Vice-President, respectively. The
Ba’athists had gained popularity among Iraqis in the 1950’s
for their strong opposition to British imperialists and
their agents. In the early hours of July 17—Iraq’s second
Independence Day—General Al-Bakr drove up to the barracks of
the Republican Guard outside Abdul Rahman Arif’s palace. He
was followed by a convoy of armed Ba’athists, including
Saddam Hussein and his half-brother Barzan. Promised his
life, Arif quickly surrendered, and the “White” Revolution
was complete. Bloodshed would soon follow, however, as Al-Bakr
and Hussein consolidated their power over the Republic. Any
threat to their rule—from collaborators with imperial Europe
to members of opposing political parties to challenges
within their own party—was quickly eliminated.
While al-Bakr was the nominal leader, Hussein ran the Party,
the National Guard, and the state’s security apparatus. He
played major roles in establishing treaties with Kurdish
parties in northern Iraq and nationalizing Iraq ’s oil
(1972-1975),[iv] to profit Iraq instead of foreign
companies. Though the regime remained politically oppressive
until its fall in 2003, Iraqi society and the economy
flourished once autonomy over oil sales was reclaimed from
foreign hands. By the late 1970’s, the value of the Iraqi
dinar was equivalent to over three American dollars.
Education and literacy rates were on the rise, and the
healthcare system was considered the “jewel of the Arab
World.” (Thirty years later, however, gas-guzzling Americans
and British shocked and awed their way back into the
driver’s seat, resulting in the destruction of Iraq ’s
infrastructure and civil society.)
Saddam Hussein remained the behind-the-scenes de facto ruler
until July 16, 1979, when al-Bakr retired and gave the
presidential seat to his second-in-command. Soon thereafter,
the lives of Iraqis would return to suffering. In 1980,
tensions were rising between Iraq and Iran . Although the
1975 Algiers Accord between the two nations established a
diplomatic resolution to their long-standing territorial
disputes, neither country abided by its terms. In addition,
Iran ’s new leader, Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini, sought to
extend theocratic rule to secular Iraq and the Gulf
monarchies. As tensions rose, each side accused the other of
encouraging internal uprisings. In September 1980, with the
tacit approval of the United States , Saudi Arabia , and the
rest of the Gulf States whose leaders feared Khomeini’s
aspirations of regional hegemony, Hussein launched a massive
military assault. The Iran-Iraq War officially began.
The United States appeared to side with Iraq by supplying
the Iraqi army with conventional, biological and chemical
weapons as well as intelligence. In secrecy, however, the
Reagan Administration also sold arms to Iran without
Congressional approval, and used the funds to support the
U.S.-backed Contra insurgency against the Sandinista
Government in Nicaragua . This criminal activity is
remembered as the Iran-Contra scandal, for which no one has
been brought to justice. In fact, many of its culprits
remain top U.S. government officials, including members of
the recent Iraq Study Group, such as the new Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates. Before a cease-fire was declared
between Iraq and Iran on April 20, 1988, over a million
lives were lost.
In 1988, Saddam Hussein’s regime was developing a $40
billion plan for post-war reconstruction. Kuwait , however,
was selling oil in quantities exceeding those mandated by
OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries)
agreements. This inexplicable violation of OPEC-established
limits dropped the price of oil per barrel, which
drastically reduced Iraq ’s export earnings. Kuwait ’s
Al-Sabah monarchy was also demanding repayment of the 10
billion dollar financial support given to Iraq to defend
against the Ayatollah’s regime that would depose them.
Furthermore, the Kuwaitis were stealing oil from the Rumaila
field in southern Iraq by “slant-drilling” under the border.
As diplomatic efforts to resolve these and the long-standing
border disputes between the two countries were dismissed by
the Al-Sabah sheikhs, Saddam Hussein threatened military
action to end Kuwait ’s intransigence. On August 2,
1990—once again with tacit approval from the United States
—Iraqi troops crossed the border of one of its neighbors.
Since then, punishment for the Iraqi government’s actions
has been carried out against the country’s civilian
population, in violation of the basic standards of
international law. U.N. sanctions imposed on Iraq ’s economy
on August 6, 1990, lasted until the fall of Saddam Hussein’s
regime after the American invasion of 2003. It is estimated
that between 1.2 and 1.8 million Iraqis died during those
years, due to starvation, destruction of electrical and
sewage treatment plants during the Gulf War, daily bombing
by US and British warplanes, and denial of basic medical
supplies and equipment. But today, Iraqis see those as their
“better days”—a testimonial to the grave human suffering
under the brutal, illegal American-British occupation.
Every Iraqi knows of Al-Hajaj bin Yusef Al-Thaqafi, a ruler
from a thousand years ago reputed to have led the most
brutal and repressive regime in Iraq’s long history. The
name “Al-Hajaj” is invoked in casual conversation to
describe times when conditions have hit rock bottom.
Ironically, Saddam Hussein admired the rule of that brutal
leader. Some Iraqis thought the now assassinated president
would replace Al-Hajaj in the colloquial lexicon—that is,
until the 2003 arrival of “Al-Dijaj” (in Arabic, “the
chicken”): George W. Bush and his chicken hawk
administration. Those rich politicians in Washington , who
send poor Americans to kill and be killed in the name of
stealing control of Iraq ’s oil, evaded their own
opportunities for military service. And just as the British
used King Faisal as a puppet ruler in the 1920’s, the
Americans have their own stooges today, including Ahmed
Chalabi, Iyad Allawi, Ibrahim Jafaari, and Nuri Al-Maliki.
Al-Dijaj and the rest of the chicken coop know nothing of
combat, poverty, or human suffering either at home or
abroad.
Since 1958, Iraqis have hoped that each regime change might
bring a better life. Have they hit rock bottom now?
[i] Ali, Tariq. Bush in Babylon : The Recolonisation of Iraq
. Chapter 3. Verso, London . 2003.
[ii] Ali, Tariq. Bush in Babylon : The Recolonisation of
Iraq . Chapter 4. Verso, London . 2003.
[iii] Ibid.
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