.
Bremer
a quick study in colony building
It's possible that former minister of information
Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf, aka "Comical Ali", will be proved
prophetic: "They're coming to surrender or be burned in their
tanks."
By Pepe Escobar
07/11/03: (Asia Times) "We are going to fight them and impose our
will on them and we will capture or ... kill them until we have imposed
law and order on this country. We dominate the scene and we will
continue to impose our will on this country." This is US proconsul
in Iraq Paul Bremer, speaking from Baghdad last Saturday.
"I appeal to you, O Iraqis, Arabs, Kurds and Turkmens, Shi'a or
Sunni, Christians or Muslims, it is your duty to expel the aggressor
invaders from our country." This is allegedly Saddam Hussein in his
new audio-tape broadcast by Lebanon's al-Hayat-LBC channel (only a few
days after the July 4 tape broadcast by al-Jazeera).
The question is inescapable: whom are Iraqis listening to? The "occuliberator"
or the invisible former dictator? For Pentagon masters and their
faithful lieutenant Bremer, there is no such thing as legitimate Iraqi
indigenous resistance to foreign occupation. But Asia Times Online has
reported that the resistance spirit previously confined to the Sunni
belt around Baghdad has also "contaminated" Shi'ite religious
leaders.
Whatever the spin, and whatever the cost - at least in the short to
medium term - in US casualties, the game plan remains to occupy and
control Iraq for years. Iraqi sources inside the country and in Jordan
and Egypt have confirmed information already circulated by the Israeli
website DEBKA-Net-Weekly that the Americans are spending US$500 million
to build two giant intelligence facilities: one north of Mosul, in
Kurdish territory, and another in Baghdad's middle-class Saadun
neighborhood on the Tigris River's east bank. This massive military
presence may be a throwback to when the United States had a faithful
regional gendarme, the Shah of Iran. But the facilities are necessary in
order to enforce the economic agenda that really matters to Washington:
the privatization of Iraq's economy and most of all the exploitation of
its immense oil reserves.
This will mark the end of an era, and will be the ultimate graphic
demonstration by the United States of what happens to regimes that dare
to defy the superpower - or outlast their usefulness, as was Saddam's
case. The Iraq Petroleum Co was nationalized in June 1972. It was a
progressive nationalization: first the oilfields in the northeast, then
- during the 1973 Arab-Israeli war - what was controlled by Exxon, Mobil
and Shell. Finally, in 1975, what was controlled by British Petroleum
and the Compagnie Francaise des Petroles. From 1975 until the embargo
applied in response to the invasion of Kuwait, in 1990, Iraq controlled
100 percent of the exploitation of its oil resources.
Anglo-Americans have never forgiven Iraq for this move. The British have
never forgiven the Ba'ath Party for ending their more than half a
century of influence in Mesopotamia - and making it even worse by
opening the doors of Iraq and the Persian Gulf to France. The United
States for its part has never forgiven Iraq for setting an example to
the developing world and for taking the lead in a sort of front of Arab
export countries when the Organization of Petroleum Export Countries
(OPEC) was created in 1973.
The dismantling of the Ba'ath Party and the dismantling of the
socialized economy the party put in place since the end of the 1960s are
indications that the US has already begun to refashion Iraq to its
liking - strengthening its role as successor to Britain as the dominant
Western colonial power in the Middle East.
Proconsul Bremer announced that his appointed "governing
council" of 25-30 Iraqis should be in place by mid-July. Faced with
very strong opposition from all quarters, Bremer has somewhat agreed to
grant Iraqis the power to appoint and supervise an Iraqi council of
ministers, to set oil and economic policies, issue a new Iraqi currency
and appoint new Iraqi ambassadors. But strenuous weeks of negotiations
might have been a smokescreen: nobody at this point can guarantee
whether the new ruling council will be directly appointed by Bremer or
will emanate auspiciously after tumultuous "consultations"
among Iraqi political leaders.
The Arab world scoffs at the notion of trusting Pentagon people to
introduce democracy to Iraq. The inevitable example is Pentagon pet
Ahmad Chalabi, the leader of the Iraqi National Congress (INC). Chalabi
is widely despised inside Iraq. The US State Department and Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) never trusted the slick operator. But the
Pentagon and the oil lobby love him: he has always said what Donald
Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz and Co want to hear - things like how he
thought the US "liberators" would be welcomed by the Iraqi
population with roses and showers of rice.
In a joint statement issued this Monday in Salahuddin, Kurdistan, the
seven main Iraqi political groups that form the leadership council of
the former Iraqi opposition have decided to join an interim Iraqi
government. But they have also made it clear that their tortuous
negotiations with Bremer are not over yet. For the first time, Bremer
has been forced to acknowledge that the members of the leadership
council will have a "governing" role - although the supreme
powers remain the Americans and British.
The seven main Iraqi political groups also claim to have support for an
Iraqi security force from General John Abizaid - who is taking over the
United States Central Command from General Tommy Franks - and from
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz in the Pentagon. This would be a
paramilitary army trained and equipped by the United States - with a
mission to fight the so-called "remnants of the Ba'athist
regime" that are waging a guerrilla-style resistance against the
Americans.
Many Iraqis are certain that the resistance is being waged not only by
Saddam sympathizers and former Ba'ath officials but by a coalition of
popular-resistance forces. The problem is that Iraqis don't know what is
really happening in this behind-closed-doors form of democracy because
of the newly established committee for press censorship. The US is
exercising censorship of the press in Iraq. This means that the media
can publish anything that talks of Saddam's years of terror, but they
cannot write freely about such current events as Bremer's maneuvers, US
inertia to restore basic public services, resistance against the
occupation, dissenting views about democracy imposed by invasion, etc.
Americans have to be aware that the key to understanding Iraq is
religion and tribe. The emerging New Iraq will reflect how religious,
tribal, national, regional and ethnic identities are integrated in a
national political system that includes everybody - and reflects real
power balances. Religion, ethno-nationalism and statehood should find a
better balance than the one imposed on Iraq by British colonialism in
the 1920s.
The United States may try to import its preferred leaders - or force
them down Iraqis' throats. It may impose an alien governance system. It
may marginalize powerful indigenous Shi'ite religious leaders or tribal
elders. It may try to grant privileges to tribal and commercial elites
who enjoy disproportionate local power. It may use locals and then get
rid of them when they are no longer useful. May the US try any one of
these things, it's possible that former minister of information Mohammed
Saeed al-Sahaf, aka "Comical Ali", will be proved prophetic:
"They're coming to surrender or be burned in their tanks."
Copyright 2003 Asia Times
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