.
Iraqi Governing
Council...
11/13/03: Iraqi Girl Blog:
I have to post this fast. The electrical situation has been hellish
today. There's no schedule… in our area the electricity is on 30
minutes for every two hours of no electricity. People suspect it's a
sort of punishment for what happened in Nassiryah this morning and the
bombings in Baghdad this last week. There were also some huge explosions
today- the troops got hit by mortars, I think, and retaliated by bombing
something.
Also, Mohammed Bahr Ul Iloom was shot at today. Bahr Ul Iloom is one of
the Shia clerics (a 'rotating president') and the father of the Minister
of Oil. He was unharmed, it seems, but his driver is wounded. While I'm
sure Bahr Ul Iloom would love to blame it on loyalists, Ba'athists and
Al-Qaeda, the shots actually came from American troops- it was a
'mistake'. Oops.
Bremer is currently in Washington, explaining why the Governing Council
are completely useless. The Washington Post article on the diminishing
popularity of the Governing Council came as no surprise:
"The
United States is deeply frustrated with its hand-picked council members
because they have spent more time on their own political or economic
interests than in planning for Iraq's political future, especially
selecting a committee to write a new constitution, the officials
added."
I think it's safe to say that when you put a bunch of power-hungry
people together on a single council (some who have been at war with each
other), they're going to try to promote their own interests. They are
going to push forward their party members, militias and relatives in an
attempt to root themselves in Iraq's future.
"Bremer
noted that at least half the council is out of the country at any given
time and that at some meetings, only four or five members showed
up."
Of course they're outside of the country- many of them don't have ties
in it. They have to visit their families and businesses in Europe and
North America. For some of them, it sometimes seems like the
"Governing Council" is something of an interesting hobby- a
nice little diversion in the monthly routine: golf on Saturdays, a movie
with the family in London on Fridays, a massage at the spa on Tuesdays,
and, oh yes- nation-building for 5 minutes with Bremer on the Xth of
each month.
People here never see them. Most live in guarded compounds and one never
knows what country they are currently in. For example, Chalabi is
presently missing. I haven't seen him on the news for… I don't know
how long. If anyone has seen him, please send an email- I'm dying to
know what he's up to.
I can imagine Bremer preparing for a meeting with the pioneers of Iraqi
democracy, the pillars of liberty… the Iraqi Puppet Council. He
strides in with his chic suit, flowing hair and polished shoes (the
yellow nation-building boots are only for press conferences and photo
shoots in Iraqi provinces). He is all anticipation and eagerness: today
will be the day. *This* meeting will be the productive meeting which
will make headlines.
He strides into the lavish room, Italian heels clicking on the marble
floor- there will be 25 faces today. Twenty-five pairs of adoring eyes
will follow him around the room. Twenty-five pairs of eager ears will
strain to hear his words of wisdom. Twenty-five faces will light up
with… but where are the 25? He stops in the middle of the room, heart
sinking, ire rising in leaps and bounds. Why are there only 5 unsure
faces? Did he have the schedule wrong? Was this the wrong conference
room?!
And Bremer roars and rages- where are the Puppets? Where are the
marionettes?! How dare they miss yet another meeting! But they all have
their reasons, Mr.Bremer: Talbani is suffering from indigestion after an
ample meal last night; Iyad Allawi is scheduled for a pedicure in
Switzerland this afternoon; Al-Hakim is jetting around making covert
threats to the Gulf countries, and Chalabi says he's not attending
meetings anymore, he's left the country and will be back when it's time
for the elections…
People have been expecting this for some time now. There's a complete
and total lack of communication between the Council members and the
people- they are as inaccessible as Bremer or Bush. Their speeches are
often in English and hardly ever to the Iraqi public. We hear about new
decisions and political and economical maneuverings through the
voice-overs of translators while the Council members are simpering at
some meeting thousands of miles away.
We need *real* Iraqis- and while many may argue that the Council members
are actually real Iraqis, it is important to keep in mind that fine, old
adage: not everyone born in a stable is a horse. We need people who
aren't just tied to Iraq by some hazy, political ambition. We need
people who have histories inside of the country that the population can
relate to. People who don't have to be hidden behind cement barriers,
barbed wire and an army.
Their failure has nothing to do with attacks on troops or terrorism. It
has to do with the fact that many of them are only recommendable because
they were apparently very good at running away from a difficult
situation- and running into the right arms. Another problem is the fact
that decent, intelligent people with political ambition refuse to be a
part of this fiasco because everyone senses that the Governing Council
cannot do anything on its own. Bremer is the head and he's only the tip
of the iceberg- he represents Washington.
A national conference is a good idea, but it will fail as miserably as
the Puppet Council, unless… there's a timetable. The occupation forces
need to set a definite date saying, "We're going to begin pulling
out on *this* month, next year- let's get organized before that." A
timetable is vital to any progress, if any is going to be made. Only
then, will things begin to move forward.
Prominent, popular politicians and public figures don't want to be tied
to American apron strings- this includes lawyers, political scientists,
writers, and other well-known people. Not because they are American
apron-strings per se, but because this is an occupation (by American
admission, no less). No matter how much CNN and the rest try to dress it
up as a liberation, the tanks, the troops, the raids, the shootings
(accidental or otherwise), and the Puppet Council all scream occupation.
If it were French, it'd get the same resistance… just as if it were a
Saudi, Egyptian or Iranian occupation.
It is also vital that all interested political parties be allowed to be
a part of the national conference. Any political conferences in the past
have been limited to American-approved political and religious parties
which have left a large number of political groups outside of the
circle- groups that have more popular support. Furthermore, the
conference can't be run and organized by occupation forces (troops and
the CPA). If there's one thing Iraqis are good at- it's organizing
conferences. Why should vital political decisions critical to Iraq's
independence be made under the watchful eyeball of an American
Lieutenant or General? Everyone wants a democratic Iraq, but that just
isn't going to happen if people constantly associate the government with
occupation.
Why should any Iraqi government have to be christened and blessed by
Bremer? He wasn't Iraqi, last time I checked…
Juan Cole and Joshua
Marshall both have some interesting things to say on the subject
(they both give some good links too).
http://riverbendblog.blogspot.com
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