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The rape of Iraq
By the Editorial Board
9 May 2003
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During the buildup to the last world war, it was common to
speak of Nazi Germanys rape of Czechoslovakia,
or rape of Poland. What characterized Germanys
modus operandi in these countries was the use of overwhelming
military force, the complete elimination of their governments
and all civic institutions followed by the takeover of their economies
for the benefit of German capitalism.
It is high time that what the US is doing is called by its
real name. A criminal regime in Washington is carrying out the
rape of Iraq.
One month after the fall of Baghdad to the US military, the
real reasons for the Bush administrations illegal war against
Iraq are coming clearly into focus. Behind Washingtons rhetoric
about liberation and democracy, Americas
financial oligarchy is preparing to enrich itself through the
outright theft of an entire nations wealth.
The weapons of mass destruction and terrorist cellsthe
supposed targets of the US invasionare nowhere to be found.
Only the hopelessly naïve or willfully obtuse can believe
that these were the real motives for the war. That the US government
sent hundreds of thousands of troops and expended billions of
dollars worth of munitions and materiel to liberate
the Iraqi people is even less credible.
Washingtons real intentions are the creation of an out-and-out
colonial regime. In Iraq, Washington is confronting the world
with the reemergence of imperialism in the classic sense of the
word. It is repudiating the right of small nations to self-determination
and asserting its own right to use military force to seize whatever
it desires.
Today Iraq lies in ruins. A campaign that can better be described
as a massacre than a war yielded combined civilian and military
casualties that number in the many tens if not hundreds of thousands.
Hospitals, schools, power facilities, water and sewage services,
trash collection and every other section of infrastructure required
to sustain life in a highly urbanized society have been smashed.
Cholera and other diseases have reached epidemic proportions.
Virtually the entire population is without work or any means
of support. No money has been budgeted to pay the salaries of
displaced government workers, and US officials have made it clear
that there are no plans to revive the Iraqi civil service.
In Baghdad last Saturday, several hundred desperate job seekers
stormed the Palestine Hotel, which, unbeknownst to them, the US
military command had recently abandoned. Protesting the desperate
conditions facing working people as the result of the invasion,
they shouted: George Bush, Ali Baba.
The comparison of the American occupation with the exploits
of the fabled Arabian bandit and his 40 thieves is well-founded.
Washington has unleashed an army of thieves upon this battered
country.
US occupation forces began by actively encouraging rampant
lootingincluding the pillaging of the irreplaceable treasures
of the National Museumas a means of smashing whatever had
been built up by Iraqi society.
The aim is to reduce the countrys people to a destitute
and atomized mass, creating what the Bush administration sees
as a tabula rasa upon which it can imprint its own right-wing
and predatory schemes. They are carving out an area to carry out
an economic, social and military experiment that gravely threatens
not only the people of Iraq and the region, but also the working
people of America and the world.
A secret US document entitled Moving the Iraqi Economy
from Recovery to Sustainable Growth, first reported by the
Wall Street Journal last week, provides a glimpse into
US intentions.
BearingPoint Inc., a consulting firm known previously as KPMG
Consulting, has been awarded a contract for introducing this plan.
The firm was one of a number connected to the auditing giants
that changed their names and separated from parent companies in
the wake of the series of financial scandals that reached their
high point with the collapse of the Enron Corporation, a key corporate
ally of the Bush administration.
Had it not been for Enrons debacle, it would today undoubtedly
be one of the major contractors seeking to profit from the misery
of the Iraqi people. In essence, US intentions in Iraq manifest
the same criminal tendencies that were revealed at Enron, WorldCom
and company after company in recent years.
The thrust of the US plan is the wholesale privatization of
state-owned industries, particularly the oil sector, and the formation
of a stock market as well as the imposition of a US-style tax
code aimed at benefiting foreign investors.
Privatization in Iraq, as elsewhere, is designed as a ruthless
form of triage. Most of the state-owned companies upon which people
have depended for their livelihoods and their basic needs will
simply be declared insolvent and liquidated.
Those deemed potentially profitable will be sold off through
what the document describes as a broad-based Mass Privatization
Program, which could include the distribution of vouchers
to Iraqi citizens. A similar procedure was used in Russia. While
touted as a form of peoples capitalism, that
allows ordinary citizens to own the national wealth,
it turned quickly into a means of transferring state-owned property
into the hands of a coalition of criminals and former Stalinist
bureaucrats. Ordinary people quickly sold off the vouchers for
a fraction of their face value to get money for food.
The document says that the job of the multiple contractors
being chosen by the Bush administration will be to facilitate
private sector involvement in strategic sectors, including
privatization, asset sales, concessions, leases and management
contracts, especially in the oil and supporting industries.
The document likewise calls for turning Iraqs primitive
stock market into a world-class exchange for trading
shares in the newly privatized companies. Not only would US government
contractors create the basic infrastructure for this exchange,
American taxpayers money would also go to train a cadre
of Iraqi stockbrokers, presumably imparting the wisdom of financial
fraud that has been so much in evidence on Wall Street in recent
years.
Privatization at gunpoint
The shamelessness of the US plan has shocked even some of those
who have participated in previous privatization plans. Privatization
would end up being done by American guns, not by democratic decision,
Jeffrey Sachs, the Harvard economist who played a key role in
the elaboration of privatization schemes in Russia and Eastern
Europe, commented recently. If there was privatization like
people are talking about, it will help our oil companies and the
European oil companies in grabbing the Iraqi oilfields.
For the US corporations, the conquest of Iraq is about more
than just oil, it presents a field of opportunity for unrestrained
exploitation and an infusion of badly needed profits through the
looting of an entire nation.
Iraq represented a defenseless and, in many ways, irresistible
target from the standpoint of the capitalist drive for profit.
It possesses vast natural resources, with proven oil reserves
of around 112 billion barrels, second only to Saudi Arabia. It
likewise has a highly skilled workforce. Yet, as a result of US
military attacks and 12 years of punishing sanctions, it remained
one of the most economically undeveloped countries in the world,
with a per capita income of just $800 and a Gross Domestic Product
that has plummeted by over 70 percent in the last two decades.
Before the war, Iraqs oilfields were pumping out 2.5
million barrels a day. It is estimated that with several billion
dollars worth of capital investment, output could reach 7 million
barrels a day within the next several years, bringing in annual
revenues of more than $60 billion at todays oil prices.
Lack of capitalist development characterizes virtually every
other sector. The countys stock market traded just 95 companies
and the country has one of the lowest capitalization to GDP ratios
for the region.
Iraqs telecommunications network is one of the least
advanced in the world, the result of being denied access to technology
by the US-backed sanctions. There are presently just 2.9 telephone
lines per 100 people and no mobile network.
The takeover of the oil industry is already under way. Philip
Carroll, the former CEO of Shell Oil, has been tapped to oversee
the oil ministry. It was also revealed this week that the supposed
oil fire fighting contract awarded secretly to a subsidiary
of the Halliburton Corp. in the midst of the war covers not just
the limited task of fighting oil well firesas government
officials previously maintainedbut also the operation
and distribution of products.
In other words, the company that was headed by US Vice President
Richard Cheney from 1995 to 2000and still pays him up to
$1 million annuallywill operate Iraqs oilfields and
control whatever oil is produced.
The subsidiary, Kellogg Brown & Root (KBR), secured a no-bid
contract that has no limit either on its length or dollar amount.
Like most of the contracts awarded, it is structured on a cost-plus
basis, meaning the more the company incurs in costs the more profit
it makes.
The revelation about the KBR contract came in response to a
demand for more information made by Rep. Henry Waxman, Democrat
of California, who questioned whether Halliburtons political
ties had won it the deal.
In a letter to the Army Corps of Engineers, which released
the information, Waxman noted that previous descriptions of the
contract had mentioned only oil well fires and repairs. These
new disclosures are significant and they seem at odds with the
administrations repeated assurances that the Iraqi oil belongs
to the Iraqi people.
Publicly embracing American imperialism
What is taking place in Iraq is the onset of a fundamental
change in US foreign policy with vast implications both for the
world and for the American people. Washington has embarked on
a nakedly neo-colonialist venture. The fiction that it is preparing
a democracy in Iraq is self-evident. Democracies are not created
at the point of a bayonet or by the decrees of military occupation
authorities. Those Iraqis whom the US has selected to assist in
this project, led by the convicted embezzler Ahmed Chalabi, are
a gang of criminals and CIA agents.
The retired US general in charge of the military occupation,
Jay Garner, announced this week that by the middle of the
month youll see a beginning of a nucleus of an Iraqi government
with an Iraqi face on it, that is dealing with the coalition.
This Iraqi face excludes any force in Iraq that enjoys
genuine mass support. Where indigenous forces have come forward
to restore order and essential services, as in Mosul and Fullajah,
the US militarys response has been one of bloody massacres.
Perhaps one of the most significant political features of this
process is the lack of opposition across the official political
spectrum within the US itself. In an earlier period, US imperialist
politicians and their ideological defenders eschewed the label
of empire and not infrequently cited the countrys origins
in an anti-colonial revolutionary war in order to claim moral
superiority over its rivals in old Europe. Now, US
empire and colonialism are shamelessly embraced.
The New York Times chief foreign affairs commentator,
Thomas Friedman, a scoundrel who faithfully echoed the administrations
multiple pretexts for the war, is a prime example. In a plea to
liberal opponents of the war to become constructive critics
and participants in the task of nation building, Friedman
writes: We now have a 51st state of 23 million people. We
just adopted a baby called Baghdad. He concludes by urging
Democrats in the US not to miss the opportunity to shapeand
help make happenone of the most important turning points
in US foreign policy.
Even more provocatively, Max Boot, a right-wing commentator
who serves as a spokesman for the coalition behind Bush, produced
an opinion piece for USA Today entitled: American
imperialism? No need to run away from the label. He urged
US officials not to concern themselves with potential opposition
to the neo-colonial enterprise in Iraq. More than 125,000
American troops occupy Mesopotamia, he exulted. They
are backed up by the resources of the worlds richest economy.
In a contest for control of Iraq, America can outspend and outmuscle
any competing faction.
Boot continued with a warning not to underestimate the costs
associated with the conquest of Iraq. Wed better get
used to US troops being deployed there for years, possibly decades,
to come, he writes. If that raises hackles about American
imperialism, so be it. Were going to be called an empire
whatever we do. We might as well be a successful empire.
The vast majority of the Iraqi population has no desire to
become slaves of corporate America, and not a few have already
died opposing this criminal enterprise. Should it succeed, not
only they, but working people in the United States and internationally
will pay a terrible price.
An unprecedented social and economic crisis
Americas rapacious policy in Iraq is driven by profound
domestic social and economic contradictions. US capitalism confronts
its most serious economic and financial crisis since the end of
the Second World War. Planned job cuts in April rose to over 146,000,
the thirty-third month in a row that has registered the slashing
of jobs. This marks the longest continuous decline in employment
during the postwar period.
Leading this jobs massacrewith nearly 58,000 planned
layoffswere state and local governments, which are increasingly
confronting the specter of bankruptcy. Nearly 120,000 public sector
layoffs have been announced since the year began, together with
drastic cuts in essential services ranging from public education
to medical care.
A Business Roundtable survey of top executives representing
the largest US employers showed that only 18 percent of their
companies plan to increase capital spending this year. The remaining
82 percent said capital spending would remain stagnant or decline.
Only 9 percent of these executives said their companies plan to
hire new workers this year, while close to half expected to lay
off more employees.
Meanwhile, the US dollar has registered a precipitous decline,
falling nearly 20 percent against the euro in the last year and
a half, reflecting the flight of capital from the US markets in
the face of declining profit rates. The supposedly invincible
America, the worlds sole superpower, is in reality
beset by unprecedented economic rot.
The attempts by the financial oligarchy to reverse these trends
through financial fraud and literally criminal economic activity
on the one hand, and the turn toward militarism and colonial conquest
on the other, are a response to the crisis and decay at the heart
of American capitalism.
With the way the US looting of Iraq is being organized, American
working people will be foremost among those paying the price to
enrich a handful of politically connected corporations. The liberation
of the Iraqi people will translate into a massive rip-off of the
American people. Americas military victory has only widened
the scope of activities of the criminal layer that dominates both
politics and corporate finance.
The cost-plus contracts that are awarded by the Bush administration
can be paid for in the first instance only through the intensification
of attacks on basic social conditions at home.
The rise of a new US neo-colonialism, moreover, will not be
a repetition of nineteenth century European colonialism. It will
not foster a labor aristocracy with the proceeds reaped
from a conquered Iraq. Given the global integration of capitalist
production, Iraq becomes another source of cheap labor. Its conquest
will only accelerate the drain of money and jobs out of the US
in search of guaranteed profits in Iraq.
At the same time, this neo-colonial plunder will only strengthen
the grip of the most corrupt and right-wing elements in the American
government. Those winning the lucrative deals in Iraq will be
those who have anted up to the Republican Partys campaign
committees. It is a game in which one has to pay to play.
The struggle against war, colonialism and empire
American working people can defend their own rights only by
unconditionally opposing the turn toward colonialism and empire.
This process goes hand-in-hand with the destruction of living
standards and jobs at home and the creation of an ever-more repressive
political regime that is bent on abrogating fundamental democratic
rights.
In Europe, workers must reject the opportunist and cowardly
efforts of their governments to adapt themselves to Americas
predatory aims and thereby win a share of the booty. Whether these
efforts succeed or fail, the end result will be an intensified
assault on the tattered remains of the welfare states built up
during the postwar period. The appeasement of US imperialism can
only facilitate new campaigns of colonial conquest and ultimately
the descent into a third world war.
In Iraq, the masses must intransigently oppose the imposition
of a neo-colonial regime. The claims that Washington is interested
in democracy and modernization in Iraq are a patent lie. The only
interest of the American ruling elite is expropriating whatever
is capable of yielding a profit while suppressing any resistance
by Iraqis to the plundering of their resources.
The demand must be raised for the immediate withdrawal of all
US and British occupation forces from Iraq and the convening of
a democratically elected constituent assembly to form a new independent
Iraqi government committed to protecting Iraqs resources
and utilizing them for the benefit of the masses of the countrys
working people.
The struggle against war and resurgent neo-colonialism can
be successfully waged only by one social forcethe international
working class. A new revolutionary party must be built to mobilized
the working class independently and unite it internationally on
the basis of a socialist perspective that replaces the profit
principle with the conscious development of the world economy
in the interests of all. This is the perspective of the World
Socialist Web Site and of the Socialist Equality Party.
See Also:
War, oligarchy and the political lie
[7 May 2003]
Washington pushes for interim
regime in order to pump Iraqi oil
[30 April 2003]
Bechtel awarded Iraq contract:
War profits and the US military-industrial complex
[29 April 2003]
US administration plans for
long-term military occupation in Iraq
[22 April 2003]
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