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Thieves fall out in Baghdad: behind the US raid on Ahmed Chalabi
By Patrick Martin
27 May 2004
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Last weeks raid by Iraqi police and US troops on the
Baghdad home and headquarters of Ahmed Chalabiwhose Iraqi
National Congress (INC) was once the favored US group of Iraqi
exilesis an unmistakable sign of the deepening disarray
and crisis within the US occupation regime. The man the Bush administration
once promoted as the George Washington of Iraq is now being linked
to charges of kidnapping, torture, embezzlement and murder.
Chalabi and the INC personify the criminal character of the
US conquest and occupation of Iraq. Largely on the basis of the
phony intelligence on Iraqi weapons of mass destruction
supplied by Chalabi at the behest of Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and
companywho knew the claims to be falseUS imperialism
has to date killed tens of thousands of Iraqis, wasted the lives
of more than 800 American soldiers, and caused thousands more
Iraqis and Americans to suffer crippling injury and incalculable
anguish. Chalabis role testifies to the fact that the Bush
administrations aims in invading Iraq had nothing to do
with establishing democracy, but instead were centered on seizing
control of the second-largest oil reserves in the world.
The US government launched its invasion of Iraq last year with
Chalabi waiting in the wings to be installed as the replacement
for Saddam Hussein. The Pentagon disdained any planning for the
predictable consequences of the overthrow of the Baathist regimelooting,
the breakdown of public services, guerrilla warfareat least
in part because of Chalabis assurances that the Iraqi population
would welcome a US conquest and rally behind his organization.
US military transports flew Chalabi and several hundred members
of his INC armed guard, dubbed the Iraqi Freedom Force (IFF),
into Nasiriyah, the first big southern Iraqi city to fall to the
advancing US troops. Chalabi and the IFF followed the US offensive
into Baghdad, where they played the role of extras in the Bush
administrations Hollywood production in Firdos Square (where
a statue of Saddam Hussein was torn down by US soldiers while
a handful of Iraqismainly members of Chalabis militiacheered).
The scion of one of the wealthiest families under the Iraqi
monarchy of the 1950shis father was president of the Senate
in the old regimeChalabi compared himself, rather improbably,
to Spartacus, leader of the great slave revolt in ancient Rome.
He suggested that his 400-strong IFF would rapidly grow into a
decisive military force, and US proconsul Paul Bremer abolished
the Iraqi army to make way for this eventuality. Instead, the
people of Iraq responded to Chalabi, who lived outside the country
from the age of 11, with indifference or outright hostility, and
the US military had to protect the IFF from the population it
was supposedly liberating.
Failing to achieve the preeminent role he craved, Chalabi was
appointed by the US-run Coalition Provisional Authority to the
25-member Iraqi Governing Council (IGC), and he settled into the
life of a lesser stooge of the US occupation regime. In that capacity,
as the indictment handed down by a Baghdad judge now alleges,
he conducted himself more like a mafia don than the democratic
political leader his US apologists had touted.
Chalabi is a convicted embezzler still wanted for looting the
second-largest financial institution in Jordan, Petra Bank, which
collapsed after Chalabi, then the banks president, fled
the country hidden in the trunk of a car. He has been unable to
set foot in most of the Arab world for the last 15 years for fear
of arrest on an outstanding Jordanian warrant. Bremer put the
convicted con man in charge of the Iraqi Finance Ministry, where
he installed a dozen or more of his INC confederates.
One of these, Sabah Nouri, was arrested recently on corruption
charges after auditors found a $22 million shortfall in the unit
that oversaw Iraqs changeover to a new dinar, replacing
the old currency that featured Saddams face on every bill.
The transition provided obvious opportunities for windfall profits
for someone with Chalabis experience in financial manipulation.
Gangsterism was added to chicanery. At least 15 employees,
members or associates of the INC are wanted on charges including
kidnapping, fraud, extortion and theft of government property.
Nouri, for instance, allegedly stole 12 cars from the ministry.
Another investigation into the INC involves the kidnapping
in April of a Baghdad cardiologist who said he was seized by people
he recognized as INC members, blindfolded and tortured until he
arranged to pay ransom. Other INC members face complaints over
impersonating police officers, breaking into homes and carrying
out robberies, sometimes in the guise of searching for terrorists.
The thuggery continues in the wake of the arrests. According
to the Los Angeles Times, Judge Zuhair J. Maliky, who issued
the warrant for the raid on Chalabis home and office, has
received numerous anonymous telephone death threats since then.
Weve hired 100 professional assassins to kill you,
one caller told Maliky. Another said, We are collecting
information about you and buying weapons right now. The
judge told the Times the threats were coming in so frequently
that I stopped counting.
From crime to farce
To sell the war to the American people, the Bush
administration engaged in political skullduggery just as cynical
and duplicitous as Chalabis bank swindling. Chalabi himself
played a central role. The INC was the principal source of the
pre-war claims that Saddam Hussein had huge stockpiles of chemical
and biological weapons and was actively pursuing the development
of nuclear weapons.
The INC dispatched purported Iraqi defectors to at least eight
Western intelligence services with tales of Saddams secret
weapons cache. Among these was a military defectorlater
revealed to be the relative of a top INC officialwho claimed
knowledge of mobile labs for making biological toxins. His testimony
was cited by US Secretary of State Colin Powell in his February
5, 2003, presentation to the UN Security Council, which summed
up what Powell called the strongest evidence that Iraq was violating
UN weapons sanctions.
In the wake of the post-war failure to find any chemical or
biological weapons in Iraq, or any trace of a serious nuclear
program, Chalabi dismissed the issue. He declared that since the
WMD claims had been instrumental in accomplishing the goal of
overthrowing Saddam Hussein, We were heroes in error.
Only last January, Chalabi was the guest of honor of the Bush
administration, seated behind Laura Bush in the audience at the
State of the Union speech.
Since then, however, the security and political situation for
the US in Iraq has deteriorated, leading the Bush administration
to change tactics and seek the cover of the UN to replace the
generally despised Iraqi Governing Council with a new, supposedly
sovereign puppet regime. As a result, Chalabi has
seen his influenceand potential financial rewardsdiminished.
Bitter over losing out in the struggle to control the spoils of
war, Chalabi has, in recent weeks, taken to criticizing the Coalition
Provisional Authority and Bremer, positioning himself as an ally
of the leading Shiite clerics, and demanding immediate elections
and greater Iraqi control over the countrys oil wealth.
Recently, the Pentagon announced that it was terminating the
stipend of $335,000 a month it paid the INC to gather intelligence
on other Iraqis for the US military. All told, the US government
has reportedly subsidized Chalabi to the tune of $40 million.
Shortly after the Pentagon halted the monthly payouts, the
raid was carried out on Chalabis office and home. The methods
employed in the raid are themselves illustrative of the real state
of affairs in occupied Iraq. The police smashed down doors, pointed
guns at the head of Chalabis aides, broke furniture and
took food and money from the premises. If such violence and contempt
are displayed toward a prominent member of the US-appointed Iraqi
Governing Council, what can ordinary Iraqis expect, especially
those who seek to oppose the occupation?
The well-publicized nature of the raid suggests that one purpose
was to make an example of Chalabi for the other members of the
IGC, who are resisting plans, negotiated between the Bush administration
and UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, to replace them with a different
group of stooges in the turnover of sovereignty set
for June 30. The current IGC president, Sheik Ghazi Yawar, got
the message, telling the press that the treatment dished out to
Chalabi could happen to any Governing Council member.
Who is Ahmed Chalabi?
In the wake of the raid, the Chalabi affair has served as something
of a political Rorschach test for the divisions within the US
government and ruling elite over Iraq, which have been exacerbated
by the failure of the occupation and the upsurge of mass resistance,
in both the Sunni Triangle and the Shiite-dominated south. There
are at least three competing explanations for the events of the
past week.
* Chalabi is exactly what he appears to bea corrupt
financial operator: This is the line taken by much of
the American media, which did its best up to now to conceal Chalabis
sordid résumé from the American people, and by congressional
Democrats. Newsweek magazine, for instance, produced a
cover story on the subject, bearing the headline, Our Con
Man in Iraq.
The Washington Post reported: For several months,
US officials have been investigating people affiliated with the
INC for possible ties to a scheme to defraud the Iraqi government
during the transition to a new currency that took place from Oct.
15 last year to Jan. 15, according to a US occupation authority
official familiar with the case. The official said the raids were
partly related to that investigation. At the center of the inquiry
is Nouri, whom Chalabi picked as the top anti-corruption official
in the new Iraqi Finance Ministry. Chalabi heads the Governing
Councils finance committee and has major influence in its
staffing and operation.
* Chalabi is an Iranian spy: This was the
claim of the CIA and State Department, which have been on the
outs with Chalabi since the mid-1990s. (The CIA preferred to pursue
an anti-Saddam military coup, while the State Department caught
the INC stealing US aid funds.) Chalabis longtime director
of intelligence, Aras Habib, is being sought on suspicion of betraying
US intelligence secrets to Iran. The information allegedly includes
both US capabilities for communications intercepts and details
of the US military position within Iraq.
If true, this demonstrates that Chalabi is for sale, not merely
to the highest bidder, but to any bidder willing to make an offer.
The Iranians presumably have been more discriminating customers
for intelligence than the credulous US officialsand media
punditswho swallowed Chalabis lies about weapons of
mass destruction and a Saddam-Al Qaeda connection. The US counterintelligence
investigation is now said to be focusing on Pentagon civilian
officials who may have shared secrets with Chalabian indication
that the Iraqi is only a pawn in the infighting between various
branches of the US national security establishment.
* Chalabi is a victim of the Bush administrations
turn to the UN after the April uprisings in Fallujah, Najaf and
Karbala: This is the position taken by the most right-wing
section of the US media (the Wall Street Journal and the
New York Post, for instance) as well as some elements among
the congressional Republicans and within the Pentagon. Chalabi
and the INC, who took possession of much of the archives of Saddam
Husseins secret police, supplied documents that were used
to support charges that top officials of the UN oil-for-food program
had taken bribes from Hussein. According to this accountwhich
hardly casts a favorable light on the methods of the Bush administrationthe
White House has sought to discredit Chalabi because an exposure
of corruption at the UN would cut across its plans to win UN sanction
for the June 30 transition to a new puppet regime in Baghdad.
Significantly, even though the US military command in Baghdad
authorized the raid on Chalabi, top Pentagon officials have still
been supportive. In testimony before a congressional committee
last week, General Richard Meyers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, praised the INC for providing tactical intelligence
that saved the lives of US soldiers.
In the aftermath of last weeks raid, the Chalabi affair
has degenerated into farce. Chalabi denounced US administrator
Bremer, saying he has lost his mind, and he postured
as the Moses of Iraq, telling the US occupation authority, My
message is let my people go, let my people be free.
Chalabi appeared on four US television interview programs last
Sunday, proclaiming his innocence of charges of corruption and
handing over sensitive intelligence information to Iran. He blamed
the charges on the CIA, his longtime nemesis in Washington politics,
and challenged CIA Director George Tenet to provide evidence.
Rather incongruously for someone now posturing as an Iraqi patriot,
Chalabi insisted he would not cooperate in any investigation conducted
within Iraq, demanding instead a hearing on the issue before the
US Congress, where he still hopes for support among far-right
elements in the Republican Party.
According to some reports, it is widely believed in Iraq that
the raid itself was a fake, that there is no real conflict between
Chalabi and the US government, and that Chalabi and Bremer are
playing assigned roles in a stage-managed effort to boost Chalabis
political credibility by giving him credentials as an opponent
of the US occupation. The popularity of this theory testifies
both to the chameleon-like character of Chalabi and the widespreadand
thoroughly justifieddistrust of the Iraqi people for anything
coming from the US media and US occupation authorities.
There are likely elements of truth in all the scenarios outlined
above, including the claims of the right-wing media that the Bush
administration is seeking to cover up an oil bribery scandal involving
the United Nations. There is no doubt that Iraqs oil wealth
underlies the conflict, although perhaps not in the way presented
by the Wall Street Journal.
There has been little comment in the American media on an event,
reported by Al Jazeera, that took place only a few days before
the raid on Chalabi. The IGC sent a delegation to New York City
on May 19 to ask the UN to turn over full authority for the disposition
of Iraqi oil revenues. Up to now, the Coalition Provisional Authority
and the UN have jointly controlled the billions in funds obtained
from Iraqi oil exports, under provisions of Security Council resolutions
passed after the 1991 Gulf War. Those resolutions provided that
the bulk of Iraqs oil revenues would pay for imports of
food and other necessities, while a portion was set aside to pay
compensation for damage caused by Saddam Husseins
1990 invasion of Kuwait.
The Security Council is discussing a new resolution, sought
by the US, which would provide UN sanction for the June 30 transition
to a sovereign Iraqi regime. IGC officials, including
Chalabi, have begun raising demands that the resolution put an
end to compensation payments to Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, which
are vastly more wealthy than Iraq, and assign all the revenues
from oil sales to whatever new regime is in power in Baghdad.
The IGC-appointed deputy foreign minister of Iraq, Hamid al-Bayati,
told Reuters, Iraq must have a say in the next UN resolution.
Iraq must be fully in charge of its resource wealth. Planning
Minister Mahdi al-Hafidh added, It is unjust for Iraq to
pay for the crimes of Saddam with its future.
These comments and the dispatch of an Iraqi delegation to the
UN were followed only days later by the raid on Chalabi. The timing
was probably not coincidental. One thread runs through all the
Byzantine maneuvers in Baghdad: the struggle to control the vast
wealth generated by Iraqs oil resources.
See Also:
White House pushes ahead with plans for
Iraqi puppet state
[21 May 2004]
Washingtons
Iraqi stooge urges mass repression
[3 September 2003]
Washingtons
colonial regime in waiting for Baghdad
[7 April 2003]
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