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August 9, 2005 Edition > Section:  <http://www.nysun.com/section/31> Opinion



State of Wobbliness


BY NIBRAS KAZIMI
August 9, 2005


Ladies and gentlemen, Project New Iraq is about to fail. Too bad, since an
Iraqi success story would avert many future disasters in the West.

And yes, it was a noble goal to overthrow Saddam and liberate the Iraqi
people, and no, it did not make the bad guys hate you even more, since that
is not emotionally possible: Their hatred is so great that they intend, over
the next decade of turmoil, to burn the oil under their feet just to spite
you - the oil that would feed and clothe their children.

On Sunday, demonstrators in the southern town of Samawa clashed with Iraqi
police forces, leading to at least one fatality. Only a year and a half ago,
they welcomed Allied forces deployed there with "Welcome Mr. Japan" signs
written in mangled English. Those demonstrators were not out to support
Muqtada al-Sadr. They were not out to denounce the concept of federalism.
They were not clamoring for more sovereignty. They demanded water, a couple
of more hours of electricity, and no more iron shavings in their rationed
flour.

Two days earlier, a similar demonstration of several thousand souls with
similar demands in Karbala demanded that their native son, Prime Minister
Ja'afari, resign his post. Farther south, Basra's natives are seething with
resentment as their easygoing town turns further and further into an Islamic
city-state where heavily accented Iranian intelligence officers get to
decide whether out-of-town visitors can check into hotels.

Maybe it is unrealistic to ask for much across all of Iraq given the
ferocious intensity of the murderous insurgency, but at least for the line
south of the towns of Musayyeb on the Euphrates and Suweira on the Tigris,
where things have been relatively calm, one would have expected to see some
changes for the better two and a half years after liberation. Sure, no one
is piling poor Shias into mass graves any more, but how would one explain
the anger in Samawa?

Here is a prediction that pains me: Expect riots in Baghdad. The anger and
resentment in the capital is immense. Once people fall into the habit of
thinking that tomorrow will be even worse than today, then that defines
failure in a grand experiment like Iraq.

The reasons for all this are very complex, but it is immoral at this point
to engage in sterile academic arguments as to who is to blame. Right now, a
dehydrated nation demands water, electricity, gasoline, and all the other
basic things.

The fundamental paradox now is that the Americans are not leading the
process in Iraq while at the same time not allowing the elected government
to lead. There are two crucial elements to this conundrum: security and
corruption.

The people in the streets are angry because there is no accountability for
the miserable failure of governmental performance on both security and
corruption. A week ago in the Friday sermon, one of Ayotallah Sistani's most
influential spokesmen posed this pertinent question: Where does the Iraqi
Intelligence Service get its budget from, and who does its chief, General
Mohammed Shahwani, answer to? The answer to both questions is the Central
Intelligence Agency in Langley, Virginia, but no one in the Iraqi government
is supposed to know or challenge the legality of this open secret.

America's security policy in Iraq, which came into shape while Ayad Allawi
was prime minister, is still in place. Its main theme was to woo the
Ba'athists back into power. The result was that the insurgents somehow came
up with better planned attacks by acting on leaked sensitive information.
This policy, one of whose hallmarks is Shahwani's outfit, has clearly
failed. But did anyone learn anything?

The current elected government ran on a platform of de-Ba'athification Plus
but is being stymied at every turn. Here is a bizarre Mexican standoff: The
rules for the Special Criminal Court that is supposed to put Saddam on trial
specifically state that no Ba'athist, of whatever rank, is allowed to hold a
job in the tribunal. The de-Ba'athification Commission proceeded to fire the
Ba'athists, but a rearguard action by the American embassy, as well as
editorial melodrama in the New York Times, halted the process. It's the law,
stupid! Those who gave testimony against Saddam and went into a witness
protection program got phone calls from the insurgents telling them that
their act is up.

And just who is being held accountable for the corruption under Allawi's
government? Hundreds of millions of dollars went missing, and it was all
widely reported. But did anyone go to jail? What lesson are current state
bureaucrats supposed to infer from that failure to act? At least now, the
government has put in place some regulations that make it a little harder to
carry tens of millions of dollars in cash out of Baghdad Airport. But given
the lack of accountability, some ministers and their cronies are just
getting more creative in circumventing these regulations. Some of the
schemes that I'm hearing about are indeed ingenious, and funnily enough
those embezzlers are proud enough to openly gloat about their deftness.
Great! They have to work harder to steal. Now that's progress.

Against the backdrop of governmental paralysis in doing something - anything
- about security and corruption, Iraq is having its most important
historical moment: the crafting of a constitution that defines the identity
and future of the country. But this historical contract is being forged in
the Green Zone; an artificial bubble of comfort that bears no resemblance to
the rest of Iraq. The rest of Iraq wants the government to provide basic
services now and can spare little attention to the rhetoric that will shape
their future.

Ja'afari is sitting in this Green Zone much too content with his title while
twiddling his thumbs and mouthing ornate gibberish. Anyone who has followed
his career over the decades would never refer to him as a dynamic
personality and can-do guy. To cover for his shortcomings, his aides are
whispering to their party cadres that the Americans are deliberately
sabotaging and paralyzing the government in order to bring back Allawi in
the next round of elections.

The legal mechanism for delaying the constitutional debate and getting on
with fixing or at least appearing to fix the problems of security and
corruption is there for the taking. Everyone involved should make full use
of the six-month extension: Ja'afari must be sacked, Ba'athists must be
purged, and thieves must go to jail.

At least then the Iraqi people can see some movement in the right direction.
Instead, the Americans, by hurrying along the process, have the haunted look
of those trying to cut and run. The bad guys are ecstatic and see it as
Somalia all over again. But the fact remains the same: Iraq must succeed,
because if it doesn't, those bad guys will. Success can be only measured by
how Iraqis wake up in the morning and look forward to better times; finding
water in their taps to wash their faces would be a good start.

Nibras Kazimi is an Iraqi writer living in Washington, D.C. He can be
contacted at  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 



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