Time to hear from a left hack, radical chic jab from the left...

Cheers, Ken Hanly

www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=15&ItemID=5786

ZNet | Iraq June 26, 2004

The Robbery of Reconstruction

by Naomi Klein

Good news out of Baghdad: the Program Management Office, which oversees the
$18.4bn in US reconstruction funds, has finally set a goal it can meet.
Sure, electricity is below pre-war levels, the streets are rivers of sewage
and more Iraqis have been fired than hired. But now the PMO has contracted
the British mercenary firm Aegis to protect its employees from
"assassination, kidnapping, injury and" - get this - "embarrassment". I
don't know if Aegis will succeed in protecting PMO employees from violent
attack, but embarrassment? I'd say mission already accomplished. The people
in charge of rebuilding Iraq can't be embarrassed, because, clearly, they
have no shame.

In the run-up to the June 30 underhand (sorry, I can't bring myself to call
it a "handover"), US occupation powers have been unabashed in their efforts
to steal money that is supposed to aid a war-ravaged people. The state
department has taken $184m earmarked for drinking water projects and moved
it to the budget for the lavish new US embassy in Saddam Hussein's former
palace. Short of $1bn for the embassy, Richard Armitage, the deputy
secretary of state, said he might have to "rob from Peter in my fiefdom to
pay Paul". In fact, he is robbing Iraq's people, who, according to a recent
study by the consumer group Public Citizen, are facing "massive outbreaks of
cholera, diarrhoea, nausea and kidney stones" from drinking contaminated
water.

If the occupation chief Paul Bremer and his staff were capable of
embarrassment, they might be a little sheepish about having spent only
$3.2bn of the $18.4bn Congress allotted - the reason the reconstruction is
so disastrously behind schedule. At first, Bremer said the money would be
spent by the time Iraq was sovereign, but apparently someone had a better
idea: parcel it out over five years so Ambassador John Negroponte can use it
as leverage. With $15bn outstanding, how likely are Iraq's politicians to
refuse US demands for military bases and economic "reforms"?

Unwilling to let go of their own money, the shameless ones have had no
qualms about dipping into funds belonging to Iraqis. After losing the fight
to keep control of Iraq's oil money after the underhand, occupation
authorities grabbed $2.5bn of those revenues and are now spending the money
on projects that are supposedly already covered by American tax dollars.

But then, if financial scandals made you blush, the entire reconstruction of
Iraq would be pretty mortifying. From the start, its architects rejected the
idea that it should be a New Deal-style public works project for Iraqis to
reclaim their country. Instead, it was treated as an ideological experiment
in privatisation. The dream was for multinational firms, mostly from the US,
to swoop in and dazzle the Iraqis with their speed and efficiency.

Iraqis saw something else: desperately needed jobs going to Americans,
Europeans and south Asians; roads crowded with trucks shipping in supplies
produced in foreign plants, while Iraqi factories were not even supplied
with emergency generators. As a result, the reconstruction was seen not as a
recovery from war but as an extension of the occupation, a foreign invasion
of a different sort. And so, as the resistance grew, the reconstruction
itself became a prime target.

The contractors have responded by behaving even more like an invading army,
building elaborate fortresses in the green zone - the walled-in city within
a city that houses the occupation authority in Baghdad - and surrounding
themselves with mercenaries. And being hated is expensive. According to the
latest estimates, security costs are eating up 25% of reconstruction
contracts - money not being spent on hospitals, water-treatment plants or
telephone exchanges.

Meanwhile, insurance brokers selling sudden-death policies to contractors in
Iraq have doubled their premiums, with insurance costs reaching 30% of
payroll. That means many companies are spending half their budgets arming
and insuring themselves against the people they are supposedly in Iraq to
help. And, according to Charles Adwan of Transparency International, quoted
on US National Public Radio's Marketplace programme, "at least 20% of US
spending in Iraq is lost to corruption". How much is actually left over for
reconstruction? Don't do the maths.

Rather than models of speed and efficiency, the contractors look more like
overcharging, underperforming, lumbering beasts, barely able to move for
fear of the hatred they have helped generate. The problem goes well beyond
the latest reports of Halliburton drivers abandoning $85,000 trucks on the
road because they don't carry spare tyres. Private contractors are also
accused of playing leadership roles in the torture of prisoners at Abu
Ghraib. A landmark class-action lawsuit filed by the Centre for
Constitutional Rights alleges that Titan Corporation and CACI International
conspired to "humiliate, torture and abuse persons" in order to increase
demand for their "interrogation services".

And then there's Aegis, the company being paid $293m to save the PMO from
embarrassment. It turns out that Aegis's CEO, Tim Spicer, has a bit of an
embarrassing past himself. In the 90s, he helped to put down rebels and
stage a military coup in Papua New Guinea, as well as hatching a plan to
break an arms embargo in Sierra Leone.

If Iraq's occupiers were capable of feeling shame, they might have responded
by imposing tough new regulations. Instead, Senate Republicans have just
defeated an attempt to bar private contractors from interrogating prisoners
and also voted down a proposal to impose stiffer penalties on contractors
who overcharge. Meanwhile, the White House is also trying to get immunity
from prosecution for US contractors in Iraq and has requested the exemption
from the new prime minister, Iyad Allawi.

It seems likely that Allawi will agree, since he is, after all, a kind of US
contractor himself. A former CIA spy, he is already threatening to declare
martial law, while his defence minister says of resistance fighters: "We
will cut off their hands, and we will behead them." In a final feat of
outsourcing, Iraqi governance has been subcontracted to even more brutal
surrogates. Is this embarrassing, after an invasion to overthrow a
dictatorship? Not at all; this is what the occupiers call "sovereignty". The
Aegis guys can relax - embarrassment is not going to be an issue.

. A version of this article first appeared in the Nation

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