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Fables
of the Reconstruction
A Coalition memo reveals that even true believers see the
seeds of civil war in the occupation of Iraq
by
Jason Vest
As the
situation in Iraq grows ever more tenuous, the Bush administration
continues to spin the ominous news with matter-of-fact optimism.
According to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Iraqi uprisings
in half a dozen cities, accompanied by the deaths of more
than 100 soldiers in the month of April alone, is something
to be viewed in the context of good days and bad days,
merely a moment in Iraqs path towards a free and
democratic system. More recently, the president himself
asserted, Our coalition is standing with responsible
Iraqi leaders as they establish growing authority in their
country.
But according
to a closely held Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) memo
written in early March, the reality isnt so rosy. Iraqs
chances of seeing democracy succeed, according to the memos
author a US government official detailed to the CPA,
who wrote this summation of observations he'd made in the
field for a senior CPA director have been severely
imperiled by a years worth of serious errors on the
part of the Pentagon and the CPA, the US-led multinational
agency administering Iraq. Far from facilitating democracy
and security, the memos author fears, US efforts have
created an environment rife with corruption and sectarianism
likely to result in civil war.
Provided
to this reporter by a Western intelligence official, the memo
was partially redacted to protect the writers identity
and to avoid inflaming an already volatile situation
by revealing the names of certain Iraqi figures. A wide-ranging
and often acerbic critique of the CPA, covering topics ranging
from policy, personalities, and press operations to on-the-ground
realities such as electricity, the document is not only notable
for its candidly troubled assessment of Iraqs future.
It is also significant, according to the intelligence official,
because its author has been a steadfast advocate of
transforming the Middle East, beginning with regime
change in Iraq.
The
trigger for civil war
Signs
of the authors continuing support for the US invasion
and occupation are all over the memo, which was written to
a superior in Baghdad and circulated among other CPA officials.
He praises Iraqi National Congress leader Ahmed Chalabi, and
laments a lack of unqualified US support for Chalabi, a long-time
favorite of Washington hawks. (It bears noting that Chalabi
was tried and convicted in absentia by the Jordanian government
for bank embezzlement, in 1989, and has come under fire more
recently for peddling dubious pre-war intelligence to the
US.) The author also asserts that what we have accomplished
in Iraq is worth it. And his predictions sometimes hew
to an improbably sunny view. Violence is likely, he says,
for only two or three days after arresting radical
cleric Muqtada al Sadr, an event that would make other
populist leaders think twice about bucking the CPA.
Written only weeks ago, these predictions seem quite unwarranted,
since simply trying to arrest al Sadr has resulted in more
than two weeks of bloody conflict with no end in sight
and seems to have engendered more cooperation between
anti-Coalition forces than before.
Yet the
memo is gloomy in most other respects, portraying a country
mired in dysfunction and corruption, overseen by a CPA that
handle(s) an issue like six-year-olds play soccer: Someone
kicks the ball and one hundred people chase after it hoping
to be noticed, without a care as to what happens on the field.
But it is particularly pointed on the subject of cronyism
and corruption within the Governing Council, the provisional
Iraqi government subordinate to the CPA whose responsibilities
include re-staffing Iraqs government departments. In
retrospect, the memo asserts, both for political
and organizational reasons, the decision to allow the Governing
Council to pick 25 ministers did the greatest damage. Not
only did we endorse nepotism, with men choosing their sons
and brothers-in-law; but we also failed to use our prerogative
to shape a system that would work ... our failure to promote
accountability has hurt us.
In the
broadest sense, according to the memos author, the CPAs
bunker-in-Baghdad mentality has contributed to the potential
for civil war all over the country. [CPA Administrator
L. Paul] Bremer has encouraged re-centralization in Iraq because
it is easier to control a Governing Council less than a kilometer
away from the Palace, rather than 18 different provincial
councils who would otherwise have budgetary authority,
he says. The net effect, he continues, has been a desperation
to dominate Baghdad, and an absolutism born of regional isolation.
The memo also describes the CPA as handicapped by [its]
security bubble, and derides the US government for spending
millions importing sport utility vehicles which are
used exclusively to drive the kilometer and a half between
CPA and Governing Council headquarters when we would
have been much better off with a small fleet of used cars
and a bicycle for every Green Zone resident.
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Secretary
Rumsfeld gestures to emphasize his point during a press
briefing with Ambassador Paul Bremer. Photo Courtesy
of U.S.
Army/Photo by: R.D. Ward.
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While
the memo upbraids CPA officials an apparent majority
who stay inside the Green Zone in the name of personal
safety, it also maintains that the Green Zone itself is less
than secure, both for Westerners and Iraqis. According
to the author, screening for Iranian agents and followers
of Muqtada al Sadr is inconsistent at best, and anti-CPA
elements can easily gather basic intelligence, since no one
is there to prevent people from entering the parking
lot outside the checkpoint to note license plate numbers of
collaborators.
Ordinary
Iraqis also fear that some of the custodial staff note
who comes and goes, according to the memo, causing a
segment of Iraqi society to avoid meeting Americans
because they fear the Green Zone. It also derides the
use of heavily armed personal-security details (PSDs) for
CPA personnel, saying the practice inspires reticence among
ordinary Iraqis. It is ingrained in the Iraqi psyche
to keep a close hold on their own thoughts when surrounded
by people with guns, the memo notes. Even those
willing to talk to Americans think twice, since American officials
create a spectacle of themselves, with convoys, flak jackets,
fancy SUVs.
While
the memo offers an encouraging and appealing picture of thriving
businesses and patrons on the streets of a free Baghdad, it
notes that the progress evident happens despite us rather
than because of us, and reports that frequent
explosions, many of which are not reported in the mainstream
media, are a constant reminder of uncertainty.
Indeed,
while boosters of the Iraqi invasion delight in the phrase
25 million free Iraqis, if the CPA memo is any
indication, this newfound liberty does not include freedom
from fear. Baghdadis have an uneasy sense that they
are heading towards civil war, it says. Sunnis,
Shias, and Kurd professionals say that they themselves, friends,
and associates are buying weapons fearing for the future.
The memo also notes that while Iraqi police remain too
fearful to enforce regulations, they are making a pretty
penny as small arms dealers, with the CPA as an unwitting
partner. CPA is ironically driving the weapons market,
it reveals. Iraqi police sell their US-supplied weapons
on the black market; they are promptly re-supplied. Interior
ministry weapons buy-backs keep the price of arms high.
The memo
goes on to argue that the trigger for a civil war
is not likely to be an isolated incident of violence, but
the result of deeper conflicts that revolve around patronage
and absolutism reaching a flashpoint.
Their
corruption is our corruption
Asserting
that the US must use our prerogative as an occupying
power to signal that corruption will not be tolerated,
the CPA memo recommends taking action against at least four
Iraqi ministers whose names have been redacted from the document.
(Though there may be no connection, two weeks ago, Interior
Minister Nuri Badran abruptly resigned, as did Governing Council
member Iyad Allawi.) Also redacted is the name of a minister
whose acceptance of alleged kickbacks . . . should be
especially serious for us, since he was one of two ministers
who met the President and had his picture taken with him.
(Though the identity of the minister in question cannot be
precisely determined, the only Iraqi ministers who have been
photographed with President Bush are Iraqi public-works minister
Nesreen Berwari and electricity minister Ayhem al-Sammarai,
on September 23, 2003.) If such information gets buried
on the desks of middle-level officials who do not want to
make waves, the memo warns, the short-term gain
will be replaced by long-term ill.
Developing
this theme, the memo asserts that the US share[s] culpability
in the eyes of ordinary Iraqis for engendering Iraqs
currently cronyistic state; since we appointed the Governing
Council members ... their corruption is our corruption.
The author then notes that two individuals names again
redacted have successfully worked to exclude certain
strains of Shia from obtaining ministerial-level positions,
and that for this Iraqis blame Bremer, especially because
the [CPA] Governance Group had assured Iraqis that exclusion
from the Governing Council did not mean an exclusion from
the process. As it turns out, we lied. People from Kut [a
city south of Baghdad recently besieged by Shiite forces loyal
to Muqtada al Sadr], for example, see that they have no representation
on the Governing Council, and many predict civil war since
they doubt that the Governing Council will really allow elections.
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Ambassador
L. Paul Bremer, head of the Coalition Provisional Authority,
and Baghdad police Brig. Gen. Ahmid Ibrahim, center,
present a certificate to a graduating Baghdad police
officer.
Photo by: Sgt. Mark S. Rickert
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Fanning
the embers of distrust is the USs failure to acknowledge
that the constituencies of key Governing Council members are
not based on ideology, but rather on the muscle of their respective
personal militias and the patronage which we allow them to
bestow, according to the memos author. Using the
Kurds as an example, he reveals that we have bestowed
approximately $600 million upon the Kurdish leadership, in
addition to the salaries we pay, in addition to the USAID
projects, in addition to the taxes which we have allowed them
to collect illegally. To underscore the point, the author
adds that he recently spent an evening with a Kurdish contact
watching The Godfather trilogy, and notes that the entire
evening was spent discussing which Iraqi Kurdish politicians
represented which [Godfather] character.
The memo
also characterizes the CPAs border-security policy as
completely irrelevant, going so far as to state
that it is undeniable that a crumbling Baathist regime
did better than we have in that regard. Noting that
senior Defense Department officials do not fully understand
the nature of the problem, the memo recommends that the US
deploy far greater numbers [of soldiers] than we have
now to the borders. The memo also criticizes the Defense
Department in particular the Office of the Secretary
of Defense for keeping potentially useful personnel
in Washington. There is an unfortunate trend inside
the Pentagon where those who can write a good memo are punished
by being held back from the field, it says, adding that
OSD harms itself, and its constituent members
individual credibility, when it defers all real world experience
to others.
The CPAs
press operation headed by Dan Senor, Bremers
senior communications adviser, who is seen by many as little
more than a White House hack doesnt escape the
memo writers criticism, either. The press office, he
says, has made a bad political situation worse by promoting
American individuals above Iraqis. In one case, the
memo says, Iraqis present at the 4 am conclusion of
the Governing Council deliberations on the interim constitution
were mocking Dan Senors request that no one say anything
to the press until the following afternoon.... It was obvious
to all that an American wanted to make the announcement and
so take credit. Our lack of honesty in saying as much annoyed
the Iraqis . . . [they] resent the condescension of our press
operation.
Pre-war
concerns validated
By and
large, the March memo validates many points raised by career
military, diplomatic, and intelligence officers before the
war. For them, lack of planning for post-war stabilization
was a primary matter of deep concern, which cannot be said
for the Bush administrations hawkish advocates of regime
change.
Among
the more informed and prescient in this camp is Retired USAF
Colonel Sam Gardiner, a long-time National War College instructor
and war-games specialist who asserted in February of 2003
that the military is not prepared to deal with [Bushs]
promises of a rapid and rosy post-war transition in
Iraq. Based on Gardiners experience as a participant
in a Swedish National War College study of protracted difficulties
in rebuilding Kosovos electrical grid after NATO bombed
it in 1999, Gardiner made a similar study, in 2002, of the
likely effect US bombardment would have on Iraqs power
system. Gardiners assessment was not optimistic. It
was also hardly unknown: not only did he present his finding
to a mass audience at a RAND Corporation forum, he also briefed
ranking administration officials ranging from then-NSC Iraq
point man Zalmay Khalizad to senior Pentagon and US Agency
for International Development officials.
Despite
repeated assurances over the past year from CPA chief L. Paul
Bremer that Iraqs electricity situation has vastly improved,
the memo says otherwise, reporting that there is no
consistency in power flows. Street lights function
irregularly and traffic lights not at all.... Electricity
in Baghdad fluctuating between three hours, on and off, in
rotation, and four hours on and off.
I
continue to get very upset about the electricity issue,
Gardiner said last week after reviewing the memo. I
said in my briefing that the electrical system was going to
be damaged, and damaged for a long time, and that we had to
find a way to keep key people at their posts and give them
what they need so there wouldnt be unnatural surges
that cause systems to burn out. Frankly, if we had just given
the Iraqis some baling wire and a little bit of space to keep
things running, it would have been better. But instead weve
let big US companies go in with plans for major overhauls.
Indeed,
as journalists Pratap Chatterjee and Herbert Docena noted
in a report from Iraq in Southern Exposure, published by the
Durham, North Carolinabased Institute for Southern Studies,
the steam turbines at Iraqs Najibiya power plant have
been dormant since last fall. As Yaruub Jasim, the plants
manager, explained, Normally we have power 23 hours
a day. We should have done maintenance on these turbines in
October, but we had no spare parts and money. And why
not? According to Jasim, the necessary replacement parts were
supposed to come from Bechtel, but they hadnt arrived
yet in part because Bechtels priority was a months-long
independent examination of power plants with an eye towards
total reconstruction. And while parts could have been cheaply
and quickly obtained from Russian, German, or French contractors
the contractors who built most of Iraqs power
stations unfortunately, Jasim told Chatterjee
and Docena, Mr. Bush prevented the French, Russian,
and German companies from [getting contracts in] Iraq.
(In an interview last year with the San Francisco Chronicle,
Bechtels Iraq operations chief held that to just
walk in and start fixing Iraq was an unrealistic
expectation.)
The CPA
memo also validates key points of the exceptionally perceptive
February 2003 US Army War College report, Reconstructing
Iraq: Insights, Challenges, and Missions for Military Forces
in a Post-Conflict Scenario. Critical of the US governments
insufficient post-war planning, the War College report asserted
that the possibility of the United States winning the
war and losing the peace is real and serious. It also
cautioned that insufficient attention had been given to the
political complexities likely to crop up in post-Saddam Iraq,
a scene in which religious and ethnic blocs supported by militias
would further complicate a transition to functional democracy
in a nation bereft of any pluralistic history.
According
to a Washington, DCbased senior military official whose
responsibilities include Iraq, CPA now estimates there are
at least 30 separate militias active in Iraq, and essentially,
[CPA] doesnt know what to do with regard to them
which is frightening, because CPAs authority essentially
ends on June 30, and any Iraqi incentive to get rid of the
militias is likely to go away after that date, as sending
US troops around Iraq against Iraqis isnt likely to
endear the new Iraqi government to its citizens.
And then
there is the problem of Iran. According to the memo, Iranian
money is pouring in to occupied Iraq particularly
the area under British control and it asserts it is
a mistake to stick to a policy of not rock[ing]
the boat with the Iranians, as the Iranian actors
with which the State Department likes to do business . . .
lack the power to deliver on promises to exercise restraint
in Iraq. According to senior US intelligence and military
officials queried on this point, the Iranian influence in
Iraq is both real and formidable, and the US is, as one put
it, at best catching up in the battle for influence.
But the officials also added that pushing the point with Iran
too hard either through diplomatic channels or on the
ground in Iraq would likely be more troubled than the
current course of action, possibly resulting in armed conflict
with Iran or a proxy war in Iraq that the US isnt ready
to fight.
Famously,
Lord Cromer once described Great Britains approach to
the Land of the Nile: We do not rule Egypt; we rule
those who rule Egypt. Compare that with several statements
made by the US official who wrote the memo considered here.
Of one senior Iraqi official, whose name is redacted, he states
that it is better to keep [him] a happy drunk than an
angry drunk. And he says of two other Iraqi leaders
that they are much more compliant when their checks
are delayed or fail to appear, adding that the
same is true with other Governing Council members. The
attitudes arent much different, are they? And yet sometimes,
the most true and heartbreaking view is afforded from the
wheel of the mighty ship of state.
Jason
Vest is a senior correspondent for the American Prospect.
His book on the current Bush administration and national security
will be published in 2005. This piece was commissioned by
the Association of Alternative
Newsweeklies (AAN) for use by its members.
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