
By Eng. Bilal Izaddin/Shutterstock.com
Baghdad, Iraq – November 1,2019 Iraqi people demonstrating in Public Square against the government
As Americans sat down to Thanksgiving dinner, Iraqis were mourningĀ 40 protesters killed by police and soldiers on Thursday in Baghdad, Najaf and Nasiriyah. Nearly 400 protestersĀ have been killed sinceĀ hundreds ofĀ thousands of people took to the streets at the beginning of October. Human rights groups have described the crisis in Iraq as a ābloodbath,āĀ Prime Minister Abdul-Mahdi has announced he will resign,Ā andĀ Sweden has opened an investigation against Iraqi Defense Minister Najah Al-Shammari, who is a Swedish citizen, for crimes against humanity.
According toĀ Al Jazeera, āProtesters are demanding the overthrow of a political class seen as corrupt and serving foreign powers while many Iraqis languish in poverty without jobs, healthcare or education.āĀ Only 36% of the adult population of Iraq have jobs, andĀ despiteĀ the gutting of theĀ public sector under U.S. occupation, itsĀ tattered remnants still employ more people than the private sector, which fared even worse under the violence and chaos of the U.S.’s militarized shock doctrine.
Western reportingĀ convenientlyĀ casts Iran as the dominant foreign playerĀ in Iraq today. But while Iran has gained enormous influenceĀ and is one of the targets of the protests, most of the people ruling Iraq today are still theĀ former exiles thatĀ the U.S. flew inĀ with itsĀ occupation forces in 2003, ācoming to Iraq with empty pockets to fillā as a taxi-driver in Baghdad told a Western reporter at the time. The real causes of IraqāsĀ unendingĀ political and economicĀ crisisĀ are these former exiles’Ā betrayal of their country, their endemic corruption and theĀ U.S.āsĀ illegitimateĀ role inĀ destroying Iraq’s government, handing it over to themĀ and maintaining themĀ in powerĀ for 16 years.
The corruption of both U.S. and Iraqi officials during the U.S. occupation is well documented. UN Security Council resolution 1483 established a $20 billion Development Fund for Iraq using previously seized Iraqi assets, money left in the UNās āoil for foodā programĀ and new Iraqi oil revenues. An audit by KPMG and a special inspector general found that a huge proportion of that money was stolen or embezzled by U.S. and Iraqi officials.
Lebanese customs officials found $13 million in cash aboard Iraqi-American interim Interior Minister Falah Naqibās plane. Occupation crime boss Paul Bremer maintained a $600 million slush fund with no paperwork. An Iraqi government ministry with 602 employees collected salaries for 8,206. A U.S. Army officer doubled the price on a contract to rebuild a hospital, and told the hospitalās director the extra cash was his āretirement package.ā A U.S. contractor billed $60 million on a $20 million contract to rebuild a cement factory, and told Iraqi officials they should just be grateful the U.S. had saved them from SaddamĀ Hussein. A U.S. pipeline contractor charged $3.4 million for non-existent workers and āother improper charges.ā Out of 198 contracts reviewed by the inspector general, only 44 had documentation to confirm the work wasĀ done.
U.S. āpaying agentsā distributing money for projects around Iraq pocketed millions of dollars in cash.The inspector general only investigated one area, around Hillah, but found $96.6 million dollars unaccounted for in that area alone.Ā One American agent could not account for $25 million, while another could only account for $6.3 million out of $23 million. The āCoalition Provisional Authorityā used agents like these all overĀ IraqĀ and simply āclearedā their accounts when they left the country. One agent who was challenged came back the next day with $1.9 million in missing cash.
The U.S. Congress also budgeted $18.4 billion for reconstruction in Iraq in 2003, but apart from $3.4 billion diverted to “security,” less than $1 billion of it was ever disbursed.Ā Many Americans believe U.S. oil companies have made out like bandits in Iraq, but thatās not trueĀ either. The plans that Western oil companies drew up with Vice President Cheney in 2001Ā had that intent, but a law to grant Western oil companies lucrative āproduction sharing agreementsā (PSAs) worth tens of billions per year was exposed as a smash and grab raid and the Iraqi National AssemblyĀ refused to pass it.
Finally, in 2009, Iraqās leaders and their U.S. puppet-masters gave up on PSAs (for the time beingā¦) and invited foreign oil companies to bid on ātechnical service agreementsā (TSAs) worth $1 to $6 per barrel for increases in production from Iraqi oilfields. Ten years later, production hasĀ onlyĀ increased to 4.6 million barrels per day, of which 3.8 million are exported. From Iraqi oil exports of about $80 billionĀ per year, foreign firms with TSAs earn only $1.4 billion, and the largest contracts are not held by U.S. firms. China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) is earning about $430 million in 2019; BP earns $235 million; Malaysiaās Petronas $120 million; Russiaās Lukoil $105 million; and Italyās ENI $100 million. TheĀ bulkĀ of Iraqās oil revenues still flowĀ through the Iraq National Oil Company (INOC) toĀ the corrupt U.S.-backed government in Baghdad.
Today, this corrupt system keeps dominant power in the hands of a cabal of corrupt Shiite and Kurdish politicians who spent manyĀ years in exile in the West, working with Ahmed Chalabiās U.S.-based Iraqi National Congress (INC), Ayad Allawiās U.K.-based Iraqi National Accord (INA) and various factions of the ShiiteĀ Islamist Dawa Party.Ā Voter turnout has dwindled from 70% in 2005 to 44.5% in 2018.
Ayad Allawi and the INA were the instrument for the CIAās hopelessly bungled military coup in Iraq in 1996. The Iraqi government followed every detail of the plot on a closed-circuit radio handed over by one of the conspiratorsĀ and arrested all the CIAās agents inside Iraq on the eve of the coup. It executed thirty military officersĀ andĀ jailedĀ a hundred more, leaving the CIA withĀ noĀ human intelligenceĀ fromĀ inside Iraq.
Ahmed Chalabi and the INCĀ filled that vacuum with a web of lies that warmongering U.S. officialsĀ fed into the echo chamber of the U.S. corporate media to justifyĀ theĀ invasion of Iraq. On June 26th 2002, the INC sent a letter to the Senate Appropriations Committee to lobby forĀ more U.S. funding. It identified its āInformation Collection Programā as the primary source for 108 stories about Iraqās fictitious āWeapons of Mass Destructionā and links to Al-Qaeda in U.S. and international newspapers and magazines.
After the invasion, Allawi and ChalabiĀ became leading members of the U.S.Ā occupationāsĀ Iraqi Governing Council. Allawi was appointed Prime Minister of Iraqās interim government in 2004, and Chalabi was appointedĀ Deputy Prime Minister and Oil MinisterĀ in the transitional government in 2005. Chalabi failed to win a seat in the 2005 National Assembly election, but was later elected to the assembly and remained a powerful figureĀ until his death in 2015. Allawi and the INA areĀ stillĀ involved in the horse-trading for senior positions after every election, despite never getting more than 8% of the votes – andĀ only 6% in 2018.
These are the senior ministers of the new Iraqi government formed after the 2018 election, with someĀ details of their Western backgrounds:
Adil Abdul-Mahdi – Prime Minister (France). Born in Baghdad in 1942. Father was a government minister under the British-backed monarchy. Lived in France from 1969-2003, earning a Ph.D in politics at Poitiers. In France, heĀ became a follower of Ayatollah Khomeini and a founding member ofĀ theĀ Iran-based Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) in 1982. WasĀ SCIRIās representative in Iraqi Kurdistan for a period in the 1990s. After the invasion, he became Finance Minister in Allawiās interim government in 2004; Vice President from 2005-11; Oil Minister from 2014-16.
Barham Salih – President (U.K. & U.S.). Born in Sulaymaniyah in 1960. Ph.D. in Engineering (Liverpool – 1987). Joined Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) in 1976. Jailed for 6 weeks in in 1979 and left Iraq for the U.K.Ā PUK representative in London from 1979-91; head of PUK office in Washington from 1991-2001. President of Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) from 2001-4; Deputy PM in interim Iraqi government in 2004; Planning Minister inĀ transitional government inĀ 2005; Deputy PM from 2006-9; Prime Minister of KRG from 2009-12.
Mohamed Ali Alhakim – Foreign Minister (U.K. & U.S.). Born in Najaf in 1952. M.Sc. (Birmingham), Ph.D. in Telecom Engineering (Southern California), Professor at Northeastern University in Boston 1995-2003. After the invasion, he became Deputy Secretary-General and Planning Coordinator in the Iraqi Governing Council; Communications Minister in interim government in 2004; Planning Director at Foreign Ministry, and Economic Adviser to VP Abdul-Mahdi from 2005-10; and UN Ambassador from 2010-18.
Fuad Hussein – Finance Minister & Deputy PM (Netherlands & France). Born in Khanaqin (majority Kurdish town in Diyala province) in 1946. Joined Kurdish Student Union and Kurdish Democratic PartyĀ (KDP)Ā as a student in Baghdad. Lived in Netherlands from 1975-87; incomplete Ph.D. in International Relations; married to Dutch Christian woman. Appointed deputy head of Kurdish Institute in Paris in 1987. Attended Iraqi exile political conferences in Beirut (1991), New York (1999) & London (2002). After the invasion, he became an adviser at the Education Ministry from 2003-5; and Chief of Staff to Masoud Barzani, President ofĀ the KRG,Ā from 2005-17.
Thamir Ghadhban – Oil Minister & Deputy PM (U.K.). Born in Karbala in 1945. B.Sc. (UCL) & M.Sc. in Petroleum Engineering (Imperial College, London). Joined Basra Petroleum Co. in 1973. Director General of Engineering and then Planning at Iraqi Oil Ministry from 1989-92. Imprisoned for 3 months and demoted in 1992, but did not leave Iraq, and was reappointed Director General of Planning in 2001. After the invasion, he wasĀ promoted to CEO of Oil Ministry; Oil Minister in the interim government in 2004; elected to National Assembly in 2005 and served on 3-man committee that drafted the failed oil law; chaired Prime Ministerās Advisorsā Committee from 2006-16.
Major General (Retd) Najah Al-Shammari – Defense Minister (Sweden). Born in Baghdad in 1967. The only Sunni Arab among senior ministers. Military officer since 1987. Has lived in Sweden and may have been member of Allawiās INA before 2003. Senior officer in U.S.-backed Iraqi special forces recruited from INC, INA and Kurdish Peshmerga from 2003-7. Deputy commander of ācounterterrorismā forces 2007-9. Residency in Sweden 2009-15. Swedish citizen since 2015. Reportedly under investigation for benefits fraud in Sweden, and now for crimes against humanity in killing of over 300 protesters in October-November 2019.
In 2003, the U.S. and its allies unleashed unspeakable, systematic violence against the people of Iraq. Public health experts reliably estimated that the first three years of war and hostile militaryĀ occupation cost about 650,000 Iraqi lives. But the U.S. didĀ succeed inĀ installing aĀ puppet governmentĀ of formerly Western-based Shiite and Kurdish politicians in the fortified Green Zone in Baghdad, with control over Iraqās oil revenues.Ā As we can see, many of theĀ ministers in the U.S.-appointed interim government inĀ 2004 are still rulingĀ Iraq today.
U.S. forces deployed ever-escalating violence against Iraqis who resisted the invasion and hostile military occupation of their country. In 2004, the U.S. began training a large force of IraqiĀ police commandos for the Interior Ministry, and unleashedĀ commando unitsĀ recruited from SCIRIās Badr Brigade militia as death squads in Baghdad in April 2005.Ā This U.S.-backed reign of terror peaked in the summer of 2006, with the corpses ofĀ as many as 1,800Ā victims brought to the Baghdad morgue each month. An Iraqi human rights group examinedĀ 3,498 bodiesĀ of summary execution victims and identified 92% of them as people arrested by Interior Ministry forces.
The U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency tracked āenemy-initiated attacksā throughout the occupation and found that over 90% were against U.S. and allied military targets, not “sectarian” attacks on civilians.Ā But U.S. officials used a narrative of “sectarian violence” to blame the work of U.S.-trained Interior Ministry death squads on independent Shiite militias like Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army.
TheĀ government IraqisĀ are protesting againstĀ todayĀ is still led by the sameĀ gang of U.S.-backed Iraqi exiles who wove a web of lies to stage manage the invasion of their own country in 2003, and then hidĀ behind the walls of the Green Zone while U.S. forces and death squads slaughtered their people to make the country āsafeā for theirĀ corruptĀ government.
More recently theyĀ againĀ acted as cheerleaders as AmericanĀ bombs,Ā rockets and artillery reduced most of Mosul, Iraq’s second city, to rubble, after twelve years of occupation, corruption andĀ savageĀ repression drove its people into the arms of the Islamic State.Ā Kurdish intelligence reports revealed that more thanĀ 40,000 civilians were killed in the U.S.-led destruction of Mosul.Ā On the pretext of fighting the Islamic State, the U.S. has reestablished a huge military base for over 5,000 U.S. troops at Al-Asad airbase in Anbar province.
TheĀ cost of rebuildingĀ Mosul, Fallujah and other cities and townsĀ is conservatively estimated at $88 billion. ButĀ despite $80 billion per year in oil exports and a federal budget of over $100 billion, the Iraqi government has allocated no money at all for reconstruction. Foreign, mostly wealthy Arab countries, have pledged $30 billion, including just $3 billion from the U.S., but very little of thatĀ hasĀ been,Ā or may ever be,Ā delivered.
The history of Iraq since 2003 has been a never-ending disaster forĀ its people. Many of thisĀ new generation of Iraqis who have grown up amid the ruins and chaos the U.S. occupationĀ left in its wakeĀ believe they have nothing to lose but their blood and their lives,Ā as they take to the streets to reclaim their dignity, their future and their country’s sovereignty.
The bloody handprints of U.S. officials and their Iraqi puppets all over this crisis should stand as a dire warning to Americans of the predictably catastrophic results of an illegal foreign policy based on sanctions, coups, threats and the use of military force to try to impose the will of deluded U.S. leaders on people all over the world.
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