Iraq's US Security Charade
By Ramzy Baroud
ccun.org, December 6, 2008
World media rashly celebrated the "historic" security pact that
allows for US troops to stay in Iraq for three more years after the
Iraqi parliament ratified the agreement on Thursday, 27 November. The
approval came one week after the Iraqi cabinet did the same.
Thousands of headlines exuded from media outlets, largely giving the
false impression that the Iraqi government and parliament have a real
say over the future of US troops in their country, once again playing
into the ruse fashioned by Washington that Iraq is a democratic country,
operating independently from the dictates of US Ambassador to Baghdad
Ryan Crocker and the top commander of US troops in Iraq, General Ray
Odierno. The men issued a joint, congratulatory statement shortly after
the parliamentary vote, describing it as one that would "formalise a
strong and equal partnership" between the US and Iraq.
Jonathan
Steel of the British Guardian also joined the chorus. "Look at the
agreement's text. It is remarkable for the number and scope of the
concessions that the Iraqi government has managed to get from the Bush
administration. They amount to a series of U-turns that spell the
complete defeat of the neo-conservative plan to turn Iraq into a
pro-Western ally and a platform from which to project US power across
the Middle East."
Even Aljazeera.net English seemed oblivious
to the charade. It assuredly wrote that the agreement "will end the 2003
invasion of Iraq that toppled Saddam Hussein. It is effectively a
coming-of-age for the Iraqi government, which drove a hard bargain with
Washington, securing a number of concessions -- including a hard
timeline for withdrawal -- over more than 11 months of tough
negotiations."
Most attention was given to dates and numbers as
if their mere mention was enough to compel the US government to respect
the sovereignty of Iraq: 30 June 2009 is the date on which US forces
will withdraw from Iraqi cities and January 2012 is the date for
withdrawal from the entire country. Also duly mentioned is a hurried
reference to opposition to the agreement represented in the "no" vote of
the "followers of Muqtada Al-Sadr, the Shia leader", which caused,
according to the BBC "rowdy scenes of stamping, shouting and the waving
of placards during the debate".
The dismissal of the opposition
as "followers" of this or that -- portraying those who refuse to be
intimidated by US pressure as a cultic, unruly bunch -- also has its
rewards. After all, only a real democracy can allow for such stark,
fervent disagreements, as long as the will of the majority is honoured
in the end.
Iraqi government spokesman Ali Al-Dabbagh knew
exactly how to capitalise on the buzzwords that the media was eagerly
waiting to hear. The success of the vote would constitute a "victory for
democracy because the opposition have done their part and the supporters
have done their part".
Of course, there is nothing worth
celebrating about all of this, for it's the same charade that the Bush
administration and previous administrations have promoted for decades,
in Iraq and also elsewhere. "Real democracy" in the Third World is
merely a means to a specific end, always ensuring the dominion of US
interests and its allies. Those who dare to deviate from the norm find
themselves the subject of violent, grand experiments, with Gaza being
the latest example.
What is particularly interesting about the
Iraq case is that news reports and media analysts scampered to dissect
the 18- page agreement as if a piece of paper with fancy wording would
in any way prove binding upon the US administration which, in the last
eight years, has made a mockery of international law and treaties that
have been otherwise used as a global frame of reference. Why would the
US government, which largely acted alone in Iraq, violated the Geneva
Conventions, international law and even its own war and combat
regulations, respect an agreement signed with an occupied, hapless power
constituted mostly of men and women handpicked by the US itself to serve
the role of "sovereign"?
It's also bewildering how some
important details are so conveniently overlooked; for example, the fact
that the Iraqi government can sign a separate agreement with the US to
extend the deadline for withdrawal should the security situation deem
such an agreement necessary. Instead, the focus was made on
"concessions" obtained by the Iraqis regarding Iraq's jurisdiction over
US citizens and soldiers who commit heinous crimes while "off duty" and
outside their military bases. This precisely means that the gruesome
crimes committed in prisons such as Abu Ghraib and the wilful shooting
last year of 17 Iraqi civilians by Blackwater mercenaries in Nisour
Square in Central Baghdad is of no concern for Iraqis. And even when
crimes that fall under Iraqi jurisdiction are reported, such matters are
to be referred to a joint US-Iraqi committee. One can only assume that
those with the bigger guns will always prevail in their interpretation
of the agreement.
In fact, a major reason behind the delay in
publishing the agreement in English (an Arabic version was first
publicised) is the apparent US insistence on interpreting the language
in a fashion that would allow for loopholes in future disagreements. But
even if the language is understood with mutual clarity, and even if the
Iraqi government were determined to stand its ground on a particular
issue, who is likely to prevail: the US government with 150,000 troops
on the ground and a massive imperial project whose failure will prove
most costly to US interests in the Middle East, or the government of
Nuri Al-Maliki, whose very existence is a US determination?
More than five years have passed since the US occupied Iraq, leaving in
its wake a tragedy that has claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands
of Iraqis, destroyed civil society, thus allowing for the growth of one
of the world's most corrupt political regimes, and introducing the same
terrorists to Iraq that the Bush administration vowed to defeat. Nothing
has changed since then. The US attacked Iraq for its wealth and the
strategic value of controlling such wealth. The Bush administration and
their allies have tried many times to distract from this reality, using
every political cover and charade imaginable. The facts remain the same,
as does the remedy: The US must withdraw from Iraq without delay,
allowing Iraqis to pick up the pieces and work out their differences as
they have done for millennia.
-Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been
published in many newspapers, journals and anthologies around the world.
His latest book is The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a
People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London).
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