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TOPICS: AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY
America's Incompetent Colonialism
The Failures of the US Administration of Iraq
By Professor Keith Watenpaugh
A
year ago, word began to filter out of Baghdad that in addition to the National
Museum, the Iraqi National Library and Archive had also been looted, and
burned, not once, but twice. Like the current scandal of systematic abuses of
human rights by members of the US military, the CIA and its sub-contractors,
the burning evoked a host of emotions most notably shame, revulsion and anger.
The anger was primarily directed against the civilian leadership of the
Department of Defense who failed to heed the near-unanimous warnings of the
probability of post-war instability and the vulnerability of Iraq’s cultural
heritage and take appropriate preventative measures. Their failure to fully
grasp the reality of the situation in Iraq was among the earliest examples of
continuing gross and criminal ineptitude of which the gruesome images from Abu
Ghuraib are the most recent manifestations.
The destruction so enraged an international group of junior historians of the
Arab Middle East, that we organized an assessment visit to the country last
June to find out what had happened at Baghdad’s library and archives. What we
also sought to do was record the needs of Iraq’s academic and intellectual
community as it rebuilds itself in the face of a generation of brutish rule by
Saddam Hussein, a decade of debilitating UN sanctions, a brief and humiliating
war, and an open-ended American-led military occupation. All of us spoke
Arabic, had lived in the region and conducted research in Iraq or in its
neighboring countries before. The report of our findings is available for free
download from the H-Net (http://www.h-net.org/about/press/opening_doors/)
website. Downloaded several thousand times in the last year, our report is
still among the only independent assessments of cultural and intellectual
conditions in Iraq. Current status of the libraries and museums can be also be
accessed from the following: IFLA-Blue Shield (http://www.ifla.org/VI/4/admin/icbs-iraq.htm),
Iraq Crisis (https://listhost.uchicago.edu/mailman/listinfo/iraqcrisis) SAFE
(http://www.savingantiquities.org/k-safe-resources.htm). Conducting research
for the report required us to meet with civilian and military administrators
of the CPA in the Green Zone. Aside from discovering that when American men
are overseas they all - including me - wear khaki slacks and blue button-down
shirts, I experienced what could only be termed “de ja vue all over again.” My
own area of expertise is the interwar Middle East when France and Britain
controlled the several states of the Arab Eastern Mediterranean as League of
Nation’s Mandates. And while the League imposed humanitarian requirements on
both, the Mandates were merely colonialism in drag. Sitting across the table
from CPA administrators I listened to the same language of democratization and
development being employed as part of a broader, concerted plan to turn Iraq
into a dependent and docile American client; and key features of Iraqi
society, including higher education, media, culture, and the arts would be
subordinated to that program. What also struck me about those conversations -
and the events of the intervening year have confirmed my suspicions - is that
the CPA, and here I mean not just the American diplomats and bureaucrats
seconded to the DOD and the token representatives of “Coalition Partners,” but
also the vast array of civilian contractors and subcontractors, have been
infected by the pathologies of colonialism. As I have discussed in an earlier
essay for Middle East Report, (http://www.merip.org/mer/mer228/228_watenpaugh.html)
the civilian and military administrators of Iraq have grown contemptuous of
Iraq and Iraqis and have convinced themselves of their hosts’ essential
incompetence. Blaming the victim has always proved an effective strategy in
justifying colonialism. The CPA’s colonial culture has limited its
effectiveness on behalf of the Iraqi people and thus the US taxpayer is not
getting a good value for its billions of dollars. And while unique elements of
the CPA have made significant contributions to the rebuilding of Iraqi
society, here I note especially the work of John Russell in the recovery of
Iraq’s ancient heritage, those successes are not balanced by the abuses,
corruption, cronyism and incompetence on the other side of the ledger. In part
this has been caused by the exportation of domestic US politics to the Green
Zone and the appointment of individuals whose sense of Iraqi, Arab, and
Islamic cultures (if they have any at all) is shaped by a narrow partisan,
cultural or religious agenda - and in some cases the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict. This was reinforced recently by the discovery that the CPA’s massive
press/propaganda office is peopled primarily by Republican Party activists,
lead by Dan Senor, himself a former American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC)
intern, as well.
The article continues on the following pages.