They just got a different tool to use than we do: They kill innocent lives to achieve objectives. That's what they do. And they're good. They get on the TV screens and they get people to ask questions about, well, you know, this, that or the other. I mean, they're able to kind of say to people: Don't come and bother us, because we will kill you. Bush - Joint News Conference with Blair - 28 July '06

Thursday, September 08, 2005

Iraq constitution: Cooked in a Neoliberal US kitchen

db: Well researched, well referenced, and well worth reading.

globalpolitician: Iraq's Neoliberal Constitution

Last June 30, the Iraqi Al-Mada newspaper published the latest draft of the Iraqi constitution that was then being negotiated upon by Iraqi politicians. Its contents would have been enough to give former occupation authority chief Paul Bremer a heart attack.

The Iraqis - even those who were willing to cooperate with the Americans - wanted, at least on paper, to build a Scandinavian-type welfare system in the Arabian desert, with Iraq's vast oil wealth to be spent upholding every Iraqi's right to education, health care, housing, and other social services. "Social justice is the basis of building society," the draft declared. All of Iraq's natural resources would be owned collectively by the Iraqi people. Everyone would have the right to work and the state would be legally bound to provide employment opportunities to everyone. The state will be the Iraqi people's collective instrument for achieving development.

In other words, the Iraqis wanted a country different from that which the Americans had come to Iraq for. They, or at least those who were involved in drafting the constitution, wanted nothing of the kind of economic and political system that Bremer and other U.S. officials had been attempting to create in Iraq ever since the occupation began. What the occupation authorities wanted was to fulfill "the wish-list of international investors," as The Economist magazine had described the economic policies they began imposing in the country in 2003.

As direct occupiers, the United States had enacted laws which give foreign investors equal rights as Iraqis in the domestic market; permit the full repatriation of profits; institute the flat tax system; abolish tariffs; enforce a strict intellectual property rights regime; sell off a whole range of state-owned companies; reduce food and fuel subsidies; and privatize all kinds of social services such as health, education, water delivery, etc. Read more

db: The author presents a well researched story. His focus is on the economic consequences of the American/UK agenda - the other important issue to the 'Coalition', aside from exploiting Iraq's natural wealth at the cost of Iraqis, is the establishment of 'permanent' military bases in the region......to help with the war of terror and other cover stories.