|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Bushs Madrid shakedown nets $13 billion in pledges
By Chris Marsden
27 October 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The international donors conference in Madrid, Spain,
produced pledges of at least $13 billion to help fund the US occupation
of Iraq. While this sum was higher than Washington had anticipated
only a few weeks ago, it fell far short of the $35 billion the
Bush administration was seeking to extract from generally reluctant
governments. Moreover, some two thirds of the funds pledged came
in the form of loans, rather than grants.
The effort to portray the conferences agenda as humanitarian,
dedicated to the reconstruction of the war-torn country, could
not disguise the mercenary and colonialist character of the proceedings.
The conference was hosted by a government that trampled over the
democratic wishes of its people, with polls showing between 75
and 90 percent of Spaniards opposed to the war. Outside, thousands
took to the streets to protest against the conference, carrying
placards that read Robbers, not Donors! and We
Wont Pay For Your Pillage.
Prior to the conference, the Bush administration engaged in
weeks of arm-twisting to get the European powers, the Arab regimes
and all of the 71 attending countries, international organisations
and private companies to pay towards the cost of policing Iraq
and invest therehopefully making it possible for US corporations
to begin extracting billions in oil profits.
The traditional methods of carrot-and-stick were used. First,
it was made clear to potential donors that a failure to pay would
earn the enmity of Washington. Second, those who agreed to make
significant contributions were promised a share of the future
spoils from reconstruction contracts. It was made clear that those
who refused would be shut out.
There have been last-minute attempts to ramp up the money
and all the pressure has been on the European Union, said
a senior official accompanying the Iraqi delegation, while the
president of Iraqs US-appointed Governing Council, Ayad
Allawi, opened the pledging session with promises that his country
would not forget those who helped it.
No participant in the sordid proceedings came out clean, least
of all the US. The Bush administration, as the occupying power,
is obliged under international law and the Geneva Conventions
to provide for the needs of the Iraqi people. But all that it
has so far offered is a $20 billion package now before Congress,
most of which is to be spent on security and resurrecting Iraqs
oil industry, rather than benefiting the suffering Iraqi people.
Some $65 billion of the total $87 billion request submitted by
Bush to the US Congress goes directly to the Pentagon and to corporations
receiving defence contracts.
The US would not address why oil revenues would not be used
to pay for reconstructionnotwithstanding earlier American
promises that the countrys oil wealth would be used for
the benefit of the Iraqis. When pressed by reporters, Secretary
of State Colin Powell stated baldly, Well have to
see how Iraqi revenues start to generate in a couple of years
time after we make the initial investments [in] the oil infrastructure.
The British agency Christian Aid used the occasion of the conference
to accuse Iraqs US and British administrators of failing
to account for at least $4 billion in oil revenues and other money
meant to go towards rebuilding the country.
United Nations secretary general Kofi Annan played a venal
role in attempting to lend the proceedings a veneer of dignity.
The UN had already given the US its imprimatur by passing this
months Security Council resolution explicitly calling for
international aid for Iraq. This set the stage for Annan to appeal
for everyone to forget that an illegal war of aggression had been
waged by the US against a virtually defenceless country and that
Iraq was subject to a US occupation, and to give and give
generously.
Most countries pledged very little. In all, the European Union
is giving just $812 million next year, even less than the $931
million it offered to Afghanistan last year. The bulk of the $13
billion raised came from Japan and the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), but $3.5 billion of Japans $5 billion and all
of the IMFs $4.25 billion is in the form of loans that must
be repaid, with interest. This added burden comes on top of an
already massive Iraqi foreign debt, estimated at $130-$150 billion.
None of this debt has thus far been written off. Even if Iraqs
war-shattered country manages to produce the planned 2.7 million
barrels of oil per day by the end of 2004, which appears unlikely,
revenue would total just $13 billionless than the years
estimated $16 billion budget, even before debt repayments are
factored in.
If the readiness of donors to make money out of their loans
was not proof enough, the efforts at self-enrichment that motivated
participants were exemplified by the proceedings at a parallel
meeting of 300 private-sector companies, including 134 from the
European Union and 19 from the US. The subject of this meeting
was investment opportunities in Iraq. Iraqs interim trade
minister Ali Allawi pledged to the conference, The new Iraq
will be above all a market-oriented economy, and called
on the assistance of the international private sector
in rebuilding Iraq.
But humanitarian concerns about Iraqs future were the
last thing on the minds of the assembled company representatives,
including those from such giants as General Motors, Motorola and
Coca-Cola. They wanted to know how they could profit from the
conquest and colonial-style occupation of Iraq.
They were not left wanting by Washingtons Iraqi stooges.
Ali Allawi promised that security concerns would be addressed,
but said they were not intolerable when compared with
some countries in Latin America or Asia. In any case, he argued,
free-market reforms, responsible government
and Iraqs central location in an oil-rich region should
give investors incentives equal to or better than any that
they would face in any other parts of the world.
As one example of the profits to be made, the Ministry of Industry
and Minerals revealed plans to open 13 state-owned companiesincluding
those making clothing, vegetable oil, dairy and chemicalsto
leasing by private firms.
This set corporate mouths salivating. Fred Schwien, representing
the US Commerce Department, commented, The dairy folks are
excited, while John Disharoon of Caterpillar said, Things
are starting to move forward.
DaimlerChrysler vice president Timothy McBride boasted, We
have a tradition of establishing a strong presence in difficult
markets, and Hans Kraus of Intecsa-Uhde, a joint venture
of Germanys Thyssen and Spains Dragados, noted, Were
not building chemical plants in Paris or London. We tend to work
in countries that arent all that pleasantIran, Algeria,
and now maybe Iraq.
France and Germany both refused to make any additional money
available for Iraq, citing as their reason a commitment to the
formation of an independent Iraqi government. French foreign minister
Dominique de Villepin said, To us, the starting point is
truly the full and complete recognition of Iraqi sovereignty.
It should be remembered that these two countries and Russia
voted earlier this month for the UN Security Council resolution
sanctioning the US occupation and the puppet regime it has set
up, in return for little more than a vague pledge of greater UN
involvement in running Iraq at an unspecified time in the future.
Their opposition to the occupation of Iraq is not based on any
genuine commitment to self-determination. Rather, it reflects
tensions between the major imperialist powers made worse by the
monopoly enjoyed by US corporate interests within the conquered
country.
These tensions underlie the decision to have most of the funds
raised in Madrid go into a trust managed by the World Bank, the
UN and a committee of Iraqisan arrangement demanded by donors
wary of allowing the US to exercise direct control. In response,
American officials stressed that the US would administer all US
contributions.
The Madrid donors conference was an obscenity when measured
against the terrible plight of millions of Iraqis in the aftermath
of more than a decade of sanctions and the impact of two wars.
At one point in the proceedings, Mouwaffek al-Rabii, a member
of the US-backed Iraqi Governing Council, told delegates that
more than two thirds of Iraqis depend on food rations, less than
half have access to pure drinking water, 20 percent of children
under age five are malnourished, maternal mortality has quadrupled,
and diseases such as malaria are recurring. Primary health care
is extremely limited. Some 50,000 homeless Iraqis are squatting
in public buildings in Baghdad and 1.5 million homes are needed
by the end of next year. Unemployment stands at 60 percent.
Naturally, all of the Governing Council representatives blamed
these problems exclusively on Saddam Hussein, with almost no mention
made of the impact of either the war or pre-war sanctions. They
and the rest of the participants, as well as the media, know very
well that this is a self-serving falsification, and that primary
political and practical responsibility for the social nightmare
facing the Iraqi people rests with Washington and all those governments
that supported its policy of embargo and war.
See Also:
UN vote on Iraq: Paris, Berlin and Moscow
bow before Bush
[18 October 2003]
UN estimate for rebuilding Iraq half
that of Bushswheres the money going?
[11 October 2003]
As Washington readies reconstruction:
Iraqis riot over unemployment, corruption
[2 October 2003]
Bush at the UNa war
criminal takes the podium
[24 September 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |