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: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
De-Baathification laws modified by Iraqs
parliament
By James Cogan
17 January 2008
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With just 143 of its 275 members in attendance, the Iraqi parliament
ratified legislation on Saturday that will replace the so-called
de-Baathification laws imposed by the US occupation
in 2003 with a raft of new regulations governing the treatment
of former members of Saddam Husseins Baath Party apparatus.
The action ostensibly meets one of the main benchmarks that
the Bush administration demanded of the Shiite-dominated government
of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. The benchmarks were drawn up
in Washington with the aim of providing a place in the US client
state for the predominantly Sunni Arab ruling elite of the former
regime and offering incentives for ending its support for the
anti-occupation insurgency.
De-Baathification is a clear obstacle to this agenda. The policy
was enacted by the US proconsul in Iraq, Paul Bremer, on May 16,
2003 and was a major factor in the development of armed resistance
in the months following the invasion. It is widely regarded in
Washington now as ill-conceived.
Bremer decreed that no member of the ex-ruling partys
top four ranks could hold any position in the public service or
state bureaucracy. The party had seven tiers of membership, with
the vast majority of the estimated 1.5 million members in the
lower fifth, sixth and seventh categories. He also denied the
top four ranks the right to a state pension and directed that
they be investigated for criminal conduct.
Bremer also ordered the dismissal and investigation of lesser-ranking
Baath Party members who held senior management positions in state-owned
corporations and affiliated institutions such as universities,
schools and hospitals. On May 23, 2003, Bremer dissolved the Iraqi
Armyan action which stripped the predominantly Sunni officer
caste of its position, as well as an estimated 400,000 soldiers
of their jobs.
Between May and September 2003, an estimated 150,000 senior
civil servants, lecturers, teachers, health professionals and
managers who performed a myriad of responsibilities were flung
from their jobs due to Baathist membership. It was reported in
2003, for example, that 28,000 teachers were sacked. In a majority
of cases, those affected were of Sunni Arab backgrounds.
The marginalisation of the Baathist ruling stratum resulted
in thousands of former army officers and state officials supporting
the armed insurgency against the US occupation. It also ruined
a significant layer of the educated upper middle class, many of
whom left Iraq for Jordan, Syria and other countries.
By early 2004, it was obvious in US ruling circles that de-Baathification
had fuelled the insurgency and created difficulties recruiting
qualified Iraqi personnel. Reversing the policy, however, was
problematic. The occupation also faced an upsurge of opposition
among Shiitesthe majority of the countrys population.
The clerical and political representatives of the Shiite elitebitter
opponents of the Baathistsorganised mass demonstrations
demanding elections that would deliver them power. Any open overtures
to former Baathists would have further inflamed anti-occupation
sentiment among Shiites, which nevertheless erupted into open
rebellion in April 2004.
The first moves on de-Baathification were only made after the
US had imposed an unelected interim government and drawn up the
constitutional process leading to elections in January 2005. In
late May 2004, Ahmad Chalabi, a prominent pro-US exile who headed
Bremers de-Baathification commission and had directed a
ruthless purge, was arrested for corruption. His removal
opened the way for the interim government of former Baathist Iyad
Allawi to begin reversing the barriers against former members
of Husseins ruling party.
Working closely with then US ambassador to Iraq, John Negroponte,
Allawis government recruited large numbers of former Baathist
secret police and military officers into various security roles.
More broadly, lower-ranking Baathists were permitted to reapply
for their jobs after being vetted by the de-Baathification commission.
Commission spokesman Ali al-Lami told the Washington Post
that 102,000 have been reinstated to their positions since early
2004.
The laws, however, have continued to be a source of grievance.
Among secular Iraqis, particularly Sunnis, de-Baathification is
a symbol of their side-lining and collective punishment by the
US occupation for the benefit of Shiite fundamentalist and Kurdish
nationalist parties. The Sunni parties in parliament and Allawis
Iraqi National Accord coalition have repeatedly demanded the repeal
of the laws.
While US President Bush on Sunday hailed the new legislation
as an important step toward reconciliation, the Accountability
and Justice Act does little to address Sunni grievances. Members
of the Baath Partys two highest rankswho numbered
only a few thousand peoplewill remain deprived of political
rights, the right to government employment and a state pension.
Members of the Baathist third rank, some 3,500 people, will be
able to apply for pensions but cannot hold government jobs. Members
of the fourth rank, some 30,000 individuals, can reapply for positions,
or pensions if they are past working age, but are barred from
working in the defence, interior, finance or foreign affairs ministries
or as judges.
The changes to employment rights will have only a minimal effect.
Many of the top four Baathist ranks are in no position to return
to their posts because they are either dead, in prison or in exile.
Since the US invasion, thousands have been killed in US military
operations, or by death squads linked to the Interior Ministry
and the militias of the main Shiite parties.
Shiite politicians have even hinted that the new laws will
be used to purge the security ministries of ex-Baathists brought
back to their posts since 2004. De-Baathification commission spokesman
Lami told the Washington Post that as many as 7,000 officers
recruited by the US military to the Interior Ministry could be
forced to retire due to their previous membership of the Baath
Party.
Senior Baathists who are still alive and in Iraq may well be
reluctant to seek non-security jobs for fear that Shiite opponents
will be able to locate them easily. Abu Yassin, a 54-year-old
former Education ministry bureaucrat, told the Associated Press:
This law is meaningless to me because I cannot work again
in a ministry controlled by Shiite parties and militias and there
is no compensation for the past years I have spent without a job.
I prefer to stay at home living the rest of my life in peace rather
than getting killed while heading to work.
One aspect of the new laws may have broad political implications.
Not only is the Baath Party still banned, but the ideology under
any other name has been declared illegal. Baathism, which
originated in Syria, was based on a rather vague secular pan-Arab
nationalism with an admixture of socialist phrase-mongering. Banning
the ideology could provide a pretext for legal action against
existing political parties.
The party considered closest to former Baathists, the Iraqi
National Dialogue Front (INDF) of Saleh Mutlaq, walked out of
the Iraqi parliament as the vote on the new laws was taken. Allawis
Iraqi National Accord and two small Sunni-based parties also expressed
their opposition by refusing to vote for the laws. At a joint
press conference, the four parties condemned the banning of Baathist
ideology, saying it could be misused to criminalise
any party organised on the basis of Iraqi nationalism.
Far from contributing to national reconciliation,
the new legislation will consolidate sectarian and ethnic divisions.
Among Sunnis, it will strengthen sectarian and regionalist-tribal
tendencies. Significantly, the main Sunni religious party, the
Iraqi Islamic Party, supported the changes. The laws, in essence,
are a continuation of the divide-and-rule policies that have characterised
the US occupation from the beginning.
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