http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/ten-years-on-from-the-war-how-the-world-forgot-about-iraq-8518490.html

Ten years on from the war, how the world forgot about Iraq 
Iraq: The Legacy: A nation in crisis - In the first of a landmark six-part 
series, Patrick Cockburn reports on the feeling of betrayal in Baghdad

Patrick Cockburn  
Sunday 03 March 2013



 
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It is 10 years since the start of the war in Iraq which led to the toppling of 
Saddam Hussein.

The diplomatic map of the world has been redrawn as a consequence. Inquiry 
after inquiry has studied the legality of the conflict.

Political reputations have been made and lost. But what of the country itself?

Patrick Cockburn, The Independent’s acclaimed foreign correspondent, toured 
Saddam’s former empire to find out what state it is in. Who have been the 
winners?

Who have been the losers? And have we left Iraq in a better condition than we 
found it?

***

Iraq is disintegrating as a  country under the pressure of a mounting 
political, social and economic crisis, say Iraqi leaders.

They add that 10 years after the US invasion and occupation the conflict 
between the three main communities – Shia, Sunni and Kurd – is deepening to a 
point just short of civil war. “There is zero trust between Iraqi leaders,” 
says an Iraqi politician in daily contact with them. But like many of those 
interviewed by The Independent for this article, he did not want to be 
identified by name.

The escalating crisis in Iraq since the end of 2011 has largely been ignored by 
the rest of the world because international attention has been focused on 
Syria, the Arab uprisings and domestic economic troubles. The US and the UK 
have sought to play down overwhelming evidence that their invasion and 
occupation has produced one of the most dysfunctional and crooked governments 
in the world. Iraq has been violent and unstable for so long that Iraqis and 
foreigners alike have become desensitised to omens suggesting that, bad as the 
situation has been, it may be about to get a great deal worse. 

The record of failure of post-Saddam governments, given the financial resources 
available, is astounding. One of the reasons many Iraqis welcomed the fall of 
Saddam in 2003, whatever their feelings about foreign occupation, was that they 
thought that his successors would restore normal life after years of sanctions 
and war. To their astonishment and fury this has not happened, though Iraq now 
enjoys $100bn (£66bn) a year in oil revenues. In Baghdad there is scarcely a 
new civilian building to be seen and most of the new construction is heavily 
fortified police or military outposts. In Basra, at the heart of the oilfields, 
there are pools of sewage and heaps of uncollected rubbish in the streets on 
which herds of goats forage.

I was in Baghdad at the end of January when there were a couple of days of 
heavy rain. For years, contractors – Iraqi and foreign – have supposedly been 
building a new sewage system for the Iraqi capital but none of the water was 
disappearing down the drains. I drove for miles in east Baghdad through streets 
flooded with grey, murky water, diluted with sewage. I only turned round in 
Sadr City, the Shia working-class bastion, when the flood waters became too 
deep to drive through. Shirouk Abayachi, an advisor to the Ministry of Water 
Resources, explained to me that “since 2003, $7bn has been spent to build a new 
sewage system for Baghdad, but either the sewers weren’t built or they were 
built very badly”. She said the worst flooding had been where in theory there 
were new sewage pipes, while those built in the 1980s worked better, concluding 
that “corruption is the key to all this”.

Theft of public money and incompetence on a gargantuan scale means the 
government fails to provide adequate electricity, clean water or sanitation. 
One-third of the labour force is unemployed and, when you include those 
under-employed, the figure is over half. Even those who do have a job have 
often obtained it by bribery. “I feared seven or eight years ago that Iraq 
would become like Nigeria,” says one former minister, “but in fact it is far 
worse.” He cited as evidence a $1.3bn contract for an electricity project 
signed by a minister with a Canadian company that had only a nominal existence 
– and a German company that was bankrupt.

***

Iraqis looked for improved personal security and the rule of law after Saddam, 
but again this has not materialised. The violence is much less than during the 
mass slaughter of 2006 and 2007 when upwards of 3,000 Iraqis were being 
butchered every month. But Baghdad and central Iraq remains one of the most 
dangerous places on earth in terms of bombings, assassinations and kidnappings. 
It is not just political violence that darkens lives, but a breakdown of civil 
society that leaves people often looking to tribal justice in preference to 
police or official courts. One woman said that: “If you have a traffic 
accident, what matters is not whether you were right or wrong but what tribe 
you belong to.”

The same sense of insecurity in the face of arbitrary government taints 
political life. If there is not quite the same fear as under Saddam, it often 
feels as if this is only because the security forces are less efficient, not 
because they are any less cruel or corrupt. The rule of Nouri al-Maliki, Prime 
Minister since 2006, has become a near dictatorship with highly developed means 
of repression, such as secret prisons, and pervasive use of torture. He has 
sought to monopolise control over the army, intelligence service, government 
apparatus and budget, making sure that his supporters get the lion’s share of 
jobs and contracts. His State of Law Coalition won only 24 per cent of the 
votes in the 2010 election – 2.8 million  votes out of 19 million registered 
voters – but he has ruled as if he had received an overwhelming mandate.

Dr Mahmoud Othman, a veteran Kurdish leader and member of parliament, gives an 
excoriating analysis of what is wrong with present-day Iraq. “It is a failed 
state,” he says. “The country is run by gangs [within the government] and gangs 
are more important than law. Maliki rules because he is head of the armed 
forces. Iraq is run by force, but force does not mean that those exercising it 
are in control.”

Saddam Hussein and the US both found to their cost that Iraq can never be ruled 
by compulsion alone, something Mr Maliki has been slow to learn. The power of 
religious and ethnic communities is too great for successful coercion by the 
state and is underpinned by Iraqis’ loyalty to tribes, clans and extended 
families. When the Americans were leaving Iraq their main concern was that they 
would leave behind a security vacuum. But this was to mistake the nature of 
Iraqi politics. “The new [post-Saddam Hussein] Iraq has been built on the 
consensus of three communities: the Kurds, the Shia and the Sunni,” says one 
Iraqi leader, previously optimistic about the future of the country. “This 
political consensus has fractured.” He believes there is still some chance of 
repairing the damage, but, if this fails, he says “the end of Iraq and the 
division of the country will be inevitable”.

Iraqis who fought for years against Saddam Hussein, blaming most of Iraq’s ills 
on his regime, today express bitter disillusionment with his successors. 
Mustafa al-Khadimi, a veteran opponent of Saddam’s rule, says “I feel saddened 
and disappointed. I have given my life to destroying the old system and have 
seen members of my family and friends killed. Now I watch Iraq treated like a 
cake to be cut up between our politicians.” Others, equally despairing, 
criticise Mr Maliki for exacerbating and exploiting political divisions to keep 
power in his hands. As the pre-eminent leader of the Shia, three-fifths of the 
population, he alarms them by suggesting that their political dominance is 
under threat from the Sunni, a fifth of Iraqis, once in charge under Saddam but 
now marginalised. Last year, Mr Maliki sought to unite Sunni and Shia Arabs 
against the Kurds, another fifth of the population, by massing troops and 
threatening to invade Kurdish-controlled but disputed areas.

What makes these escalating conflicts so bizarre and damaging to Iraq is that 
they are fought by combatants who are part of the same power-sharing 
government. But because they don’t co-operate – and indeed hate and fear each 
other – government itself is paralysed. The administrative apparatus has in any 
case been degraded by departure of able officials abroad and the allocation of 
jobs solely through political patronage rather than experience or ability, 
membership of al-Dawa, the ruling Shia religious party often being the 
essential qualification. One study of Iraqi officials revealed that on average 
they put in just 17 minutes’ productive work during the average day. These 
toxic elements combine to produce a corrupt, self-serving and ineffective 
government. But its failings have been there a long time and might not in 
themselves have produced a new crisis. Party patronage may be a crude and 
unfair way of distributing oil wealth, but it benefits a lot of people. Iraqis 
may be enraged by the lack of public services such as electricity or health 
care, but they have suffered these shortages for a long time. By 2011 Iraq had 
achieved a bloody and unsatisfactory stability that might have endured longer 
had it not been rocked by important changes in the political balance of power 
inside and outside Iraq.

***

The last American troops left at the end of 2011 and President Barack Obama 
made clear by his actions that he did not intend to be inveigled back into the 
Iraqi political morass. Polls showed American voters had a deep distaste for 
any involvement in Iraq. American influence plummeted. But the Iraqi political 
system was in large part a US creation and many of its leaders owed their 
careers to US backing. This includes Mr Maliki who was appointed as Prime 
Minister by the US ambassador, Zalmay Khalilzad, because he was one of the few 
Shia politicians acceptable to the US and Iran.

Both countries, though they fight each other for influence in Iraq, have a 
common interest in stabilising the post-Saddam settlement. When Maliki was 
reappointed Prime Minister in 2010 an Iraqi official called me to comment 
sarcastically that “the Great Satan (US) and The Axis of Evil (Iran) have come 
together and given us a new prime minister”. With the US departure there 
disappeared a major force for persuading Iraqi leaders to agree to share power.

In their last years there, the Americans had learned how to play Iraqi 
political games effectively. In 2007 during the so-called Surge they had 
offered protection to the Sunni in return for an end to military action against 
US troops (al-Qa’ida continued to attack the Shia civilians and Iraqi 
government forces). It was always a temporary arrangement, regarded with 
suspicion by the Shia-dominated government in Baghdad. Just as the last US 
soldiers were leaving Iraq, Mr Maliki forced his Sunni Vice-President Tariq 
al-Hashemi to flee to Kurdistan and he was later sentenced to death.

The Sunni had suffered shattering defeats with the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, 
the formation of a Shia-Kurdish government and loss of the sectarian civil war. 
But the conflict in Syria marked a change for the better in Sunni fortunes. 
They have been emboldened by the bid for power of Syria’s Sunni majority just 
across the border from their own heartlands in Anbar and Nineveh provinces. 
They are encouraged by Sunni states like Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, 
backing Sunni rebels in Syria and sympathising with Sunni demonstrators in 
Iraq. Since late December Iraqi Sunni have peacefully protested against 
discrimination in all its forms. Maliki and his senior officials appear to be 
finally taking on board the significance of Sunni protests and the strength of 
the Sunni counter-offensive against the Shia in the Middle East. Mr Maliki 
predicted last week that “if the opposition [in Syria] is victorious, there 
will be civil war in Lebanon, divisions in Jordan and a sectarian war in Iraq”.

The US departure, the Syrian crisis and the Sunni protests are all 
destabilising Iraq. The Kurds and the Shia religious leadership – the 
Marji’iyyah – regard Mr Maliki and his government with distrust, but the very 
divisions of Iraq that weaken central governments also make it difficult to get 
rid of those in power, because their opponents are themselves so divided. 
Opposed to Mr Maliki they may be, but they cannot agree on a successor.

The Shia are themselves divided. Muqtada al-Sadr, the populist nationalist 
cleric who fought the US occupation, has called for the removal of Maliki and 
has praised the demonstrators in Anbar. This is important because his 
well-organised political movement used to have a military wing, the Mehdi Army, 
feared and execrated by Sunni for carrying out atrocities against them. Muqtada 
recently said: “Maliki’s entire policy is offensive to the Shia because it 
portrays them as a tyrannous majority in the eyes of the Kurds and Sunni.”

Iraq is one of the great political minefields of the world. It is full of 
ancient and modern battlefields where great empires have been humbled or 
destroyed. Saddam Hussein claimed to have built up an army of one million men 
in 1991, only to see it evaporate or mutiny. Much the same happened in 2003. 
The US army marched into Baghdad full of arrogant contempt for what Iraqis said 
or did. Within a year the US military controlled only islands of territory in a 
country they thought they had conquered. 

Maliki may employ a million men in different branches of the Iraqi security 
forces. In most countries this would guarantee government control, but in 
practice Maliki only has full authority in about half the national territory. 
He has no power in the northern third of the country held by the Kurds and 
increasingly limited influence in Sunni areas.

This does not mean the government is collapsing. It still has money, jobs, the 
army, intelligence services and electoral legitimacy. Qusay Abdul Wahab 
al-Suhail, the Sadrist deputy speaker of parliament, says that the problem in 
Iraq is that all parties have some degree of strength and therefore see no need 
to compromise with opponents. The result is a permanent political stalemate or 
paralysis.

Whatever the US and British invasion and occupation of Iraq 10 years ago was 
meant to achieve it has not created a peaceful and prosperous country. If an 
Iraqi was arrested before 2003 for a political offence he could expect to be 
tortured unless he immediately confessed, and this is still the case. The one 
improvement is that he stands less chance of being executed.

Ordinary Iraqis are pessimistic or ambivalent about the future. Professor Yahya 
Abbas says: “If you ask my students ‘What do you want?’ About 95 per cent will 
answer ‘I want to leave Iraq.’”


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