Al Jazeera
 
 
 
_Iraqi prime minister woos US  businesses_ 
(http://blogs.aljazeera.net/americas/2011/12/14/iraqi-prime-minister-woos-us-businesses)
 

 
    By _John Terrett_ (http://blogs.aljazeera.net/profile/john-terrett)  in 
   
_Americas_ (http://blogs.aljazeera.net/americas) 
on Wed, 2011-12-14 


 
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki met with US business leaders on 
Tuesday,  the second day of his visit to Washington DC.  
He told them that instead of military generals leading the way in Baghdad's 
 future, it would be business owners and captains of industry like them. 
Maliki wants US companies to set up shop in  Iraq. 
I went along to hear him speak at the US Chamber of Commerce headquarters  
just steps from the White House. (That's a measure of how important business 
and  commerce is in the US that the first building you come to when 
crossing  Lafayette Park after leaving the White House is the Chamber's HQ.) 
His message, just weeks before most US troops pick-up and go home, was 
clear,  "our door is open, please come!"  He said: "Iraq represents a great  
investment environment, a nascent one and very promising!"    
The big US corporations like  Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Boeing and Pepsi  
(firms that sometimes seem to be extensions of the State Department) are 
already  
doing business in Iraq but fewer smaller scale ones.  
Nonetheless, the US is facing stiff competition for Iraqi contracts from  
Italian, Chinese and even French companies with long traditions of trading in 
 the region - despite its problems - like security, corruption, and 
questions  about Iraq's political direction under Maliki.  
Around 30 Iraqi companies turned up to hear their prime minister speak all  
well aware of the problems facing their country - but still optimistic. 
Abdullah al-Jiburi, of the Jiburi Group, told me: "When there is a real 
start  and a serious start and everything covered by law ... those things will 
be  evaporated in the future." 
Mr al-Jiburi is employing Newport Global, a Rhode Island based company, to  
oversee the construction of a sports village near Iraq's southern city of 
Basra,  which is scheduled to open in June of 2012. 
Rounsevelle Schaum is the boss and he equates today's Iraq to California in 
 1849 during the Gold rush! 
"Iraq's oil reserves are approx those of Saudi Arabia so its going to be a  
great capital growth and expansion opportunity for those who are there." 
Critics argue all the optimism will come to nothing if Prime Minister 
Maliki  turns his back on western values and teams up with Iran ... stifling 
investments  from western nations. 

Tom Nides, the deputy US secretary of state  (number two to Hillary 
Clinton), was at the event too. He said: "We're very  confident that under 
Prime 
Minister Maliki the country he's set up is friendly  to US companies and we're 
very confident Iraq has a bright future that's why  were going to have a 
very robust diplomatic presence there."  
The new era in Iraq is set to begin at the end of the  year.

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