Whenever President Bush is asked about the prospect of withdrawing from Iraq, he sticks to the same line: the US will not "cut and run" and abandon the Iraqi people. Meanwhile, on the reconstruction front, that's exactly what he's doing:
The Bush administration does not intend to seek any new funds for Iraq reconstruction in the budget request going before Congress in February, officials say. The decision signals the winding down of an $18.4 billion U.S. rebuilding effort in which roughly half of the money was eaten away by the insurgency, a buildup of Iraq's criminal justice system and the investigation and trial of Saddam Hussein.
This wouldn't be a problem if the job was done - but its not. Electricity output is averaging 4000 MW, 10% lower than its prewar level - and Iraqis are on average getting power for only 12 hours a day (or half or maybe even a third of that in Baghdad). Oil exports are 25% lower than they were before the war began. There's still inadequate water supplies, sewage systems, roads, bridges - all the stuff that the Americans bombed back in 2003 (or in 1991, or 1997) is still in ruins. But the Iraqis are getting a lovely set of border forts (which will cost more than four times as much as will be spent on roads, bridges, and public buildings) plus a secure communications network for their new army and secret police (which will cost only slightly more than will be spent on schools) - all paid for with reconstruction money which would otherwise be used for those worthier projects.
That's the problem right there - the Americans don't seem to understand the "re" in "reconstruction". Or that they are supposed to be doing this for the benefit of the Iraqi people, rather than themselves. Or even that reconstruction funds were appropriated by Congress for civilian purposes, not military ones.
But the most telling quote is this bit:
"The U.S. never intended to completely rebuild Iraq," Brig. Gen. William McCoy, the Army Corps of Engineers commander overseeing the work, told reporters at a recent news conference. In an interview this past week, McCoy said: "This was just supposed to be a jump-start."
Really? What about Colin Powell's famous pre-war "you break it, you own it"? Instead, the US now seems to want to shirk its moral obligation to the Iraqi people in favour of international vandalism: smash it all up, then just walk away...
> roughly half of the money was eaten away by the insurgency, a buildup of Iraq's criminal justice system and the investigation and trial of Saddam Hussein.
ReplyDeletecrime always costs money - one wouldnt really want to just surrender as a result - of course there was no need to have an expensive sadam trial. Speaking of which aren't we lucky that Hitler saved us from a show trial!
> What about Colin Powell's famous pre-war "you break it, you own it"?
the US probably rebuilt the equivilent of what it broke. It just got blown up again. If iraqis choose to blow up their own stuff what can you do about it? Maybe they have jsut reached the point where it is no longer worth it to rebuild the targets.
Icehawk:
ReplyDeleteWhat about the idea that if the Iraqis reconstruct then there might be less insurgency destruction of basic infrastructure?
I don't know if this would even be true, I'm just postulating it as a possibility.
Muerk: quite apart from the moral obligation, rebuilding Iraq is exactly what is needed to show Iraqis that the US is committed to their ongoing wellbeing, which is one of the core determinants of whether a military occupation is successful or not.
ReplyDeleteBut then, I suspect its far too late for that now...
> He was talking about fixing a nation, not fixing a power plant.
ReplyDeleteAnd in that regard he was making a promise he could not keep.
Stil - I dont suppose the terrorists are making that promise nor was sadam.
>US military spending vastly outstrips its reconstruction spending is both short-sighted and a very bad sign.
yes and no - How can you spend on reconstruction if it gets blown up straight away? beter to spend ion military and protect a little of the construction (offensively or defensively)
You make it sound so terrible that the Bush isn't going to fix everything in Iraq that is broke.
ReplyDeleteMost of assests which probably broke or was near broke when the Americans invaded Iraq due to the U.N sanctions not the war itself.
It is unlikely that Congress would pass a bill for more funds for reconstruction in Iraq due to the outright oppostition from the Democrats to the war and Republicans that see it as a waste of US taxapers money.
Iraq is not a poor country with billions of dollars worth of oil reserves and currently high oil world prices at the moment.
By providing an effective police force and militiary then democracy can flourish in Iraq.
By removing the US and other allied troops from Iraq, then it should lessen the insurgency (and the suppossed reasons for the insurgency).
This should allow Iraqis to continue the rebuilding of the country.
Another example, of underfunding of reconstruction is in Afghanstian where only half of the 10bn required has been promised by the international community and it is not an oil rich country.
This seems to be ignored by the MSM as it can't blame Bush.
> But if that is true, then they've lost.
ReplyDeleteI think the objectives are wrong - you can't have an objective which is so easy to deny you.
If my only objective is to deny you and it costs you 1 million dollars to build a school and be 10 dollars to destroy it then I'll be happy to play that game for the rest of time.
Unfortunately even in a fully functioning iraqi economy there will still be enough insurgents to make your spending on repair be dwarfed by the cost of protecting it.
> Can't we aspire to a bit more than that?
I am not america - they are a force of nature to me just as the terrorists are. I just note that they are - overall - a slightly nicer force of nature.
If this post was anything more than just another anti-US tirade then a bit more attention would have been placed on the expectation of other countries stepping up to the plate. idiot, maybe those countries which were Saddam's main supporters and who opposed his overthrow - France, Russia, China - have some responsibilty to provide for reconstruction. They have done nothing, spent nothing - which is an indication of what motivated their anti-war stance. But I'm sure Chirac will be there with his grubby little hands if Iraq wants to give France millions for another nuclear reactor - just like last time.
ReplyDeleteCountries that opposed wreaking Iraq in the first place should have to pay for rebuilding it??? That's like saying you should go to jail for the assassination of Bush because you opposed the assassination.
ReplyDeleteIcehawk, the US is actually building something better in Iraq, I thought idiot was trying to say that the US was not going to stop.
ReplyDeleteYou talk of moral obligation - but why do you consider the moral obligation of those who profitted the most from Saddam to be beside the point? Given that those that did gain the most were againist the invasion and were quite prepared to continue doing business with Saddam I would have thought that anyone on the anti-war side would be demandng that those countries took on some of this moral obligation. But no, "The rest of us are not" as you say. I'm sure Putin and Chirac would agree.
This part of of this latest announcement that has been conviently overlooked - the US is not cutting and running it is trying to get other coutries to do the decent thing. (The other overlooked facts are that there is still 8 billion to be spent, that this money covers the period up to 2007 and that there have been other types of US funding - hardly cutting and running).
Another odd moral position that the anti-war side is taking is to completely ignore the moral culpability of the insurgents for disrupting reconstruction. We have a collection of secular and religious facists trying to derail democarcy and who gets the blame for the disruption to reconstruction? The US. Very odd.
I look at the antiwar movement and really wonnder what their motives are. There are no demonstrations against the insurgents, there are no human shields flocking to Iraq to protect Iraqi's from religous fanatics. There's no willingness to hold the people who made the most out of Saddam to account. But there is the relentless demonisaiton of the US. That speaks volumes about their real concerns.
that should read - "I thought idiot was trying to say that the US was going to stop."
ReplyDelete