HOME
DV NEWS
SERVICE ARCHIVE SUBMISSIONS/CONTACT ABOUT DV
Americans
Defend Two Untouchable Ministries from the Hordes of Looters
by
Robert Fisk
in
Baghdad
April
14, 2003
Iraq's
scavengers have thieved and destroyed what they have been allowed to loot and
burn by the Americans and a two-hour drive around Baghdad shows clearly what
the US intends to protect. After days of arson and pillage, here's a short but
revealing scorecard. US troops have sat back and allowed mobs to wreck and then
burn the Ministry of Planning, the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Irrigation,
the Ministry of Trade, the Ministry of Industry, the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, the Ministry of Culture and the Ministry of Information. They did
nothing to prevent looters from destroying priceless treasures of Iraq's
history in the Baghdad Archaeological Museum and in the museum in the northern
city of Mosul, or from looting three hospitals.
The
Americans have, though, put hundreds of troops inside two Iraqi ministries that
remain untouched and untouchable because tanks and armoured personnel
carriers and Humvees have been placed inside and outside both institutions. And
which ministries proved to be so important for the Americans? Why, the Ministry
of Interior, of course with its vast wealth of intelligence information on
Iraq and the Ministry of Oil. The archives and files of Iraq's most valuable
asset its oilfields and, even more important, its massive reserves are safe
and sound, sealed off from the mobs and looters, and safe to be shared, as
Washington almost certainly intends, with American oil companies.
It
casts an interesting reflection on America's supposed war aims. Anxious to
"liberate" Iraq, it allows its people to destroy the infrastructure
of government as well as the private property of Saddam's henchmen. Americans insist
that the oil ministry is a vital part of Iraq's inheritance, that the oilfields
are to be held in trust "for the Iraqi people". But is the Ministry
of Trade relit yesterday by an enterprising arsonist not vital to the
future of Iraq? Are the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Irrigation
still burning fiercely not of critical importance to the next government? The
Americans could spare 2,000 soldiers to protect the Kirkuk oilfields but
couldn't even invest 200 to protect the Mosul museum from attack. US engineers
were confidently predicting that the Kirkuk oilfield will be capable of pumping
again "within weeks".
There
was much talk of a "new posture" from the Americans yesterday.
Armoured and infantry patrols suddenly appeared on the middle-class streets of
the capital, ordering young men hauling fridges, furniture and television sets
to deposit their loot on the pavement if they could not prove ownership. It was
pitiful. After billions of dollars of government buildings, computers and archives
have been destroyed, the Americans are stopping teens driving mule-drawn carts
loaded with second-hand chairs.
Robert Fisk is an award winning foreign
correspondent for The Independent
(UK), where this article first appeared. He is the author of Pity Thy
Nation: The Abduction of Lebanon (The Nation Books, 2002 edition). Posted
with authors permission.