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Who
Profits from Erasing Iraq's Debt?
by
Heather Wokusch
July
26, 2003
Outspoken
Pentagon advisor Richard Perle recently called for Iraq's debt to be cancelled
as a way of teaching banks about the "moral hazard of ... lend[ing] to a
vicious dictatorship."
Fair
enough. Other countries with "odious debt" incurred under nasty
regimes may be granted debt forgiveness. Why not Iraq?
Why
not indeed. A war profiteer like Perle lecturing on morality is doubtful
enough, but who in today's occupied Iraq will really profit from debt
forgiveness, the Iraqi people or companies like Halliburton?
At
stake is more than $184 billion of pending contracts and debts against Iraq,
many of which transpired before the 1991 invasion of Kuwait. In other words,
even deals inked when Saddam Hussein was considered a US ally could now be
considered odious debt.
No
small coincidence that the countries slated to lose most from an Iraqi
write-off include Russia, France and Germany: Bush's axis-of-just-as-evil for
opposing the recent invasion of Iraq.
But
taking Perle's moral high ground for argument's sake, consider that Chile's
Pinochet, Indonesia's Suharto, South Korea's Park Chung Hee, and yes, Iraq's
Hussein were all former recipients of White House largesse. So much for the US
government steering clear of vicious dictators.
And
of course, today's "war on terror" has become a gold mine for brutal
regimes of strategic US interest.
Take
Uzbekistan. Despite an abysmal human rights record and corrupt government, the
country received $500 million in US funding last year - $79 million
specifically earmarked for "torture
as a routine investigative technique." Its proximity to Afghanistan
and expanding US military presence guarantee ever more funding to back the
savage Uzbek government, step up repression and no doubt create the kind of
Islamic fundamentalism the US should be fighting in the first place.
And
then there's Pakistan. General Pervez Musharraf seized power in a 1999 coup,
stifling opposition and rewriting the constitution to shore up his dubious
power base - not exactly a model of democratic leadership. Regardless, Pentagon
ally Musharraf just left Camp David with $3 billion in fresh US grants, for
things like upping the nuclear war ante with India.
How
ironic that dictatorships like Uzbekistan and Pakistan can cash in on the
"war on terror," while fledgling democracies defying Washington's
unilateral excesses are punished. The Bush administration's recent rampage
against the International Criminal Court (ICC) is a case in point: 64 countries
receiving US military aid were forced
to sign bilateral agreements exempting US troops from prosecution, or else
risk losing the aid. The Bahamas, for instance, was warned funds would be
withheld for paving and lighting an airport runway, and Caribbean states were
told they could lose hurricane relief and rural dentistry benefits if they
didn't support Washington's attack on the ICC.
In
other words, the US government provides funding for "torture as a routine
investigative technique" but not necessarily for hurricane relief. No
wonder they hate us.
The
White House is quick to point out that some countries have demonstrated loyalty
to the Bush administration by sending peacekeeping troops to Iraq: Poland,
Ukraine, Nicaragua, and El Salvador among others. Rarely mentioned, however, is
the fact that US taxpayers will be funding this "coalition of the
billing" to the tune of $250 million this year alone.
But
who really benefits from massive cash infusions to Iraq, estimated to be
costing US taxpayers $3.9 billion every month? And who would benefit from a
hasty write-off of Iraq's past debt?
There's
no doubt the country's in chaos and needs help. Twelve years of debilitating
sanctions have left the population and infrastructure ravaged, while the recent
invasion and aftermath have left thousands dead and millions unemployed.
Meanwhile, attacks against US service members grow more frequent and bloody
every week.
But
not everybody's hurting. Halliburton, the Texan oil company tied to US vice
president Dick Cheney, is making a killing on subsidiary contracts to Iraq,
doing everything from repairing oil wells to providing housing for US troops.
Corporate cronies will also benefit from Bush administration plans to privatize
Iraq's 100 state-owned firms, probably at fire sale prices.
No
doubt the lack of financial transparency in today's Iraq creates unprecedented
opportunities. Some US firms have already been charged with bilking millions of
dollars in bogus rebuilding contracts, while the integrity of the US-UK
controlled fund slated to recover foreign Iraqi assets has been called into
question.
Clearly,
throwing more cash into this mess makes no sense. How long can US taxpayers
shoulder the unilateral burden? What new dictators will be propped up? What
assets and national resources will be privatized away from the Iraqi people
without their consent? How long before they negate today's agreements as
odious?
Bottom
line, until a stable government is in place, truly representative of the Iraqi
people, there should be no debt cancellations - reschedulings or delayed
payment allowances perhaps, but no write-offs. Same goes for privatizations.
The Bush administration's secretive, unilateral and unaccountable approach to
finances is among our biggest moral hazards in Iraq.
Heather Wokusch is a free-lance writer with
a background in clinical psychology. Her work as been featured in publications
and websites internationally. Heather can be contacted via her website: http://www.heatherwokusch.com