10 Reasons To Oppose Us Militarization Of Aid And Reconstruction In Iraq
Further checking out Znet, lead me here. The author, Yiffat Susskind, lays out 10 compelling reasons why the US military should not be in charge of "rebuilding" Iraq.
An excerpt:
3) The military lacks the training and experience to distribute aid properly
• The result has been utter chaos: soldiers firing handguns into the air to keep order at distribution points, randomly throwing aid boxes off trucks into crowds and standing by while Iraqis fight each other with fists and knives to get at food packages.
• These conditions violate the dignity of aid recipients. When people are pitted against each other in competition for scarce resources, their capacity to pull together to survive the crisis at hand is undermined and their dependence on the invading army is reinforced.
• Aid distribution requires expertise. For example, in late March, Oxfam reported that soldiers had handed out powdered milk without proper instructions. For children, ingesting milk powder that has not been properly mixed with water can result in diarrhea or even death.
[This is what I was intuiting when I wrote :
And, quite frankly, I can’t think of a person in the world who, if their goal was, “to create a place where Arabs were free and safe and unafraid and happy and successful and not ruled by corrupt monarchs or brutal dictators,” would choose the US military to achieve this goal.]
More from Susskind:
5) Humanitarian aid should be directed to meet the basic needs of Iraqis, not the propaganda needs of the US military.
• Army spokespeople have stated bluntly that aid delivery is intended to make Iraqis view US soldiers as liberators rather than occupiers.
• That aid distribution is primarily a public relations exercise became clear early on. There are 24 million people in Iraq. Yet, US soldiers came provisioned with enough food aid to sustain only two million people for a day and a half.
• The UN World Food Program, meanwhile, was prepared to provide food for the entire Iraqi population for four months. But its operations were suspended for more than a month because the US military arbitrarily barred aid workers from entering Iraq.
And
8) US control of reconstruction encourages war profiteering and unscrupulous conflicts of interest.
• The destruction of Iraq means big bucks for US corporations who are being hired – to the tune of $100 billion in government contracts – to rebuild the roads, government buildings, water systems, bridges and other infrastructure destroyed by the US. The contracts are blatant examples of kick-backs and conflicts of interest.
• Even before the war began, the Administration secretly invited six US companies to bid on reconstruction contracts. These companies have a history of making large campaign contributions to the Republican Party4.
• Many of the same individuals who lobbied aggressively for the war have ties to the companies who are now profiting from rebuilding Iraq. For example, Dick Cheney is paid $1 million a year in “deferred retirement” by Halliburton, which was hired to fight oil-well fires in Iraq. Former Secretary of State George Shultz, who heads the advisory board of the virulently pro-war Committee for the Liberation of Iraq, is also on the board of directors of the Bechtel Group, which won the first major contract to repair transportation, power, water and sewage systems in Iraq5.
9:01:50 AM
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