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The Iraq we don't hear about
The Sunday Times ^ | June 06, 2004 | says Amir Taheri

Posted on 06/07/2004 4:25:45 AM PDT by crazycat

Obsessed by bombs and bullets, the West ignores a political renaissance, says Amir Taheri, newly returned from Iraq

Iraq today is no bed of roses, I know. I have just come back from a tour of the country. But I don’t recognise the place I have just visited as the war zone depicted by the Arab and western media.

(Excerpt) Read more at timesonline.co.uk ...


TOPICS: Breaking News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: amirtaheri; goodnews; iraq; iraqielections; progress; selfrule
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The Iraq we don't hear about Obsessed by bombs and bullets, the West ignores a political renaissance, says Amir Taheri, newly returned from Iraq

In London the other day the Iraqi national football team met a team made up of MPs, mostly opponents of the war, for a friendly match. The Iraqis won 15-0.

Six months ago the team did not even exist. But in August, after defeating several opponents, including Iran and Saudi Arabia, the men will stand to attention as Iraq’s new flag is raised at the Olympic games in Athens.

Iraq today is no bed of roses, I know. I have just come back from a tour of the country. But I don’t recognise the place I have just visited as the war zone depicted by the Arab and western media.

It is true that Saddamite leftovers and their allies have stolen enough money and arms to continue their campaign of terror and disruption for some time yet. But they have no popular following and have failed to develop a coherent national strategy. The Iraqi civil defence corps has gone on the offensive, hunting down terrorists, often with some success. At the same time attacks on the Iraqi police force have dropped 50% in the past month.

There is also good news on the economic front. In the last quarter the dinar, Iraq’s currency, has increased by almost 15% against the dollar and the two most traded local currencies, the Kuwaiti dinar and the Iranian rial.

Thanks to rising oil prices, Iraq is earning a record £41m to £44m a day. This has led to greater economic activity, including private reconstruction schemes. That money goes into a fund controlled by the United Nations but Iraqi leaders want control transferred to the new interim government, when sovereignty is transferred at the end of this month.

Despite the continuing terrorist violence Iraq has attracted more than 7m foreign visitors, mostly Shi’ites making the pilgrimage to Najaf and Karbala where (despite sporadic fighting) a building boom is under way. This year Iraq has had a bumper harvest with record crops, notably in wheat. It could become agriculturally self-sufficient for the first time in 30 years.

“Iraq has always had everything that is needed to build a successful economy,” says Heydar al-Ayyari, an Iraqi politician. “We have water and fertile land. We have oil and a hardworking people. What we lacked was freedom. Now that we have freedom we can surge ahead.”

Nor should one believe the claims of self-styled experts that the Iraqis are not ready for freedom. During the past 10 months elections have been held in 37 municipalities. In each case victory went to the moderate, liberal and secular candidates. The former Ba’athists, appearing under fresh labels, failed to win a single seat. Hardline Islamist groups collected 1% to 3% of the vote.

Iraq is like a jostling school of democracy with people coming together in clubs, associations, non-governmental organisations, tribal councils, professional guilds and trade unions to talk about the future now that Saddam Hussein’s one-party state has disintegrated.

On my visit to southern Iraq I attended many meetings in mosques, shops in the souks and abandoned office buildings. Everywhere Iraqis were busy using their newly won freedom of expression to discuss their political future.

Yet this is the one area in which the coalition has done little. Despite the fact that President George W Bush has promised to help Iraq to become a model of constitutional government for the Muslim world, there has been no effort to provide training and logistical support for the 30 or so parties that will contest the election in January.

Pro-democracy voices dominate the new privately owned Iraqi press which, with more than 200 dailies, weeklies and periodicals, represents a breath of fresh air in the state-controlled Arab media.

Preparations for self-rule have been under way for months. All but four of the 26 government departments set up after liberation are now under exclusive Iraqi control. The provisional government headed by Iyad Allawi, the prime minister, has been sworn in ahead of the formal transfer of power at the end of the month.

Iraq’s diverse political groups have manifested a rare degree of maturity by agreeing a draft constitution aimed at establishing a parliamentary government. The final text will be finessed by a directly elected constituent assembly and put to a referendum next year.

“This is a radical change from a culture in which power was grabbed by driving a tank to the radio station and announcing a coup d’état,” says Salih Muhsin, an Iraqi scholar.

Over the past year Iraq has absorbed nearly 1m refugees, returning home often after decades of exile in Turkey and Iran. Some 400 of the 5,000 villages razed by Saddam as part of his ethnic cleansing have been rebuilt. Life is returning to the Ahwar region in the south of the country where Saddam dislodged tens of thousands of people and caused one of the biggest ecological disasters of the past century by draining the marshes.

“We are coming out of the cold,” says al-Ayyari. “The world should help us put our house in order.” But this is precisely what many in the West, and the Arab world, won’t do.

Having opposed the toppling of Saddam, they do not wish to see Iraq build a better future. Arab despots and their satellite television channels fear a democratic Iraq that could give oppressed people of the region dangerous ideas. The anti-American coalition in the West shudders at the thought that someone like Bush might put Iraq on the path of democratisation.

The Arab fear of democracy and the western disease of anti-Americanism mean that media coverage of Iraq is often focused on bad news. The day after the war began we were told that the port of Umm Qasr was to become “the Arab Stalingrad” because a few gunmen fired shots in the air in front of a CNN camera. When this did not materialise the headline news the following week was that the Saddamites were massing at Nasiriya where they would defeat the Americans in the desert.

It is impossible to listen to the Today programme on Radio 4 without hearing parallels drawn with Vietnam or other Stalingrads. Take the coverage of Falluja where Arab nationalism was supposed to be reborn in a sea of American blood. Today Falluja is calm, with the Iraqi civil defence corps in control.

As Falluja, Baquba and Tikrit, Saddam’s home town, calmed down, opponents of liberation found a fresh tune: this time it was a song about a national anti-American insurrection led by Moqtada al-Sadr, the maverick mullah.

But that did not, nor is it likely to, happen. Anyone with any knowledge of the Shi’ite community in Iraq would know that al-Sadr has almost no popular support.

Even Ayatollah Kazem Ha’eri-Yazdi, al-Sadr’s spiritual mentor, has come out against the latter’s forlorn bid for power. Ayatollah Sadreddin Qapanchi made a similar point in a sermon in Najaf: “The people of Iraq are ready to exercise the right of self-determination,” he said.

“All they ask is a chance to choose their government. Iraq shouldn’t be thrown to those who seek power through violence.”

Can Iraq become a democracy? “There is no need to ask the question,” says Hoshyar Zebari, who has retained his post as foreign minister. “Iraq today has no choice but to become a democracy. Our people know that without democracy there will be no Iraq.”

He is right. Even if a fresh despot fancied turning Iraq back into a dictatorship it would prove a nigh impossible task. The edifice of despotism built over almost half a century has been reduced to debris. Saddam is in prison, awaiting trial for crimes against humanity. His ruling party has evaporated and his military and police machine has been shattered.

The Soviet-style economic system, controlled by a corrupt elite, is being rapidly replaced by one based on enterprise and the market.

The new government — which includes five women — appears to be a broad-based coalition representing Iraq’s ethnic, religious and political diversity. The president is Sheikh Ghazi al-Yawer, a Sunni, the deputy president is Ibrahim Jaafari, a Shi’ite, and the second deputy is Rowsch Shways, a Kurd. But it will need strong support in military, political and economic terms for some time, as the increased violence that marred last week’s ceremony demonstrates.

Allawi said he expected Iraq to continue its close “partnership” with the US and European states after the handover of partial powers. He said “friendly” countries would continue “defending Iraq until it could defend itself”.

Key to the success of the provisional government is the perception that it holds real power.

It is imperative that it controls Iraq’s armed services and police and has a real say in how the coalition uses its forces in Iraq. The government must also control Iraq’s oil income and have a say in how the American aid package is spent.

For a country emerging from half a century of dictatorship and three wars in one generation, things in Iraq are better than anyone might have expected. Even a moderate success here could transform the whole of the Middle East.

Iraq is not about to disintegrate. Nor is it on the verge of civil war. Nor is it about to repeat Iran’s mistake by establishing a repressive theocracy. Despite becoming the focus of anti-American energies in the past year, its people still hold the West in high regard. Iraq has difficult months ahead, nobody would dispute that. But it has a chance to create a new society. Its well-wishers should keep the faith and prove the doomsters wrong.

1 posted on 06/07/2004 4:25:45 AM PDT by crazycat
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To: crazycat
A good read. Thanks for the post

Nor should one believe the claims of self-styled experts that the Iraqis are not ready for freedom. During the past 10 months elections have been held in 37 municipalities. In each case victory went to the moderate, liberal and secular candidates. The former Ba’athists, appearing under fresh labels, failed to win a single seat. Hardline Islamist groups collected 1% to 3% of the vote.

2 posted on 06/07/2004 4:28:54 AM PDT by AHerald
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To: crazycat

Excellent analysis of the current Iraqi situation from Amir Taheri. This is more bad news for the Democrats - Iraq is NOT Vietnam Redux.


3 posted on 06/07/2004 4:31:11 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: goldstategop
more bad news for the Democrats - Iraq is NOT Vietnam Redux

Indeed this is the whole point for the Democrats. They view Vietnam as a wonderful victory for "progressives" (or whatever they called themselves in those days). The hope that they could subvert the growth of Democracy in Iraq and return America to a "malaise" is all that keeps them going these days.

4 posted on 06/07/2004 4:41:39 AM PDT by rhombus
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To: AHerald

It is so true that Iraq has all of the natural resources to provide for it's people. I've wondered just how much of a problem Afghanistan will become as time goes on. Relying on illegal drugs grown by farmers there (paying 10 times what regular crops would pay) is hardly a "model" for the US to support forever. Are there any other natural resources there that have not been talked about? Besides growing terrorists?


5 posted on 06/07/2004 4:43:27 AM PDT by BillyCrockett
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To: crazycat

Worldwide, there seems to be a growing number of news stories written with the actual truth in mind.

I only say this because whenever I find an article of this type I post it over at a lib board and have great fun watching their frustration as they try to spin it to their way of thinking.

Lately I've been finding, on average, one article per day, where in the past it used to be one or two per week.

Yes, there is still a *l o n g* way to go for media reform, but its refreshing to see the slightest glimmer of hope in that area.


6 posted on 06/07/2004 4:58:47 AM PDT by Rebelbase
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To: crazycat; Wolverine; TexasTransplant; imintrouble; thesummerwind; Fiddlstix; Teacher317; ...
Pro-democracy voices dominate the new privately owned Iraqi press which, with more than 200 dailies, weeklies and periodicals, represents a breath of fresh air in the state-controlled Arab media.

The Arab fear of democracy and the western disease of anti-Americanism mean that media coverage of Iraq is often focused on bad news. The day after the war began we were told that the port of Umm Qasr was to become “the Arab Stalingrad” because a few gunmen fired shots in the air in front of a CNN camera. When this did not materialise the headline news the following week was that the Saddamites were massing at Nasiriya where they would defeat the Americans in the desert.

It is impossible to listen to the Today programme on Radio 4 without hearing parallels drawn with Vietnam or other Stalingrads.

IOW, it is only the people who have lived under tyranny but now have freedom and hope who support democracy. All others, prominently including free, competitive (but insular and self-important) US journalism, prefer to exploit the bad news as a cover to downplay the good news for the people of Iraq.

In doing so they create a virtual reality in which they are important and we-the-people, in the US as well as in Iraq, depend solely on their protection. In that world the actual reality - the fact that it is the nature of the US military which creates the conditions for civil society in Iraq and is the ultimate guarantor of our own civil society - cannot be uttered.

Why Broadcast Journalism is
Unnecessary and Illegitimate

7 posted on 06/07/2004 5:07:53 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion
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To: crazycat

Bump!


8 posted on 06/07/2004 5:08:12 AM PDT by F-117A
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To: crazycat
"The anti-American coalition in the West shudders at the thought that someone like Bush might put Iraq on the path of democratisation."

Will Bush succeed where the UN has failed again and again? He's already gotten farther than the UN ever did.
9 posted on 06/07/2004 5:11:12 AM PDT by Law is not justice but process
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To: crazycat

Thanks for posting this. It's too bad that good news from Iraq is not heard more often. Hearing this news balances out all the bad news of troops being killed.


10 posted on 06/07/2004 5:14:47 AM PDT by tob2 (Old fossil and proud of it!)
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To: crazycat
That money goes into a fund controlled by the United Nations but Iraqi leaders want control transferred to the new interim government, when sovereignty is transferred at the end of this month.

Yeah, I'll bet they want to get that money out of the U.N.'s hands. The fact that their even close to any money in Iraq after the "Oil for Food" disaster is mind boggling...

11 posted on 06/07/2004 5:24:05 AM PDT by Damocles (sword of...)
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To: crazycat
" Despite becoming the focus of anti-American energies in the past year, its people still hold the West in high regard."

bump for great news and a positive article on Iraq.

12 posted on 06/07/2004 5:26:26 AM PDT by No Blue States
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To: Law is not justice but process

Reading this article and looking at other stuff he has written, he is no blind Bush lover. Therefore it looks like GW may well achieve his aims.

The media and the liberal elites have gone collectively insane, in their reporting and analysis over Iraq.

Now we have the D-day commemerations going on, the death tolls are being put in a proper perspective and the idea of sacrifice is being rightly admired and remembered.

Also the death of the Gipper is reminding everyone that the arguements against Reagan are exactly the same as those employed against GW. Only Reagan is now recognised as the visionary he was, which leaves the obvious question hanging.

As usual the Gippers timing was perfect.


13 posted on 06/07/2004 5:28:33 AM PDT by crazycat
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To: crazycat

"That money goes into a fund controlled by the United Nations ...."

Well, this is patently insane. I thought the coalition was in charge of this.


14 posted on 06/07/2004 5:40:37 AM PDT by Bahbah
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To: AHerald

What? The sky ISN'T falling? There must be some sort of mistake because the connie news networks have been telling us that it was for 15 months now.


15 posted on 06/07/2004 5:48:09 AM PDT by Blood of Tyrants (Even if the government took all your earnings, you wouldn't be, in its eyes, a slave.)
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To: crazycat
As usual the Gippers timing was perfect.

I was thinking the exact same thing last night...

16 posted on 06/07/2004 6:15:24 AM PDT by cspackler (There are 10 kinds of people in this world, those who understand binary and those who don't.)
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To: crazycat

Big bump BTTT! Pass this news around people. If the libmedia won't do it, it falls to us....let's get busy.


17 posted on 06/07/2004 6:26:15 AM PDT by Texas2step (<><)
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To: Rebelbase

I only say this because whenever I find an article of this type I post it over at a lib board and have great fun watching their frustration as they try to spin it to their way of thinking.

Lately I've been finding, on average, one article per day, where in the past it used to be one or two per week.




Do you have a running link of these articles? I always like to tease the libs with them as well.


18 posted on 06/07/2004 6:27:32 AM PDT by Mixer
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To: Mixer

I just glean them from FR. I make sure to post only from mainstream sources so that they see its their own media speaking.


19 posted on 06/07/2004 6:30:48 AM PDT by Rebelbase
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To: crazycat

Outstanding article from an unbiased and credible Iranian author.

Thanks for posting. This is really good news!


20 posted on 06/07/2004 6:31:37 AM PDT by RottiBiz (Help end Freepathons -- become a Monthly Donor.)
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