Building support for the new Iraq
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June 16, 2009Thoughts on the inquiry
At LabourList there is a comment on the inquiry by Gary Kent, Director of LFIQ Given the huge investment that this country made in the lives of its soldiers and public money, it is only right that there should be a comprehensive inquiry into the causes and conduct of the military intervention in Iraq in order to learn the lessons for the future. Labour Friends of Iraq was founded by supporters and opponents of that intervention but who deliberately sought to respond to the new Iraq that emerged from the intervention. For the last five years our priority has been working with Iraqis who are seeking to build independent organisations such as trade unions and to create a federal and democratic country. The sad thing about much of the discussion about Iraq is that it either ignores or obscures the reality of Saddam’s murderous regime or that Iraqi voices are invisible in that debate. My worry is that a large number of activists have little or no knowledge of the crimes of the previous Iraqi regime which include genocide against Iraqi Kurds, massacres of Shias in the south and external aggression in which about a million people died. It is important that the inquiry recognises that this story didn’t start with the invasion but examines this suffering of the Iraqi people under Saddam. It should take evidence in Iraq. After five trips to Iraq since 2006, I would say that many Iraqis welcomed the intervention, especially in Kurdistan which had benefited for 12 years from the US and the UK policing a no-fly zone for Iraqi bombers and gunships over the Kurdistan Region. I would add that many were deeply angered by the litany of errors committed after the intervention which gave vent to Shia fundamentalists, Baa’thist die-hards anxious to protect their former privileged position of dominance and Al Qaeda. Iraq came very near to full-scale civil war but security has vastly improved and its sovereign government is increasingly taking charge of its own security. There are still problems with delivering public services, in relations between the central government in Baghdad and the Kurds and with the country’s neighbours. There is a desperate need for foreign investment and trade as well as all sorts of cultural, political and social contacts to overcome the legacy of decades of neglect and destruction of the economy and Iraq’s isolation from the outside world. By all means, let’s examine how we got here but let’s also make a greater effort to work with the new Iraq in their interests and ours. |