Endless
Corruption Is Leaving Iraq A Failed State
By Gwynne
Dyer
May 12,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Japan
Times"
-
Property
prices in central Baghdad are as high as London’s,
even though Iraq’s national income is down by 70
percent since the collapse of oil prices. Islamic
State bombings regularly devastate parts of the
capital and still the real estate market booms. Why?
Because
there is so much “dirty money” in Iraq that needs to
be laundered. If you lack the political clout to get
your stolen money out of the country, then the
safest course is to put it into residential
property. But then that’s not a very safe bet either
when the entire pseudo-democratic system bequeathed
to Iraq by the U.S. invasion is on the brink of
collapse.
Intrusion
late last month by thousands of angry Iraqis into
the Green Zone, the vast blast-walled government
compound in Baghdad, was probably the beginning of
the end of the current dispensation in Iraq. They
stayed for two days, only leaving after delivering
an ultimatum calling for wholesale reform of the
government but vowing to return if it does not
happen.
It will not
happen, and they will be back in the streets soon.
Former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, forced from
power in 2014 after Islamic State forces conquered
the western half of Iraq, has been plotting a
comeback with other parties in parliament. He may
not succeed, but he and his allies are certainly
able to block the passage of most measures they do
not like.
The cement
binding Maliki and the other plotters is their
determination to retain the utterly corrupt system
that has allowed them to loot the country’s oil
wealth for so long. The oil wealth is a great deal
less now, but it is still practically Iraq’s only
source of income and they have no intention of
giving it up.
The man who
replaced Maliki, President Haider al-Abadi, is in
relative terms a reformer. He belongs to the same
Dawa Party as Maliki and can’t afford to get too far
out of touch with his power base. Nevertheless,
almost a year ago he promised that he would replace
many of his Cabinet members, drawn from the various
parties in the ruling coalition, with “technocrats”
who would (theoretically) be less likely to steal
the government’s money.
He couldn’t
deliver on his promise, however, because any Cabinet
changes have to be approved by parliament. None of
the parties there were willing to give up their own
Cabinet ministers, and with it their ability to
divert the government’s cash flow into their own
pockets. Three times Abadi’s proposed reforms were
rejected by parliament.
It was
after the last time, in April, that Moqtada al-Sadr,
a populist cleric with a big following among
Baghdad’s multitudinous Shiite poor, ordered the
invasion of the fortified Green Zone. That forced
parliament to approve of five of Abadi’s Cabinet
changes, and more will probably follow.
But
changing the figureheads in the government
ministries will not end the looting of public funds,
which permeates the system from top to bottom.
Indeed, you might say that corruption is the system
in Iraq. Like several other oil-rich countries, Iraq
distributes some of the cash flow to the citizens by
means of paying them to do non-jobs. Most of the
rest is stolen by the 25,000 or so people who hold
senior administrative, political or military
positions, leaving a small amount for public works.
There are 7
million government employees in Iraq — a large
majority of the adult male population — and most of
them do little or no work. Indeed, some of them
don’t even exist, like the “ghost soldiers” whose
pay is collected by their officers. Collectively
they were paid around $4 billion a month, which was
all right when monthly oil income was up around $6
billion.
The oil
revenue is now down to $2 billion a month. The
central bank has been making up the difference from
its reserves, but those are now running out. The
country’s economic crisis is now more urgent and
more dangerous than the military confrontation with
Islamic State, but that does not seem clear to many
of the major players in Iraq’s dysfunctional
political system.
It is so
dysfunctional that little is being done even to
repair the Mosul Dam, which requires constant work
on its foundations if it is not to break and drown
Mosul, four hours downstream, under a 24-meter-high
wave. The wave would be much lower by the time it
would reach Baghdad two days later, but it would
still be big enough to wreck property values for a
long time to come.
All the
talk about the Iraqi army driving Islamic State back
is just hot air. The only Iraqi military advances
have happened under the cover of massive U.S.
airstrikes, and the government’s own attention is
elsewhere. So, increasingly, is that of the
population. But Islamic State is still paying
attention.
Gwynne Dyer is
an independent journalist whose articles are
published in 45 countries. |