by Rahul Mahajan and Robert Jensen
When politicians feel compelled to label a policy
"smart," there's a good chance it isn't. Such is the case with
the new proposal for "smart sanctions" on Iraq.
In July the U.N. Security Council
extended the existing oil-for-food program in Iraq for another 150 days,
which postponed the fight over the
smart-sanctions plan proposed by the British and United States. The
threat of a Russian veto stopped the smart-sanctions proposal this
time, but in the coming months, it's crucial for
the American people to pressure the Bush administration to abandon this
latest ruse and allow economic sanctions to be lifted.
The problem with smart sanctions is that they likely will
have the same effect on the Iraqi people as smart bombs did during the
Gulf War. No matter whether the weapons are dumb or smart, the targets --
the Iraqi people -- will continue to die.
The economic embargo, allegedly placed
on Iraq to force compliance with U.N. resolutions about weapons of mass
destruction, have killed more than 1 million
civilians over the past decade, according to United Nation's figures. Most
of the world wants to lift the cruel siege, but the United
States insists on keeping the screws on the Iraqi people.
The latest turn of the screw is the U.K./U.S. proposal for
"new-and-improved" sanctions, which Bush administration
officials disingenuously suggest will alleviate the suffering of ordinary
Iraqis. But instead of allowing Iraq to recover from the one-two punch of
war and siege that have devastated the economy, the plan would keep the
country subjugated indefinitely under a kind of U.N. trusteeship.
Under the current system, all imports are prohibited
unless specifically approved by the U.N. Sanctions Committee. The proposal
calls for automatic approval of imports except for a 23-page listed of
banned or suspect items that includes almost all computer and
telecommunications equipment, as well as other necessary civilian items
which may have potential military uses.
This likely will allow more goods in, but the shortage of
food, medicine and other goods is only part of the problem. The plan will
not stimulate the local economy or allow the foreign investment needed to
reconstruct Iraq's industrial base. More food in the country is
meaningless if ordinary Iraqis can't afford it, and until the economy is
rebuilt their purchasing power will not increase.
Smart sanctions have the same motivation as the 1991 Gulf
War and the dumb sanctions of the past decade -- not primarily to contain
Iraqi military aggression (even Dick Cheney has admitted that Iraq poses
no substantial military threat to its neighbors) but to maintain control
over the Middle East. Keeping Iraq a pariah state provides an excuse for a
permanent land-based U.S. military presence in Saudi Arabia and
neighboring countries.
But recent developments are starting to
undermine U.S. control. The shelving of the smart-sanctions plan, despite
tremendous diplomatic pressure from the United States (including an
arrangement in which the United States released $80 million in "holds" on
Chinese contracts with Iraqin return for Chinese cooperation), signals a
changing landscape. France and Russia have long bristled at U.S. policy,
and now Russia has put forth its own plan that
could lead to the total suspension of sanctions.
Iraq's traditional trading partners are
tired of bearing the economic costs of the
sanctions regime, and the resurgence of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
also has played a part, forcing the elites who rule the Arab
world to take stronger stances against the U.S.-dominated status
quo in the region.
The new U.K./U.S. proposal is not the result of
humanitarian concerns, but an attempt by the Bush administration to shore
up U.S. power in the face of these challenges. Serious concerns about
peace and democracy in the region suggest another path.
Iraq needs to be able to resume normal economic, political
and social life. The current system that sends Iraqi oil proceeds to a
U.N.-administered account -- a feature retained in the new proposal -- has
meant a collapse of the local economy; the Iraqi government is not even
allowed to use the money to buy local goods and services.
The sanctions have made it impossible to maintain anything
beyond minimal educational, health, and social services. Families are at
the mercy of unscrupulous profiteers. Women, who bear the brunt of the
costs in enforced impoverishment, have been disempowered. Iraq is the
only country in the world where literacy decreased in the past 10 years.
There has been an explosion in crime that would have been unthinkable
before. Iraqis have changed from a generally pro-Western orientation to a
violently anti-Western one.
The only way to change this is to put real control of Iraq
back in Iraqi hands. This will make the government and Saddam Hussein more
accountable to the people for economic policy, and not allow it to blame
the West for problems.
Iraq won't democratize tomorrow if it is freed today, but
continuing the sanctions regime will only continue to delay that process.
Mahajan is a doctoral candidate
in physics and Jensen is a professor of journalism at the University of
Texas at Austin. Both are members of the coordinating committee of the
National Network to End the War Against Iraq.
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