vrijdag 3 november 2006
The Empire 39
Terwijl Nederlandse militairen vooral op hun zwaar verdedigde bases in Afganistan zitten te wachten tot ze naar huis kunnen, pakken de grote jongens alweer in. De zaak in het Midden Oosten is verloren, de buit voor de grote concerns is binnen, meer kunnen ze er niet uitpersen. En dat betekent dat binnen afzienbare tijd de oorlog officieel wordt afgeblazen. Misschien een onderwerp voor de op handen zijnde verkiezingen in Nederland? Of gaat het nog steeds om de poppetjes?
'As Bechtel Goes.
By Paul Krugman The New York Times .
Bechtel, the giant engineering company, is leaving Iraq. Its mission - to rebuild power, water and sewage plants - wasn't accomplished: Baghdad received less than six hours a day of electricity last month, and much of Iraq's population lives with untreated sewage and without clean water. But Bechtel, having received $2.3 billion of taxpayers' money and having lost the lives of 52 employees, has come to the end of its last government contract.
As Bechtel goes, so goes the whole reconstruction effort. Whatever our leaders may say about their determination to stay the course complete the mission, when it comes to rebuilding Iraq they've already cut and run. The $21 billion allocated for reconstruction over the last three years has been spent, much of it on security rather than its intended purpose, and there's no more money in the pipeline.
The failure of reconstruction in Iraq raises three questions. First, how much did that failure contribute to the overall failure of the war? Second, how was it that America, the great can-do nation, in this case couldn't and didn't? Finally, if we've given up on rebuilding Iraq, what are our troops dying for?
There's no definitive way to answer the first question. You can make a good case that the invasion of Iraq was doomed no matter what, because we never had enough military manpower to provide security. But the lack of electricity and clean water did a lot to dissipate any initial good will the Iraqis may have felt toward the occupation. And Iraqis are well aware that the billions squandered by American contractors included a lot of Iraqi oil revenue as well as U.S. taxpayers' dollars.
Consider the symbolism of Iraq's new police academy, which Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, has called "the most essential civil security project in the country." It was built at a cost of $75 million by Parsons Corporation, which received a total of about $1 billion for Iraq reconstruction projects. But the academy was so badly built that feces and urine leak from the ceilings in the student barracks.'
Lees verder: http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/110306M.shtml
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