Who's Sordid
Now?
By PAUL KRUGMAN,
September 30, 2003
It's official: the administration that once scorned nation-building
now says that it's engaged in a modern version of the Marshall Plan.
But Iraq isn't postwar Europe, and George W. Bush definitely isn't Harry
Truman. Indeed, while Truman led this country in what Churchill called
the "most unsordid act in history," the stories about
Iraqi reconstruction keep getting more sordid. And the sordidness isn't,
as some would have you believe, a minor blemish on an otherwise noble
enterprise.
Cronyism is an important factor in our Iraqi debacle. It's not just
that reconstruction is much more expensive than it should be. The really
important thing is that cronyism is warping policy: by treating contracts
as prizes to be handed to their friends, administration officials are
delaying Iraq's recovery, with potentially catastrophic consequences.
It's rarely mentioned nowadays, but at the time of the Marshall Plan,
Americans were very concerned about profiteering in the name of patriotism.
To get Congressional approval, Truman had to provide assurances that
the plan would not become a boondoggle. Funds were administered by an
agency independent of the White House, and Marshall promised that priorities
would be determined by Europeans, not Americans.
Fortunately, Truman's assurances were credible. Although he is now honored
for his postwar leadership, Truman initially rose to prominence as a
fierce crusader against war profiteering, which he considered treason.
Iraq's reconstruction, by contrast, remains firmly under White House
control. And this is an administration of, by and for crony capitalists;
to match this White House's blithe lack of concern about conflicts of
interest, you have to go back to the Harding
administration.
That giant, no-bid contract given to Halliburton, the company that made
Dick Cheney rich, was just what you'd expect. And even as the situation
in Iraq slides downhill, and the Iraqi Governing Council demands more
autonomy and control, American officials continue to block local initiatives,
and are still trying to keep the big contracts in the hands of you-know-who.
For example, in July two enterprising Middle Eastern firms started offering
cellphone service in Baghdad, setting up jury-rigged systems compatible
with those of neighboring countries. Since the collapse of Baghdad's
phone system has been a major source of
postwar problems, coalition authorities should have been pleased.
But
no: the authorities promptly shut down the services. Cell service, they
said, could be offered only by the winners in a bidding process "
one whose rules, revealed on July 31, seemed carefully designed to shut
out any non-American companies. (In the face of strenuous protests the
rules were revised, but still seem to favor the usual suspects.) Oddly,
the announcement of the winners,
originally scheduled for Sept. 5, keeps being delayed. Meanwhile, only
Paul Bremer and his people have cellphones " and, thanks to the
baffling decision to give that contract to MCI, even those phones don't
work very well. (Aside from the fact that its management
perpetrated history's biggest accounting fraud, MCI has no experience
in building cell networks.)
Then
there's electricity. One reason Iraq still faces blackouts is that local
experts and institutions were excluded from the repair business. Instead,
the exclusive contract was given to Bechtel, whose Republican ties are
almost as strong as Halliburton's. And if a
recent story in The Washington Post is accurate, Bechtel continues to
ignore pleas by Iraqi engineers for essential spare parts.
Meanwhile,
several companies with close personal ties to top administration officials
have begun brazenly offering their services as facilitators for companies
seeking Iraqi business. The former law firm of Douglas Feith, the Pentagon
under secretary who oversees Iraq reconstruction, has hung out its shingle.
So has another company headed by Joe Allbaugh, who ran the Bush-Cheney
campaign in 2000 and ran FEMA until a few months ago. And a third entrant
is run by Ahmad Chalabi's nephew.
There's
a moral here: optimists who expect the administration to get its Iraq
policy on track are kidding themselves. Think about it: the cost of
the occupation is exploding, and military experts warn that our army
is dangerously overcommitted. Yet officials are still allowing Iraqi
reconstruction to languish, and the disaffection of the Iraqi public
to grow, while they steer choice contracts to their friends. What makes
you think they will ever change their ways?
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