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The day of blood and elections has passed, and the blaring trumpets of corporate
media hailing it as a successful show of “democracy” have subsided
to a dull roar.
After a day which left 50 people dead in Iraq, both civilians and soldiers,
the death toll was hailed as a figure that was “lower than expected.”
Thus... acceptable, by Bush Administration/corporate media standards. After
all, only of them was an American, the rest were Iraqis civilians and British
soldiers.
The gamble of using the polling day in Iraq to justify the ongoing failed occupation
of Iraq has apparently paid off, if you watch only mainstream media.
“Higher than expected turnout,” US mainstream television media
blared, some citing a figure of 72%, others 60%.
What they didn’t tell you was that this figure was provided by Farid
Ayar, the spokesman for the Independent Electoral Commission for Iraq (IECI)
before the polls had even closed.
When asked about the accuracy of the estimate of voter turnout during a press
conference, Ayar backtracked on his earlier figure, saying that a closer estimate
was lower than his initial estimate and would be more like 60% of registered
voters.
The IECI spokesman said his previous figure of 72% was “only guessing”
and “was just an estimate,” which was based on “very rough,
word-of mouth estimates gathered informally from the field. It will take some
time for the IECI to issue accurate figures on turnout.”
Referencing both figures, Ayar then added,
“Percentages and numbers come only after counting and will be announced
when it's over ... It's too soon to say that those were the official numbers.”
But this isn’t the most important misrepresentation the mainstream media
committed.
What they also didn’t tell you was that of those who voted, whether they
be 35% or even 60% of registered voters, were not voting in support of an ongoing
US occupation of their country.
In fact, they were voting for precisely the opposite reason. Every Iraqi I
have spoken with who voted explained that they believe the National Assembly
which will be formed soon will signal an end to the occupation.
And they expect the call for a withdrawing of foreign forces in their country
to come sooner rather than later.
This causes one to view the footage of cheering, jubilant Iraqis in a different
light now, doesn’t it?
But then, most folks in the US watching CNN, FOX, or any of the major networks
won’t see it that way. Instead, they will hear what Mr. Bush said, “The
world is hearing the voice of freedom from the center of the Middle East,”
and take it as fact because most of the major media outlets aren’t scratching
beneath film clips of joyous Iraqi voters over here in the land of daily chaos
and violence, no jobs, no electricity, little running water and no gasoline
(for the Iraqis anyhow).
And Bush is portrayed by the media as the bringer of democracy to Iraq by the
simple fact that this so-called election took place, botched as it may have
been. Appearances suggest that the majority Shia in Iraq now finally get their
proportional representation in a “government.” Looks good on paper.
But as you continue reading, the seemingly altruistic reasons for this election
as portrayed by the Bush Administration and trumpeted by most mainstream media
are anything but.
And Iraqis who voted are hearing other trumpets that are blaring an end to
the occupation.
Now the question remains, what happens when the National Assembly is formed
and over 100,000 US soldiers remain on the ground in Iraq with the Bush Administration
continuing in its refusal to provide a timetable for their removal?
What happens when Iraqis see that while there are already four permanent US
military bases in their country, rather than beginning to disassemble them,
more bases are being constructed, as they are, by Cheney’s old company
Halliburton, right now?
Antonia Juhasz, a Foreign Policy in Focus scholar, authored a piece just before
the “election” that sheds light on a topic that has lost attention
amidst the recent fanfare concerning the polls in Iraq.
Oil.
I think it’s worth including much of her story here, as it fits well
with today’s topic of things most folks aren’t being told by the
bringers of democracy to the heart of the Middle East.
On Dec. 22, 2004, Iraqi Finance Minister Abdel Mahdi told a handful of reporters
and industry insiders at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. that Iraq
wants to issue a new oil law that would open Iraq's national oil company to
private foreign investment. As Mahdi explained: "So I think this is very
promising to the American investors and to American enterprise, certainly to
oil companies." In other words, Mahdi is proposing to privatize Iraq's
oil and put it into American corporate hands. According to the finance minister,
foreigners would gain access both to "downstream" and "maybe
even upstream" oil investment. This means foreigners can sell Iraqi oil
and own it under the ground ? the very thing for which many argue the U.S. went
to war in the first place.
As Vice President Dick Cheney's Defense Policy Guidance report explained back
in 1992, "Our overall objective is to remain the predominant outside power
in the [Middle East] region and preserve U.S. and Western access to the region's
oil."
While few in the American media other than Emad Mckay of Inter Press Service
reported on ? or even attended ? Mahdi’s press conference, the announcement
was made with U.S. Undersecretary of State Alan Larson at Mahdi's side. It was
intended to send a message ? but to whom? It turns out that Abdel Mahdi is running
in the Jan. 30 elections on the ticket of the Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution (SCIR), the leading Shiite political party. While announcing the
selling-off of the resource which provides 95 percent of all Iraqi revenue may
not garner Mahdi many Iraqi votes, but it will unquestionably win him tremendous
support from the U.S. government and U.S. corporations. Mahdi's SCIR is far
and away the front-runner in the upcoming elections, particularly as it becomes
increasingly less possible for Sunnis to vote because the regions where they
live are spiraling into deadly chaos. If Bush were to suggest to Iraq’s
Interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi that elections should be called off, Mahdi
and the SCIR's ultimate chances of victory will likely decline./
I’ll add that the list of political parties Mahdi’s SCIR belongs
to, The United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), includes the Iraqi National Council, which
is led by an old friend of the Bush Administration who provided the faulty information
they needed to justify the illegal invasion of Iraq, none other than Ahmed Chalabi.
It should also be noted that interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi also fed the
Bush Administration cooked information used to justify the invasion, but he
heads a different Shia list which will most likely be getting nearly as many
votes as the UIA list.
And The UIA has the blessing of Iranian born revered Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah
Ali al-Sistani. Sistani issued a fatwa which instructed his huge number of followers
to vote in the election, or they would risk going to hell.
Thus, one might argue that the Bush administration has made a deal with the
SCIR: Iraq's oil for guaranteed political power. The Americans are able to put
forward such a bargain because Bush still holds the strings in Iraq. Regardless
of what happens in the elections, for at least the next year during which the
newly elected National Assembly writes a constitution and Iraqis vote for a
new government, the Bush administration is going to control the largest pot
of money available in Iraq (the $24 billion in U.S. taxpayer money allocated
for the reconstruction), the largest military and the rules governing Iraq's
economy. Both the money and the rules will, in turn, be overseen by U.S.-appointed
auditors and inspector generals who sit in every Iraqi ministry with five-year
terms and sweeping authority over contracts and regulations. However, the one
thing which the administration has not been unable to confer upon itself is
guaranteed access to Iraqi oil ? that is, until now.
And there is so much more they are not telling you. Just like the Iraqis who
voted, believing they did so to bring an end to the occupation of their country.