The following is an
August 28 entry from Girlblog, a site run by a very English-fluent
Iraqi woman who is nameless by design.
The Myth: Iraqis, prior to occupation, lived in little beige tents
set up on the sides of little dirt roads all over Baghdad. The men
and boys would ride to school on their camels, donkeys and goats.
These schools were larger versions of the home units and for every
100 students, there was one turban-wearing teacher who taught the
boys rudimentary math (to count the flock) and reading. Girls and
women sat at home, in black burkas, making bread and taking care of
10-12 children.
The Truth: Iraqis lived in houses with running water and electricity.
Thousands of them own computers. Millions own VCRs and VCDs. Iraq
has sophisticated bridges, recreational centers, clubs, restaurants,
shops, universities, schools, etc. Iraqis love fast cars (especially
German cars) and the Tigris is full of little motorboats that are
used for everything from fishing to water-skiing.
I guess what I’m trying to say is that most people choose to ignore
the little prefix ‘re’ in the words ‘rebuild’ and ‘reconstruct’. For
your information, ‘re’ is of Latin origin and generally means ‘again’
or ‘anew’.
In other words, there was something there in the first place. We have
hundreds of bridges. We have one of the most sophisticated network
of highways in the region: you can get from Busrah, in the south,
to Mosul, in the north, without once having to travel upon those little,
dusty, dirt roads they show you on Fox News. We had a communications
system so advanced, it took the Coalition of the Willing three rounds
of bombing, on three separate nights, to damage the Ma’moun Communications
Tower and silence our telephones.
Yesterday, I read how it was going to take up to $90 billion to rebuild
Iraq. Bremer was shooting out numbers about how much it was going
to cost to replace buildings and bridges and electricity, etc.
Listen to this little anecdote. One of my cousins works in a prominent
engineering company in Baghdad – we’ll call the company H. This company
is well known for designing and building bridges all over Iraq. My
cousin, a structural engineer, is a bridge freak. He spends hours
talking about pillars and trusses and steel structures to anyone who’ll
listen.
As May was drawing to a close, his manager told him that someone from
the CPA [Coalition Provisional Authority] wanted the company to estimate
the building costs of replacing the New Diyala Bridge on the South
East end of Baghdad. He got his team together, they went out and assessed
the damage, decided it wasn’t too extensive, but it would be costly.
They did the necessary tests and analyses (mumblings about soil composition
and water depth, expansion joints and girders) and came up with a
number they tentatively put forward: $300,000. This included new plans
and designs, raw materials (quite cheap in Iraq), labor, contractors,
travel expenses, etc.
Let’s pretend my cousin is a dolt. Let’s pretend he hasn’t been working
with bridges for over 17 years. Let’s pretend he didn’t work on replacing
at least 20 of the 133 bridges damaged during the first Gulf War.
Let’s pretend he’s wrong and the cost of rebuilding this bridge is
four times the number they estimated – let’s pretend it will actually
cost $1,200,000. Let’s just use our imagination.
A week later, the New Diyala Bridge contract was given to an American
company. This particular company estimated the cost of rebuilding
the bridge would be around – brace yourselves – $50 million!
Something you should know about Iraq: we have over 130,000 engineers.
More than half of these engineers are structural engineers and architects.
Thousands of them were trained outside of Iraq in Germany, Japan,
America, Britain and other countries. Thousands of others worked with
some of the foreign companies that built various bridges, buildings
and highways in Iraq. The majority of them are more than proficient
- some of them are brilliant.
Iraqi engineers had to rebuild Iraq after the first Gulf War in 1991
when the ‘Coalition of the Willing’ was composed of over 30 countries
actively participating in bombing Baghdad beyond recognition. They
had to cope with rebuilding bridges and buildings that were originally
built by foreign companies, they had to get around a lack of raw materials
that we used to import from abroad, they had to work around a vicious
blockade designed to damage whatever infrastructure was left after
the war – they truly had to rebuild Iraq. And everything had to be
made sturdy, because, well, we were always under the threat of war.
Over a hundred of the 133 bridges were rebuilt, hundreds of buildings
and factories were replaced, communications towers were rebuilt, new
bridges were added, electrical power grids were replaced… things were
functioning. Everything wasn’t perfect – but we were working on it.
And Iraqis aren’t easy to please. Buildings cannot just be made functionary.
They have to have artistic touches - a carved pillar, an intricately
designed dome, something unique… not necessarily classy or subtle,
but different. You can see it all over Baghdad – fashionable homes
with plate glass windows, next to classic old ‘Baghdadi’ buildings,
gaudy restaurants standing next to classy little cafes, mosques with
domes so colorful and detailed they look like glamorous Faberge eggs
– all done by Iraqis.
My favorite reconstruction project was the Mu’alaq Bridge over the
Tigris. It is a suspended bridge that was designed and built by a
British company. In 1991 it was bombed and everyone just about gave
up on ever being able to cross it again. By 1994, it was up again,
exactly as it was – without British companies, with Iraqi expertise.
One of the art schools decided that although it wasn’t the most sophisticated
bridge in the world, it was going to be the most glamorous. On the
day it was opened to the public, it was covered with hundreds of painted
flowers in the most outrageous colors – all over the pillars, the
bridge itself, the walkways along the sides of the bridge. People
came from all over Baghdad just to stand upon it and look down into
the Tigris.
So instead of bringing in thousands of foreign companies that are
going to want billions of dollars, why aren’t the Iraqi engineers,
electricians and laborers being taken advantage of? Thousands of people
who have no work would love to be able to rebuild Iraq… no one is
being given a chance.
The reconstruction of Iraq is held above our heads like a promise
and a threat. People roll their eyes at reconstruction because they
know (Iraqis are wily) that these dubious reconstruction projects
are going to plunge the country into a national debt only comparable
to that of America. A few already rich contractors are going to get
richer, Iraqi workers are going to be given a pittance and the unemployed
Iraqi public can stand on the sidelines and look at the glamorous
buildings being built by foreign companies.
I always say this war is about oil. It is. But it is also about huge
corporations that are going to make billions off of reconstructing
what was damaged during this war. Can you say Halliburton? (Which,
by the way, got the very first contracts to replace the damaged oil
infrastructure and put out ‘oil fires’ way back in April.)
Well, of course it’s going to take uncountable billions to rebuild
Iraq, Mr. Bremer, if the contracts are all given to foreign companies!
Or perhaps the numbers are this frightening because Ahmad Al-Chalabi
is the one doing the books – he is the math expert, after all.
Former
exile and Pentagon favorite Ahmad Al-Chalabi was charged in absentia
for embezzling millions from a bank he operated in Jordan. This entry
of Girlblog was found at: http://riverbendblog.blogspot.com/