US DEPUTY defence secretary and right-wing political hawk Paul Wolfowitz got a taste of Iraqi realities when rockets slammed into the supposedly secure al-Rashid hotel where he stayed in Baghdad last week.
Wolfowitz, the Pentagon’s architect of regime change to remove Saddam Hussein and install a pro-US stooge government in Iraq, is seeing the wheels come off his imperialist project.
Earlier, his visit to Tikrit, Saddam’s home town, was marred by an RPG attack on a US helicopter, countering military spokesman Brigadier General Mark Hetling’s claim that these attacks were “not synchronised” and “not very professional”.
Further evidence of coordinated strikes came on 27 October when 34 people were killed and 224 wounded in attacks on the International Committee of the Red Cross’s HQ and four police stations.
Whether these attacks flow from “rogue Baathist elements” or “al-Qa’ida terrorists” or from a myriad of Iraqi opponents, the effect undermined the US/UK coalition forces’ attempts to pacify Iraq and open up the oil economy and industry to multinationals’ control.
Moreover, as the death toll of US soldiers mounts (now 112), and the failure to find weapons of mass destruction (WMD), public support for warmongers Bush and Blair is rapidly eroding.
Approval of Bush’s handling of Iraq slumped from 64% in April to 49% early in October according to a USA Today/CNN/Gallop Poll. Blair too suffered a slump in popularity with a 64% disapproval rating following the WMD fiasco, according to the Financial Times in mid-September.
Profiteering
Neither Bush nor Blair will be helped by the Washington Post’s evidence that Saddam abandoned his nuclear weapons plans after the first Gulf War in 1991. This follows last month’s Iraq Survey Team’s report that failed to find evidence of WMD in Iraq after months of searching.
The public cost of funding the occupation and of Iraqi reconstruction is also creating much public anger especially when seen alongside the underfunding of health, the imposition of tuition fees, etc.
Moreover, the profiteering from public contracts awarded by US companies involved in Iraqi reconstruction outrages people. Kellogg, Brown and Root, a subsidiary of Halliburton (the multinational which Vice-President Dick Cheney served as chief executive) asked its employees to write to newspapers defending its billion dollar contracts.
It has also emerged that Halliburton charged the occupation authority $1.59 a gallon for imported petrol – vastly more expensive than domestic Iraq petrol – and costing $300 million.
From The Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party, cwi in England and Wales
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