Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Iraq: The Lights Have Gone Out, Who Cares
BAQUBA - Lack of electricity in Baquba has shattered businesses, and the lives of families. Months of power failures has darkened morale everywhere.In Diyala province, just north of Baghdad, a generation has grown up in dark. The province, and its capital Baquba 40 km north of Baghdad has lived with intermittent electricity supply since the times of the sanctions under Saddam Hussein in the 1990s. Came the U.S. in 2003, and everyone thought it would get better.
"I felt happy when the U.S. invaded Iraq because I thought the electricity problem will be solved, and we would have it all the time like other countries," Abdul-Kareem Hasan, a trader in Baquba told IPS.
But promises of reconstruction by western contractors proved empty, and there is now less electricity than during the sanctions.
In some cities, homes get electricity just an hour or two a day. Sometimes, there is no electricity for a week. People struggle to get alternative source of electricity.
"Big generators are operated privately for distributing electricity to people," resident Nihad al-Alwan told IPS. "This process implies that a person purchases a generator of certain capacity and gives outlets to people. Each family takes what they need."
In Baghdad, that can mean a high bill for electricity in addition to paying for scarce and costly food. In many homes the entire income cannot cover the cost of electricity needs.
The failure has fed anger with the government. "If the government were serious about fixing electricity, they could do it easily," said Abdullah Jumeel, a local employee.
Businesses are down. "We need electricity to operate the machines, and sometimes we go back home without doing anything," blacksmith Jabar Ameen told IPS. "If there is no electricity, there is no work -- and no money."
Only those who can pay for big generators can operate their factories or keep shops open. But most businesses have shut shop. "As a result, the number of jobs has become more limited, adding to extreme unemployment," said 51-year-old resident Majeed Kamil.
Unemployment across Iraq has officially been said to range between 60-70 percent over the last months.
Compounding the problem is the rising cost of fuel.
"We can have simple generators that can be sufficient for the main necessities, but fuel is too expensive," says resident Radhi Kadhim. "Fifteen litres of petrol may be priced 12-15 dollars, or sometimes up to 25 dollars. This can operate the generator for just one or two days. It is futile."
Beyond numbers and hours, the stoppage of electricity seems to have made people jumpy and bitter. And it brings little reassurance to hear the sound of generators at night in other people's homes.
The winter has been hard without electricity. "We use wood fire to warm up the houses," resident Safa al-Hamdani said. "Electric heaters have become useless. So now we use a metal container, say 50cm by 20cm and burn wood in it. We have abandoned the world of modern technology."
"I dream of waking up and having a hot shower," said a local resident. "But I am now exhausted complaining about lack of electricity. I'm sure nobody can bear living in Iraq. It's a country in the stone ages."
The worst of the suffering comes in summer, when temperatures can reach 55 C.
"When a family has a new-born baby, the members of the family may spend all night waving pieces of paper over the child to get the baby to sleep," Safiya Hadi, a nurse at the general hospital in Baquba told IPS. "This may continue the whole night."
It is not easy for an adult to sleep either. "Sometimes we sleep just one or two hours in the night because of no electricity," Adil Mahdi, a carpenter, told IPS. "When we go to work in the morning, we can hardly move or think."
It is much harder for infants and children, he says. "Adults can still bear the summer heat, but babies can not. We just pity them. Both the Saddam government and the current government have been unjust, leaving people to suffer like this from lack of electricity."
After a hard winter, everyone is waiting for a harder summer.
Ahmed, our correspondent in Iraq's Diyala province, works in close collaboration with Dahr Jamail, our U.S.-based specialist writer on Iraq who has reported extensively from Iraq and the Middle East
© 2008 Inter Press Service



42 Comments so far
Show AllThere has got to be someone in Iraq with money and without connections to oil. OK, here is a plan.
1. Start purchasing solar panels -- doesn't the sun shine quite a bit in Iraq?
2. Use the panels to charge batteries.
3. Connect the batteries to an inverter to provide reliable electricity.
Off the grid electricity could be obtained this way and it could be very small-scale and relatively easy to keep protected. Plus, it would be alternative energy totally indepedent of f***** oil.
Ken
"They will greet US as liberators. US is going to reconstruct Iraq."
Liberated and reconstructed into slavery in poverty.
buffalo ken,
Ther is a serious disconnect here...
We are talking about deperately poor people, they would hardly be able to afford enough solar panels and batteries to run electric heaters in winter, or fans or an AC in summer.
PJD - All I'm saying is the "centralized" solutions are not working. They are vulnerable and corruptable. Plus, anything coming from the US is so stained.
For about $5,000 I think I could setup a system that would enable neighborhoods to have a small-scale reliable source of power. Then when a women had a baby, there would be a way to help keep the child cool.
Yes, it would require communities to have some collective self-interest and not be dominated by some sort of warlord. Yes, these neighborhoods would have to share and prioritize what the electricity gets used for.
Yes, I recognize that the whole country is in shambles by virtue of this shameful occupation, and even small-scale ideas like this are an incredible challenge to implement. But this is an alternative nonetheless and what is happening now is not working. Some better ideas are called for as well as some better humanity. The leadership will not be coming from US, but perhaps there are some within Iraq who are capable of slowly but surely restoring order.
In the end, I think the US must pay reparations.
Peace,
Ken
let me see. we have imposed these conditions with violence. the arabs have responded in kind. we call the arabs extremists. i just don't get it; i must be one of those gullible types which the right wing talks about.
The sad thing is I understand (as best I can) how hard it is in this shallow day and age for People to work together for the benefit of the community. I understand that any idea involving investment when folks are in such dire straits is potentially foolish and subject to failure. I understand that I know nothing really about what it is like to be in Iraq.
It is just so frustrating to hear about all of this suffering and to know that the primary cause is the actions of the leadership in the country I live in. It is even more frustrating that like this article says: "Who Cares".
kloro - me too.
Solar powered lights and ammonia refrigerators? Might be good for us too.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absorption_refrigerator
First get the american out, all the american, private company included-2 have a grassroot coop set up to provide for the basic, in this case, electricity(solar panels is a great idea). after how many years now this us gov. has failed. In any private company, bush would have lost his job a long time ago. get any other ngo to work things out, they'll do better than those idiot military. I am glad the Berkeley supervisor wanted to kik the military asses recruters out of their city.
Just as the failure to aid recovery in New Orleans was a manifestation of Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine," the failure to restore the infrastructure in Iraq is a deliberate attempt to continue the chaos resulting from the initial "Shock and Awe" campaign.
The idea is to keep the populace in such a miserable state of panic and despond that the commons belonging to the people as a whole can be looted.
In Iraq's case that means mainly the petroleum resources. And if all the corporate looters want is the oil, why, they ask, should we waste any resources rebuilding Iraqi infrastructure?
The current situation was set up by L. Paul Bremer at the behest of his hidden masters. Whoever they may be.
In Iraq there is only kind of place with lights, electricity, air conditioning, swimming pools. While the subjugated masses suffer in squalor, the people who are designated as their oppressors bath in luxury in the green zone fortresses. There, after a hard shift of bombing, patrolling, shooting, torturing or profiteering, the average contractor or mercenary can relax in comfort and get a cool good sleep. The solution of course is for the US of I to generously connect the state of the art power supplies of the Fortresses to the electricity grid supplying the Iraqi population. Better still , have all the foreigners move out of the country, and let the Iraqi people live in the first world luxurious fortresses.
I really like buffalo_ken's solar panel plan, but it would run into two problems. It would run into the opposition of the oil companies, which don't want any demonstrations of effective solar power. It would also fail so long as the current lawlessness reigns. Solar power panels are expensive things that could easily stolen...and shipped back to the US for sale to wealthy, Republican California suburbs.
Perhaps the US government could help the Iraqis out by awarding no-bid contracts to Halliburton for mass distribution of defective candles made by prisoners in China, offered at a 1000% markup.
as cheney said, this is "a war that will not end in our lifetimes." sadly, the iraqis being held hostage to this concept are not large consumers of energy. cheney and bush want said energy to be consumed by consumers of vast amounts of energy. this is directly related to cash flow (into back pockets). to stave off the effects of peak oil we will see a reduction in the world's population thru a variety of means. a complex issue, but sadistically simple in its enactment.
After reading about this storied catastrophe, who is going to be responsible for the financial reconstruction of Iraq? Me, my children and grandchildren. NoWay! It would be better that those who've gained the most from this illegal endeavor of stealing oil, should be the benefactors of the Iraqi reconstruction.
Proceeds from the dismantlment of Exxon, Halliburton, etc. should be used to pay.
Buffalo Ken:
There is something seriously wrong with your comment. Someone else already called it a disconnect. To give advise to your victim about how best to endure your torture is callous and inhuman. Since you are likeyl ot callous or inhuman I assume you feel you are not responsible for the plight of Iraqis. If you really feel innocent, good for you. If you are american and you sound like you are, then I don't know how you can. Take Buffalo Bill, for example. Do you remember being told that the Indians were repeatedly betrayed, robbed, murdered, and humiliated, along with the stories of frontier heroes? Not me. We are guilty as a collectivity. So, only some people strung up "niggers", but shouldn't the country as a whole make up for that? Buddy, don't ask the Iraqis to buy solar panels, buy them for them, and apologize as well, for your country and for yourself as a member of that country. You owe them a lot more than solar panels, by the way.
Incidentally, Mr.Buffalo Ken, your suggestions are not really welcome. Neither is your presence. Americans should suggest nothing. They should get out and shut up for a long time. Well meaning as you seem to be, you are playing God again. Just go home!
It is not the leadership that is responsible. the world doesn't say America's leadership has no class, it says AMERICANS HAVE NO CLASS. The world says Americans are aggresive. Americans love war. Americans are shallow. Ameicans are imperialist. Americans have a savage history. Americans are nouveau riche. Americans have no culture. Americans are stupid. Americans are unaware of the rest of the world. Americans are incredibly fat. WAKE UP! It isn't our leaders. It isn't the corporations. IT'S US!
Jeepers lizard, take it easy why don't ya. I know there is a lot to be pissed about, and I can see from your comments today that you are in a particularly foul mood, but don't lash out at me. I think I share much of your sentiment regarding the sorry state of affairs. I am not the enemy unless you've decided that everyone is the enemy, in which case, you are just being your own enemy.
Anyhow, let me clarify:
1. The solar panel idea was simply trying to throw a suggestion out there. Haven't any of you folks brainstormed before? It works when individuals try to improve upon various ideas instead of constantly pointing out flaws. I recognize that the vast majority of Iraqi citizens simply have no means to purchase or acquire panels on their own, but if funds were somehow made available (from whatever source), in certain situations, this might be a possible option. This was a suggestion made more out of frustration than anything and perhaps I intended there to be some irony given that Iraq is sitting on considerable reserves of oil, but obviously this was missed.
2. In my opinion, the US of A is directly responsible for the ongoing suffering of the Iraqi citizens and general disorder within the country, and therefore, the US of A is responsible for reparations. In an ideal and fair world (which obviously is not what we live in), those who have profited from the war ought be the first ones to PAY for said reparations.
3. In my opinion, the sooner the US departs Iraq in all ways, the better. The better for them and for us.
Ken
Its time to go to bed, but let me add this. When someone uses flawed logic and/or poorly communicates an idea, feedback to this effect is necessary and helpful, but personal attacks and outright lack of civility serve only to diminish the quality of the discussion. Lately it seems this lack of civility has risen to a new level here at CD, which is a shame. I know it takes away any incentive I have to participate, and I'm sure the same is true for many others.
For those who are full of anger, perhaps a walk in the park would do you some good.
Goodnight.
It isn't anger. It is what the world says. I am just telling you what they say. And it happens to be true. I said you are well meaning didn't I? But we shouldn't be talking solar panels when a million people have been killed in Iraq and the rest are living in the stone age. It isn't you I,m criticizing, I said US. Me too. I feel responsible.
When I say your suggestions are not welcome, I mean by Iraqis. When I say neither is your presence, I mean Americans in Iraq. Perhaps I was unclear, but it was not as personal as you seem to think. Iraq is deadly serious business. Much,much,much more serious than your comment seemed to acknowledge. That is what I am trying to convey as a message.
Operation Iraqi Freedom - ????
Give them democracy - ????
Freedom and democracy = war, 1 million Iraqi deaths, infrastructure totally destroyed, militias controlling the country, torture and abuse by coalition troops.
"They hate us because of what we are" - now, I understand that sentiment, particularly when you look at what we have caused.
I was against the war, but to pull out now would only result in a civil war. We have a duty to reconstruct the country which we have destroyed, without any pre-conditions or demands for Iraqi oil.
We attacked Iraq, so let us pick up the tab, and try to regain a bit of dignity, because the rest of the World knows us for what we are.
The occupation is robbing poor innocent children of their childhood for nearly five years, and all people in this forum can say is solar panels! Anyway these are brown skinned muslim children I guess they don't matter.
When is the United States going to be finished inflicting pain on Iraq? When?
kalia, perhaps you didn't read buffalo ken's 11:28pm post, item #1. or item #2. and finally, item #3. i think it does matter to many people, regardless of the color of skin. that is clearly evident by many of the posts that appear on this site on a very regular basis. unfortunately, for the ones it should matter most to (the oil people), it matters least. it is indeed a catch-22, for we are all consumers, like it or not.
andyuk, based on the few reliable reports we get anymore re: iraq, i'm quite certain there's been a civil war ongoing for some time now. it's no longer a question of if or when it might start. besides, we're not leaving there until the oil is gone. period. we do indeed have a moral obligation to repair what we've destroyed. but look at the history of the usa. certainly we fixed things for the native americans. for new orleans. for those caught in the enron debacle. for... anyhow, it's unamerican to fix what we should. the rich kid of world culture has not the ability nor the inclination to do otherwise.
Lino: I think that it is right on the verge of civil war, an exaggerated form of the sectarian violence which was present in Northern Ireland.
It is quite right for people to mention OIL, because that and regional power, was what it was all about.
It doesn't surprise me at all, that there are Muslims who want to commit acts of terror against us.
article about Iraq oil law on atimes.com this a.m.
The plan I am sending you has been approved by many prominent thinkers and
activists in the field. Which includes: Benjamin Ferencz, Chief Prosecutor
at the Nuremburg Trials, Ken Livingstone-Mayor of London,
Bishop Thomas Gumbleton of Detroit, Tom Hayden, Richard Falk, Matthew Rothschild, Anthony Arnove, Danny Schecter, Tony Benn- Former Member of the British parliament ,Reggie Rivers,Frida Berrigan,
Robert Jensen, Andrew Bard Schmookler, Burhan Al-Chalabi and others.
I formulated this plan in September 2004, based on a comprehensive
study of the issues. For my plan to be successful it must be implemented
with all seven points beginning to happen within a very short period of
time.
I have run up against a wall of doubt about my plan due to its
rational nature ,and due to its adherence to placing the blame on the
invaders, and then trying to formulate a process of extrication which would
put all entities in this conflict face to face, to begin to finally solve
the dilemmas that exist.
If you read my plan you will see that it is guided by a reasonable
and practical compromise that could end this war and alleviate the
internecine civil violence that is confronting Iraq at this juncture in its
history.
I am making a plea for my plan to be put into action on a wide-scale.
I need you to circulate it and use all the persuasion you have to bring it
to the attention of those in power.
Just reading my plan and sending off an e-mail to me that you received
it will not be enough.
This war must end-we who oppose it can do this by using my plan.
We must fight the power and end the killing.
If you would like to view some comments and criticism about my plan
I direct you to my blog: sevenpointman
Thank you my dear friend,
Howard Roberts
A Seven-point plan for an Exit Strategy in Iraq
1) A timetable for the complete withdrawal of American and British forces
must be announced.
I envision the following procedure, but suitable fine-tuning can be
applied by all the people involved.
A) A ceasefire should be offered by the Occupying side to
representatives of the Sunni insurgency and the Shiite and Kurdish communities. These
representatives would be guaranteed safe passage, to any meetings. The
individual insurgency groups and communities would designate who would attend.
At this meeting a written document declaring a one-month ceasefire,
witnessed by a United Nations authority, will be fashioned and eventually
signed. This document will be released in full, to all Iraqi newspapers, the
foreign press, and the Internet.
( The inclusion of Kurdish communities in this sub-section was added in early September 2006-
as an attempt to define the goals of parity and fairness and to avoid any sectarian splitting
of Iraq.)
B) US and British command will make public its withdrawal, within
sixth-months of 80 % of their troops.
C) Every month, a team of United Nations observers will verify the
effectiveness of the ceasefire.
All incidences on both sides will be reported.
D) Combined representative armed forces of both the Occupying
nations and the insurgency organizations and major community factions. that agreed to the cease fire will
protect the Iraqi people from actions by terrorist cells.
E) Combined representative armed forces from both the Occupying
nations and the insurgency organizations/community factions will begin creating a new military
and police force. Those who served, without extenuating circumstances, in
the previous Iraqi military or police, will be given the first option to
serve.
F) After the second month of the ceasefire, and thereafter, in
increments of 10-20% ,a total of 80% will be withdrawn, to enclaves in Qatar
and Bahrain. The governments of these countries will work out a temporary
land-lease housing arrangement for these troops. During the time the troops
will be in these countries they will not stand down, and can be re-activated
in the theater, if the chain of the command still in Iraq, the newly
formed Iraqi military, the leaders of the insurgency/community factions, and two international
ombudsman (one from the Arab League, one from the United Nations), as a
majority, deem it necessary.
G) One-half of those troops in enclaves will leave three-months after they
arrive, for the United States or other locations, not including Iraq.
H) The other half of the troops in enclaves will leave after
six-months.
I) The remaining 20 % of the Occupying troops will, during this six
month interval, be used as peace-keepers, and will work with all the
designated organizations, to aid in reconstruction and nation-building.
J) After four months they will be moved to enclaves in the above
mentioned countries.
They will remain, still active, for two month, until their return to
the States, Britain and the other involved nations.
2) At the beginning of this period the United States will file a letter with
the Secretary General of the Security Council of the United Nations, making
null and void all written and proscribed orders by the CPA, under R. Paul
Bremer. This will be announced and duly noted.
3) At the beginning of this period all contracts signed by foreign countries
will be considered in abeyance until a system of fair bidding, by both
Iraqi and foreign countries, will be implemented ,by an interim Productivity
and Investment Board, chosen from pertinent sectors of the Iraqi economy.
Local representatives of the 18 provinces of Iraq will put this board
together, in local elections.
4) At the beginning of this period, the United Nations will declare that
Iraq is a sovereign state again, and will be forming a Union of 18
autonomous regions. Each region will, with the help of international
experts, and local bureaucrats, do a census as a first step toward the
creation of a municipal government for all 18 provinces. After the census, a
voting roll will be completed. Any group that gets a list of 15% of the
names on this census will be able to nominate a slate of representatives.
When all the parties have chosen their slates, a period of one-month will be
allowed for campaigning.
Then in a popular election the group with the most votes will represent that
province.
When the voters choose a slate, they will also be asked to choose five
individual members of any of the slates.
The individuals who have the five highest vote counts will represent a
National government.
This whole process, in every province, will be watched by international
observers as well as the local bureaucrats.
During this process of local elections, a central governing board, made up
of United Nations, election governing experts, insurgency organizations, US
and British peacekeepers, and Arab league representatives, will assume the
temporary duties of administering Baghdad, and the central duties of
governing.
When the ninety representatives are elected they will assume the legislative
duties of Iraq for two years.
Within three months the parties that have at least 15% of the
representatives will nominate candidates for President and Prime Minister.
A national wide election for these offices will be held within three months
from their nomination.
The President and the Vice President and the Prime Minister will choose
their cabinet, after the election.
5) All debts accrued by Iraq will be rescheduled to begin payment, on the
principal after one year, and on the interest after two years. If Iraq is
able to handle another loan during this period she should be given a grace
period of two years, from the taking of the loan, to comply with any
structural adjustments.
6) The United States and the United Kingdom shall pay Iraq reparations for
its invasion in the total of 120 billion dollars over a period of twenty
years for damages to its infrastructure. This money can be defrayed as
investment, if the return does not exceed 6.5 %.
7) During the interim period all those accused of crimes against the Iraqi people,
or against international law will be given access to a fair trial.
The extent of the implications of the international nature of the crime, and the
security standards which exist in Iraq will dictate the place of the trial, and its subsequent procedures.
All defendants will have the right to present any evidence they want, and to
choose freely their own lawyers.
If they are found guilty they will be given all necessary appeals provided for by the jurisdiction
of their trials, and will be sentenced in Iraq, after all these appeals are exhausted.
If they are found not guilty they will be released and given protection under international law,
with the strict adherence to these laws by the judicial organs of a sovereign Iraq.
This is a fine plan, but one which will only be carried out in a "perfect World". Do you really expect the US to abandon it's huge new embassy, and it's gigantic air base city in Iraq? What will happen, when the majority of the regions show their alliegance to Iran? What about the OIL?
Why should the compensation be restricted to just the US and UK, and not all the countries who went willingly along with this venture?
I would love to see the main architects of the Iraq war tried and convicted, but are we really in "cloud cuckoo land" here? If I thought that Bush, Blair, Rumsfeld, Cheney, Wolfowitz, Rove, I could go on, but what is the point, if I thought that these EVIL people could face retribution, then I could retire a happy man.
This would be the single most important thing, that we in the West could do, to show the rest of the World, that we can admit to error and pay the price.
THE INTENT IS GENOCIDE
STOP EVEN PRETENDING THAT "WE" ARE THERE TO "HELP"
sevenpointman, run for office. you'd be part of a landslide.
only one thing, as andyuk mentions, WHAT ABOUT THE GODDAMN OIL????????????????????
go sit under a shade tree, think about it a bit, and bring us a new plan.
OLD RASCAL IS RIGHT. THIS IS GENOCIDE. AS FOR LIZARD, I'D LIKE TO KNOW WHERE YOU LIVE THAT YOU THINK YOU CAN DISREGARD THE OPINIONS OF CITIZENS OF THE USA HERE.
Let them eat candles.
Let them eat candles?
Let them eat Kansas. We owe them a few 'red' states.
You all, everyone, sound like good Americans wishing we civilians could make things right for the Iraqi people! I join you in that, but at the same time I know if any of us showed up with money and goods the Iraqi citizen would distrust us, and rightly so! From what I read about the situation over there (Dahr Jamail's "Beyond the Green Zone") and (Robert Parry's "Neck Deep") even the very young children shake their fists at U.S. soldiers and declare, "We'll hate America forever!" so we should get the hell out of there and give money and building materials to a country the Iraqis will trust to rebuild their infrastructure! God Help America! The Middle East, all of it, is a big place and we are now outlaws there! Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and all the other Stans - rich in oil - all of them - and they all hate USA because we want their oil and willingly kill to get it!
Privitization of Iraqi oil = Theft of Iraqi resources. A solution would be to give the Iraqis back thier resources and leave them alone. They are quite capable of managing thier own affairs. This is genocide.
"Iraq: The Lights Have Gone Out, Who Cares"...
We'll 'care a lot' when its California...again!
[Did Enron set-up shop in newly-'privatized' Iraq like Halliburton moved to Dubai?]
California is a total rip-off and to think it use to be a beautiful place.
Well, at least the surge is working, so they say. But let's give the coalition credit. They went into Iraq on fabricated Intell.,bombed the country into rubble, found no WMDs, were not greeted with roses, has not won the hearts & minds of the people, murdered more Iraqis in less than 5 years than Saddam Hussein ever did, there less food, bad water, less medicine, and less gasoline & higher prices than were the case under Saddam Hussein. Oh, did I mention the death of nearly 4,000 soldiers. Then there is a bankrupted
USA as a result. By the way, if the occupation was causing 1500 death per week and the so-called surge reduced it to 750 per week, that's good and the surge paid off they claim. But hold on, there were no deaths (at least not paid for with my taxes) before that illegal invasion.
Meanwhile, the Iraqi people suffer, the US ambassador and others sit in their rooms with electricity in that 104 acre embassy with ample food, clean water, working sewer system, recreation and the whole works.
Buffalo Ken was talking about solutions to these people's problems not self-flagellation or having someone scream about how fat and stupid Americans are. Who cares? Not all Americans are that way. Most of us hate this war, and feel helpless to stop this mess.
I have heard of solar panels being taken to very remote areas and used to power small villages. I have seen this in the Philippines, and I have heard of it in remote India and Nepal. If some well-meaning private citizens or some NGO that did not appear American went in and rigged some solar panels, people could go back to work. If the economy is going, sometimes the unrest begins to die down. Buffalo Ken might have a point there.
Iraq is a good candidate for distributed solar thermal energy. Most of the residential housing is detached single family homes with flat roofs. Each family can have a collector on their roof, supplying all the residential energy and an electric vehicle. All of it is buildable in local shops with simple technology that's been in the public domain for nearly a century, although semiconductor advances and better metals bring improvements. The materials needed are a minimum number of metals that may be recovered from local waste streams and a few polymers.
Iraqis should just pick up the ball and run with it. They do feel entitled to draw on their oil supply but maybe they will at some point decide that independence from oil is the way of progress. Besides, which Iraqi wants to become dependent upon yet another imperial stooge dictator? Part of the progressive agenda is to release the people from enslavement to far-flung capitalists and local industry keeps the capitalists out of the economic loop. The capitalists don't talk about localism, which is a reliable indicator that it's the best thing for the people.
'Rev.' John Hagee stated in November 2002 that in order to bring about the expansion of the 'Kingdom of Israel', President Bush had been chosen by 'god' to turn 'Babylon into a howling wilderness where not even an insect could survive...' (from 'Prophesy Questions and Answers Hour'...it is enlightening and frightening to listen to the Fascist 'Focus on the Family' AM Radio stations as they beat the drums of war and genocide - good Christians loose in the devil's backyard).
The systematic dismemberment of all that made Iraqi life as a sovereign republic - civilized and national - was on the first order of business for the Coalition Provisional Authority. First fire or kill all the competent, secular, national civil, police and military expertise and leadership - mainly the 'Baathists' in the overthrown government, schools, hospitals...you name it. That meant virtually all competent educated Iraqi Christians - who were closely allied with the secular Baath Party. This was ordered by H. Paul Bremer. Bremer was merely following Bush' plan, outlined in a speech Bush gave to the troops at CENTCOM in April 2003 where he promised that the 'model' for the 'newly Iraq' would be 'our ally - the democratic Afghanistan'. Afghanistan is a non-nation of brutal misery decorating the US' New World Order.
For over a year and a half...sophisticated urban Iraqis would console themselves that ...'at least we are not Afghanistan'...Little did they know that the plan was to drag their society to the horrid depths of American's model in nation building - Afghanistan.
It is all deliberate, systematic and genocidal. There is no incompetence in the US administration of its colony, Iraq. The brutalization of daily life is part of the policy to eradicate a nation with all of its indigenous, national institutions. This is the great triumph and genius of President George W. Bush. The great boot that grinds out the last vestiges of a nation - to the point where proud Iraqis can no longer even provide the barest of comfort for their precious infants.
The only mistake...was to believe the Israeli advisers in his administration (Feith, Wurmser, Shumsky et al) who assured him that Iraqis were 'Tribal Arabs' who had no sense of a nation and were incapable of sustained, organized resistance. This blind racism on the part of the Administration and the sustained heroic resistance by Iraqis will be the downfall of the US project - just like Viet Nam. Iraqis have no alternative but to resist the US - from the the oldest to the youngest - because the US' plan for Iraq from the beginning was its utter destruction - as an 'example' and warning to all natural resource rich sovereign nations striving to be free of US control.