Friday, March 19, 2010

Corruption still plagues Iraq

Richard Engel is an excellent journalist, but his latest blog post seems to be incomplete in places and he claims that Iraq's political parties are sectarian and unpopular. If they are unpopular, why did so many Iraqis vote for them?

The third war (2004-2006): The Sunni insurgency. Sunnis favored under Saddam’s government were increasingly ostracized and isolated – basically punished by Shiite political parties. Iran’s influence grew dramatically. Al-Qaida militants moved in to western Iraq to incite [sectarian violence?] and help fellow Sunni Arabs fight the U.S.-backed Shiite government.

The fourth war (2006-2007): The Shiites hit back. Al-Qaida-led Sunni insurgents carried out so many atrocities that Shiite militias, some backed by the government, started to fight back. A civil war erupted and bodies piled up in hospital morgues. Neighborhoods were ethnically cleansed. Two to three thousand Iraqis were killed every month. Between 2 and 3 million Iraqis fled their homes, many left the country.

The fifth war (2007-2008): The American "surge." The U.S. military changed its strategy and added extra troops. The United States stopped the civil war.

The sixth war (2008-today): The war of corruption. Iraq’s political parties used the relative stability created by the surge to enrich and empower themselves, stealing from government projects big and small. Iraq is now considered one of the most corrupt nations on earth. The political parties, still mostly based on sectarian lines, are unpopular among most Iraqis.

....

Life for regular Iraqis

I am often asked about the lives of average Iraqis. Have conditions improved? It depends on what you use as a starting point.

Are Iraqis happier, richer and freer than they were under Saddam Hussein? Undoubtedly they are.

Are they better off today than two years ago when Sunnis and Shiite death squads were slitting throats in the street? Certainly, the answer is yes.

But do Iraqis have a stable government that people in Baghdad believe will bring them out of what has been a dark and tumultuous period? Not yet.

I like Engel's honesty. He acknowledges that Iraqis are happier, richer, and freer than they were under Saddam, but he also emphasizes the corruption and incompetence of the current government. I also appreciate his acknowledgment that Sunni insurgents committed many atrocities before Shiite militias hit back. This is something that Arabs and America-hating leftists are unwilling to do.

6 comments :

Iraqi Mojo said...

Also I am not attempting to justify the criminality of Shiite militias. I am merely pointing out that Sunni extremists (the scum of the earth) mass murdered Iraqi Shia before Shiite militias hit back. It seems that objective journalists understand this. I don't expect wahhabi wackos to understand it.

I have slammed Shiite extremists on many occasions. Read my post Dogs of the Shia.

David All said...

A good article from CBS newsonline.
"Iraqis Wary, but Hopeful on War Anniversary" at http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/03/19/world/main6315030.shtml?tag=stack

Bruno said...

sunnishiasunnishiasunnishia

... ah, excellent debate.

Iraqi Mojo said...

Bruno, how would you have responded to Dolly's comment?

Apostate said...

Bruno thinks the Shias should have forgotten the religious oppression they suffered under Saddam and lined up behind him against the American invaders. LOL.

Maury said...

The Sunni-Shia divide goes back 1200 years Bruno. It's impossible to ignore when discussing Iraqi history. A country doesn't make progress by sweeping those problems under a rug. The US wouldn't have a black President today if we had swept our civil rights problem under the rug for the last 40 years. A secular party made up of Sunni and Shia leaders made the strongest showing in the elections. To me,that shows amazing progress in a relatively short time. Iraqi's obviously want to mend fences and face the future together. This never would have happened without the amreekan invasion. Not in a million years.