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The
War Economy of Iraq
Christopher
Parker and Pete W. Moore
Christopher
Parker is assistant professor of political and social science
at Ghent University in Belgium. Pete W. Moore is associate
professor of political science at Case Western Reserve University.

British
Soldier on patrol in Basra province.
(Toby Melville/Reuters/Landov) |
On
May 26, 2003, L. Paul Bremer declared Iraq “open for
business.” Four years on, business is booming, albeit not
as the former head of the Coalition Provisional Authority intended.
Iraqis find themselves at the center of a regional political
economy transformed by war. Instability has generated skyrocketing
oil prices, and as US attitudes to Arab investment have hardened
in the wake of the September 11 attacks, investors from
the oil-producing Gulf countries are seeking opportunities closer
to home. This money, together with the resources being pumped
in to prop up the US occupation, is fueling an orgy of speculation
and elite consumption in the countries surrounding Iraq. The
sheer volume of loose change jingling around the Middle East
would be potentially destabilizing even if fighting did not persist
in Bremer’s erstwhile domain.
War
and profit have always gone hand in hand. In Iraq, as well, a “war
economy” is firmly rooted, yet it has gone largely unexamined
in the stacks of books and articles dissecting Washington’s
grandiose venture gone bad. Armed with ideological assumptions
and economic quick fixes, US occupation officials pursued policies
that, at a minimum, aggravated the severe social dislocation
wrought by war, privatization and sanctions before 2003. Today,
militias supporting or opposing the Iraq government—not
the government itself—control import supply chains and,
indeed, regulate whole sectors of the Iraqi economy. At the same
time, the people who earned a living through the antecedent networks
of the war economy are attacking the new US-sponsored political
order. These insurgents include not only those “Iraqis
who miss the privileged status they had under the regime of Saddam
Hussein,” as President George W. Bush would have it, but
also—indeed mostly—ordinary working people who are
protecting livelihoods they built in the shadow of Baathist dictatorship.
Countless other civilians are caught in the crossfire as the
struggle to make ends meet has become deeply politicized.
Evidence
of Iraq’s war economy is fragmentary. Amman—arguably
the city where the business of occupied Baghdad is really done—is
a veritable rumor mill. Leads are difficult to follow and confirm,
as the individuals involved are wary of admitting to war profiteering
and economic data are uneven. But the fragments start to form
a recognizable pattern when set in a comparative frame. The Iraqi
case fits well within the large scholarly literature on the economics
of civil war. Not all civil conflicts are the same, of course;
some end quickly, while others endure. When available evidence
on Iraq is compared with the lengthy civil wars in Lebanon from 1975–1991
and in Algeria in the 1990s, ominous parallels come into view.
During those civil wars, much of the money to fund militias and
state-sanctioned violence alike came from the control of external
trade and the taxation of regions under militia or state control.
These dynamics did not simply emerge in the chaos of war, but
were grounded in longer trajectories of international involvement,
state atrophy and grassroots political economy.
The
US project in Iraq, nothing less than a forced revolution, was
more radical in its means than in its way of viewing the political
world. And while today’s deepening war economy certainly
owes a great deal to the early zeal with which US officials sought
to remake Iraq as a free marketeer’s paradise, any eventual
autopsy of the Bush administration’s imperial fiasco needs
to cut deeper than the blunders of Bremer and his subordinates
to reveal the fundamental failures of political imagination that
lay beneath.
Iraq
Beyond Saddam
“In
Iraq, the US fights an enemy it hardly knows,” wrote the
International Crisis Group in the executive summary of a 2006
report. “Its descriptions have relied on gross approximations
and crude categories (Saddamists, Islamo-fascists and the like)
that bear only passing resemblance to reality.”[1] Over a year later, US and British officials
from Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair on down continue to speak
in stereotypes when describing the guerrillas’
motivations. Washing their hands of any responsibility for the
violence that plagues Iraq, they present the insurgency as springing
from a yearning for lost domination on the part of groups linked
to the Saddam-era state. This is the statist narrative—the
idea that Saddam’s regime controlled everything worth controlling
before it was overthrown. More amorphously, mainstream analysts
trace the insurgency’s origins to the aggrieved “thought
world” of Iraq’s Sunni Arab community.[2] Suggesting
that the insurgency is rooted in the “majoritarian mindset” of
Iraq’s Sunni Arabs, Fouad Ajami further notices a Sunni Arab
susceptibility to the “dark appeal” of revived histories
that dredge up anti-Shi‘i prejudices and “the panic
of a community that fears it could be left with a ‘realm
of gravel and sand.’”[3]
To
be sure, sectarian fears and religious extremism—as well
as foreign occupation—are powerful causes of the ongoing
violence, but the sectarian narrative renders invisible the everyday
concerns and struggles of people trying to survive in conditions
of war. It makes more sense to locate the roots of resistance
and intra-Iraqi violence in structures of collective action and
social regulation that took shape over the course of the 1980–1988
Iran-Iraq war, and were consolidated during the state’s
economic opening in the 1980s and the early years of the UN sanctions.
Clearly, and contrary to the assumptions of the statist narrative,
the state retreated considerably from the economy over the last
two decades of Baathist rule, a period that also witnessed plummeting
standards of living for ordinary Iraqis. Yet the social reverberations
of these economic upheavals are rarely considered.
Mainstream
accounts of the 1980s and 1990s preserve the centrality of the
state by charting the rise of what Charles Tripp has referred
to as the “shadow state”—a web of informally
regulated networks that leveraged statist agency (e.g., the ability
to make and enforce internationally binding contracts or employ
nominally legitimate coercion) to create domestic enclaves for
the private accumulation of capital and power.[4] Even
as the state’s formal regulatory powers began to shrink
during the 1980s, the social impressions left by a legacy of
rent-fueled state centralization and militarization remained
to preserve the essence of Saddam’s power. This narrative
is certainly persuasive as far as it goes. But the tendency to
present the regime, however formally weakened, as the programmer
of economic and social activity elides the agency of the Iraq—some
27 million Iraqis, in fact—beyond Saddam. As statist agency
receded, it was replaced by conditions of multiple jurisdiction
and sovereignty: Localized social structures, transnational trade
networks and a globalized sanctions regime came together to create
new economic opportunities and impose new constraints. Nevertheless,
even if “the regime” as such controlled less than
conventional analysis would suggest, central regime figures were
elevated by their ability to mobilize the state’s remaining
powers and control oil resources. In other words, the regime
was able to dominate, but not necessarily in ways of its own
choosing. Understanding the relationship between conflict and
economy in contemporary Iraq requires a recounting of the rapid
economic decline in the 1980s and 1990s.
In
1980, Iraq was a net creditor and considered home to one of the
region’s most advanced economies. By early March 2003,
as US and British forces amassed on its southern border, it had
become one of the world’s poorest and most underdeveloped
countries. Average annual income had fallen from between $3,600
and $4,000 in 1980 to between $500 and $600 by the end of 2003.[5] On the eve of the invasion, Time reported: “Industry
has ceased to exist and unemployment may be as high as 50 percent.
The agricultural sector is in complete disarray, leaving more
than 60 percent of the population to rely on the UN Oil
for Food program [for basic needs]. About 40 percent of
the nation’s children are suffering from malnutrition.”[6]
This
dramatic decline in living standards coincided with a long deterioration
of Iraq’s major industries. In the first year of the Iran-Iraq
war, oil production fell from 3.4 million barrels per day to
just under a million.[7] Oil revenues continued to drop
off for the duration of the conflict—totaling $11 billion,
less than half the pre-war amount, in 1988—while military
spending remained high.[8] The
result was the increase of foreign debt to over $80 billion by
1988, the draining of foreign reserves and the abandonment of
development projects.[9] The war also led to a wider militarization
of Iraq’s economy, draining human and financial resources
away from manufacturing and agriculture. By the time the war
with Iran ended, more than 20 percent of the labor force—over
one million people—were employed in Iraq’s armed
forces. While Saddam claimed victory in the war, his adventure
had left a heavily indebted state with a physical infrastructure
in great need of repair.

Masked
insurgents on patrol in Ramadi. (Ali Mashadani/Reuters/Landov) |
Saddam
responded to the crisis of state accumulation by implementing
a sweeping program of economic liberalization (infitah).
The program had its origins in efforts at reforming the agricultural
sector in the early to mid-1980s, but its scope and intensity
increased dramatically by late 1987 and into 1988. All industries
deemed non-essential to the health of state coffers and military
preparedness were jettisoned in a frenzy of privatization. As
Kiren Chaudhry notes, “Whereas Egypt’s widely publicized infitah policy
resulted in the privatization of exactly two factories over a
period of 15 years, in a single year the Iraqi government sold
70 large factories in construction materials and mineral extraction,
food processing and light manufacturing to the private sector.” The
selloff was, if anything, more sudden in agriculture. By 1989,
99 percent of Iraq’s agricultural land—half
of which had been state-owned since the 1960s—was either
privately owned or leased from the government by private investors
on favorable terms. The main beneficiaries of Saddam’s infitah were
by and large the same people who, by virtue of their connections
to government power brokers, had profited from the massive amounts
of government spending on construction during the oil boom of
the 1970s. Laws were changed to allow for large-scale, cross-sectoral
investment, and the tax on corporate profits was reduced to 35 percent.
In the end, most of the new captains of industry and agribusiness
sacked 40–80 percent of their workers.[10] The end of the Iran-Iraq war also brought
the decommissioning of over 200,000 soldiers, who were simply
put out on the street amidst high unemployment and food shortages.
These
moves had the knock-on effect of making many state regulatory
agencies redundant, sparking massive layoffs in the public sector
and precipitating the collapse of effective economic regulation
by the state bureaucracy. Thus, while Saddam’s government
remained in control of oil and other strategic industries, and
remained the agency of necessity and choice with regard to large
investment or trade contracts with large foreign firms, broad
swathes of economic life were simply left to the vagaries of
petty market action and struggle. Meanwhile, inflation began
to skyrocket.
The
international response to Saddam’s invasion of Kuwait—a
devastating military campaign during the early months of 1991
and draconian sanctions in place for the next 13 years—pushed
Iraq’s economy from bad to worse. More of Iraq’s
economic infrastructure was destroyed in six weeks of allied
bombing than in the eight years of war with Iran.[11] Sanctions
further eroded the gross domestic product and wrought havoc upon
the personal finances and life chances of untold numbers of Iraqis.
Following the freezing of Iraqi banks’ foreign assets and
the subsequent devaluation of the dinar, “savings of 2,000
dinars that once would have paid out $6,000 were suddenly worth
only $2.”[12] Experienced
technicians and professionals working in Iraq’s crumbling
hospitals, laboratories and universities found themselves forced
to emigrate or seek income-generating opportunities in the informal
sector to make ends meet. The precipitous decline in the number
of children attending school in the sanctions years may have
caused the adult literacy rate to drop from 80 to 58 percent.[13] In
1996, the World Health Organization concluded that sanctions
had set back Iraq’s health care system by 50 years.
Inevitably,
as the ability and willingness of state officials to govern economic
life through formal channels dissipated, new configurations of
regulatory power arose to take their place. These configurations
were not necessarily congruent with, or contained within, Iraq’s
borders. Transnational tribal allegiances were mobilized to facilitate
and regulate trade across international borders. Businessmen-politicians
in neighboring countries cultivated links with members of Iraq’s
Republican Guard (among others) in order to facilitate and protect
networks of transport and distribution. And small-time trade
networks emerged to profit from differentials between countries
in prices for petroleum and other products. Major multinational
corporations also took advantage of the multiple jurisdictions.
Consider the case of RJ Reynolds, whose involvement in cigarette
smuggling to Iraq was the subject of European Union legal action
in 2002. Coordinating operations from Switzerland, home to congenial
bank secrecy and business privacy laws, the company sent master
cases containing 10,000 cigarettes each for loading and unloading
at ports in Spain, from whence they were shipped onward through
holding companies in Cyprus, before being redistributed through
the free zone in Mersin, Turkey. They were then transported over
the mountains between Turkey and Iraq via Silopi Pass, moving
through the hands of agents operating in Kurdish-controlled regions
of northern Iraq before ending up at one of the many smoke stands
located along Iraq’s roads and highways.[14]
Cats
of the Embargo
It
is difficult to imagine any regime surviving intact—much
less retaining statist agency in the economy—through turmoil
such as that experienced by Iraq over the past three decades.
Nevertheless, observers have been remarkably consistent in presenting
capital formation and livelihood in Saddam’s Iraq as variables
strongly determined by state intervention. As late as 2003,
observers could note that the state sector accounted for 80 percent
of Iraq’s GDP,[15] a figure which hardly measures
state power or economic centralization. Nevertheless, it is typical
for an author writing on the present day to first assert that
transforming “a centrally planned economy to a market economy” is
a primary challenge facing the engineers of change in Iraq, only
to later note that “the United States found [in Iraq] an
economy that essentially needed to be rebuilt from scratch, crushed
by decades of wars, sanctions and atrophy due to Saddam’s
neglect of the population’s needs.”[16] The contradiction apparent in these statements
reflects the degree to which emphasis on the person of Saddam
Hussein led mainstream observers to imagine the passivity, even
emptiness, of the Iraq that lay beyond his extended circles.
Claims
regarding state control over the economy tend to brush over key
facts. For example, while over 75 percent of Iraq’s
labor force remained employed in the public sector on the eve
of the March 2003 invasion, the average salary of a civil servant
was only $5 per month.[17] Similarly, while more than half of the population was dependent
upon government-controlled food rationing during the early 1990s,
these rations accounted for only 37 percent of per capita
caloric intake in the pre-sanctions era.[18] Inadequate diets and purchasing power placed
a premium upon plots of arable land and their crops. Local tribal
sheikhs were given considerable scope in the regulation of the
rural economy, and used their position and networks to expand
and diversify their economic activities. In short, the kind of
formal accounting upon which claims about the nature of economic
transition in Iraq are made obscures the importance of gray and
black markets to the simple tasks of eating and earning a living
over the past two decades.
In
a very real sense, the conditions that obtained in Iraq from
the late 1980s onward resembled conditions of war. People accustomed
to “a culture of laziness” sustained by enormous
oil revenues were forced to take extraordinary measures to make
ends meet.[19] Hyperinflation,
massive public-sector layoffs and food shortages shaped Iraqi
society as it moved from the dislocations of the infitah to
the devastation of war to the ruin of sanctions.
Highly
profitable transnational alliances between elite businessmen cum regime
figures emerged in the 1980s and 1990s. But smaller-scale networks
of trade flourished as well. In her 1999 study of sanctions-era
Iraq, Sarah Graham-Brown noted:
The
people who run the black market in both petrol and basic
foodstuffs, and luxury items like whiskey and Western cigarettes,
are actually members of the lower middle strata of Iraqi
society, hardened war profiteers who managed to survive as
soldiers and smugglers during the Iran-Iraq war as well as
the Gulf war which followed. Many of these “new elements” in
society have links with Iraq’s large and once powerful
rural clans. Coming mostly from the lower echelons of these
clans, the new merchants are both Shiites and Sunnis….
The goods they handle are mostly smuggled from Syria, Turkey
and Iran.[20]
Proprietors
of small retail businesses came to rely on the smugglers’ “taxi
service” to stock their shelves. One Baghdad repair shop
owner told Joseph Braude: “My supplier sends me products
via Jordan in trucks. The driver charges you $100—but you
are not paying any tax. As for the border guards, just give them
a pack of cigarettes and a can of Coke—that’s more
than enough. They will leave you alone.”[21] Even
petroleum smuggling—typically seen as an activity requiring
the resources of big players operating within the purview of
the regime—was a source of livelihood for thousands of
Iraqis operating beyond the control and surveillance of the state.
Drivers equipped their cars and trucks with extra tanks that
were filled with subsidized diesel and gasoline at filling stations
on Iraq’s border with Jordan, and then simply driven over
and sold to middlemen in Zarqa or Amman.
In
between, one could find the qitat al‑hisar—the
“cats of the embargo.” “Unlike high-ranking Baath Party hacks
who lived mainly by leveraging their government influence,” writes Braude, “the
cats engaged each other in rough-and-tumble competition in what became an underworld’s
dark meritocracy. They spanned Iraq’s ethnic and sectarian rainbow, including
many Shi‘a and Kurds. Cats hailing from disenfranchised communities maintained
a businesslike rapport with the country’s political bosses, paying them
with the bribes they demanded in exchange for autonomy in the black market.”[22] But outside this “dark
meritocracy,” the system relied on regular working people to drive the
trucks carrying oil and other goods, walk through the mountains from Turkey
with backpacks full of cigarettes and look the other way as some aspect of
state regulatory control was subverted. These activities were not simply individual
acts of opportunism, but practices within a grassroots political economy of
meaning. Today, many of these same people—people who can hardly be described
as beneficiaries of the Baathist regime—ply their trade under threat
from new agencies, technologies and infrastructures that have been introduced
with US-sponsored “reconstruction.” While presented in the neutral
language of development and modernization, these agents and infrastructures
are hardly politically neutral. Those whose livelihood depended on the oil
tanker trucks, for example, are now threatened by the repair and restoration
of Iraq’s pipelines. Thus even resistance to foreign control over Iraqi
oil is often motivated by something other than nationalism.
To
date, observers have not fully taken into account how the project
of reconstituting a market in Iraq has selectively criminalized
certain socioeconomic actors and empowered others.[23] The imposition of new rules through the barrel
of a gun has abruptly rendered petty trade networks constructed
over decades untenable or even illegal. Moreover, sovereignty
in Iraq is now even more fragmented than in the 1990s. The new
Iraqi constitution allows for de jure autonomy for geographic
regions—the majority-Kurdish provinces and several provinces
in the south—that are already autonomous de facto. The
current government’s would-be monopoly on coercive violence
is distributed among US forces, Iraqi security forces and private
security contractors who are becoming an increasingly institutionalized
feature of the post-Saddam landscape. Furthermore, Iraqi security
forces have clear and overlapping ties with local militias: Insofar
as security force elements were active in the informal economy
under sanctions, army decommissioning may have simply led to
a privatization of coercive violence from below that ironically
mirrors the Bush administration’s subcontracting of war-
and occupation-related services to US firms.
On
the Road
Whether
cats of the embargo or regime fat cats involved in sanctions
busting on a grander scale, informal traders were but one node
in wider networks that were regional, even global in scope. It
stands to reason that these networks survived the 2003 invasion,
but the question of how the evolving war economy of Iraq is connected
to regional political economies is a tricky one. By their very
nature, such linkages are not well-advertised. Who is making
the money? Who is deciding who makes the money? In many cases
the complete answer lies outside Iraq, so one place to start
is on the road.

The
roads, rivers and pipelines of Iraq. Only major highways
are shown. (Holly Syrrakos/Go! Creative) |
In
Iraq today, there are three major trade routes that are the loci
of struggle between competing militias and the various agents
of occupation as they seek to shape and regulate economic exchange.
The first follows Highway 1, heading north from Baghdad
through the oil refining and industrial town of Bayji. From Bayji,
the route continues to Mosul and on toward the Syrian border.
The second route is Highway 10, which heads west from Baghdad
to Amman, passing through Falluja and Ramadi—the
“Sunni heartland” of al‑Anbar province—before traversing
the vast desert. Highway 6 is the main road from Baghdad to Basra, with
way stations in Kut and ‘Amara—strongholds of Muqtada al‑Sadr’s
Mahdi Army. Highway 8 offers a western passage to the south, leaving Baghdad
and running through the town of Hilla—skirting the Shi‘i shrine
cities of Najaf and Karbala’—before heading to Basra, where it
meets up with Highway 6, which continues down to Umm Qasr and Kuwait.
These towns are all noteworthy locales, as either frontier outposts along long-distance
trade routes or nodes of oil infrastructure or centers of the rise of the Shi‘a.
Bayji is also located close to the de facto border between central Iraq and
the Kurdish-regulated areas, while Hilla and Kut are the gateways to southern
Iraq. Not coincidentally, all of these cities have been flashpoints of conflict
over the past four years.
The
importance of these trade routes cannot be overstated. Like most
Gulf countries, Iraq has been highly dependent on a full range
of consumer and industrial imports since the 1950s. Control of
those supply chains and roads facilitated the selective privatization
begun in the late 1980s, and re-exporting neighbors utilized
those same links for their own political ends. All of this trade
was organized through bilateral protocols ensuring the political
control to reward allies and punish rivals. Of course, these
arrangements were not foolproof, and so smuggling networks concentrated
in border areas thrived, especially as war and sanctions began
to take their toll and Baathist officials lost control over whole
sections of the country. In tandem—formal, state-regulated
trade on top and tolerated local smuggling at the bottom—these
arrangements tied Iraq to its neighbors in politically consequential
ways. Powerful Baathist bureaucrats leveraged their political
positions to cement connections to traders in neighboring states.
Lower-level smuggling also involved cross-border connections,
though these were more based on tribe and kinship than political
power. Following Highway 10 to Jordan illuminates how these
networks shaped post-2003 Iraq.
Though
fears of Iranian influence, Turkish invasion and Syrian complicity
seem to dominate discussion of the external players in Iraq’s
violence, by far the most important country in political economy
terms, to the Sunni insurgency (responsible for the vast majority
of American causalities) is the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.
The political and social histories of modern Iraq and Jordan
are bound tightly together. The deep ties between families, tribes,
political movements and economic actors across the borders of
these two countries have a history that, by and large, has yet
to be written. While far from transparent, linkages between the
Jordanian establishment and the constituent elements of Baathist
power—together with connections to the Sunni tribes of
al‑Anbar—are less obscure.
The
war with Iran ended operations of Iraq’s only port, Umm
Qasr. By 1982, Jordan’s port of ‘Aqaba became the
primary location receiving imports destined for Iraq and shipped
by sea. A number of Iraqi-Jordanian trade agreements followed,
to expand ‘Aqaba’s capacity, widen Highway 10
and establish a trucking firm to move goods from ‘Aqaba
to Baghdad. Iraq quickly became Jordan’s largest trading
partner. Officials agreed to a protocol whereby oil priced significantly
below market value was supplied to the Jordanian government in
order to fund exports back to Iraq. Estimates of that fund vary,
but reasonable estimates suggest a value in the hundreds of millions
of dollars each year.[24] Wild stories about side deals
and the general graft of the protocol decades still make the
rounds in Amman today.
Like
their Baathist counterparts, Hashemite officials in Jordan chose
the recipients of these lucrative deals. These cronies and their
supporters helped keep the Hashemite regime afloat during its
own financial storms in the 1980s and 1990s. This form of direct
political patronage coexisted alongside extra-legal forms of
trade that were also winked at. Over-invoicing of exports, false
bills of lading at the port of ‘Aqaba and substandard goods
were among the ways Jordanian and Iraqi traders increased their
profits. In addition, the trade networks supported an increasingly
important labor market in Jordan. Thus did gilded trade linkages
within and between Iraq and Jordan tie the political future of
each regime to the other.
Many
but not all of the traders and industrialists connected to Iraq,
then and now, are East Bank Jordanians (as opposed to Palestinians).
Additionally, the transportation labor dependent upon Iraq trade
is composed of lower-income, rural East Bankers located in the
southern part of the country. The economic and political rationales
that linked the Jordanian transportation labor, the Amman-based
exporters and the Sunni importers in Iraq also overlapped with
and animated tribal and religious sympathies. That some of the
truckers and small-time traders might moonlight for the black
market was to be expected. The imposition of sanctions after
the invasion of Kuwait only forced this network to craft more
durable and clandestine mechanisms of operation. Thus, it was
hardly a secret that the failure of the 1990s sanctions to impoverish
Baathist elites was due primarily to sanctions-busting trade
routed through Jordan.
On
the eve of the 2003 invasion, Highway 10 was both sinew
and symbol. It was a mainstay of the Iraqi regime’s political
economy of survival, yet also emblematic of how much its power
had dissipated and been disfigured since the 1980s. If Highway 10
is the path to understanding Iraq before 2003, then Highway 8
heads south into the post-2003 period.
Same
Truck, Different Driver
In
2003, Highway 8 from Kuwait carried US troops and the bureaucrats
of the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) northward to Baghdad.
It also served as the spinal cord of the political economy of
Shi‘i militias and parties freed from Baathist control.
CPA officials came primed to supply Iraq with “the most
liberal investment regime in the entire region.”[25] What
they provided instead was a regulatory vacuum in which local
networks of trade found themselves arrayed against politically
favored, well-armed agents of corporate America, backed by the
US military.
While
presenting their project as introducing universal values of free
markets and good governance to Iraq, US policymakers, CPA officials
and American firms were themselves deeply implicated in selecting
the winners and losers of the new order, revealing the deep politicization
of the supposedly neutral occupation regime. In any case, promise
of access to the Iraqi market and reconstruction projects was
central to Bush administration efforts to build a domestic and
international coalition in advance of the war. By luring into
Iraq commercial actors whose interests coincided with dominant
perceptions of the US interest, policymakers no doubt sought
to erect an edifice of indirect rule without the undue burden
of direct US military, financial and diplomatic input. Indeed,
in predicting $50–100 billion in oil revenues in the first
two to three years after Saddam’s fall, ex-Deputy Defense
Secretary Paul Wolfowitz drew a picture of a self-financing (and
market-regulated) transformation, thus freeing US strategists
to advance wider goals in the region.[26]

Iraqi
businessmen look at a bullet-riddled armored car during
the Iraq Rebuild exhibition held in Amman, April 4, 2005.
(Ali Jarekji/Reuters/Landov) |
Bremer
used this new mandate to justify implementation of a wide-ranging
agenda of neo-liberal economic reforms. In the June 20, 2003 Wall
Street Journal, he announced a “wholesale reallocation
of resources and people from state control to private enterprise.” The
makeover list included: revamping the banking system, modernizing
the stock exchange, privatizing some 120 state-owned enterprises,
tax reform and removal of all restrictions on foreign investment
through suspension of all customs duties and tariffs. The idea
that free trucking and bartering generate stable liberal politics
has a spotty record in the developing world and is a uniform
failure in the Middle East,[27] but
this did not deter Bremer and his staff of experts. The viceroy
himself was no stranger to political risk in the name of profit,
having set up Crisis Consulting Practice in 2001, under the umbrella
of insurance company Marsh and McLennan, to advise major corporations
on investing in trouble spots. Anecdotes about how the CPA’s
neat ideological ordering of the world eventually yielded to
reality are now numerous.[28] US economic consultants arrived to find that “street-corner
money-changers, some of whom the US suspects are linked to organized
crime,” were setting the currency exchange rates. With “no
data available to crunch,” experts found themselves reduced
to
“figuring out how best to stack money inside a truck.”[29] By the time of the handover in June 2004,
CPA economic and development teams were doing little more than claiming progress
on granting commerce licenses and visiting business delegations.
Given
the pre-2003 roots of the war economy, how much responsibility
do CPA policies shoulder for its maturation? The blunders of
the CPA have become lore, allowing criticism of the project to
focus on failures of execution. It is not hard to pick up the
refrain that if only the US had done this or that, the US could
have succeeded.
The
failure was not in execution, however, but in the delivery itself.
Occupation plans and security contingencies, good or bad, simply
added to the maelstrom of political, social and economic dislocations
that had already had most Iraqis feeling the pinch. Big cats
and small cats, together with American corporations and the would-be
empire builders among returning Iraqis, all saw CPA policies
for what they were, ideological fantasies, and none were squeamish
about using violence to shape the market in their favor. Just
consider the words of an Iraqi businessman quoted in internal
CPA documents: “It is nothing personal. I like you and
believe you could be bringing us a better future, but I still
sympathize with those who attack the coalition because it is
not right for Iraq to be occupied by foreign military forces.”[30]
After
the dissolution of the CPA, militias appear to have carved out
or coopted their own areas of economic control and regulation.
If the Algerian and Lebanese experiences are a guide, then these
militias and underground economies are likely interdependent.
Also, far from representing forces that are somehow excluded
from or antithetical to globalization or market forces, they
are firmly linked to big players in the global economy via connections
in neighboring countries. Their trade was not simply in oil and
alcohol, but also in food and consumer goods, and with the arrival
of the CPA, they found themselves suddenly in competition with
well-positioned big traders surfing atop a tidal wave of duty-free
consumer goods and packaged meals.
Down
Highway 8, the main Shi‘i militias and parties—under
the nose of the occupying powers—have monopolistically
carved up the economy in ways that resemble the practices of
their Baathist predecessors. Media reports depict southern cities
overrun with goods coming over the border from Iran and re-exported
from Gulf ports, primarily Dubai. Control over the transportation
and lodging of Shi‘i pilgrims has reportedly been centralized
by ‘Ammar al‑Hakim, son of the powerful leader of the Supreme
Islamic Iraqi Council, ‘Abd al-‘Aziz al‑Hakim. Al-Da‘wa
and Sadrist elements can logically be assumed to be in the game
as well. Below the major players, minor smugglers shuttle smaller
amounts of goods across the Iranian border. Marshland oil smugglers
amount to thousands of pinpricks that have cut southern Iraq’s
oil production in half.[31] More sophisticated pipeline attacks underscore
the links between post-2003 acts of sabotage and the legacy of
a grassroots political economy beyond the state. For most of
the past four years, such attacks have been interpreted as a
tactic for undermining the occupation. More recently, however,
observers have become aware of the economic motives for these
attacks. Throughout the 1990s, most of Iraq’s oil
was transported in relatively small tanker trucks—to Jordan
and Turkey with dispensation from Washington and undercover to
Syria and the Gulf. As the pipelines to Turkey and the Gulf were
turned back on in 2003, most of these truckers—many
of whom had close ties with, and indeed colleagues in, neighboring
countries—were out of a job. Hence, it is not surprising
to learn that pipeline attacks “are now orchestrated by
[insurgents and criminal gangs] to force the government to import
and distribute as much fuel as possible using thousands of tanker
trucks.” The same news story continues: “Ibrahim
Bahr al-‘Uloum, a former oil minister, said it was obvious
that crude oil pipelines connecting the northern wells with refineries
and power plants farther south, in the Baghdad area, had been
repeatedly struck to force trucks to move the crude. Oil employees
trying to fix the pipelines had sometimes been kidnapped and
killed. Both the trucking companies and groups in the protection
rackets were probably complicit in some way, he said. ‘This
is a business for the people who are working in the trucks.’”[32]
Headed
west on Highway 10 the same themes vary slightly. Thousands
of Iraqi trading companies have relocated to Amman, drastically
inflating real estate prices in the upscale neighborhoods of
the Jordanian capital. The families and finances of former Baathist
officials have followed. Re-exports from ‘Aqaba are up,
as is cross-border truck traffic to Iraq. Jordan’s massive
trade deficit is driven in large part by the increase in imports,
which are re-exported to Iraq. Today, Amman is a bizarre menagerie
of war profiteers, not so secret agents, gloomy security consultants
and former Baathists all rubbing elbows in the same upscale bars
and hotels. Interviews with businessmen in Jordan suggest that,
after initial chaos along Highway 10 from Jordan, rural
insurgent groups now protect and manage the trade through internal
agreements and with the cooperation of their Jordanian counterparts.
The city of Falluja is a notorious example of these arrangements.
Strategically
located on Highway 10, Falluja is home to many people who
have strong links with their tribal kin across the border in
Jordan and Saudi Arabia. Also, the proportion of Fallujans in
the Iraqi intelligence services is reported to have been the
highest in the country.[33] This
combination made Falluja a key node for underground trade during
the 1990s, and a focal point for efforts to control trade in
the post-2003 order. Against this backdrop, it is no coincidence
that the overwhelming majority of foreigners kidnapped and held
in Iraq have been truck drivers, mostly from Turkey, Egypt and
the Philippines.
It
seems most plausible that these various sources of revenue support
the insurgents and local militias as much or more than the foreign
funding vaguely claimed to exist by the US. Recently, US forces
have nodded to the possibility that economic variables are behind
some of the violence in Iraq, going so far as to present this
as the basis for a tactical alliance with erstwhile insurgents.
Following a recent visit to Iraq, Gen. James T. Conway, commandant
of the Marine Corps, reported that Sunni tribal sheikhs in Anbar
had decided to start cooperating in operations against al‑Qaeda
jihadis. “Some commanders said the extremists’ key
misstep was to interfere with the locals’ black market
trading, which al‑Qaeda coopted in order to finance itself.… Cooperation
by the sheiks also has quickly created a Sunni police force in
areas where none existed before.”[34] On the surface, this would
seem to be a practical application of the “Sunni buy-in” that
was much discussed by US Embassy officials in late 2005
and early 2006. But this surprising acknowledgement of a
war economy raises some important questions. One regards the
link between jihadi involvement in trade and connections in neighboring
countries: The largely unreported visit of around 200 tribal
elders from the town of Ma‘an in southern Jordan—a
town whose population is historically invested in long-distance
overland trade between Jordan and Iraq—to pay condolences
to the family of slain jihadi leader Abu Mus‘ab al‑Zarqawi
takes on a different significance if we view it in this light.[35] Second,
one might conclude that al‑Qaeda coopting local economic assets
signals an increase, not a decrease, in the strength of America’s
number one enemy in Iraq. Attacks on infrastructure and roads
that were high in the first year and a half after the US invasion
are generally down, not because the insurgents have retreated,
but because they now control access to these assets. Taking sides
among the actors in the war economy is unlikely to produce stability
that will last beyond the departure of US forces.
There
is no US military or even diplomatic solution to the problem
of a war economy in Iraq. The reconstruction and development
plans that have accompanied the
“surge” resemble warmed-over CPA policies. Political economy changes
do figure in civil conflict resolution, but the recent historical examples
are not heartening. Luis Martinez has shown how a strong Algerian state selectively
liberalized investment in the oil sector as a means of enticing business elements
backing the Islamists to the government side.[36] In
Lebanon, intra-Christian fighting, combined with the rise of Shi‘i and
Sunni business interests in the 1980s, financially squeezed militias’ business
interests, paving the path to the Ta’if agreement in 1989. In Iraq, by
contrast, the strong state died in the early 1980s, and signs of militia financial
fatigue do not appear.
In
the first two years after the US invasion, business interests,
groups and individuals who might have comprised a professional
middle class on which to build a different Iraq fled. Some of
the initial violence—the road attacks, assassinations and
bombings of civilians—was designed precisely to push out
those potential rivals to the war economy. Unintended effects
of more mundane activity in protection rackets, monopolies and
weapons smuggling probably propelled others to exit. Most of
those without the means to leave lay low and do what it takes
to get by. Much of what may be rebuilt by a weak Iraqi government
or a weak US military, therefore, will eventually fall back into
the hands of the guys with the guns and the money.
The
Sorcerer’s Apprentice

Baghdad
travel agent checks passports of Iraqis looking to leave
the country, June 7, 2006. (Ali Mashadani/Reuters/Landov) |
Queried
about the chaos that reigned immediately after the fall of Baghdad,
then Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld rejoined, “Freedom
is untidy. People have to make mistakes.” Four years on,
there is little evidence that Bush administration officials have
learned from theirs.
Faith
in the capitalist firm as an agent of transition brought with
it only unprecedented levels of graft, plunder and incompetence.
Nevertheless, in the spring of 2007 US officials helped
to fashion a new draft law that, if passed, would go a long way
toward privatizing Iraq’s oil sector. The specter of sectarian
logic—encouraged by US officials as they sought to manage
the residual passions of a political world beyond the market
through intermediaries of their own choosing—now haunts
Iraqi political life with violent consequence. And yet, walls
are being built around Baghdad neighborhoods cleansed of Sunnis
or Shi‘a, partially imprisoning the remaining residents
within sectarian cages. Recent “troop surges” correspond
with an intensified campaign of bombings in civilian areas. As
of mid-2007, more than two million Iraqis have left their country,
one million have been internally displaced and one million have
been killed or wounded. Many Iraqis who might have had the resources
to resist the control of violent groups have departed. Like Goethe’s
sorcerer’s apprentice, the architects of Iraq’s forced
revolution find themselves flailing to contain the ghosts that
they themselves called into existence.
To
paraphrase de Certeau, tactics are for the poor, while strategy
is for those who make and control boundaries.[37] Part
of the predicament faced by policymakers lies in the very categories
of analysis that made the project of forced revolution thinkable
in the first place. By dividing the political world into dichotomous
spheres of state and society, regime and market, endogenous and
exogenous, and so on, transitions theory (and the invasion of
Iraq was essentially transitions theory by other means) provided
categories that only remotely corresponded with the lived experience
of the Iraqis themselves. By designating the Iraqi state, the
Iraqi economy and Iraqi society as discrete objects of transition,
mainstream analysis obscured the extent to which state, economy
and society were in fact linked to broader complexes of production
and exchange that extended far beyond Iraq’s borders. For
strategists in Washington and London, war was an instrument of
reform: Actors, objects and meanings would be detached and isolated
from their milieux, making it possible to establish new relations
of power and value between them. Strategists imagined Iraq as
an entity that defined the frontiers of global transition and
newness, and they saw their project as one of opening those frontiers
to the agents of a political world remade according to the “laws
of the market.” Yet unlike the frontiers in the neatly
staged Hollywood westerns that seemingly formed the neoconservative
worldview, the frontier that they projected to contain their
strategic vision did not hold, not least because they arrived
to find that they were already there. Not only was Saddam’s
Iraq made possible by a long history of engagement by great powers
and global institutions, but the Iraq beyond Saddam was also
shaped by complex entanglements with regional and global networks
of authority and exchange. And corporate America itself proved
ambivalent about the revolutionary role assigned to it by Pentagon
planners, and did not hesitate to use US military force, political
connections and graft in the pursuit of profit.
Nevertheless,
supporters of the forced revolution project continue to present
Anglo-American violence as a facilitator of historically inevitable
transformations. The violence of the insurgent, by contrast,
is presented as emanating from the recesses of a pre-market culture.
Yet the war economy in Iraq does not pit the dark, essentialist
world of the tribal smuggling networks against the agents of
an enlightened and transparent global capitalism, nor can it
be reduced to a conflict between global and local. Rather—heightened
by a peculiarly American sense of manifest destiny—it provides
an extreme example of the violence that underpins the wider project
of neoliberalism, a project that actively seeks to transform
the world in ways that make its assumptions appear as true. Resistance
to such a project is thus likely to express itself through alternative
ideological visions, thereby projecting the frontiers of conflict
in terms of a clash of worldviews. In the face of the “creative
destruction” wrought by invading forces, regular people
articulate alternative paths of “creative destruction” that
may express themselves with reference to alternative political
and economic projects, or simply arise in the struggle to get
by. Absent clear boundaries, strategy is reduced to tactics.
The agents of a war economy thus do not necessarily fight to
win as such: They are engaged within and act so as to reproduce
an emergent, constantly shifting tactical environment. Meanwhile,
there will be no single declaration of victory, no event signaling
the end of one order and the beginning of a new one. Sadly, the
one thing we can be sure of is that Bremer’s cohorts in
the political risk business will be there to profit from his
mistakes.
Endnotes
[1] International
Crisis Group, In Their Own Words: Reading the Iraqi Insurgency (Brussels/Amman,
February 2006).
[2] Michael
Eisenstadt and Jeffrey White, Assessing Iraq’s Sunni
Arab Insurgency (Washington, DC: Washington Institute for
Near East Policy, 2005), p. 23.
[3] Fouad
Ajami, “Heart of Darkness,” Wall Street Journal,
September 28, 2005.
[4] Charles
Tripp, “Iraq: National Power and Local Authority,” presentation
at the British Society for Middle Eastern Studies, University
of Exeter, July 15, 2003.
[5] BBC
News, October 10, 2003. See also Abbas Alnasrawi, “Iraq:
Economic Sanctions and Consequences, 1990–2000,” Third
World Quarterly 22/2 (2001), p. 215. According to Alnasrawi, “GDP
per capita in 1999 was estimated to be $883 in 1990 dollars compared
with the $6,151 that obtained in 1980.”
[6] Time,
April 18, 2003.
[7] Alnasrawi,
p. 206.
[8] Tripp,
p. 248.
[9] Charles
Tripp, A History of Iraq (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2002), p. 248; and Alnasrawi, p. 207.
[10] Kiren
Chaudhry, “On the Way to Market: Economic Liberalization
and Iraq’s Invasion of Kuwait,” Middle East Report 170
(May-June 1991).
[11] Tripp,
p. 261.
[12] Braude,
p. 106.
[13] Richard
Garfield, “Changes in Health and Well-being in Iraq During
the 1990s: What Do We Know and How Do We Know It”(Cambridge:
Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq, 2000), pp. 32–51, cited
in Alnasrawi, p. 214.
[14] See “The
Cigarette ‘Transit’ Road to the Islamic Republic
of Iran and Iraq: Illicit Tobacco Trade in the Middle East,” WHO
Tobacco Control Papers, University of California, San Francisco,
2004. See also Wall Street Journal, October 31, 2002.
[15] Kilian
Balz, “Reconstruction of Iraq: Dealing with Legal Uncertainty,” International
Bar News (June 2003).
[16] These
quotes come from Bathsheba Crocker,
“Reconstructing Iraq’s Economy,” Washington Quarterly 27/4
(2004), pp. 73, 75.
[17] Braude,
p. 101.
[18] Food
and Agriculture Organization statistics cited in Alnasrawi, p.
209.
[19] Braude,
p. 115.
[20] Sarah
Graham-Brown, Sanctioning Saddam: The Politics of Intervention
in Iraq (London: I. B. Tauris, 1999), p. 172. Graham-Brown
cites “Surviving Sanctions,” Middle East International,
June 25, 1993.
[21] Braude,
p. 119.
[22] Braude,
pp. 120–121.
[23] See
Christopher Parker, “Livelihood, Aggregation Problems and
the Persistence of War: Reframing Iraq’s Insurgency,” Conflict
in Focus 4 (December 2004), pp. 4–9.
[24] Coalition
for International Justice, Sources of Revenue for Saddam and
Sons: A Primer on the Financial Underpinnings of the Regime in
Baghdad (Washington, DC, September 2002).
[25] Transcript
of a January 18, 2004 speech by CPA Chief Policy Officer Richard
Jones (former ambassador to Kuwait), posted at http://www.cpa-iraq.org/transcripts/jones_kuwait.html.
[26] See
Christopher Parker, “From Forced Revolution to Failed Transition,” UNISCI
Discussion Papers 12 (October 2006), especially pp. 84–90.
[27] See
Pete W. Moore and Andrew Shrank, “Commerce and Conflict:
US Effort to Counter Terror with Trade May Backfire,” Middle
East Policy 10/3 (2003).
[28] See,
for instance, Rajiv Chandrasekaran’s Imperial Life in
the Emerald City (New York: Random House, 2006), which follows
the few CPA officials who quickly realized the senselessness
of US privatization programs.
[29] Fortune,
July 7, 2003.
[30] See
Pete Moore, “The Secret Iraq Documents My 8 Year-Old Found,” Salon.com,
May 18, 2007.
[31] United
Press International, December 15, 2006.
[32] New
York Times, June 4, 2006.
[33] Nir
Rosen, “Losing It,” Asia Times, July 15, 2004.
[34] Army
Times, April 9, 2007.
[35] Our
knowledge of this visit comes from André Bank, personal
communication to Parker, November 2006.
[36] See
Luis Martinez, The Algerian Civil War: 1990–1998 (London:
C. Hurst and Company, 2000).
[37] See
Michel de Certeau, The Practice of Everyday Life (Berkeley,
CA: University of California Press, 2000).

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