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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Michael Watkins who wrote (149950)10/30/2004 10:46:20 AM
From: Sun Tzu  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
A fascinating take of when idealogical fantasy meets reality. I consider this is one of the best reads on the events. I had heard portions of the events through interviews with Sistani's and Sadr's assistants. They put it quite bluntly early on, "the CPA can do whatever it wants for now and sign any contracts it wants with big corporations. Once we come in power we are going to cancel them all. These contracts have no legitimacy". I guess it took a while but their message got across.

ST


Iraq was to the neocons what Afghanistan was to the Taliban: the one place on Earth where they could force everyone to live by the most literal, unyielding interpretation of their sacred texts. One would think that the bloody results of this experiment would inspire a crisis of faith: in the country where they had absolute free reign, where there was no local government to blame, where economic reforms were introduced at their most shocking and most perfect, they created, instead of a model free market, a failed state no right-thinking investor would touch. And yet the Green Zone neocons and their masters in Washington are no more likely to reexamine their core beliefs than the Taliban mullahs were inclined to search their souls when their Islamic state slid into a debauched Hades of opium and sex slavery. When facts threaten true believers, they simply close their eyes and pray harder.

Which is precisely what Thomas Foley has been doing. The former head of “private sector development” has left Iraq, a country he had described as “the mother of all turnarounds,” and has accepted another turnaround job, as co-chair of George Bush’s reelection committee in Connecticut. On April 30 in Washington he addressed a crowd of entrepreneurs about business prospects in Baghdad. It was a tough day to be giving an upbeat speech: that morning the first photographs had appeared out of Abu Ghraib, including one of a hooded prisoner with electrical wires attached to his hands. This was another kind of shock therapy, far more literal than the one Foley had helped to administer, but not entirely unconnected. “Whatever you’re seeing, it’s not as bad as it appears,” Foley told the crowd. “You just need to accept that on faith.”




To: Michael Watkins who wrote (149950)10/30/2004 10:10:51 PM
From: Win Smith  Respond to of 281500
 
Originally posted a while ago, in techstocks.com , before Harper's put it online, to no apparent notice. Still one of my favorites, though, along with Fallows in theatlantic.com and Langewiesche in theatlantic.com / techstocks.com . Maybe somewhere there is equivalent reporting of how really, really well things are going in Iraq, but I sort of doubt it.