Discontent with President Bush�s �New Way Forward in Iraq�
is deep and wide across the U.S. and around the world. A big reason is his
recent decision to deploy 21,500 additional U.S. troops to Iraq. Opinion polls
show that the American public�s approval of Bush�s job performance has plunged
to a new low.
On this note of displeasure, we turn to the president�s call
for the creation of new employment in Iraq. �To show that it is committed to
delivering a better life, the Iraqi government will spend $10 billion of its
own money on reconstruction and infrastructure projects that will create new
jobs,� he said in his January 10 address.
Of course Iraqis out of work need to be on employers�
payrolls. Just ask Rudy Giuliani, former mayor of New York City, and Newt
Gingrich, a former congressman and current senior fellow at the American
Enterprise Institute. In a January 12 Wall Street Journal op-ed, they estimate
that Iraq has a 30 percent to 50 percent jobless rate, and suggest creating �an
Iraqi Citizen Job Corps, along the lines of FDR's Civilian Conservation Corps
during the Great Depression.�
It is worth noting that Iraqi joblessness on the low end of
Giuliani and Gingrich�s figures is nearly the official unemployment rate for
black male teens in the U.S. And there is nothing on the political horizon now
to improve that bleak situation that predates the U.S. invasion and occupation
of Iraq. It is beyond the political pale to press for an FDR-like program of
employment opportunities for these African American youth, facing three meals
and a cell in the nation�s fast-growing prison-industrial complex.
Be that as it is, the U.S. Congress should debate and
discuss the details of creating more jobs for Iraqis. I mean the involvement of
politically-connected GOP firms such as Halliburton. The new Democratic
majority, this means you.
Recall that Halliburton, the construction and engineering
firm led by Dick Cheney before he became Bush�s vice president, is synonymous
with corporate profiteering under the U.S. occupation of Iraq. To wit, the U.S.
government claims to have spent over $20 billion on rebuilding Iraq. However,
Baghdad residents today have less access to electricity and water than before
the March 2003 invasion, says Dean Baker, a macroeconomist and co-director of
the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC.
This kind of makes you wonder why no wit has coined the term
Halliburtonized as a verb meaning to be looted. If such a U.S. company and
others feeding at the American taxpayer trough slither into an Iraq jobs
program, this would bode ill for these long-suffering people. They deserve much
better.
So for their sake, I urge the Democratic-led Congress to
make every effort to root out America�s corporate rascals from any future Iraq
employment program. Prevention is the best medicine when it comes to banishing
all GOP-oiled firms from sucking any more resources away from jobless Iraqis.
Seth
Sandronsky is a member of Sacramento Area Peace Action and a co-editor of Because People Matter, Sacramento's
progressive paper. He can be reached at: bpmnews@nicetechnology.com.