|
Iraqi Realists
Nikolas
Gvosdev
Iraq's
Governing Council appears to have a clear vision of
their country's national interests--and this may bring
them into greater conflict with their supporters in
Washington.
Writing
in The National Interest's winter 2003/04 energy
supplement, Joe Barnes, Amy Jaffe and Edward L. Morse
note: "The idea that a grateful Iraqi citizenry will
relinquish its rights to high oil prices out of
gratitude to the United States for their liberation
seems, to put it gently, farfetched." ("The New
Geopolitics of Oil," at http://www.inthenationalinterest.com/Articles/Vol2Issue49/Vol2Issue49Energy-Morse.html)
Iraqis
may be grateful to the
United
States
for liberation from Saddam Hussein's tyranny, but this
does not mean that they feel their national interests
are fully in alignment with those of the United States.
And, based on the results of their meetings in Moscow,
it appears that the Governing Council is prepared to
take a more independent line in charting Iraq's postwar
future.
The
visit of Abdul Aziz Al-Hakim, the head of the Governing
Council, and Jalal Talabani, head of the Patriotic Union
of Kurdistan, to Moscow appears to have produced several
results, namely:
1)
A
commitment by Russia to consider reducing Iraq's debt
and outstanding interest payments by two-thirds in
return for consideration of Russian commercial
interests, including contracts signed with the Hussein
government;
2)
A
pledge that
Russia
would invest up to $4 billion in Iraq, principally in
the energy and communications sector
What is
important about this? First and foremost, both
Baghdad
and
Moscow
bypassed the United States. Russian President Vladimir
Putin chose to make the announcement directly to
Iraq's
representatives, rather than via former Secretary of
State James Baker. The message is clear— the United
States can take no credit for this, and it is in
Iraq's
interests to deal directly with Russia rather than via
Washington intermediaries.
The
Governing Council, for its part, wants to demonstrate
its independence and also, by involving
Russia
directly, provide for a "mixed" set of investors.
Fearing, perhaps, that the Pentagon directives on
reconstruction contracts might deprive Iraq of
investment capital and give excluded countries no stake
in successful Iraqi reconstruction, reassuring Russia
directly that its interests will be considered enabled
Baghdad
to bring
Russia
into the process. Thus, Russian Energy Minister Igor
Yusufov announced: "The Iraqi side proposed to resume
talks at the level of experts on Russian contracts which
have already been signed. … This proposal was accepted
by Russian President Vladimir Putin and he ordered the
government to work in this direction."
So now
the United States is placed in an awkward position. It
can stand back and let the Governing Council cut deals
with Russia — and one assumes that agreements on are
deck for
France
and Germany. It can interfere and seriously erode the
legitimacy of the Governing Council as a transition
institution toward full Iraqi sovereignty.
One, in
fact, even hopes that perhaps
Washington
has tacitly encouraged the Governing Council to take
these steps, as ways to vest Russia and other countries
as shareholders in Iraqi reconstruction and to give the
Governing Council a boost in its internal and external
legitimacy, especially in the wake of Saddam Hussein's
capture.
At any
rate, the Moscow talks offer a "win-win" solution for
all involved. If carried out, large-scale forgiveness of
Iraqi debt and the promise of major new investments in
Iraq help to reduce the burdens shouldered by American
taxpayers and bolster the stability of the postwar
regime in Iraq. Let's not look this gift horse in the
mouth.
Nikolas
K. Gvosdev is the editor of The National Interest.
|