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Iraqi Memories
Robert G. Rabil
“In order to have a
future, and lay the foundations of justice for the
future, the people of
Iraq must come to
terms with the atrocities perpetrated in their name
during three decades of Ba’thist rule. The ultimate
rationale behind the Iraq Memory Foundation is that the
truth can help heal a society that has been politically
brutalized on a large scale.” This is the mission
statement of the Iraq Memory Foundation, the brainchild
of Iraqi writer, and my former professor, Kanan Makiya.
This plan needs revision in order to be productive.
The IMF needs to address three principal pressing
concerns. Who should own the documents of Saddam
Hussein’s regime and how to legitimize their ownership
in the eyes of Iraqis? How and who should process the
documents, including what documents to display? And how
to administer and manage the overall Foundation? Central
to these concerns is my belief that the story of the
history of modern Iraq cannot be limited to Hussein’s
brutal era and that handling of the documents should not
follow a Manichean certitude that leave little latitude
for morally neutral areas of human conduct. Only then
could Iraq’s national reconciliation begin to take
roots.
Makiya believes that Iraq, by confronting the brutal
legacy of Saddam Hussein’s reign, will heal itself and
in the process bind itself together. With that in mind,
the IMF plans to construct a museum that will house,
among other things, a collection of state documents
showcasing the Ba’athist regime’s horrific legacy from
1968 to 2003. The Coalition Provisional Authority
earmarked one million dollars for the foundation, an
amount that Makiya wants to raise to over $10 million
through private funding to make sure his project has a
decent chance of success.
On the surface, Makiya’s project to help Iraqis forge a
national identity based on truth and reconciliation
seems commendable and auspicious. On a deeper level,
however, this project, if not rightly managed to tell
Iraq’s complete modern historical story through the
prism of Iraqi eyes, will have no legitimacy and
consequently further divide Iraqis. Elizabeth A. Cole,
writing in the New York Times, asserted that “in
a fragmented society like postwar Iraq, deciding on the
‘truth’ about the old regime will not be easy. Not
everyone in Iraq, for instance, agrees that all the
country’s woes were the product of Saddam Hussein’s
tyrannical rule; instead some point to the damage done
by 13 years of economic sanctions. Nor does it seem
likely that everyone would agree that Mr. Makiya, an
exile backed by an occupying power, is the right person
to spearhead the nation’s truth-seeking effort.”
Cole’s assertions are both sensible and disputable.
Iraqis need to face the past and learn from its mistakes
so they can create socio-political and constitutional
mechanisms to prevent the country from committing past
blunders and mistakes. Makiya has been the first – to my
knowledge – to tackle this very sensitive issue. But
this confrontation of the past needs to be legitimate in
the eyes of Iraqis and encompassing in its approach,
laying sturdy grounds for “truth and “reconciliation”
among Iraqis. Neither “truth” nor “reconciliation” can
be pursued by half measures in a country where
sectarianism, tribalism and violence had been the
socio-political norms. Iraq’s story must be told in its
entirety, affecting no less the conscience of the
Shiites and Kurds than the Sunnis. Facing the past
should help forge an Iraqi identity steeped in an Iraqi
collective consciousness. Herein lies the importance of
the Iraqi official documents. They offer a credible and
insightful reading of Iraq’s modern history especially
under the rule of the Ba’ath regime.
Significantly, can
Iraq’s past, indeed Iraq’s modern history, be limited to
the Ba’athist rule over the country? Will facing the
atrocities committed by the regime of Saddam Hussein
provide the national base out of which Iraq’s identity
may emerge? I think not. A people who do not learn the
lessons of history, it is said, are bound to repeat the
mistakes it chronicles. In examining thousands of
official Iraqi documents captured during the March 1991
uprising, I realized how thoroughly the Ba’ath regime
had coordinated and supervised a system of oppression by
procedures designed both to eliminate opposition and to
turn the maximum number of Iraqis into its accomplices.
The documents undoubtedly confirmed Makiya’s “Republic
of Fear.”
But at the same time, a thorough analysis of the
documents showed me that Hussein was the product of
Iraq’s
turbulent and convulsionary politics. This period,
characterized by coup and counter coup d’etats,
culminated in the brutal reign of Hussein.
The documents showed that Hussein was not the first
ruler to attack the Kurds en masse, impose
economic blockade and collective punishment on his
people, and torture Iraqis. Hussein took the tyranny and
brutality of former regimes to new heights. He excelled
at learning, refining and evolving old brutal policies,
including the means of achieving them by using, if
necessary, weapons of mass destruction. One could even
argue that some of the policies the juntas in Iraq used
had been practiced thousands of years ago. For example,
the Assyrians and Babylonians employed the strategy of
mass displacement (forced deportation and settlement) to
make revolt in their empires less likely.
Equally significant, can the focus on the atrocities of
the Ba’ath regime absolve Iraq’s former opposition
parties, some of which are now members of Iraq’s
Governing Council, of their crimes? Some documents in
the very same brush that detailed the atrocities
committed by the Ba’ath regime described the crimes
committed by the former opposition, including
kidnapping, banditry and murder. No doubt, these crimes
pale in comparison to those committed by Hussein, and
most likely they were the result of Hussein’s brutal
rule. But can suffering be measured? Here, one needs to
ask the question, what kind of documents will the IMF
display? By displaying only the horrors of Saddam
Hussein’s rule, will truth and reconciliation among
Iraqis succeed? Will concentrating on Saddam Hussein’s
rule do justice to Iraq’s modern history and
historiography?
Similarly, the
manner in which the IMF, and by extension the documents,
is managed raise sensitive issues and questions of
legitimacy that, if not addressed appropriately, will
affect, and defy, the very purpose of the Foundation. As
a non-Iraqi who managed the Iraq Research and
Documentation Project, the forerunner of IMF and owner
of over two million digital copies of Iraqi official
documents, I encountered certain problems that may have
a bearing on the Foundation’s work as well.
The IRDP research team included members of various
ethnic and religious Iraqi backgrounds and a few
Lebanese-Americans. Notwithstanding the nebulous
character of certain documents, due to illegible
handwriting, illiteracy or coding, their reading and
analysis differed markedly from one researcher to
another. Problems arose when these documents were not
put in their historical context. Importantly, a major
problem of legitimacy arose when one researcher came
across his own file, laying bare his life’s very private
and intimate details including those of his family
members. Penetrating details ranged from the private to
the political. Suddenly, the issue of who has the right
to look at the documents became a burning problem. Out
of this issue another emerged that questioned the rights
of proprietorship of the documents. Who owned them? Who
had the right to decide their fate and consequential
contextual outcome? And was Makiya, given his
affiliation with the Iraqi National Congress, (as Cole
wrote) the “right person to spearhead the nation’s
truth-seeking effort”?
The issue of
ownership rights poses a dangerous threat to Iraq’s
national reconciliation. Following the collapse of the
Ba’ath regime, millions of documents found their way
into the hands of private groups and political and
religious parties. A significant number is under the
control of the Iraq Survey Group, the US intelligence
unit charged with finding Iraq’s weapons of mass
destruction. Under the current political climate of
jockeying for power, it is no idle speculation that some
groups and parties would use the documents to blackmail
or discredit their opponents.
An example of what
could happen was reflected in the attempt to discredit
and disparage a British official who opposed the war on
Iraq.
On April 25, 2003, the Christian Science Monitor
ran a story about documents obtained in Iraq that
alleged Saddam Hussein's regime had paid a British
member of Parliament, George Galloway, $10 million over
11 years to promote its interests in the West. Creating
a universal stir, the Monitor was forced to
conduct an extensive investigation that determined the
six papers detailed in the April 25 piece were indeed
forgeries. Admittedly, political figures could use these
documents not only to blackmail their opponents but also
to advance their political ambitions. As one Iraqi
recently told me, “some parties have already drawn up
lists of names from the documents to either blackmail,
discredit or put on the defensive.”
In a system where collaboration was a mainstay of the
regime’s policies, many, whose names could come up in
those lists or in future lists, were compelled out of
necessity to “cooperate” with the regime. Through a
comprehensive and methodical system, the regime with the
help of the Security Apparatus strove to deepen the
population’s dependence on the state for services and
employment. Central to this policy was the objective to
turn Iraqis into spies and/or members of the Ba’ath
party. The Coalition Provisional Authority has the
responsibility to prevent any exploitation of the
documents by any party or group until an official Iraqi
government assumes power and decides what to do with all
these documents. Meanwhile, the CPA and Iraqi
authorities have to be generous in understanding that
forced collaboration was one more way in which Iraqis
were victimized.
Robert G. Rabil is the
former project manager of Iraq Research and
Documentation Project and author of "Embattled
Neighbors: Syria, Israel, and Lebanon (Lynne Rienner
Publishers, 2003).
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