The Hamilton Spectator

Iraq’s latest hope will have trouble meeting high expectatio­ns

- GWYNNE DYER

Fifteen years after George W. Bush invaded Iraq to destroy Saddam Hussein’s imaginary “weapons of mass destructio­n,” what have the Iraqis got to show for it?

There was a great deal of death and destructio­n (around half a million Iraqis have died violently since 2003), but they do now have a democratic­ally elected government. Sort of.

Iraqis voted in their fourth free election last April — or rather, fewer than half of them bothered to vote at all, so pessimisti­c were they about the notion that voting can change anything.

And after the election, the politician­s seemed to be living down to their expectatio­ns.

Almost six months later, the many political parties were still bickering over which of them would be in the government, which would give them access to the huge amounts of money that are available to government ministers in one of the world’s most corrupt countries.

It looked like business as usual, despite bloody riots in the south (where most of the oil is) over chronic shortages of water, electricit­y and jobs.

But last Tuesday the Iraqi parliament elected a prominent Kurdish politician, Barham Saleh, to the largely ceremonial office of president.

The president then has 15 days to nominate the new prime minister (who really runs the government), but Barham Saleh did it within hours.

The new prime minister will be Adel Abdul Mahdi.

Abdul Mahdi is not himself a revolution­ary figure.

He is a former finance and oil minister who, like Barham Saleh, has been a familiar fixture in Iraqi politics ever since the invasion.

But Abdul Mahdi is the figurehead of a coalition in which a revolution­ary outsider, Muqtada al-Sadr, will be the dominant influence.

Sadr’s party astonished everybody by winning the largest number of seats in the May election.

His party has been among the least corrupt on the Iraqi political scene, and he is a nationalis­t who is equally opposed to American and Iranian meddling in Iraqi politics.

He has disbanded his own party’s militia and urges others to do the same, and he promised to appoint non-political technocrat­s instead of usual party stalwarts if his party won power.

The coalition Sadr leads (although he will not personally seek office) includes the Iraqi Communist party, which more or less shares his goals, and the group led by former prime minister Nouri al-Maliki, which emphatical­ly does not.

Maliki, in power from 2006 to 2014, proved himself to be viciously anti-Sunni, largely subservien­t to Iranian interests — and, of course, monumental­ly corrupt.

It will be very difficult to hold this coalition together, let alone to carry out Sadr’s program of sectarian reconcilia­tion and government by technocrat­s.

There are 37 million people in Iraq. In most other countries, a population of that size would require around 600,000-700,000 employees to provide all the normal functions of a central government.

The Iraqi government employs 4.5 million people to do the same jobs very badly or not at all.

Many of them rarely even show up at work, but they and their families all vote for the right party at election-time. And since they are on the take themselves, they don’t protest when the senior politician­s in their party steal millions (or in some cases billions) from public funds.

This system was tolerated during the 15 years of war because people’s first priority was survival.

Now that the fighting has died down, people are starting to protest, and Muqtada al-Sadr has become the repository of their hopes.

He will have a hard time living up to them.

Gwynne Dyer’s new book is “Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy (and Work).”

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