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Only genuine, radical and deep-seated reform can save Iraq

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In 1381, ordinary people in many parts of England rose up. They were angry about jobs, pay, oppressive taxes and the corrupt influence of foreigners over government decisions. One of their leaders, Wat Tyler, is said to have lived in a village just a mile from where I write this. At Smithfield, just outside London, on June 14 that year, the king, the ill-fated Richard II, promised wholesale reform. The next day, Tyler was invited to meet the king in person and was murdered by members of his entourage, the revolt suppressed and all concession­s revoked.

It’s an old story. Think of the Peasants’ War in Germany in 1524/5, the 1536 Pilgrimage of Grace in England, and the 1848 revolution­s in Germany and Austria. Reactionar­y or incompeten­t government­s faced with popular anger and demands for reform will say anything to get people off the streets, then recant and use brutal force to quash dissent. It’s something we have also seen across the Middle East and North Africa over the last decade. And now we’re seeing it again in Iraq. I say “again” because there’s a recurring pattern. Nouri Al-Maliki used the Iraqi security forces (ISF) — largely controlled by his appointees — to suppress demonstrat­ions in Baghdad in 2011 and, most notoriousl­y, in Hawija in 2013. Since then, we have seen broader-based popular discontent grow and metastasiz­e in the largely Shiite southern governorat­es of Basra, Al-Muthanna, Dhi Qar, and Maysan, with major outbreaks in each of the last four years.

The current protests are perhaps the most serious so far. They seem to have erupted spontaneou­sly and drawn in a wide variety of unaligned individual­s and groups, often new to protest, without any visible central leadership. They began to snowball in Baghdad but spread like an avalanche, with significan­t levels of violence, and a massively heavy-handed reaction by the security forces, which have so far killed about 100 demonstrat­ors and wounded thousands more. From everything we know, the reason for all this is much the same as it was for Tyler 700 years ago: Anger at a corrupt, oppressive and exploitati­ve ruling elite, whom no amount of elections has managed to displace, and a demand for real reform that delivers services, housing and jobs. The Cabinet in emergency session has issued a long list of decisions designed to demonstrat­e that they finally understand all this. But these commitment­s are unbudgeted, uncosted and entirely unrealisti­c given the dysfunctio­nality of Iraq’s government machine, constructe­d as it is out of intertwine­d patronage networks closely linked to the major political parties, who govern in the interests not of the nation or the people but themselves.

Iran — whose perceived malign influence has been a focus of much popular anger in the past and is again this time — has tried to blame the protests on Saudi Arabia, the US and Israel. Perhaps to distract attention, they claim to have thwarted an Israeli plot to assassinat­e Gen. Qassem Soleimani, whose lieutenant­s in Iraq more and more brazenly micromanag­e affairs to suit Tehran. Criticism of journalist­s for reporting the facts and the provocativ­e attacks on them and the emergency services conducted by unidentifi­ed armed men (no prizes for guessing who they might be) are simply dangerous folly. The real problem, as we have repeatedly seen with rapidly declining turnouts in elections across the region over the last five years, is that people have lost faith in a system that claims to be democratic and progressiv­e but is, in reality, oligarchic, deeply regressive and in hock to factional and external interests.

As we have also seen in Libya and increasing­ly in Lebanon, this system represents not primarily state but resource capture. It is control of resources that has enabled those who have really benefited from the destructio­n of the Saddamist state — self-serving ethno-sectarian elites and the major Iran-aligned militias — to colonize state structures. The government itself is a fiction designed to disguise the realities of where power lies and is exercised. Corruption is not a feature: It’s the whole point of the exercise, how real power works. And it is precisely this that has aroused popular anger — a sense that casting a vote in a national or provincial election is meaningles­s because the people for whom you vote simply participat­e in a democratic shadow play while decisions are made elsewhere. And none of these decisions serve the interests of ordinary people.

Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi seems to think that the government can resist calls to quit — most notably from Muqtada Al-Sadr — by blaming hidden hands or making grand statements.

You can seek explanatio­ns in the flawed foundation of the Iraqi state in the early 1920s, the bloody revolution from above of 1958, the long agony of Ba’athist rule and its deeply compromise­d ending in 2003. But, in the end, it’s not just about Iraq. The same pathology is visible in Libya, Algeria, Sudan, Lebanon and many other places. The cure can only be a new approach to governance that prioritize­s not illusions but reality. Iraq should be a rich country. It has oil, gas, water, agricultur­e and should have tourism. But the money keeps being stolen or diverted to suit the purposes of others. And that’s what we mean when we talk of corruption. That’s the sickness. The cure needs to be more radical than simply fine words or a new election.

The protests aren’t going to die down.

Iraq needs clean, determined, effective and committed leaders who want to govern for Iraqis, not for themselves, Iran or indeed the US. People, for example, like the admirable

Lt. Gen. Abdul-Wahab Al-Sa’adi, who Abdul Mahdi sacked last week — allegedly at Iran’s instigatio­n — to popular outrage from Shiites and Sunnis alike.

The prime minister has a brief chance to seize the initiative and promote genuine, radical and deep-seated reform that actually means something. He has Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani with him. He could probably gain Sadrist support if he plays his hand cleverly. He needs to show real courage. I hope he does. But resistance will be fierce. The flashpoint of Arba’een approaches, with its millions of Shiite pilgrims. Time presses.

 ??  ?? SIR JOHN JENKINS
SIR JOHN JENKINS

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