Box 4: Parked in the BayThe US administration deployed two US Naval ships with 3,500 marines on board to the waters of the Bay of Bengal for humanitarian assistance/disaster relief operations in Bangladesh after that country was hit by Tropical Cyclone Sidr in 2007. In the words of the US Charge d’Affaires in Bangladesh, US is "(h)ere for the long term … to assist with recovery and rehabilitation".1 These Department of Defense operations come under a joint plan of the US Department of State and USAID. One of the ships, USS Kearsarge, has also been used between 2003 and 2005 in "Operation Iraq Freedom" and the "Global War on Terror". Many local voices were raised in protest in Bangladesh.
1 - US embassy, Dhaka, press release, 7 December 2007,
http://tinyurl.com/c2kmpb, see also Indo-Asian News Service, "Islamists protest US naval presence for cyclone relief", The Earth Times, 24 November 2007,
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/147173.html In respect of the agricultural sector more specifically, the US has implemented a blueprint similar to the one already described in relation to Afghanistan, albeit on a larger scale and with more flagrant profiteering by US companies. In one of its orders, the CPA abolished agricultural subsidies and opened up the agricultural market. Not surprisingly, the country was flooded with cheap imports and local food production collapsed. Just as in Afghanistan, changes in seed laws were seen as crucial. However, whereas in Afghanistan it was at least the central government that enacted the new laws, in Iraq farmers’ rights to save seeds were struck down by the infamous Order 81 during the last days of the US’s Coalition Provisional Authority’s rule.24
Dan Amstutz was put in charge of the USAID’s Agriculture Reconstruction and Development Program for Iraq (ARDI). This work, which was managed by one of USAID’s most trusted private contractors, Development Alternatives Inc. (DAI), focused on accelerating "the transition from a command-and-control production and marketing system to a market-driven economy where farmers and agribusinesses are able to take risks and realize profits". [25] At the top of ARDI’s list was wheat, Iraq’s most important food crop. In the field, ARDI’s work with wheat focused on the import, multiplication and distribution of certified wheat seed. [26] Those efforts seem to have had little impact. During ARDI’s three years, Iraq’s national wheat production dropped from 2.6 million tonnes in 2002 to 2.2 million tonnes in 2006 (despite a doubling in the area sown to wheat) and the national average yields for wheat plunged over those same years from 1.6 tonnes per hectare to 0.6 tonnes per hectare. [27] But ARDI was also playing a political game with wheat that was part of a larger US shock-therapy strategy for the Iraq economy and likely to have been of more interest to US agribusiness: its central objective was to liberalise and privatise Iraq’s wheat sector, and its Public Distribution System in particular. [28] While the chaos following the US invasion made an immediate sell-off or dismantling of Iraq’s wheat sector impossible (and illegal under the Geneva Convention), ARDI tried to push the Iraqis down the alternative path of neoliberal reforms that could arrive at the same ends while sidestepping political sensitivities and immediate practical problems. [29] Some of this privatisation is now being implemented in Iraq through the "International Compact with Iraq" – a five-year plan negotiated by the Iraqi government with the World Bank, the US and other major donors. [30] Whatever the eventual outcome, the combined devastation of Iraq’s wheat production and the opening of its wheat markets to US imports, both brought about by the US invasion, has yielded billions of dollars for US grain companies.
When ARDI came to a close in 2006, USAID launched two new programmes – a US$343 million Inma Agribusiness Program [31] and Izdihar (Iraq Private Sector Growth and Employment Generation). [32] Both programmes are being carried out by the Loius Berger Group Inc., one of the world’s largest infrastructure and development consultancies, and they are designed to prepare the way for agribusiness investment in the food industry.
Yet, like similar programmes in Afghanistan, these agriculture reconstruction programmes also serve a military function and are immersed in military operations. Of the US$250 million of "reconstruction" funds that the US has so far spent on the 581 agricultural projects that it has either proposed, planned or completed since the beginning of the invasion, more than 97 per cent of the projects have been paid for with funds from the Commanders’ Emergency Response Program (CERP), which is managed by the "Multi-National Corps-Iraq". Only 2.4 per cent of these projects have been funded by the Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Fund, which is supervised by the US’s Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction. CERP was initially funded by way of the cash and assets that the US military seized from the former Iraqi government. After the US military had spent these seized funds by early 2004, just before the Coalition Provisional Authority came to an end, the US decided to keep CERP going with appropriations from the US government. Of the 552 agricultural reconstruction projects the US has started in Iraq, the Multi-National Corps-Iraq have managed 536, the US Army Corps of Engineers have managed six, and USAID has managed only ten. [33] Funding for agriculture reconstruction in Afghanistan is also dominated by a similar CERP, meaning that, in both cases, it is the military that ultimately decides which projects get done.
"We have two new best friends in the rice industry, the director general of the ministry of trade from Iraq and the director general of the Iraqi Grain Board," said Stuart Proctor Jr., president and chief executive officer of USA Rice Federation in 2004 after a meeting with both of these men. [36]
The USAID and other so-called civilian programmes in Iraq work with Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) – modelled on the PRTs that were first set up in Afghanistan. According to the US Embassy in Iraq: "Established in Iraq in 2005 and inaugurated by Secretary Rice in November that year, the Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) initiative is a civilian–military inter-agency effort that is the primary U.S. Government interface between U.S., Coalition partners and provincial and local governments throughout all of Iraq’s 18 provinces." [34]
A December 2008 report by the United States Institute of Peace, "an independent, nonpartisan, national institution established and funded by Congress", [35] provides more details about how the PRTs relate to the US military mission in Iraq, and is worth quoting at length:
"PRTs tend to play a supporting, advisory role for the military, providing them with civilian expertise they would not otherwise have access to and offering suggestions on how to shape operations. As one member of a PRT working in a counter-insurgency environment in Baghdad said, 'The military is the blunt instrument; we provide the fine tuning.’ Nonetheless, in counter-insurgency environments, the military has the unambiguous lead, and freely ignores PRT’s advice if, in their judgment, security concerns dictate.… PRT’s report to Baghdad and Washington about political, economic and security developments in their provinces – an obviously beneficial but rarely discussed function. Senior policymakers and military officials highly value the information they get from the PRTs. On a political level, these officials analyze winners and losers and project trends for political development in their provinces. PRT members also monitor security flashpoints and scout for the military, a particularly useful role in areas where the military has a light footprint. On an economic level, officials in Baghdad said that were it not for the PRTs, they would have little idea of how much money was being spent by Iraqi ministries. (The Iraqi Ministry of Finance, for both technical and political reasons, is unable or unwilling to provide this information, but this information is readily available to the PRTs.) … PRTs are valuable diplomatic representatives to provincial governments. It is highly unusual, if not completely unprecedented, for the U.S. to have independent diplomatic contacts with such low-level and numerous governmental entities in a foreign country. In the current environment in which many U.S. interests depend on the course of Iraqi political development, it is valuable for the U.S. to have these points of diplomatic contact to nudge Iraqi politics in a direction that serves Washington’s interests." [37]
Box 5: Another way is possibleThe experience of disaster-ridden regions with aid from abroad and from their own governments does not mean that assistance is never needed. Indeed, help can be meaningful and extremely important, if it enables communities to help themselves. Peasant organisations such as La Via Campesina1 have shown a way forward. After the tsunami they routed relief directly to communities’ right across the affected region:
"In Sri Lanka, India, Thailand and Indonesia, where La Via Campesina has member organisations, farmers launched relief operations to support the survivors of the catastrophe, they gave out rice and vegetables to feed the people affected, and several fund-raising activities were organised to channel national and international contributions towards small peasants and fisherfolk’s organisations. La Via Campesina also immediately publicly raised important issues affecting small producers such as the origin of food aid (local or imported food), the type of reconstruction policies implemented (agribusiness or family based production) and people’s participation in the process."2
1 - International Secretariat of La Via Campesina, "20 months after the Tsunami: Looking back at La via Campesina relief operations", 4 July 2006,
http://tinyurl.com/b6ftfg2 - Peter Rosset and María Elena Martínez, "The Democratisation of Aid", in Red Pepper, February 2005,
http://www.redpepper.org.uk/The-democratisation-of-aid It now seems likely that, under President Obama, the PRTs importance to the US mission will greatly expand. According to a report in the New York Times on 3 December 2008, "Pentagon planners" are proposing "relabeling some units, so that those currently counted as combat troops could be 're-missioned’, their efforts redefined as training and support for the Iraqis". [38] As a result of this ploy, the Pentagon intends to keeps as many as 70,000 troops in Iraq beyond 2011, which is the date established in the US–Iraqi Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) for the complete withdrawal of all combat troops. If this ruse goes ahead, the distinction between the military and aid workers will be completely blurred. Moreover, by agreeing to this subversion of SOFA, the US President Obama has, in practice, given up on his electoral pledge to withdraw US combat troops from Iraq within 16 months. [39] This is hardly a clean break from the policies of the Bush administration.
It is a huge challenge for farmers to organise in such a setting where choices are limited and where farmers are not themselves in control of their own futures. Both the Oil-for-Food programme, which banned purchase of local produce, and the large-scale importation of food after the invasion when the markets were opened up to cheap imports devastated Iraqi farmers. Moreover, farmers’ organisations are now being set up by occupying forces to facilitate their "reconstruction" work. In Iraq, the US Army is directly involved in re-establishing the "farmers’ unions" that were formerly under the control of the central government and in using these unions to distribute its aid, such as seeds, pesticides and machinery. [40]
Conclusion
It would be dangerous to see the integration of the US military operations and aid work in Afghanistan and Iraq as an aberration. The same merging of "hard" and "soft" power under the military in Afghanistan and Iraq is happening with US overseas programmes in other parts of the world. For instance, a coalition of US groups has accused the newly launched United States Africa Command, known as AFRICOM, of seeking to bring humanitarian work previously done by the State Department and USAID under the Department of Defense directive, an accusation that AFRICOM denies. [41] But it is hard to deny the overall trend: today the United States spends approximately 30 times more on military operations globally than it does on diplomacy and development under the State Department and USAID. Moreover, the Pentagon now controls more than 20 per cent of US Official Development Assistance. [42] According to Betty McCollum in the US House of Representatives, the fact that USAID has to have an office of military affairs to communicate with the Pentagon "means that something has gone horribly awry". [43]
It is essential for people around the world to stop aid being hijacked in this way. Aid policies and practices need to be rethought. Some people are calling for an International Agreement on Aid to make aid real and accountable.44 This has to go hand in hand with demanding demilitarisation and an end to the wars in Afghanistan and the occupation of Iraq. No matter how good aid work is, it will not contribute towards genuine reconstruction if it is also being used to reinforce the military interests of the principal donor country and to maintain its hegemonic dominance.
Going further
Reality of Aid - http://www.realityofaid.org/
FACTSHEET: How does food aid work? http://www.alertnet.org/thefacts/reliefresources/11268811061.htm
References
1 - Najib Khelwatgar and Ahmad Qurishi, "Afghan Army open fire on Shindand pro-testers, Karzai worried", PAN, 23 August 2008:
http://tinyurl.com/42z5mr2 - A US Special Forces civil affairs team leader, quoted in Anna Perry, "Afghan Agricultural Center Contributes to Better Security", American Forces Press Service, 3 July 2008.
http://tinyurl.com/br3zlc3 - To get a sense of the nature and extent of Chemonics’ interventions, see "Rebuilding Agricultural Markets Program (RAMP) Afghanistan: Fiscal Year 2006 Work Plan.
http://tinyurl.com/bva5apAmong the USAID partners in this is the Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE –
www.cipe.org). See also "Windfalls of War: US contractors in Afghanistan & Iraq", on the website of The Center for Public Integrity.
http://tinyurl.com/bwra934 - See "Chemonics International", Washington Post, Post 200 – Top DC area businesses,
http://tinyurl.com/dds7eh 5 - "Chemonics announces scholarship at Afghan AgFair", Chemonics’ website, 20 February 2009,
http://tinyurl.com/ddvsqd6 - Chemonics International Inc., "Lashkar Gah Bost Airport and Agriculture Center, Helmand Province, Afghanistan: Environmental Assessment", October 2008.
http://tinyurl.com/ajn8ze7 - USAID: Afghanistan, "Provincial Reconstruction Teams",
http://tinyurl.com/akn2qb8 - Quoted in Army Staff Sgt Jon Soucy, "Missouri Guard’s Agricultural Mission Grows in Afghanistan", American Forces Press Service, 23 December 2008,
http://tinyurl.com/couxfb9 - See ICARDA’s web page about the FHCRAA,
http://tinyurl.com/c8793l10 - J. Dennis, A. Diab and P. Trutmann, "The Planning of Emergency Seed Supply for Afghanistan in 2002 and Beyond", a draft concept paper prepared for the Tashkent Conference, 2002,
http://www.afghanseed.org11 - FAO Newsroom, "Code of conduct on seeds for Afghanistan reached", 30 May 2002,
http://tinyurl.com/3sphbl12 - See also ICARDA website’s "Seed for Afghanistan" section,
http://tinyurl.com/b44kba13 - GRAIN, "Seed laws: imposing agricultural apartheid", Seedling, June 2005,
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=33714 - National Seeds Policy of Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, 2005 (emphasis added).
15 - A copy of the final draft of the Afghanistan Seed Law (August 2006) can be downloaded from
http://tinyurl.com/cpy3sn16 - AfghanMania, "Private Seed Enterprise opens in Bamyan", 21 August 2006,
http://tinyurl.com/b3jrjd17 - SeedQuest, news section, "Message from the President of the newly formed ANSA", 24 October 2008,
http://tinyurl.com/b9to3g18 - Jim Landers, "Texas troops combat Afghan insurgents with farming plan", Dallas Morning News, 1 February 2009,
http://tinyurl.com/af98d519 - See Suleiman Al-Khalidi, "Iraq buys 200,000 t of Russian wheat from Glencore", arabian Business.com, 25 September 2008,
http://tinyurl.com/bngmlv20 - Policy Archive, "Iraq Agriculture and Food Supply: Background and Issues", June 2004,
http://tinyurl.com/br6dmd21 - Cargill, the biggest global trader of agricultural commodities, is a multinational corporation registered in the US,
http://www.cargill.com/22 - See "Iraq’s Closed Factories," The Ground Truth in Iraq (blog), 15 January 2009,
http://tinyurl.com/acv6q7Bassam Yousif, "Economic restructuring in Iraq: intended and unintended consequences", Journal of Economic Issues, March 2007,
http://tinyurl.com/dmjfl223 - "More than 90% of Iraqi industries are halted", IRAQdirectory.com, 10 January 2009:
http://tinyurl.com/ad2hnr24 - Focus on the Global South and GRAIN, Against the grain, "Iraq’s new patent law: A declaration of war against farmers", October 2004,
http://www.grain.org/articles/?id=625 - See DAI – Projects: ARDI, "Revitalizing Iraq’s agricultural sector", n.d.
http://tinyurl.com/b739o6 26 - It should be noted that since the invasion the US has sought to dismantle former public programmes which provided subsidised inputs, including seeds, to Iraqi farmers, and that the provision of seeds by US forces is seen as a temporary measure before a "free-market" seed system takes over.
27 - These are FAO figures, available from FAOSTAT.
http://faostat.fao.org/site/291/default.aspx28 - Robert Looney, "Neoliberalism in a Conflict State: The Viability of Economic Shock Therapy in Iraq", Strategic Insights, Vol. III, No. 6, June 2004,
http://tinyurl.com/ah4zvc29 - See Rich Magnani and Sawsan Al-Sharifi, "Reform and Rehabilitation of Iraq’s agricultural sector: The case of the Iraqi wheat sector", USAID–Iraq, 2005,
http://tinyurl.com/dgllqrand
http://tinyurl.com/afh7mlSee also "Iraq Private Sector Growth and Employment Generation – The Potential for Food Process-ing in Iraq", USAID–Iraq, 15 March 2006,
http://tinyurl.com/ck4rn630 - See the annexes to The International Compact with Iraq: Annual Review, May 2007–April 2008, which show progress against benchmarks,
http://tinyurl.com/atv6lr31 - "Inma" means "growth" in Arabic. The Program’s website can be found at
http://tinyurl.com/bq7oyn32 - "Izdihar" means "prosperity" in Arabic. The Program’s website can be found at
http://www.izdihar-iraq.com/index.html33 - USDA Foreign Agricultural Service Information Management Unit, "Iraq Agriculture and Irrigation Overview," July 2008,
http://tinyurl.com/bjxozk34 - US embassy, Baghdad, press release, "Fact sheet on Provincial Reconstruction Teams", 17 December 2007,
http://tinyurl.com/yygq7l35 - According to "USIP’s Missions and Goals" as described on the institute’s website. See
http://www.usip.org/aboutus/index.html36 - Doreen Muzzi, "Iraq trade deal pleases rice industry", Farm Press, 13 March 2004,
http://tinyurl.com/absdp537 - Rusty Barber and Sam Parker, "Evaluating Iraq’s Provincial Reconstruction Teams While Drawdown Looms: A USIP Trip Report", USIPeace Briefing, December 2008,
http://tinyurl.com/5okaaa38 - Tom Shanker "Campaign promises on ending war in Iraq now muted", New York Times, 3 December 2008,
http://tinyurl.com/cab7jy(The Pentagon is the military headquarters of the US Department of Defense.)
39 - Gareth Porter, "How Obama Lost Control of Iraq Policy", Agence Global, 2 January 2009,
http://tinyurl.com/azl36z40 - See Erik LeDrew, "Artillery Troopers Plant Seeds of Reconstruction in Iraq", US Dept. of Defense, Defend America, October 2004,
http://tinyurl.com/bvnbmqSee also Michael Molinaro, "For Jiff Jaffa farmers, democracy and fertilizer go hand in hand", Operation Iraqi Freedom: Official Website of Multi-National Force – Iraq, 13 September 2006,
http://tinyurl.com/cnkqsfSee also Michael Molinaro, "Farmers in Iraq Hold Elections to Select Board", US Department of Defense, Defend America, 18 August 2006,
http://tinyurl.com/d8w8kb41 - "AFRICOM: The Militarization of U.S.–Africa Policy Revealed", Africa Action, 6 February 2008,
http://tinyurl.com/atbve3and Karen DeYoung, "U.S. Africa Command Trims Its Aspirations", Washington Post, 1 June 2008,
http://tinyurl.com/3mprad42 - Beth Tuckey, "Congress Challenges AFRICOM," Foreign Policy in Focus, 23 July 2008,
http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/539843 - Ibid.
44 - ActionAid International, Real Aid – An Agenda for Making Aid Work, June 2005,
http://tinyurl.com/dm8loa