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War on Iraq

Refugee Crisis Threatens Future of Iraq

By Michael Schwartz, Tomdispatch.com. Posted February 14, 2008.


Close to 5 million Iraqis have fled their homes, depriving Iraq of its most precious resource.
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I'm an innumerate, but the figures on this -- the saddest story of our Iraq debacle -- are so large that even I can do the necessary computations. The population of the United States is now just over 300,000,000. The population of Iraq at the time of the U.S. invasion was perhaps in the 26-27 million range. Between March 2003 and today, a number of reputable sources place the total of Iraqis who have fled their homes -- those who have been displaced internally and those who have gone abroad -- at between 4.5 million and 5 million individuals. If you take that still staggering lower figure, approximately one in six Iraqis is either a refugee in another country or an internally displaced person.

Now, consider the equivalent in terms of the U.S. population. If Iraq had invaded the United States in March 2003 with similar results, in less than five years approximately 50 million Americans would have fled their homes, assumedly flooding across the Mexican and Canadian borders, desperately burdening weaker neighboring economies. It would be an unparalleled, even unimaginable, catastrophe. Consider, then, what we would think if, back in Baghdad, politicians and the media were hailing, or at least discussing positively, the "success" of the prime minister's recent "surge strategy" in the U.S., even though it had probably been instrumental in creating at least one out of every ten of those refugees, 5 million displaced Americans in all. Imagine what our reaction would be to such blithe barbarism.

Back in the real world, of course, what Michael Schwartz terms the "tsunami" of Iraqi refugees, the greatest refugee crisis on the planet, has received only modest attention in this country (which managed, in 2007, to accept but 1,608 Iraqi refugees out of all those millions -- a figure nonetheless up from 2006). As with so much else, the Bush administration takes no responsibility for the crisis, nor does it feel any need to respond to it at an appropriate level. Until now, to the best of my knowledge, no one has even put together a history of the monumental, horrific tale of human suffering that George W. Bush's war of choice and subsequent occupation unleashed, or fully considered what such a brain drain, such a loss of human capital, might actually mean for Iraq's future. Tom

Iraq's Tidal Wave of Misery: The First History of the Planet's Worst Refugee Crisis

By Michael Schwartz

A tidal wave of misery is engulfing Iraq -- and it isn't the usual violence that Americans are accustomed to hearing about and tuning out. To be sure, it's rooted in that violence, but this tsunami of misery is social and economic in nature. It dislodges people from their jobs, sweeps them from their homes, tears them from their material possessions, and carries them off from families and communities. It leaves them stranded in hostile towns or foreign countries, with no anchor to resist the moment when the next wave of displacement sweeps over them.

The victims of this human tsunami are called refugees if they wash ashore outside the country or IDPs ("internally displaced persons") if their landing place is within Iraq's borders. Either way, they are normally left with no permanent housing, no reliable livelihood, no community support, and no government aid. All the normal social props that support human lives are removed, replaced with...nothing.

Overlapping Waves of the Dispossessed

In its first four years, the Iraq war created three overlapping waves of refugees and IDPs.

It all began with the Coalition Provisional Authority, which the Bush administration set up inside Baghdad's Green Zone and, in May 2003, placed under the control of L. Paul Bremer III. The CPA immediately began dismantling Iraq's state apparatus. Thousands of Baathist Party bureaucrats were purged from the government; tens of thousands of workers were laid off from shuttered, state-owned industries; hundreds of thousands of Iraqi military personnel were dismissed from Saddam's dismantled military. Their numbers soon multiplied as the ripple effect of their lost buying power rolled through the economy. Many of the displaced found other (less remunerative) jobs; some hunkered down to wait out bad times; still others left their homes and sought work elsewhere, with the most marketable going to nearby countries where their skills were still in demand. They were the leading edge of the first wave of Iraqi refugees.


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Michael Schwartz, professor of sociology at Stony Brook University, has written extensively on popular protest and insurgency. This report on the Iraqi refugee crisis is from his forthcoming Tomdispatch book, War Without End: The Iraq Debacle in Context (Haymarket Books, June 2008). His work on Iraq has appeared on numerous Internet sites, including Tomdispatch, Asia Times, Mother Jones, and ZNET. His email address is Ms42@optonline.net.

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THANK YOU, GEORGE W.
Posted by: shd1230 on Feb 14, 2008 6:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Five million displaced--who knows how many dead. But hey, look on the bright side. THEY HAVE DEMOCRACY!!!

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» RE: THANK YOU, GEORGE W. Posted by: nightgaunt
Saddam Attacks USA?????
Posted by: flymulla on Feb 14, 2008 6:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sir
Why we live in a world of ostrich burying the head or the Tom Thumbs or Wizard of OZ?
Refugee Crisis Threatens Future of Iraq
Close to 5 million Iraqis have fled their homes, depriving Iraq of its most precious resource.
Now, consider the equivalent in terms of the U.S. population. If Iraq had invaded the United States in March 2003.
Saddam would not attack as he would be stopped on the Turkey border or the Red Sea ocean line, sir. This is childish norm or suppositions. This is the truth.
Sir
No, it is not when it comes to the Bush era, sir.
This is nothing when you talk of Iraq soldiers’ sir. The worst is not with the dead it is with the live ones. The USA freezes the funds of Syria is killing many slowly, At least the dead tell no tales but what about this those who make many broke?
Now we have other agencies talk of mental who have taken to the belts with the bombs and blow themselves and others around. There is always new in Iraq, is there not?
I thank you
Firozali A.Mulla MBA PhD
P.O.Box 6044
Dar-Es-Salaam
Tanzania
East Africa

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Move 'em
Posted by: LANCE on Feb 14, 2008 7:46 AM   
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...to Crawford.

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I don't get it
Posted by: grn1 on Feb 14, 2008 8:32 AM   
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At the same time Spielberg is opting out as creative consultant in Chinas olympics due to its involvement in the crisis of Darfur. It is obvious to some, realpolitik is a course of action that applies to others, yet is blind to destructive commitments of its own.

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can there be any doubt.....
Posted by: kellysgarden on Feb 14, 2008 11:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....that the real reason of the Iraq invasion and occupation was simply to take possession of that whole country and never leave? Get rid of all the Iraqis by killing, driving them out, and mutating any future generations by radiation from DU dust. We then have sole control of the oil resources.

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WHO THE HECK IS KIDDING WHO??
Posted by: chiquita1 on Feb 14, 2008 7:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most Americans don't give a damn about the 1.5 MILLION Iraqis & Afganis who've died fighting BUSH & HIS FASCISTS for Middle East Oil.

Moreover, most Americans have no feeling for the 5 MILLION who've been driven from their homes like African-American Katrina victims! What blew me away was that Racism drove them OUT and FASCISM is keeping them OUT - MUCH TO THE GLEE & JOY OF WHITE FOLKS...

What has to happen in the Middle East & Central Asia is for MUSLIMS of all STRIPES to put aside their diffeences and realize they are facing a BASIC SURVIVAL ISSUE called the U.S. and they will have to UNITE TO SURVIVE & to keep control of THEIR NATURAL RESOURCES!

Neither Americans nor EU folks will help the Muslims overcome the issues they face. They must UNITE & TAKE CARE OF THEM TOGETHER! Then and only then will Americans feel the pain of having to get the HE%% without what they came for - SOME HEAVY DUTY GENOCIDE & SOME OIL!

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This is a GWOT where the USA decides who the enemies are.
Posted by: nightgaunt on Feb 15, 2008 1:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Characteristics are immaterial to the geopolitics in play. Where morality and humanity are abscent from the equation,it is called realpolitik. What the likes of Henry Kissinger and Zbignew Brzinski and James A. Baker the III deal in. Most of our presidents of the 20th & 21st centuries have done as some kind of political ritual bloodletting couched in Christian religious expressions of piety. All hail the century of death that will make the bloody last century in smaller terms by the degree of killing,the numbers to die and the mass weapons of death used to carry out their rightous deeds. Their God Given causes and 'rights'.

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» RE: Kissinger Posted by: jim_altman
Collateral Damage
Posted by: jim_altman on Feb 16, 2008 5:31 AM   
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Terrorists seize headlines. Refugees are forgotten. Yet, today's refugees become tomorrow's terrorists. I was struck by another refugee story in the New York Times this morning. Ethnic Albanians are being evicted from homes in Kosovo by the UN. What ethnic cleansing couldn't accomplish is proceeding under a UN mandate. Once again, the refugee suffers in obscurity. When you begin to calculate the numbers of refugees created in the last hundred years by the conflicts of the major powers, you begin to see the emerging dominant issue of this century, the dispossessed. The conflicts created by our conflicts are now shaping future conflict, but we are still locked in the Hegelian worldview that treats all such people as collateral damage. Our leaders talk about "the terorists" or "the economy" or "the situation" in the middle east or wherever. We insist of describing things as "movements" or "revolutions," rather than describing particular human situations. The world today is filled with hostility, not because of the shibboleths of terrorism, or Islamo-fascism, or al-Qaeda, but because large groups of people are systematically ignored. Today's refugees become tomorrow's suicide bombers because to the major powers of this world they have already ceased to exist.

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