Commentators

Rain (AM and PM) 15° London Hi 18°C / Lo 14°C

Ali Allawi: This raises huge questions over our independence

Thursday, 5 June 2008

In 1930 the Anglo-Iraqi treaty was signed as a prelude to Iraq gaining full independence. Britain had occupied Iraq after defeating the Turks in the First World War, and was granted a mandate over the country. The treaty gave Britain military and economic privileges in exchange for Britain's promise to end its mandate. The treaty was ratified by a docile Iraqi parliament, but was bitterly resented by nationalists. Iraq's dependency on Britain poisoned Iraqi politics for the next quarter of a century. Riots, civil disturbances, uprisings and coups were all a feature of Iraq's political landscape, prompted in no small measure by the bitter disputations over the treaty with Britain.

Iraq is now faced with a reprise of that treaty, but this time with the US, rather than Britain, as the dominant foreign partner. The US is pushing for the enactment of a "strategic alliance" with Iraq, partly as a precondition for supporting Iraq's removal from its sanctioned status under Chapter 7 of the UN Charter. It is a treaty under any other name. It has been structured as an alliance partly to avoid subjecting its terms to the approval of the US Senate, and partly to obfuscate its significance. Although the draft has not been circulated outside official circles, the leaks raise serious alarm about its long-term significance for Iraq's sovereignty and independence. Of course the terms of the alliance for Iraq will be sweetened with promises of military and economic aid, but these are no different in essence from the commitments made in Iraq's previous disastrous treaty entanglements.

The Bush administration has set 31 July as the deadline for the signing of the agreement. Under the present plan, the draft of the agreement will have to be brought to Iraq's parliament for approval. Parliament, however, is beholden to the political parties that dominate the present coalition, and there is unlikely to be substantive debate on the matter. The Shia religious leadership in Najaf, especially Grand Ayatollah Sistani, has not clearly come out against the agreement, although his spokesmen have set out markers that must be respected by the negotiators. The Najaf religious hierarchy is probably the only remaining institution that can block the agreement. But it is unclear whether the political or religious leadership are prepared to confront the US. President Bush, with an eye on history, is seeking to salvage his Iraq expedition by claiming that Iraq is now pacified and is a loyal American ally in the Middle East and the War on Terror.

It is only now that Iraqis have woken up to the possibility that Iraq might be a signatory on a long-term security treaty with the US, as a price for regaining its full sovereignty. Iraqis must know its details and implications. How would such an alliance constrain Iraq's freedom in choosing its commercial, military and political partners? Will Iraq be obliged to openly or covertly support all of America's policies in the Middle East? These are issues of a vital nature that cannot be brushed aside with the Iraqi government's platitudes about "protecting Iraqi interests". A treaty of such singular significance to Iraq cannot be rammed through with less than a few weeks of debate. Otherwise, the proposed strategic alliance will most certainly be a divisive element in Iraqi politics. It will have the same disastrous effect as the treaty with Britain nearly eighty years ago.

The writer is the former finance minister of Iraq

Click here to have your say

Interesting? Click here to explore further

Comments

19 Comments

Previous finance minister, now exile in UK, Please stop using the media to manipulate readers opinion. the article doesn't worth the paper printed on.
Bottom line our country is broken, all efforts need to be towards rebuilding it even if it meant being allies with the devils.
accept america as a superpower be it's ally and let the country prosper.
quote "Iraq's freedom in choosing its commercial, military and political partners" are you joking

Posted by zaid | 11.06.08, 13:12 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note all fields are required.

Contact details

blackstaff- don't be foolish. How many occasions have these military laws actually worked, been applied and not been twisted? Every day cases of abuse of iraqis are coming to light without anyone facing the consequences of their actions. Please educate yourself, a higher level of intellect than you display is expected here.

Posted by sheeples champion | 09.06.08, 21:48 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note all fields are required.

Contact details

They must and will all pay for their crimes against humanity. That they continue to defile us with complicity in their foul machinations as their sort has, throughout history, still implies the absence of a benevolent or farsighted deity. There is no 'Justice'; just us.

Posted by james | 09.06.08, 19:00 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note all fields are required.

Contact details

hatem is correct. Ali Allawi is a cousin of Ayad Allawi. He wrote an excellent book in 2007: The Occupation of Iraq: Winning the War, Losing the Peace. He is a scholar who lived most of his life in exile in England before the war.

Posted by sam | 07.06.08, 15:30 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note all fields are required.

Contact details

This man is not the same as Ayad Allawi that everone is shouting about.

Posted by hatem | 07.06.08, 10:33 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note all fields are required.

Contact details

The more I hear from GW Bush and his colleagues, the better I like Iran.

Posted by Mark D | 07.06.08, 01:31 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note all fields are required.

Contact details

Oh, I can't beleive who is critizing the US?? their close friend Allawi! what is this? and for what reason..this man after fully participated in all the mess Iraq is going through since the invasion and occuipation of 2003 he is trying to tell us that he is a diffrent person, patrioatic Allawi!! after becoming rich from taking part in the curroptin, he is no became honest person!!
those are all criminal alonf with Bush and his administration

Posted by Suzan Elian | 06.06.08, 11:57 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note all fields are required.

Contact details

Don;t beleive this criminal person, he and al-Maliki, al-Hakim, Talabani, Barazani, adel Abdulmahdi, Muqtada are all part of the criminal group that destroyed our homeland, they must pay the price, they must be hang for their crimes

Posted by Mohammed | 06.06.08, 11:44 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note all fields are required.

Contact details

Allawi, part of those who encourged and helped US in invading and destroying Iraq, nomatter what he is writing now, Iraqis will never foprget this to him and to all those puppet, you will be at trial one day and imprisoned for your participation in crimes against humanity

Posted by Naser | 06.06.08, 11:27 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note all fields are required.

Contact details

>>>President Bush, with an eye on history, is seeking to salvage his Iraq expedition by claiming that Iraq is now pacified and is a loyal American ally in the Middle East and the War on Terror.<<<

Yes, "pacified" being the operative word there!

How can the escalation of American commitment five years after the initial failure in Iraq be considered a "victory"? Well, how can we ever win a "war on terror"? This is a war on a concept. Moreover, a concept that academics still can't agree upon the correct wording of a definiton for. A war against an idea that is ridiculously abstract and therefore seemingly alllows a global conflict with no bounds of previous experience. Think about it. The war on "terror", this time the enemy is not something physical but rather a method by which the militarily weak can defend themselves against the militarily rich. The Bush administration, through these means, has actually made it permissable to do anything in the name of the "war" on "terror".

Posted by the angry parrot | 06.06.08, 04:04 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note all fields are required.

Contact details

19 Comments

Most popular in Opinion