BTL:Disorder, Protests Challenge U.S. Occupation of Iraq, Undermining...

by Between the Lines' Scott Harris Friday, Apr. 18, 2003 at 6:26 AM
betweenthelines@snet.net BETWEEN THE LINES c/o WPKN Radio 89.5 FM Bridgeport, Connecticut

...White House Triumphalism. Interview with Roger Normand, executive director of the Center for Economic and Social Rights, conducted by Between the Lines' Scott Harris

Disorder, Protests Challenge U.S. Occupation of Iraq, Undermining White House Triumphalism

Interview with Roger Normand, executive director of the Center for Economic and Social Rights, conducted by Scott Harris

After several weeks of fighting for control of Iraq's largest cities, the Pentagon announced on April 14 that major combat operations were over. But while the president and his administration were jubilant at the victory of the world's most powerful military over a nation battered by 12 years of economic sanctions and a decade of constant bombing, it seemed that the occupation of Iraq would be filled with danger and uncertainty.

After Saddam Hussein's forces fled Baghdad, chaos and violence reined in the streets of the capital city and elsewhere as the looting of government offices, banks, hospitals, museums and private homes went unchallenged by U.S. troops. But while the Pentagon made little effort to control widespread pillaging, the old regime's oil ministry was one of the few government buildings to be guarded by U.S. Marines -- a powerful symbol of why many believe the U.S. had come to Iraq. Anti-U.S. occupation protests were organized by Baghdad citizens just days after American tanks rolled into the central city.

Islamic fundamentalist Shiites, Sunni groups and Kurdish rebels are now in fierce competition with each other for spheres of influence and a role in any government body installed by former U.S. General Jay Garner, the man appointed by the Bush administration to run post-war Iraq. Between The Lines' Scott Harris spoke with Roger Normand, executive director of the Center for Economic and Social Rights, who assesses the dangers posed by the U.S. occupation of Iraq and the Pentagon's possible next target nation in the Middle East.

Contact the Center for Economic and Social Rights by calling (718) 237-9145 or visit the group's Web site at www.cesr.org.

Related links:

"Privatization in Disguise," By Naomi Klein, The Nation, April 15, 2003

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Original: BTL:Disorder, Protests Challenge U.S. Occupation of Iraq, Undermining...