An Iraqi official who has served as Iraq’s trade, defense, and finance minister at various times since 2003 has written a book about his country’s four years under the American occupation (“The Occupation of Iraq,” published by Yale University Press). According to the AP, it is a detached and nonpartisan look at the United States’ and Iraqi government’s failings.
Ali Allawi, cousin to former Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, was educated in the United States and Britain and demonstrates no preference for the Sunni or Shiite sects within Iraqi society and its badly divided government (he belongs to a secularist political party). He slams a lot of people, but most of all the Americans.
Snippets of Allawi’s book, from the AP:
“The corroded and corrupt state of Saddam was replaced by the corroded, inefficient, incompetent and corrupt state of the new order.”
First came the “monumental ignorance” of those in Washington pushing for war in 2002 without “the faintest idea” of Iraq’s realities. “More perceptive people knew instinctively that the invasion of Iraq would open up the great fissures in Iraqi society,” he writes.
What followed was the “rank amateurism and swaggering arrogance” of the occupation, under L. Paul Bremer’s Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), which took big steps with little consultation with Iraqis, steps Allawi and many others see as blunders.
The lies that led to war and the missteps after the invasion that led to failure are all documented in the Mother Jones Iraq War Timeline.
On U.S. reconstruction failures — in electricity, health care and other areas documented by Washington’s own auditors — Allawi writes that the Americans’ “insipid retelling of ‘success’ stories” merely hid “the huge black hole that lay underneath.”
There have been a lot of great books about the Iraq War, from Ron Suskind to Thomas Ricks to Michael Gordon to Rajiv Chandrasekaran. Now it looks like there is an Iraqi equivalent.