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[casi] Iraq: The Challenge of Humanitarian Response




http://www.foreignpolicy-infocus.org/commentary/2003/0306humane.html

Iraq: The Challenge of Humanitarian Response

By Kevin Murray | June 2, 2003

Editor: John Gershman, Interhemispheric Resource Center (IRC)





Foreign Policy In Focus www.fpif.org



The new world order on display in Iraq places new demands on the U.S.
humanitarian community. The Wolfowitz-Perle doctrine of pre-emptive action
against perceived external threats preserves a role for humanitarian
intervention. In fact, it may make humanitarian response a growth industry.
The role of relief organizations in Iraq raises many questions, however, and
these questions deserve the continuing attention of the movement that sought
to avoid this war in the first place.

Humanitarian relief often describes itself as a politically neutral
enterprise designed to save lives and limit human suffering in emergency
situations. What could be political about high-tech bubbles full of clean
water? The enterprise unites governments, the private sector,
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and the UN system in professional and
technically advanced network. U.S.-based corporations and not-for-profit
organizations with a heavy reliance on U.S. government funding are major
actors in this network.

The neutrality principle has always been difficult to sustain. Political
forces in a society always influence choices about how and to whom aid is
provided. The provision of aid, in turn, has an impact on the balance of
political power, at least at the local level. This is not a new debate. My
own organization, Grassroots International, came into existence pointing out
the close relationship between war and famine (and, hence, aid) in the Horn
of Africa in 1984. Others have made the same argument quite effectively in
Afghanistan in 2003.

No one questions that almost twelve years of sanctions in Iraq visited
tremendous suffering on the Iraqi people. Coming in the wake of those
sanctions, the recent attacks took place at a moment of unprecedented
vulnerability for millions of Iraqis. While the massive humanitarian
disaster predicted by many does not seem to have occurred, the conflict has
multiplied human suffering across Iraq. The occupation regime has shown
itself to be remarkably incapable of producing any sort of humanitarian
answer for what it has wrought.

Hundreds of professional aid workers--most of them foreigners--are slowly
moving into action. They face many obstacles, including security conditions
that offer them little freedom to operate and a basic social infrastructure
in deplorable condition. These workers are doing their jobs at considerable
personal risk, and some will probably give their lives to this mission.
Their compassion is to be celebrated, as is that of the many thousands of
people in the U.S. who are clicking on websites and writing checks to
support this work.



The Context of Compassion
Even compassion has a context, however, and this one is extremely complex.
Relief and reconstruction in Iraq are taking place against the backdrop of a
military occupation. A collection of individuals trained, for the most part,
in U.S. military and security structures hold effective political power in
Iraq and show little sign of being ready to surrender that power to a new
Iraqi leadership. Humanitarian neutrality will be even more elusive than
usual in the context of total logistical and security dependence on such
authority. European organizations and U.S. ones not receiving government
funds will certainly operate with more independence than those reliant on
U.S. government contracts, but they will still face serious limitations.
Financial independence from the U.S. government will not, in this case,
automatically lead to operational independence from the military.

Many of the large U.S. humanitarian organizations lobbied hard for the State
Department to take control of the Iraq relief operation from the Pentagon.
Such a change would have given the United States Agency for International
Development a key role and provided some degree of political cover for
participating NGOs. Before the U.S. forces took Baghdad, however, the Bush
administration made it clear that the Pentagon would retain complete control
over relief and reconstruction in Iraq. This remains true even after the
removal of General Jay Garner and the recent United Nations resolution
ending sanctions against Iraq.

With the lifting of United Nations sanctions, the UN will gradually assume a
more active humanitarian/reconstruction role in Iraq. The aforementioned
resolution assures UN control over some percentage of frozen Iraqi assets
for use in relief and reconstruction activities. It also provides for a
six-month continuation of the UN "oil for food" program, which uses oil
revenues for humanitarian purposes under UN auspices. These changes will
confer some legitimacy on the U.S.-led occupation and will likely help the
reconstruction effort accelerate beyond its current snail's pace. A UN
presence will not, however, create a significant buffer between U.S.
political/military aims and the humanitarian response.

These circumstances have created difficult dilemmas for the NGO community,
especially U.S. NGOs. Some organizations have taken the difficult decision
of not participating in the relief operation at all. Others, including
several faith-based NGOs that expressed strong opposition to the war, have
said that they would attempt to respond to the crisis, but would not apply
for U.S. government funds to do so. The largest U.S. organizations, with
huge economic stakes in Iraq relief and in good relations with USAID, are
going ahead despite their reservations about Pentagon control.

The best aid organizations will find ways to carry out some credible
operations in this context, but, in other cases, humanitarian interventions
will take place firmly within the logic of military plans to pacify the
Iraqi population and win the Iraqis' hearts and minds for a long-term
project of restructuring the country. Such programs will approximate the
"civic-military action programs" widely criticized by the humanitarian
community in Central America and elsewhere in the 1980s.

To be successful, humanitarian organizations providing aid to Iraq must
struggle to establish a humanitarian/reconstruction agenda with some degree
of autonomy from military occupation plans. This will be no easy task,
especially for those organizations working with U.S. government funds. Such
an agenda must, of course, focus on how to deliver immediate relief to those
most directly affected by the war. It must also mobilize the human and
financial resources necessary to initiate the daunting task of
reconstructing Iraq's social infrastructure.

But it very much matters how this aid is provided. Iraq's reconstruction
process ought to take place in a way that respects the long-denied basic
human rights of all Iraqis. There is already ample reason to doubt how much
importance the occupation regime will place on the protection of those
rights. In addition, a progressive humanitarian agenda must recognize the
critical importance of encouraging local initiative in the rebuilding of the
country, thereby strengthening an emerging Iraqi civil society. Iraqi civil
organizations will doubtless promote varied visions of a new Iraq. Even
amidst this challenging and contradictory diversity, a true humanitarian
agenda will honor local initiative.

Unconditional opposition to unjust war is the first humanitarian response.
If the failure to take strong public positions against this war is any
indication, many leading U.S. humanitarian organizations apparently judged
this a just war. In any event, we would do well to re-examine the
relationship between pre-emptive wars and humanitarianism … before the next
war. Unfortunately, this is unlikely to be the last time we will face such
dilemmas.

(Kevin Murray <kmurray@grassrootsonline.org> is the executive director of
Grassroots International, an international development and human rights
organization providing support to local social change organizations in
Brazil, Eritrea, Haiti, Mexico, and Palestine. He provides analysis of
humanitarian relief and development issues for Foreign Policy in Focus
(online at www.fpif.org).)







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