However,
the appointment of Ms. Francke is worrisome to the point of it
becoming dangerous and fracturing. On the one hand, Ms. Francke
is an American citizen, not an Iraqi. By what right does she
believe herself capable of representing Iraqi interests in
Washington? And as an American citizen, how could she possibly
take such a high post, on Iraq’s behalf in America’s
capital? Does no one see this as highly suspicious? Do the words
‘conflict of interest’ not come into the scope?
Having
lived most of her adult life in the US, does she know the Iraqi
people, or does she tour Baghdad behind the security of US
military protecting her and other IGC members? Does the average
Iraqi know of this woman?
Consider
the scenario: An American-appointed council, which has no
legitimacy with the Iraqi people, appoints an American in the
disguise of an Iraqi to represent Iraq in America. A few too
many references to “America” in that sentence; so the
objective is clear. Create an American stooge who can pass off
as a spy. Classic. But who the hell are these people trying to
fool? This is just going to infuriate those professional
diplomats who are still left in the foreign ministry and further
increase the Iraqi public’s hatred of the IGC.
Last
year, Ms. Francke, who incidentally is the Executive Director of
the Iraq Foundation,
a DC-based, non-profit organization working for human rights and
democracy in Iraq, once wrote that liberating Iraq would
send a message to other Arab rulers. “A free Iraq would
unleash new voices and new visions for the people of the
Middle-East, opening perspectives of freedom that have long been
squashed by their autocratic rulers.” Smacks of agenda. This
statement would have been welcomed had it not been put into
motion by other, unseen elements in Washington. This domino
effect that Ms. Francke alludes to has been the very reason for
going to war cited by Frank Gaffney, Charles Krauthammer and
Richard Perle, all advocates of ousting Saddam, all supporters
of Greater Israel, all anti-Arafat, anti-Syria, anti-Saudi
Monarchy, anti-Arab League. This is the principle ethos of
transferring democracy to other parts of the world. History
teaches us, ladies and gentlemen, that democracy must come from
within, entirely from within, and cannot be influenced, nor
injected from without.
However,
and to her credit, Ms. Francke has stressed that the US not act
as an occupying force in Iraq. She told a Foreign Relations
Committee in August 2002 that the US should build partnerships
with local Iraqis, especially local opposition figures, and work
with Iraq’s police forces. But she blasts that meager
positivism by stating “that the U.S. will have a decisive
role, unprecedented since World War II, to influence the outcome
in Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein.” This is racism at
its ugliest, saying that the US must influence the outcome in
Iraq. Sorry, Ms. Francke, perhaps you have lived too long
outside Iraq to realize that it is only the Iraqi people that
can decide their own outcome, by their own designs, without the
intervention of your bosses, or anyone else for that matter.
Ms.
Francke would have done well to speak to some veterans of the
British occupation of Iraq in the 1920s. The Brits, too, tried
to “influence the outcome in Iraq.” They lost 500 of their
troops before dropping chemical weapons on rebelling Shiite
tribes. Is that what is in store for Iraq? The British
experiment ended with the bloody 1958 revolution and Saddam’s
eventual rise. Why does no one pay attention to history?
Arrogance, perhaps?
Imagine
if the New Americans, the forefathers of the Constitution, had
declared that they would allow France (who had helped liberate
them from the British) decide their outcome. Or if Queen
Elizabeth I was told by Russia not to take on the Spanish
Armada.
Imagine
(oh, the horror!) if a Canadian became US Ambassador to Peru, or
China, or Tanzania. Would the US congress sit still for it even
if this Canadian spoke American English and ate at Burger King?
No way, Jose!
If
Ms. Francke is so big on democracy and democratic change, surely
she must realize that her appointment is an insult to that very
institution which she holds in such high regard. In the
democratic US, an ambassador must be approved by the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, after which ambassadorial
nominations are sent to the full Senate. Where is such a
representative body in Iraq? Oh, forgive me; that body exists in
the non-Iraqi citizens of the IGC.
My
qualm about Ms. Francke is not that her visions of change in
Iraq may indeed be genuine or passionate, but that she is not
Iraqi. Most of the IGC carry ‘other’ passports; Ahmed
Chalabi, the most charismatic of the lot, has a British
passport. Ms. Francke is an American citizen. Has she renounced
her American citizenship to take up such a national, Iraqi post?
Don’t count on it. And you can bet your bottom petro-dollar on
this; when the going gets tough, Ms. Francke and her fellow
“representatives of the Iraqi people” will be out of Iraq
aboard a specially-provided US transport plane.
Ms.
Francke had earlier on seemed to be voicing what many
professional Iraqis were finding displeasing with the US
presence in Iraq: “Many Iraqis have said to me, what you need
on this is Iraqi voices, Iraqi faces, that the message has to be
really targeted at what Iraqis need, and instead of Western pop
music, have readings of the Koran,” she told the American
Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, one of the
leading advocates of the Iraq war.
One
wonders if Ms. Francke has somehow been silenced with this
offering of an Ambassadorial position.
I
have nothing personal against the woman, but I would advise her,
for Iraq’s sake, to put her appointment up to a representative
body that vets her appropriately or to decline it altogether.
Anything short of that is just another chess move in the larger
imperial board.
Firas
Al-Atraqchi is a Canadian journalist of Iraqi heritage.
Holding an MA in Journalism and Mass Communication, he has
eleven years of experience covering Middle East issues, oil and
gas markets, and the telecom industry. You can reach him at firascape@hotmail.com.