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The revelation that for many years Peter Galbraith, long associated with the 'liberal hawk' wing of the Democratic Party which has sought to impose a US-defined human rights agenda through the use of US military power, had an undisclosed financial interest in the break-up of Iraq may hopefully serve to discredit and weaken the future influence of this group, says Helena Cobban. IN
2003, But in June 2004, more quietly, Galbraith also established a small, US-registered company, Porcupine, that held a 5% stake in a newly exploited oilfield in Iraqi Kurdistan, a Norwegian daily revealed in October. The daily, Dagens N‘ringsliv, had been investigating the increasingly troubled relationship between Porcupine and a privately-owned Norwegian firm, DNO, which partnered with Porcupine in the Kurdish-Iraqi oil project. Journalists at the daily said that discovering that Porcupine's hitherto secretive owner was Galbraith came as a complete surprise. Galbraith also won international headlines in another recent Norway-related story. In late September, he broke publicly with Kai Eide, the Norwegian head of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMI), over how to respond to allegations of fraud in Afghanistan's August election. Galbraith had been working as Eide's deputy since March. He resigned in late September, accusing Eide of trying to hide evidence of large-scale fraud committed during the election. There
are many parallels between the constitutional/legitimation challenges
the One key challenge for US decision-makers is how to generate a local 'host nation' government using the democratic processes that most US citizens say they want - but one that is also prepared to work very closely indeed with Washington, which most citizens of the occupied countries are reluctant to do. Prior
to the 2003 (The Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 specifies that an occupation force should keep existing governance and constitutional arrangements in place, as far as possible, until it withdraws.) Galbraith
had long been a strong sympathiser of the Iraqi Kurds' desire for strong
autonomy or even complete independence from He
continued those consultations through the time of the Adoption
of the Constitution was achieved through an Iraq-wide referendum, conducted
under the control of the In
both the TAL and the 2005 Constitution, provision was made for any one
of the country's 18 provinces, or a group of them, to declare the formation
of a 'region' that would have extra powers of self-governance. In practice,
the only 'region' that has formed is the Kurdish Regional Government
(KRG), comprised of In
the TAL, the principles for dividing the country's oil revenues were
left vague. In the 2005 Constitution, it stated that revenues from the
country's existing oil fields, many of which were nearing depletion,
would continue to be controlled by In the meantime, Galbraith and his Porcupine company had acquired their 5% interest in the KRG's new Tawke oil field, and entered into its partnership there with DNO. Galbraith also argued hard in the discussions over the 2005 Constitution for a clause defining Iraq's governance system as a fundamentally decentralised one in which all residual powers lie with the provinces and 'regions'. He won that argument, and the clause was put in. The distinguished Egyptian-American law professor Khaled Abou El Fadl has commented that Iraq's constitution-writing process involved 'a lot of authoritative input by various elements in the US as to not just what the Iraqi commitments are going to be but what the occupying country deems to be acceptable'. Power struggles The
radical decentralisation of powers that was written into the 2005 Constitution
at a time of strong With
This disagreement is over whether the 'lists' that each party or coalition will present in each of the country's province-sized constituencies will have a list of names that is 'closed', that is unchangeable, or whether on polling day voters can change the order of the names to reflect their own preferences. This matter pits the Kurdish parties (who want 'closed' lists) against all the country's other parties, who profess to prefer 'open' lists. The
Kurdish and non-Kurdish parties are at odds, too, over the potentially
explosive issue of how voting rolls will be drawn up in the oil-rich
environs of the mixed-ethnicity city of The
province But
the His Porcupine company was cut out of the deal at some point in 2008, for reasons that remain murky. But that development did not negate the fact that for the preceding four years, while Galbraith was an influential participant in Iraq-related constitutional and political discussions, he also had an undisclosed financial interest in a KRG-authorised oil development venture. In the US, Galbraith has long been associated with the 'liberal hawk' wing of the Democratic Party, which has argued since the early 1990s that US military power can, and on occasion should, be used to impose a US-defined human rights agenda in various parts of the world. Many
members of this group have been liberal idealists - though some of those
who, on 'liberal' grounds, gave early support to President George W
Bush's decision to invade Galbraith
has never expressed any such regrets, and last November, he was openly
scornful of Bush’s late-term agreement to withdraw from Helena
Cobban is a veteran *Third World Resurgence No. 230, October 2009, pp 40-41 |
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