It's just a $5,812,353 contract - chump change
for the Pentagon - and not even one of those
notorious "no-bid" contracts either. Ninety-eight
bids were solicited by the Army Corps of Engineers
and 12 were received before the contract was awarded
this May 28th to Wintara, Inc. of Fort Washington,
Maryland, for "replacement facilities for Forward
Operating Base Speicher, Iraq." According to a
Department of Defense
press release, the work on those "facilities"
to be replaced at
the base near Saddam Hussein's
hometown, Tikrit, is expected to be completed by
January 31, 2009, a mere 11 days after a new
president enters the Oval Office. It is but one
modest reminder that, when the next administration
hits Washington, American bases in Iraq, large and
small, will still be undergoing the sort of repair
and upgrading that has been ongoing for years.
In fact, in the last five-plus years, untold
billions of taxpayer dollars have been spent on the
construction and upgrading of those bases. When
asked back in the fall of 2003, only months after
Baghdad fell to U.S. troops, Lt. Col. David Holt,
the Army engineer then "tasked with facilities
development" in Iraq, proudly indicated that "several
billion dollars" had
already been invested in those
fast-rising bases. Even then, he was suitably amazed,
commenting that "the numbers are staggering."
Imagine what he might have said, barely two and a
half years later, when the U.S. reportedly had
106 bases, mega to micro, all across
the country.
By now, billions have evidently gone into single
massive mega-bases like the U.S. air base at Balad,
about 60 miles north of Baghdad. It's a
"16-square-mile fortress," housing perhaps 40,000
U.S. troops, contractors, special ops types, and
Defense Department employees. As the
Washington
Post's Tom Ricks, who visited Balad
back in 2006, pointed out - in a rare
piece on one of our mega-bases - it's essentially "a
small American town smack in the middle of the most
hostile part of Iraq." Back then, air traffic at the
base was already being compared to Chicago's O'Hare
International or London's Heathrow - and keep in
mind that Balad has been steadily upgraded ever
since to support an "air surge" that, unlike the
President's 2007 "surge" of 30,000 ground troops,
has yet to end.
Building Ziggurats
While American reporters seldom think these
bases - the most essential U.S. facts on the ground
in Iraq - are important to report on, the military
press regularly writes about them with pride. Such
pieces offer a tiny window into just how busily the
Pentagon is working to upgrade and improve what are
already state-of-the-art garrisons. Here's just a
taste of what's been going on recently at Balad, one
of the largest bases on foreign soil on the planet,
and but one of perhaps five mega-bases in that
country:
Consider, for instance, this
description of an air-field upgrade
from official U.S. Air Force news coverage,
headlined: "'Dirt Boyz' pave way for aircraft,
Airmen":
"In less than four months, Balad Air Base Dirt
Boyz have placed and finished more than 12,460
feet of concrete and added approximately 90,000
square feet of pavement to the airfield? Without
the extra pavement courtesy of the Dirt Boyz,
fewer aircraft would be able to be positioned
and maintained at Balad AB. Having fewer
aircraft at the base would directly affect the
Air Force's ability to place surveillance assets
in the air and to drop munitions on targets...
The ongoing flightline projects at Balad AB
consist of concrete pad extensions that will
provide occupation surfaces for multiple
aircraft of various types."
Or here's a
proud description of what Detachment
6 of the 732nd Expeditionary Civil Engineer Squadron
did on its recent tour in Balad:
"'We constructed more than 25,000 square feet of
living, dining and operations buildings from the
ground up,' said Staff Sgt. John Wernegreen.
'This project gave the [U.S.] Army's [3rd
Squadron, 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment] and
Iraqi army [soldiers] a place to carry out their
mission of controlling the battlespace around
the Eastern Diyala Province.'"
And here's a
caption, accompanying an Air Force
photo of work at Balad: "Airmen of the 407th
Expeditionary Civil Engineer Squadron pavement and
equipment team repair utility cuts here June 11. The
team replaced approximately 30 cubic meters of
concrete over newly installed power line cables."
And
another: "Expeditionary Civil
Engineer Squadron heavy equipment operator, contours
a new sidewalk here, June 10. Sidewalk repair is
being accomplished throughout the base housing area
to eliminate tripping hazards." (The sidewalks on
such bases go with bus routes, traffic lights, and
speeding tickets - in a country parts of which the
U.S. has helped turn into little more than a giant
pothole.)
Or how about
this caption for a photo of military
men on upgrade duty working on copper cable as "part
of the new tents to trailers project." It's little
wonder that, in another rare piece, NPR's defense
correspondent Guy Raz
reported, in October 2007, that Balad
was "one giant construction project, with new roads,
sidewalks, and structures going up - all with an eye
toward the next few decades."
Think of this as the greatest American story of
these years never told - or more accurately, since
there have been a few reports on a couple of these
mega-bases - never
shown. After all, what an
epic of construction this has been, as the Pentagon
built a series of fortified American towns, each
some 15 to 20 miles around, with many of the
amenities of home, including big name fast-food
franchises, PXes, and the like, in a hostile land in
the midst of war and occupation. In terms of troops,
the President may only have put his "surge" strategy
into play in
January 2007, but his Pentagon has
been "surging" on base construction since April
2003.
Now, imagine as well that hundreds of thousands
of Americans have passed through these mega-bases,
including the enormous al-Asad Air Base (sardonically
nicknamed
"Camp Cupcake" for its amenities) in
the Western desert of Iraq, and the ill-named (or
never renamed) Camp Victory on the edge of Baghdad.
Troops have surged through these bases, of course.
Private contractors galore. Hired guns. Pentagon
officials. Military commanders. Top administration
figures. Visiting Congressional delegations.
Presidential candidates. And, of course, the
journalists.
It has been, for instance, a commonplace of
these years to see a TV correspondent reporting on
the situation in Iraq, or what the American military
had to say about Iraq, from Baghdad's enormous Camp
Victory. And yet, if you think about it, that
camera, photographing ABC's fine reporter Martha
Raddatz or other reporters on similar stop-overs,
never pans across the base itself. You don't even
get a glimpse, unless you have access to homemade
G.I. videos or
Pentagon-produced propaganda.
Similarly, last year, the President
landed at Camp Cupcake for a
meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki with reporters in tow. You could see
shots of him getting off the plane (just as he does
everywhere), goofing around with troops, or shaking
hands with the Iraqi prime minister but, as far as I
know, none of the reporters with him stayed on to
give us a view of the base itself.
Imagine if just about no one knew that the
pyramids had been built. Ditto the Great Wall of
China. The Hanging Gardens of Babylon. The Coliseum.
The Eiffel Tower. The Statue of Liberty. Or any
other architectural wonder of the world you'd care
to mention.
After all, these giant bases, rising from the
smashed birthplace of Western civilization, were not
only built on (and
sometimes out of bits of) the ancient
ruins of that land, but are functionally modern
ziggurats. They are the cherished
monuments of the Bush administration. Even though
its spokespeople have regularly refused to use the
word
"permanent" in relation to them - in
fact, in relation to any U.S. base on the planet -
they have been built to long outlast the Bush
administration itself. They were, in fact, clearly
meant to be key garrisons of a
Pax Americana
in the Middle East for generations to come. And, not
surprisingly, they reek of permanency. They are the
unavoidable essence - unless, like most Americans,
you don't know they're there - of Bush
administration planning in Iraq. Without them, no
discussion of Iraq policy in this country really
makes sense.
And that, of course, is what makes their
missing-in-action quality on the American landscape
so striking. Yes, a couple of good American
reporters
have written pieces about one or
two of them, but most Americans, as we know, get
their news from television and - though no one can
watch all the news that flows, 24/7, into American
living rooms, it's a reasonable bet that a
staggering percentage of Americans have
never
had the opportunity to see the remarkable structures
their tax dollars have paid for, and continue to pay
for, in occupied Iraq.
This is the sort of thing you might expect of
Bush-style offshore prisons, or gulags, or
concentration camps. And yet Americans have
regularly and repeatedly seen what Guantanamo looks
like. They have seen something of what Abu Ghraib
prison in Iraq looks like. But not the bases.
Perhaps one explanation lies in this: On rare
occasions when Americans are asked by pollsters
whether they want "permanent bases" in Iraq,
significant majorities answer in the negative. You
can only assume that, as on many other subjects, the
Bush administration preferred to fly under the radar
screen on this one - and the media generally
concurred.
And let's remember one more base, though it's
never called that: the
massive imperial embassy, perhaps the
biggest on the planet, being built, for
nearly three-quarters of a billion dollars,
on a nearly Vatican-sized 104-acre plot of land
inside the Green Zone in Baghdad. It will be home to
1,000 "diplomats." It will cost an estimated
$1.2 billion a year just to operate.
With its own electricity and water systems, its
anti-missile defenses, recreation, "retail and
shopping" areas, and "blast-resistant" work spaces,
it is essentially a fortified citadel, a base inside
the fortified American heart of the Iraq capital.
Like the mega-bases, it emits an aura of American,
not Iraqi, "sovereignty." It, too, is being built
"for the ages."
A Land Grab, American-style
The issue of the mega-bases in Iraq first
surfaced barely days after Baghdad had fallen. It
was on April 20, 2003, to be exact, and on the
front-page of the
New York Times in a piece
headlined, "Pentagon Expects
Long-Term Access to Key Iraq Bases." Thom Shanker
and Eric Schmitt wrote: "American military
officials, in interviews this week, spoke of
maintaining perhaps four bases in Iraq that could be
used in the future," including what became Camp
Victory. The story, and the very idea of "permanent"
bases, was promptly denied by Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld - then essentially disappeared from
the news for years. (To this day, again as far as I
know, the
New York Times has never written
another significant front-page story on the
subject.)
Now, however, the bases are, suddenly and
startlingly, in the news (and, of course, being
written about and
discussed on TV as if they had long
been part of everyday media analysis). This week, in
fact, they hit the
front page of the
Washington Post,
due to protests by Iraqi leaders close to the Bush
administration. They were angered by, and leaking
like mad about, American strong-arm tactics in
negotiations for a long-term Status of Forces
Agreement (SOFA) that would officially embed
American-controlled bases in Iraq for the long-term,
potentially tie the hands of a future American
president on Iraq policy, and represent a
sovereignty grab of the first order. (A typical
comment from a pro-Maliki Iraqi politician in that
Post piece: "The Americans are making demands
that would lead to the colonization of Iraq.")
The growing Iraqi protests - in the streets, in
parliament, and among the negotiators - certainly
helped spark coverage in this country. A persistent
and intrepid British reporter,
Patrick Cockburn of
The
Independent, helpfully broke the story of Bush
administration demands days before it became
significant news here.
But most of the credit should really go to the
Bush administration itself, which, despite the
long-term flow of events in Iraq, still wanted it
all. Greed, coupled with desperation, seems to have
done the trick. In all the years of the occupation,
the officials of this administration have had a tin
ear for the post-colonial era they inhabit. It's
never penetrated their consciousness that the
greatest story of the twentieth century was the way
previously subjected and colonized peoples had
gained (or regained) their sovereignty.
The administration indicated this, back in 2003,
with its very dream of garrisoning a major,
potentially hostile, intensely nationalistic Arab
nation in the heart of the oil lands of the planet.
That the building of enormous American bases and the
basing of troops in relatively peaceful Saudi Arabia
after the First Gulf War led to disaster - think:
Osama bin Laden - mattered not a whit to top
administration officials.
It couldn't have been clearer just how little
they cared for Iraqi sovereignty or pride when L.
Paul Bremer III, George W. Bush's personal
representative and viceroy in Baghdad, before
officially "returning sovereignty" to the Iraqis in
June 2004, signed the infamous (though, in this
country, little noted)
Order 17. As the law of the land in
Iraq, among other things, it ensured that all
foreigners involved in the occupation project would
be granted "freedom of movement without delay
throughout Iraq," and neither their vessels, nor
their vehicles, nor their aircraft would be "subject
to registration, licensing or inspection by the
[Iraqi] Government." Nor in traveling would foreign
diplomats, soldiers, consultants, security guards,
or any of their vehicles, vessels, or planes be
subject to "dues, tolls, or charges, including
landing and parking fees," and so on.
When it came to imports, including "controlled
substances," there were to be no customs fees or
inspections, taxes, or much of anything else; nor
was there to be the slightest charge for the use of
Iraqi "headquarters, camps, and other premises"
occupied, nor for the use of electricity, water, or
other utilities. And all private contractors were to
have total immunity from prosecution anywhere in the
country. This was, of course, freedom as theft.
Order 17 would have seemed familiar to any
nineteenth century European colonialist. It granted
what used to be termed
"extraterritoriality" to Americans.
Think of it as a giant get-out-of-jail-free card for
an occupying nation.
Now, imagine, that, even after years of
disaster, even in a state of discontrol, with
unsecured global oil supplies surging
toward $140 a barrel, the Bush administration
remained in the same Order 17 frame of mind. They
began their negotiations with the Iraqis
accordingly. Cockburn (and other journalists
subsequently) would report that they were asking for
Order 17-style immunity for the U.S. military and
all private contractors in the country, as well as
the use of up to 58 bases, even though they
evidently
"only" had 30 major ones in the
country. (A leading politician of the Badr
Organization claimed that American negotiators were
actually pushing for the use of a startling
200 facilities across the country.)
They also evidently insisted on control over
Iraqi air space up to 29,000 feet, the right to
bring troops in and out of the country without
informing the Iraqis, and the right to "conduct
military operations in Iraq and to detain
individuals when necessary for imperative reasons of
security," again without notification to the Iraqis,
no less approval of any sort. They may even
have insisted on the freedom to
strike other countries from their Iraqi bases, again
without consultation or approval. In addition,
reported Cockburn, they were attempting to force
their Iraqi counterparts to agree to such a deal by
threatening to deny them at least $20
billion in Iraqi oil funds on deposit in the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York.
Gulf News
reported as well that, under the
American version of the agreement, "Iraqi security
institutions such as Defense, Interior and National
Security ministries, as well as armament contracts,
will be under American supervision for ten years."
This was partially confirmed by the
Washington
Post's Walter Pincus, who
reported on a multi-year contract
just awarded to a private contractor by the Pentagon
to supply "mentors to officials with Iraq's Defense
and Interior ministries? [ who] would 'advise, train
[and] assist... particular Iraqi officials.'"
Had the Bush administration exhibited the
slightest constraint, they might have constructed a
far more cosmetic version of the permanent
garrisoning of Iraq. They might have officially
turned the mega-bases over to the Iraqis and
leased them back for next to nothing.
They could have let the stunning facts they had
built on the ground speak for themselves. They could
have offered "joint commands" and other palliative
remedies (as they are now evidently considering
doing) that would have made their long-term
sovereignty grab look far less significant - without
necessarily being so. But their ability to
strategize outside the (Bush) box has long been
limited.
Think of them as "the me generation" on
steroids, going global and imperial. Or give them
credit for consistency. They're mad dreamers who
still can't wake up, even when they find themselves
in a roomful of smelling salts.
Instead, with their secret SOFA negotiations,
they've attempted to fly under the radar screens of
both the U.S. Congress and the Iraqi people. They
wanted to embed permanent bases and a long-term
policy of occupation in Iraq in perpetuity without
letting the matter rise to the level of a treaty.
(Hence, no advice and consent from the U.S. Senate.)
Not surprisingly, this episode, too, is
threatening to end in debacle. The Iraqi leadership
is in virtual revolt. Across the political spectrum,
as
Tony Karon of the Rootless
Cosmopolitan blog has written, the negotiations have
forced upon the Iraqis "a kind of snap survey or
straw poll? on the long-term U.S. presence, and
goals for Iraq" from which the Americans are likely
to emerge the losers.
The idea of
timetables for American departure is
again being floated in Iraq. According to Reuters,
"A majority of the Iraqi parliament has written to
Congress rejecting a long-term security deal with
Washington if it is not linked to a requirement that
U.S. forces leave," and
unnamed American officials are now
beginning to mutter about no SOFA deal being
achieved before the Bush administration leaves
office.
The administration's man in Baghdad, Prime
Minister Maliki, has declared the initial U.S.
proposal at a
"dead end" and has even begun
threatening to ask American forces
to leave when their UN mandate
expires at year's end. (Though much of this may be
bluff on his part, what choice does he have? Given
Iraqi attitudes toward being garrisoned forever by
the U.S. military, no Iraqi leader could remain in a
position of even passing power and agree to such
terms. It would be like stamping and sealing your
own execution order.)
The Sadrists are in the streets protesting the
American presence and their leader has just called
for a
"new militia offensive" against U.S.
forces. The pro-Iranian, but American-backed,
Badrists are
outraged. ("Is there sovereignty for
Iraq - or isn't there? If it is left to [the Bush
administration], they would ask for immunity even
for the American dogs.") The Iranians are
vehemently voting no. Opinion in the
region, whether Shiite or Sunni, seems to be
following suit. The U.S. Congress is
up in arms, demanding more information and possibly
heading for hearings on the SOFA agreement and the
bases. Presidential candidate Barack Obama has
insisted that any deal be submitted to Congress, the
very thing the Bush administration has organized for
more than a year to avoid.
And miracle of all miracles, the mainstream
media is finally writing about the bases as if they
mattered. Someday, before this is over, all of us
may actually see what was built in our names with
our dollars. That will be a shock, especially when
you consider what the Bush administration has proved
incapable of building, or rebuilding, in New Orleans
and elsewhere in this country. In the meantime, the
President appears headed for yet another
self-inflicted defeat.
--------
Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of
the American Empire Project, runs the
Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com.
The World According to TomDispatch: America in the
New Age of Empire (Verso, 2008), a
collection of some of the best pieces from his site,
has just been published. Focusing on what the
mainstream media hasn't covered, it is an
alternative history of the mad Bush years. A brief
video in which Engelhardt discusses the American
mega-bases in Iraq can be viewed by
clicking here.
[Sources for this piece and further reading:
In his recent articles, as in his past unembedded
reporting,
Patrick Cockburn has shown what a
good journalist can still do for the rest of us.
Special thanks go to Nick Turse for his superb and
speedy research on this piece and to Christopher
Holmes for superb proofreading on demand. In
gathering material, I've also relied on a number of
sites, including Juan Cole's invaluable
Informed Comment blog (which I visit
daily without fail), those splendid hunter-gatherers
of the news at
Antiwar.com and Cursor.org's daily
Media Patrol, Dan Froomkin's superb
White House Watch blog in the
Washington Post, and sharp-eyed Paul Woodward at his
War in Context blog. For those of you
who want to get a little more sense of the endless
base-building activities of the Bush administration,
check out the chatty
newsletter (PDF file) of the Redhorse
Association, "a group of past and present members of
the U.S. Air Force Prime Beef and Red Horse combat
engineer units."]