Iraq
Reconstruction Tracker
Elizabeth
Rosenberg, Adam Horowitz and Anthony Alessandrini
(Elizabeth
Rosenberg, Adam Horowitz and Anthony Alessandrini are M.A. candidates
in the Program in Near Eastern Studies at New York University.
This information is part of a larger project following the reconstruction
process in Iraq. For more information, write to: reconstructiontracker@earthlink.net.)
"War
began last week," said the New York Times on March 23, 2003.
"Reconstruction starts this week." In fact, the Bush
administration had been soliciting proposals to "reconstruct"
war-torn Iraq before dropping the first bomb, and before asking
the UN Security Council to authorize military action. Between
January 31 and March 4, the US Agency for International Development
issued nine procurement actions -- eight Requests for Proposals
and one Request for Applications -- for reconstruction work in
Iraq. USAID awarded its first contract, for technical expertise
on reconstruction, on February 7, two days after Secretary of
State Colin Powell attempted to convince the Security Council
of Iraq's evasion of weapons inspections. UN Security Council
Resolution 1483, passed in late May, confirmed that much of this
work will be financed by Iraqi oil revenue, and conducted by multinational
corporations chosen by the US and Britain. To date, all of the
contracts, charted below, have been awarded by USAID, the US Army
Corps of Engineers or the US Department of State.
Most
scrutiny of the Iraq reconstruction process, including the ongoing
General Accounting Office inquiry ordered up by Congress, has
focused on its suspicious lack of competitive bidding -- as exemplified
by the early award to Dick Cheney's former company Halliburton.
Iraq's designated rebuilders have numerous other dubious associations.
Bechtel, recipient of the largest USAID contract to date, was
involved in negotiations to build an oil pipeline from Iraq to
the Jordanian port of Aqaba in 1983, a project discussed privately
by Saddam Hussein and President Reagan's envoy Donald Rumsfeld.
Some of the Army engineers involved in emergency repairs to Baghdad
International Airport and the capital's electricity and sanitation
grids helped to choose Iraqi infrastructure targets during the
initial US bombardments of March. But to focus solely on the procurement
process obscures larger questions regarding reconstruction. The
procurement process itself didn't set US policy for post-invasion
Iraq or define what reconstruction would entail.
Larger
questions of reconstruction are ones of definition. How does reconstruction
in Iraq fit into broader US plans for the region? What "infrastructure"
will the US consider vital for reconstruction? Will rebuilding
concentrate on construction that will facilitate the work of post-war
occupation, or the broader work necessary for sustaining the Iraqi
economy after the occupation ends? Speaking in a not-for-attribution
forum, one former Clinton administration official who played a
major role in reconstruction and development activities during
the 1990s termed this the distinction between "parasitic"
and "sustainable" development. Parasitic contractors
and investors seek to extract resources and do short-term construction
that sustains the occupation of Iraq, as well as buy property
while the currency is in flux only to sell at a higher price upon
leaving the country. Sustainable development, on the other hand,
might include industries providing permanent employment to Iraqis,
agriculture and building the roads, power systems, telecommunications
and computer networks that would serve these long-term goals.
Some
early signs are discouraging. In Iraq, urbanization and reliance
on the oil economy since the 1970s has turned Iraq from a food
exporter into a nation heavily reliant on imported food. USAID
plans to award a contract for agricultural development, although
a Request for Proposals has not yet been issued. However, the
appointment of Dan Amstutz as head of agricultural reconstruction
in Iraq is a less than encouraging sign. Amstutz is a former senior
executive of Cargill, the biggest grain exporter in the world,
who served in the Reagan administration as a trade negotiator
in the Uruguay round of General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
talks. In a statement on Amstutz's appointment, Secretary of Agriculture
Ann Veneman said that he would "help us achieve our national
objective of creating a democratic and prosperous Iraq while at
the same time best utilize resources of our farmers and good industry
in the effort, both for the interim and the long term." Relief
groups such as Oxfam worry this means that Iraqi agriculture will
be left unprotected from cut-rate US competition, and that Amstutz
will try to dump cheap US grain on the potentially lucrative Iraqi
market rather than encourage the country to rebuild the agricultural
sector. Kevin Watkins, policy director for Oxfam, responded to
the appointment by stating: "Putting Dan Amstutz in charge
of agricultural reconstruction in Iraq is like putting Saddam
Hussein in the chair of a human rights commission."
The
US and Britain have created a reconstruction structure almost
solely of foreign expertise, ignoring the Iraqis who rebuilt their
oil industry with no international assistance under sanctions
and the idea that local expertise may offer ingenious low-budget
strategies to outside experts. The post-World War II Marshall
Plan is used by US officials to foster the perception that a reprise
in Iraq will be successful. There are other ways to reconstruct
and develop Iraq with foreign technical expertise and financial
backing. Drawing on existing local organizations and regional
institutions falls outside the conceptual limits of US-led reconstruction.
Whether or not Iraqis will be able to articulate their own vision
for the reconstruction of their country, distinct from the ventriloquism
of the occupying forces who claim that they are simply there to
"let the people of Iraq decide their future," remains
to be seen.
February
7, 2003
International
Resources Group (Washington, DC)
Technical
expertise for reconstruction
$7.1
million (initial)
February
17, 2003
Air
Force Contract Augmentation Program
(US Air Force)
Logistical
support services to USAID and contractors, including warehousing,
customs clearance, trucking and provision of bottled water.
$4
million (initial), up to $26 million over 12 months
March
24, 2003
Stevedoring
Services of America (Seattle)
Assessment
of Umm Qasr port for delivery of humanitarian supplies and reconstruction
materials; development of improvement plans to overcome port-imposed
constraints; hiring of port pilots; cargo-handling services; and
coordination of onward transport of shipments.
$4.8
million (initial)
April
11, 2003
Creative
Associates International
(Washington, DC)
Increasing
enrollment and improving quality of primary and secondary education;
facilitation of community involvement and other social mobilization
to retain students; and development of baseline indicators.
$1
million (initial), up to $62.6 million over 12 months
April
11, 2003
Research
Triangle Institute (North Carolina)
Strengthening
management skills and capacity of local administrations and civic
institutions to improve delivery of essential municipal services;
training programs in communications, conflict resolution, leadership
skills and political analysis.
$7.9
million (initial), up to $167.9 million over 12 months
April
17, 2003
Bechtel
(San Francisco)
Emergency
repair or rehabilitation of power generation facilities, electrical
grids, municipal water systems, sewage systems, airport facilities,
dredging, repair and upgrading of Umm Qasr seaport and reconstruction
of hospitals, schools, ministry buildings, irrigation structures
and transportation links.
$34.6
million (initial), up to $680 million over 18 months
Bechtel
awarded subcontracts to: ArmorGroup Land Mines (Britain): advisory
services on unexploded ordnance; Al-Bahar and Bardawil (Kuwait):
construction and earth-moving equipment; Great Lakes Dredge and
Dock (Oak Brook, Illinois): emergency dredging and marine surveying
of Umm Qasr port; National Catering (Saudi Arabia); Olive Security
(Britain): security during initial "pre-positioning and fact-finding
phases" of construction work; Tamini Enterprises (Saudi Arabia):
catering; Titan Maritime (Ft. Lauderdale, Florida): marine survey
of wrecks at Umm Qasr port; Verestar (Fairfax, Virginia): emergency
satellite communication.
April
30, 2003
Abt
Associates (Cambridge, Massachusetts)
Supporting
a reformed Iraqi Ministry of Health; delivering health services;
providing medical equipment and supplies; training and recruiting
health staff; providing health education and information; and
determining the specific needs of the health sector and vulnerable
populations such as women and children.
$10
million (initial), up to $43.8 million over 12 months
May
5, 2003
SkyLink
Air and Logistic Support (Washington, DC)
Assessment
of civilian airports and collaboration for their timely repair;
management of civilian airports for processing of humanitarian
assistance, reconstruction material and personnel.
$2.5
million (initial)
Expected:
Bearing
Point (McLean, Virginia)
Iraqi
monetary policy and currency, as part of planned Mass Privatization
Program.
Perhaps
$70 million in the first year
Pending:
Award
for promotion of diverse and representative citizen participation
in and among communities throughout Iraq; identification, prioritization
and delivery of critical reconstruction and development needs.
March
28, 2003
UNICEF
Restoration/provision
of basic health services to vulnerable populations, focusing on
women and children; support for primary health care services;
essential medicines, vaccines and micronutrients; rapid referral
and response system; and distribution of health education materials
and nutritional assessments.
$8
million for one year initially, up to $40 million
March
28, 2003
World
Health Organization
Identification
of immediate and short-term health care needs; rapid restoration
of essential health services; and strengthening of the capacity
of a reformed Iraqi Ministry of Health to manage the health sector,
including review and further development of health policies and
health system management.
$10
million for one year
April
8, 2003
UNICEF
Promotion
of "Back to School" campaign aimed at 25 percent of
children currently not in primary school; rapid assessments to
determine the availability of school materials; establishment
of temporary schools where none are functioning; training of teachers;
the establishment of accelerated learning programs; and the development
of an education management system for Iraq.
$1
million for one year initially, up to $7 million.
US
Army Corps of Engineers Awards
March
24, 2003
Kellogg,
Brown and Root (Houston, Texas) (Halliburton subsidiary)
Extinguish
oil fires; evaluate and repair, as directed by the US government,
Iraq's petroleum infrastructure.
Up
to $7 billion over two years (estimated)
Kellogg,
Brown and Root awarded subcontracts to: Boots and Coots Well Management
(Houston, Texas): managing oil fires in southern Iraq; Wild Well
Control (Harvey, Louisiana): managing oil fires in southern Iraq.
April
1, 2003
Washington
Group International (Boise, Idaho)
Fluor
Intercontinental (Greenville, South Carolina)
Perini
Corporation (Framingham, Massachusetts)
No
specific work identified to date, but potential services include
design-build activities, construction, and short-term operations
and maintenance.
Minimum
of $500,000 and maximum of $100 million per company, over one
year.
State
Department Awards
April
18, 2003
DynCorp
(Reston, Virginia) (Computer Sciences Corporation subsidiary)
Advising
the Iraqi government on establishment of law enforcement; DynCorp
will provide up to 1,000 civilian advisors to help the government
of Iraq organize civilian law enforcement, judicial and correctional
agencies.
Up
to $50 million for the first year (estimated), depending on assessments
of Iraqi capabilities by initial advisors.