Friday, August 04, 2006

Division and Corruption Mean Democracy's Failure

ABC News wanders unknowing into the realm of satire:
"Corruption in Iraq is endemic, we call it a pandemic," said Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general to Iraq who told a Senate hearing today that the country is losing $4 billion a year to corruption.

Iraqi investigators have launched 1,400 investigations in their country, targeting billions lost to bribery and fraud by government officials. An Iraqi judge recently convicted a senior defense ministry official of accepting $400,000 in bribes. And, according to the inspector general, one recent poll found that one third of Iraqis said they had to pay bribes to get basic services.

"It is a story of mistakes made — of plans that [were] either poorly conceived or overwhelmed by ongoing violence," said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, during the hearing. "And of waste, greed and corruption that drained dollars that should have been used to build schools and health clinics "

Bowen said Iraqi officials have told him corruption — not just violence — threatens the state.

"For democracy to succeed there must be integrity at its core," he said. "As long as there is corruption. It is going to be difficult to succeed."

And it's not just Iraqi corruption.

U.S. investigators have identified more than $300 million of your tax dollars that have been spent on reconstruction projects that are suspect. American government officials and contractors working in Iraq have been accused of overcharging for projects and pocketing kickbacks, with 82 such investigations now under way in the region.
I love that the special inspector general to Iraq can say that democracy needs integrity, not corruption, to succeed. Apparently without a single trace of irony.

Maybe the reason Iraq is in such a mess is that the Iraqis learned far too well about divisiveness instead of unity and corruption instead of integrity...from the obvious examples of their occupiers.

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