The Man Who Would Be King

In the five years since taking office, Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has consolidated a dangerous amount of power. Now, his citizens are angry and his opponents scheme. But is it too late?

BY BEN VAN HEUVELEN | JUNE 13, 2011

Iraqi government forces arrived at the headquarters of the Journalistic Freedoms Observatory (JFO) at about 2 a.m. on Feb. 23, half a block from Baghdad's Firdos Square, where eight years earlier news cameras had captured the iconic toppling of Saddam Hussein's statue. The soldiers jumped out of their Humvees and began trying to break down the front door. Inside, the building's night watchman had been sleeping in his ground-floor apartment. He woke to the banging and opened the door, where he was met by a score of armed men, some wearing black clothing and ski masks, some in military fatigues stripped of any identifying insignia.

"Where is the JFO?" the officers demanded.

They didn't identify themselves. They didn't have to. As the government would later confirm, these forces answered to the Baghdad Operations Command, which coordinates all security forces in the capital and reports directly to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's office. Since 2007, Maliki has bypassed several layers of civilian and military leadership, establishing a direct line of control over key security forces, including Iraq's 54th and 56th brigades, as well as an elite counterterrorism force trained and supported by the U.S. Special Operations Command. In concert with the "surge," this strategy helped Iraq's government regain control of the streets from a virulent insurgency. "We're working literally day and night with the Baghdad Operation[s] Command," said Maj. Gen. Joseph Fil, commander of U.S. troops in Baghdad, on Feb. 16, 2007, at the dawn of a joint U.S.-Iraqi operation that would soon bring remarkable security gains to the capital. Some four years later, the Baghdad Operations Command continues to act against entities deemed dangerous to the state.

The night watchman pointed the officers up a narrow stairway toward the JFO's second-story offices. They ran upstairs and bashed their way in. More soldiers entered the building. They blindfolded the night watchman and bound his arms and legs.

The JFO's headquarters consists of a reception area, a few small offices, and a conference room. Like most local NGOs, it operates on a shoestring budget, in affiliation with a few larger international organizations like Reporters Without Borders and the Society of Professional Journalists. Its mission is to protect the freedom of the press. On a practical level, this means the JFO is the central hub to which journalists in Iraq report censorship and abuse. Their records were stored in file cabinets and computers, all of which the security forces ransacked. They confiscated seven laptop and desktop computers, external hard disks, paper archives, five handicams, and one boxy gray television camera, an antique souvenir that had last been used in the 1950s. The raid lasted three hours. When it was over, the watchman was unbound and left to comfort his frightened wife and child.

Fellow journalists in Baghdad were amazed -- though not surprised -- to hear of such a brazen government attack on the press. A mutual friend arranged for me to meet Ziyad al-Ajili, director of the JFO. I drove across town to his office, which staffers had quickly returned to a state of tidiness. A broken door frame and the absence of desktop computers were the only traces of the break-in.

Getty Images

 SUBJECTS: IRAQ, DEMOCRACY
 

Ben Van Heuvelen is the managing editor of Iraq Oil Report. As a freelance journalist, his work has appeared in the Atlantic and Salon, and he blogs at benvanheuvelen.com. An Iraqi journalist who wishes to remain anonymous made essential contributions to the reporting of this story.

DOUGBUCHANAN.COM

12:15 PM ET

June 14, 2011

Dictators

Until the common people easily learn the functional design of the human mind, therein the brain's biological damage resulting from the stimuli-induced perception of holding "power", the common people will be fooled into supporting dictators such as the US DemocanRepublicrat War and Police Regime.

The US President (Bush and Obama) has claimed the raw power to order the assassination of anyone in the world, including US citizens, without any judicial review, the power of dictators. The US Congress and US Supreme Court have not objected or impeached the US Dictator in the President's office.

No news media of equally fooled journalists will ever report the functional definition of a dictator, and the national leaders which hold such power, and thus reference them as "dictators", because "government" is dependent upon an ignorant society willing to keep itself ignorant. News journalists are the most willing to keep themselves ignorant, or "power" would no longer exist above reasoning.

Respectfully, DougBuchanan.com

 

MATHMAN54

1:11 PM ET

June 14, 2011

Why set up the conditions for dictatorship?

"their idle air-conditioners served as constant reminders of their government's failure to provide even basic services"

Why is it the government's responsibility to provide electricity? Does not dependency on the government lead to increased risk of subjugation by the government?

 

IDIOTPRAYER84

8:53 PM ET

June 14, 2011

What is the alternative?

In most countries, the government is responsible for basic infrastructure. Who else has the money to lay down vast quantities of electrical wire and power generation units if it might be bombed? No company in their right mind would invest the capital required to do the job or the cost would be so high that only a few wealthy individuals would be able to afford it. Electricity is a natural monopoly.

 

TEASER38

11:32 PM ET

June 14, 2011

What about Iran?

Is he an agent of Tehran or another Saddam?

But, lets be a little bit hopeful, the US had strongmen presidents and bouts of press censorship in its beginnings too.

 

PRCEKES

12:08 PM ET

June 27, 2011

I really wonder what will

I really wonder what will happen with this part of the world in the future, I guess we will read more and more blog articles that will deal with possible scenarios.

 

ALFARKO96

5:57 AM ET

July 10, 2011

I really wonder how its gonna

I really wonder how its gonna look like in 5 years folks, I fear that another dictator might be born. I just want to read
positive articles folks, I fear that there is more and more bad news already...

Sincerely, Adam

 

JAYDEE001

2:38 PM ET

June 15, 2011

All's well that ends... well hope it ends soon!

Interesting article. Most US citizens are totally unaware of the developments in Iraq over the past two years, unless they have someone in their family or a friend serving there. There has been so news of Iraq in the US media that many believe the war there is over - although 32 members of our military forces have died in 2011, mostly from hostile fire / IED attacks.

Maliki might not be the democratic leader the Iraqi people (and the US) hoped for, but he is what we got. The big question now is whether he is the guy to lead as the US (hopefully) initiates the final pullout of its occupation of that country. Whether he is or not, I hope that our involvement in this badly mistaken invasion and occupation is no less than 6 months from the end. There are going to be those who say we should agree to an extension of our armed involvement in Iraq if Maliki asks us to stay. I hope that the President and his administration say not just no but hell no.

Let's leave Iraq to the Iraqis and get the heck out while we have an opportunity. Let's let them chart their own course and decide if Maliki or some other leader is to be the one to be the navigator. The US and its allies have wasted enough lives and wealth on a country that is not worth the sacrifice.

 

PERSON_NICE

7:20 AM ET

July 10, 2011

The US President (Bush and

The US President (Bush and Obama) has claimed the raw power to order the assassination of anyone in the world, including US citizens, without any judicial review, the power of dictators. The US Congress and US Supreme Court have not objected or impeached the US Dictator in the President's office pc flight simulator.Whether he is or not, I hope that our involvement in this badly mistaken invasion and occupation is no less than 6 months from the end.

 

CHANGS

12:41 AM ET

July 12, 2011

It is now up to the Iraqi people.

Iraq's future is now up to it's people. They must decide whether they can work together and build a country that provides equal opportunity and freedom for all or they will go back to a dictatorship, whether one based on the power of one man or family, or the power of religious leaders.

Fortunately many of the Iraqi people have been educated aboard or have lived in other countries and know what can be achieved in a system based on giving power to the people of the country.

Most of the people in Iraq have access to the internet and are aware of the power of the internet when it comes to the people in fighting a corrupt government. So hopefully they will have the same type of internet success in keeping the form of government so many of them want today.

ChangS

 

SOFTENG

6:46 AM ET

July 13, 2011

Whether he is or not, I hope

Whether he is or not, I hope that our involvement in this badly mistaken invasion and occupation is no less than 6 months from the end. There are going to be those who say we should agree to an extension of our armed involvement in Iraq if Maliki asks us to stay eliminatebadcredit. Fortunately many of the Iraqi people have been educated aboard or have lived in other countries and know what can be achieved in a system based on giving power to the people of the country.

 

SOFTENG

6:48 AM ET

July 13, 2011

The US President (Bush and

The US President (Bush and Obama) has claimed the raw power to order the assassination of anyone in the world, including US citizens, without any judicial review, the power of dictators. The US Congress and US Supreme Court have not objected or impeached the US Dictator in the President's office cloggedarteries.Fortunately many of the Iraqi people have been educated aboard or have lived in other countries and know what can be achieved in a system based on giving power to the people of the country.