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Odious Debt

The West, Quietly, is Pillaging Iraq

When Saddam Hussein grabbed power in 1979, Iraq had no long-term foreign debt. Cash reserves were $36 billion. Iraq had high literacy and public universities; it had extensive socialized health care. It was becoming a “first world” nation.

Soon, however, this violent, cunning despot began squandering that wealth. Borrowing tens of billions of dollars, he built up a vast military and security apparatus. In 1980 - with the United States’ blessing - Saddam invaded his neighbor, the Ayatollah Khomeini’s oil-rich Iran. To Saddam’s utter surprise, that war wasn’t over in a few weeks. It became an eight-year long quagmire. Hundreds of thousands on each side were maimed and killed.

An Analyis of Iraq's Odious Debt

Written by Justin Alexander of Jubilee Iraq
September 2005

Debt - Introduction

Iraq has an outstanding debt load of around $115bn (reduced this year from around $125bn in the first trance of Paris Club relief) on top of $33bn of unpaid war reparations. This means that the ratio of debt and reparations to export earnings is around 750%, way beyond the IMF’s recommended maximum ratio of 162%. The Paris Club, which holds $42bn, about a quarter of the total debt and reparations, agreed in November 2004 to reduce their claims by 80% in three trances linked to economic conditionalities. The US is topping this up to 100% relief but no other countries have followed suit. Even if all creditors match the Paris Club terms, and this looks far from certain, Iraq will still be left with $25bn debt along with the $33bn reparations. Additionally there is a very large reparations claim from Iran, although this has little international backing.

ODIOUS DEBT, ODIOUS ALLIES: Pillaging Iraq

They are asking us to pay for the knives

they gave Saddam to slaughter us.

— Dr. Hasim al Hassani, Iraqi Islamic Party

When Saddam Hussein grabbed power in 1979, Iraq had no long-term debt. Its cash reserves were $36 billion. It had high literacy and public universities; it had extensive socialized health care. Iraq was becoming a “first world” nation.

During the 1980’s, however, as a US ally, Saddam squandered that wealth. Borrowing tens of billions of dollars, he built up a vast military and security apparatus.

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