[NYTr] Bring the Troops Home: End Sexual Exploitation of Iraqi Women

All the News That Doesn't Fit nytr at blythe-systems.com
Tue Oct 9 14:20:39 EDT 2007


Workers World - Oct 11, 2007 issue
http://www.workers.org/2007/world/women-1011

Sexual exploitation of Iraqi women:

Another reason to bring the troops home

By Sue Davis

The U.S. government pretends to promote women’s rights, especially in
the Middle East, but the U.S. war and occupation of Iraq forced many
women into prostitution within weeks of the U.S. invasion. Ever since,
prostitution has spread like a ripple effect throughout the Middle East.

“The rebirth of prostitution has generated fear that permeates all of
Iraqi society,” writes Debra McNutt in the essay “Privatizing Women:
Military Prostitution and the Iraq Occupation,” in Counterpunch. (July
11)

“Families keep their girls inside, not only to keep them from being
assaulted or killed, but to prevent them from being kidnapped by
organized prostitution rings. Gangs are also forcing some families to
sell their children into sex slavery.

“The war has created an enormous number of homeless girls and boys who
are most vulnerable to the sex trade. It has also created thousands of
refugee women who try to escape danger but end up (out of economic
desperation) being prostituted in Jordan, Syria, Yemen or the UAE.

“Brothels in Baghdad’s Green Zone, disguised as a woman’s shelter,
hairdresser and Chinese restaurant, had to be closed after they were
exposed by the media.”

But, McNutt points out, “The prostitution rings keep their tracks very
well hidden, and it is not in the interest of the military or its
private contractors to reveal any information that may damage the war
effort.”

Independent journalist David Phinney has documented how a Kuwaiti
contract company that imported workers to build the U.S. Embassy
compound in Baghdad’s Green Zone—where they were terribly
exploited—also smuggled women into the construction site.

McNutt suspects that 180,000 private contractors, who now outnumber
U.S. troops by 20,000 and who are not subject to military law, are
promoting prostitution of local women or importing women under the
guise of cooks, maids or office workers.

The best-known case of private contractors engaging in military
prostitution was when DynCorp employees were caught trafficking women
in Bosnia in the 1990s.

Postings by private contractors on sex websites indicate that
prostitution exists around U.S. military bases in Iraq, though it’s
increasingly dangerous for Westerners to leave military bases on their
own.

“Contractors are now advising each other to do their ‘R & R’ in the
safer northern Kurdish region, or the bars and hotels of Dubai, the UAE
emirate that has become the most open center of prostitution in the
Persian Gulf. Meanwhile prostitution rings in Iraq have to go deeper
underground to hide from Iraqi militias,” reports McNutt.

Another casualty of the U.S. occupation not much in the news is that
women GIs—one out of 10 U.S. soldiers in Iraq—are reporting rapes and
sexual harassment in unprecedented numbers.

Sara Corbett wrote in a March 18 New York Times Magazine article
headlined “The Women’s War” that a report financed by the Defense
Department showed “nearly a third of a nationwide sample of female
veterans seeking health care through the VA said they experienced rape
or attempted rape during the service.”

Of those, 37 percent said they were raped multiple times, while 14
percent said they were gang raped. ‘End the occupation!’

Military prostitution has a long history. Perhaps the most infamous
case occurred during World War II when the Japanese military forced
100,000 to 200,000 Korean women to “service” their soldiers.

These “comfort women,” now in their eighties, are still demanding
reparations for sexual enslavement.

Those who oppose U.S. military bases in the Philippines, South Korea
and Thailand have long drawn attention to brothels clustered around
bases in those countries. The nonprofit group Prostitution Research and
Education estimates 400,000 prostitutes worked in Thailand in 1974 when
GIs went there from Vietnam on furlough.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime estimated in 2006 that
more than 2 million people are trafficked in the global sex trade,
though it noted the number could be as high as 10 million.

The U.S. military has never admitted its role in promoting prostitution
in this or any other war. But sooner or later, the Pentagon must be
held accountable for this severe violation of women’s rights.

McNutt concludes that it is the responsibility of those in the United
States “to stop our military’s abuses of women by ending the
occupation.”

Articles copyright 1995-2007 Workers World. Verbatim copying and
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