Archive for April, 2004

Iraq: A Deepening Tragedy

Friday, April 30th, 2004

By David McReynolds (former Chair, War Resisters International, Socialist Party candidate for President 1980, 2000. He visited Baghdad in 1991, just before the start of the first Gulf War as part of a team from the Fellowship of Reconciliation)

[Thanks to David for this article, which appeared on the SocialistsUnmoderated mailing list.]

// this article can be used in whole or part without permission. April 22, 2004

Friends have heard me say I could not believe the Bush Administration would launch the Iraq war - until the moment when “shock and awe” illuminated the night sky of Baghdad. My reasoning had nothing to do with the fact the US actions would violate international law (would be, in fact, criminal) but rather my conviction the war would be an act of stupidity almost without parallel.

We had known that the “Vulcans” - that perplexing coalition of neoconservatives which draws its strength from almost equal parts of former Trotskyists, sharply pro-Israel American Jews such as Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle (who would do anything for Israel except go and live there), and a group of evangelical Christians, often privately anti-Semitic, led by the likes of Pat Robertson - had been in control of the Administration from the moment of Bush’s appointment by the Supreme Court in 2001. We had seen them seize upon the tragedy of 9.11 as an excuse to curtail our own civil liberties and put the nation on a war footing, and invade Afghanistan.

But the idea that the United States would actually attack Iraq, that it would be supported in this action by Tony Blair, Prime Minister of Great Britain, and would think it’s Christian troops would somehow be welcomed as liberators by a deeply Islamic nation . . . this was such obvious folly that I keep thinking some committee of smart Wall Street bankers would tap Rumsfeld on the shoulder and say “Sorry, Rumfeld - no way. Saddam is a nasty man, but there are no weapons of mass destruction there, no links to terrorism - this war would be genuinely crazy”.

(Let not forget the wave of massive demonstrations around the world in February of 2003 - demonstrations on a scale never seen before. And the urgent efforts of political leaders in almost every nation - Israel excepted - to dissuade Bush. And the extraordinary steps taken by the Pope to use his moral force - even sending a special Papal envoy to meet with Bush).

The Iraq of Babylon and Baghdad, of the Euphrates and Tigris, the cradle from which Western civilization had sprung, a land which had, early in the 20th century, defeated the British - at that time the greatest Empire in the world. The US really thought it would be welcomed with flowers? That it would be seen as the liberator? After it had, for ten years, caused enormous suffering for the civilian population of Iraq by its economic sanctions?

With others, I was surprised at the relative ease of the first phase - the military conquest of Saddam’s forces. I had assumed there would be grinding battles in the cities, that the loss of civilian life there might cause the world to demand the US withdrawal. But with the US Occupation we saw the beginning of a “dual reality” - the “reality of Iraq” as seen by the White House and transmitted by the US media, and the “reality of Iraq” as seen from foreign news sources, reaching us in the US either by BBC or the internet. (In fairness, much of the truth was there in the New York Times, the Washington Post, and other newspapers - but not in that part of the media which most shapes public opinion - the world of “Fox News”).

It is possible those around Bush believed their own news reports. It is said that April is the cruelest month - for many American and Iraqi families this has been an unusually cruel and bloody month. April clearly caught the Pentagon by surprise. Even Rumsfeld admitted he didn’t expect things to be this difficult a year after “victory”.

Listening tonight to David Burns, of the New York Times, as he reported from Baghdad, it was clear there has been a breakdown of the Occupation. As Burns pointed out (and he is not a reporter tainted by ideology - just a journalist doing his job), travel is now extremely difficult and dangerous in Iraq, most roads are closed, there is no commercial air travel, and even in Baghdad things are not safe. He admitted it was almost impossible to know what was happening “on the ground” in any Iraq city outside of Baghdad.

Americans in Iraq rarely venture outside the “green zone” in Baghdad, which is as secure as modern technology can make it. Paul Bremer resides in the palaces and buildings Saddam had built, strides the imperial offices in combat boots, issuing orders which are erratic (such as the dissolution of the Iraqi army - which instantly left tens of thousands of armed men unemployed!).

The hearings from Washington D.C. this month, the flood of books that have come out, have defined the reality there were never any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, there was no link with Al Queda, there had never even been any plans for “post-invasion” Iraq, and - most devastating of all - Bush and the Vulcans had used 9.11 as the basis for their war planning, even diverting funds from Afghanistan and the hunt for Osama Bin Laden to plotting the war in Iraq.

So we are here, a year after the invasion. Those of us who opposed the invasion are the Cassandras, as we were in the 1960’s when we warned against deepening US involvement in Indochina.

We are in the midst of a disaster - one which the US cannot repair or make right. What course is open to us, to Iraqis, to the community of nations? I can even ask what course might be open to the leadership of the US if it could come to its senses as easily as, a year ago, it lost them.

First, the one course open to the Administration - the only possible course - would be to turn the entire matter over to the United Nations, with the understanding all US and British forces would be withdrawn within 90 days, that UN peace keeping forces, drawn from Islamic, Arab, and neutral countries (which might include Egypt, Indonesia, Pakistan, Finland, Sweden, etc.) would be in place for a period of no more than six months, to organize national elections, that such UN forces would begin immediately to open dialogue with all parties in Iraq - excluding the present US-appointed governing council.

However, this won’t happen. It isn’t simply a matter that the United Nations might want to avoid so difficult a job - might, in fact, be totally unable to carry it out. It is that the United States will not for an instant consider “turning tail and running”. And why should it? Bush might yet win re-election as a war president. John Kerry isn’t pressing for withdrawal. Those who run this country have no sons and daughters serving in Iraq - indeed, for the most part the Vulcans are made of up draft evaders from the Vietnam period (or, in the case of Bush, men who were AOL). Those who died this April, and will die in May, June, July, August, and into the dismal months of autumn and winter of the year ahead, are working class youth, in many cases from communities of color. A handful of them have already begun to resist, to desert, to apply for Conscientious Objectors status, but these are yet only a handful (though they deserve our full support). In the Vietnam War military resistance did not begin on a serious scale until quite late.

Ironically, if the US did want to negotiate its way out of Iraq, it has no one with whom to negotiate, making any potential withdrawal doubly embarrassing. The “Governing Council” the US set up is in no position to negotiate for the people of Iraq.

In India, in 1947, when Great Britain withdrew, it had the Congress Party with which to negotiate an honorable departure. The French, both in Indochina and in Algeria, had organized opposition forces with whom it could negotiate an end of the fighting. The US, sadly, rejected the chance to negotiate its way out of Vietnam but it could have done so at almost any time. (There are two other notable failures to negotiate when negotiations were possible - the Russians have destroyed Chechneya but still cannot control it, while Israel has rejected the negotiations it could have had with the PLO).

What we have is a war with no early way out. Many, particularly in the liberal community, will argue that while it was wrong to go into Iraq “we can’t just leave now”. Their feeling cannot be dismissed out of hand. There is a danger of civil war - though at the moment the US Occupation seems to have done more to unite the warring religious factions. There is danger of a rigid Islamic government coming to power, one which would strip women of the freedoms they enjoyed under Saddam and which the US says it is committed to guaranteeing. (Ironic that brutal as Saddam’s regime was, for women it was far freer than the current regime of Saudi Arabia, Bush’s closest ally in the Arab world).

No one in the peace and justice movement should have illusions about the kind of Islamic fundamentalism to which the US invasion has helped give new life - and which might easily win Iraq’s first “free election”. The tragedy is that serious as these problems are, the US cannot solve them. Our government has done a great evil in its aggression, and if international law had any force, we would not be discussing what the US should do, but rather what the world should do about preparing war crimes trials for the US and British leaders who opened the gates of this particular hell, and about what reparations these two nations must pay to Iraq.

However international law is weak - as Bush and Blair demonstrated by their actions of a year ago. The international community might hope that Bush would concede his actions were a monstrous miscalculation, and turn the matter over to the UN, but he will not do that. The loss of that pool of oil, the loss of funds to be made by private corporations from public funds “rebuilding” an Iraq we have destroyed, and the humiliation of admitting error - too much to ask.

We are in need of facing the reality. Which is that every day the Occupation continues, so will the - 4 - violence, and as the violence continues, it will become legitimized in the eyes of the people of Iraq. The resistance may not represent a majority of Iraqis, but neither did the French resistance truly represent the majority in France. Yet it was a real and honorable resistance. That, with each passing day, is what the US is creating in Iraq - a resistance that is morally legitimate.

I understand those who feel that it would be irresponsible “to turn and run”. But to think the US can “fix” things now is like thinking a rapist is the ideal person to stay and provide therapy to the victim. It is possible our pressure, combined with the military reality in Iraq, will cause the Administration to pursue a drastically different course of action. And if so, that is good. If it ends the military actions, if it announces plans for withdrawal, if it enters into negotiations directly with the Sunni and Shiite religious leaders, fine.

But what we must demand is withdrawal. Withdrawal without conditions. To those who say we are not supporting our troops, we respond that we are giving them far more support than Bush and Cheney, who sent them there. To those who say we would weaken American influence, we respond that we hope that is the case - the US needs to learn humility, as it briefly learned it after the war in Indochina (a war which did not end until over three million Vietnamese had been killed).

The actions of the US government have not only been foolish and arrogant, they also qualify as evil, as wars of aggression are, by the definition of international law, evil. One cannot argue that launching such a war was wrong but that having launched it we must “stay the course” - what course is being stayed? What purpose is being served? When we hear Bush speak now of the evils of Saddam, as he once spoke with such certainty of the dangers of weapons of mass destruction, those of us with memories would not quibble about the evils of Saddam, but rather ask why Rumsfeld and others chose to do business with Saddam even after he had used poison gas. When did these men learn morality? And who can believe they can teach the world - or the men and women of Iraq - morality, or democracy? These are words and concepts deeply stained by the Bush Administration. Out. Now.

And if you ever get a war without any gore, I’ll be the first to go

Friday, April 23rd, 2004

Tami Silicio, a Kuwait cargo worker, has lost her job for releasing a photograph of flag-draped coffins, in violation of a Pentagon policy that bans photography of military coffins. The military insists that the policy is in keeping with the wishes of the grieving families, and has nothing at all to do with keeping the human cost of war out of the public eye.

Meanwhile, the Air Force has released more than 360 photographs of exactly the same subject matter, but only when forced to do so by a Freedom of Information Act request from Russ Kick, described as a First Amendment activist, who runs http://www.thememoryhole.org.

Diebold admits it

Thursday, April 22nd, 2004

From Slashdot: Diebold admitted today that ‘thousands’ of voters were turned away from the polls during the “Super Tuesday” Democratic primary, because of flaws in Diebold voting machines.

Among other things, Diebold knowingly used uncertified software in California elections in violation of California election law. This means that Diebold’s assertions that their software is dependable, never mind secure, are without basis in fact.

I’ve mentioned here before how Diebold attempted to censor leaked company memos that point to the lack of security in their products.

Winning Hearts and Minds in Iraq

Wednesday, April 14th, 2004

So we must be ready to fight in Vietnam, but ultimate victory will depend upon the hearts and minds of the people that actually live out there. — Lyndon Johnson

We heard a lot of wartime doublespeak during the Vietnam War. It inspired the classic Vietnam documentary Hearts and Minds, in which smug official lies by U.S. officials were shown alongside the reality those officials were lying about. I vividly remember watching General Westmoreland patiently explaining that “in the Orient, life is pretty cheap.”

Some of these same phrases are being dusted off for the war in Iraq, such as “pacification” (meaning the deliberate reduction of an area to rubble). I wonder when we will begin to hear in sanctimonious speeches that American troops are fighting for the “hearts and minds” of the Iraqi people.

The hearts and minds of Faluja aren’t in a particularly grateful mood lately, despite the much-proclaimed benefits of freedom and precision bombing. NPR reported this week on the deep hostility toward the collaboration government, which in turn has condemned the U.S. for collectively punishing the residents of Faluja. Iraqi security forces refused to fight there, and have been defecting to the resistance in significant numbers. People who have escaped Faluja tell horror stories of Americans firing at random, including at women and children. A family of 28 people were all killed when an aircraft bombed their home. Iraqis are forced to bury their dead relatives in the garden because American snipers will fire on them if they venture into the street.

I just hope they appreciate it.

Bush on genocide

Thursday, April 8th, 2004

George W. Bush marked the tenth anniversary of the Rwandan genocide by urging all states to bring the perpetrators of the genocide to justice. This is a painless gesture for Bush, whose cronies presumably don’t include any Rwandan genocidists, or indeed any Rwandans.

You might think that this means Bush and the Republicans want to bring all genocide perpetrators to justice, but you’d be wrong. There is a long history of Republican involvement with Nazi war criminals, including a high-ranking member of George H. W. Bush’s 1988 campaign who was let go when his fascist connections were exposed. For G. W. Bush to claim that he wants to bring international criminals to justice, is deepest hypocrisy.

Having said that, there’s one complaint about the Bush family that is not justified. George H. W. Bush is widely misquoted as having said “Lets forgive the Nazi war criminals.” According to the New York Times article from April 14, 1990, usually used as a citation for the quote, the elder Bush actually said that the German people should be forgiven for the Holocaust.

Invoking the spirit of Good Friday and Easter, President Bush said today that people “ought to forgive” Germans for the Holocaust but should not forget history’s lessons.

“I’m one who believes in forgiveness,” Mr. Bush said aboard Air Force One….

“Most of the teachings have ample room for forgiveness and moving on,” he said, adding that people should “not forget, necessarily, because I think you learn from history, learn what not to do wrong.”

“But,” he sid, “I think, I’m a Christian and I think forgiveness is something that I feel very strongly about.”

He may indeed favor amnesty for his Nazi associates, but he wasn’t foolish enough to say it in public.

Kicking Ass in Afghanistan

Wednesday, April 7th, 2004

Francis Boyle notes that George W. Bush knew the Afghanistan war would be illegal and simply didn’t care. Richard Clarke wrote in Against All Enemies:

When, later in the discussion {on the evening of Sept. 11, with Bush and his crisis advisors}, Secretary Rumsfeld noted that international law allowed the use of force only to prevent future attacks and not for retribution, Bush nearly bit his head off. “No,” the President yelled in the narrow conference room, “I don’t care what the international lawyers say, we are going to kick some ass.”

Nightmare in Iraq

Tuesday, April 6th, 2004

Ivan Eland writes:

The armed uprising by Shiite militias in four Iraqi cities, including the Baghdad metropolitan area, was well coordinated and deadly. The rebellion cost the lives of eight American soldiers and countless Iraqis. The revolt consisted of followers of militant cleric Moktada al-Sadr, who has militias numbering in the tens of thousands across Iraq, Although the American occupation had forbidden the bearing of arms, the militants brandished many weapons, including rocket propelled grenade launchers. They took over the streets, occupied police stations and attacked American forces.

Ironically, one of the motivating forces behind the bloodshed was censorship by the United States, a country that prides itself on the freedom of speech enshrined in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Last week, U.S. occupation authorities closed down Al Hawza, Sadr’s newspaper, charging that it had incited violence in Iraq. Yet the paper did not advocate attacks on Americans. As the U.S. authorities put it, the paper was guilty of “false reporting.” That type of justification is eerily reminiscent of rhetoric from the Communist Soviet Union. The closing of Al Hawza, symbolic for many Shittes, ignited street protests that mushroomed and became more volatile by the day, culminating in the uprising.

Oil man whines about oil prices

Thursday, April 1st, 2004

When OPEC announced this week that it would cut oil production, the White House complained that oil prices should be set by market forces. This is disingenuous even by the standards of the Bush administration, on at least a couple of levels.

Of course OPEC didn’t say they were going to raise prices. They said they planned to cut production. Everybody knows cutting production will have the result of increasing prices, because that’s how market forces operate.

What they really mean, of course, is that oil prices should be set not by market forces, but by political forces exerted by the United States. The fact that OPEC can still engage in price gouging just underscores the failure of U.S. terror tactics to subdue the rest of the Middle East. After so much killing, so much threatening, and so much bribery, the OPEC nations still aren’t taking orders particularly well. This must be frustrating for the emperor.

Of course, it’s rankest hypocrisy for any capitalist, let alone a crony of the oil companies, to complain about price gouging. Predatory pricing is one of the central features of capitalism, and capitalists love it as long as they aren’t on the receiving end.

Did Bush intervene when Enron was inflating the electric bills of California consumers? Nope. Did Bush get indignant about the Microsoft monopoly and all its attendant price distortions? No, it was the Bush administration that let them off with little more than a some good-natured finger-wagging.

Absent from all this empty talk of “market forces” is a discussion of the demand side of energy prices. Bush just last month extended a regulation permitting car makers to produce less fuel-efficient vehicles. This move makes perfect sense if your agenda is to increase oil company profits by maximizing demand. And, of course, no sense at all if you complain about high gasoline prices.