President George W. Bush’s nationally-broadcast speech Sunday
evening once again was designed to mislead Congress and the American
public into supporting his administration’s policies in Iraq.
Despite record deficits and draconian cutbacks in government support
for health care, housing, education, the environment and public
transportation, the president is asking the American taxpayer to
spend an additional $87 billion to support his invasion and
occupation of Iraq.
It is disturbing that President Bush has once again tried to link
the very real threat to American security from mega-terrorist groups
like Al-Qaeda to phony threats originating in Iraq. Not only does he
try to link the terrorism that has grown out of the post-invasion
chaos in Iraq to the devastating Al-Qaeda attacks on the United
States two years ago, President Bush has depicted all the current
violence against Americans and other foreigners in Iraq as part of
this terrorist threat.
Like most Americans, I am deeply distressed at attacks on U.S.
soldiers. However, the Fourth Geneva Convention -- to which the
United States is a signatory -- is quite clear that a people under
foreign military occupation have the right to militarily engage
armed uniformed occupation forces. This is not the same as
terrorism, which refers to attacks deliberately targeted against
unarmed civilians and is universally recognized as a war crime. It
is therefore terribly misleading for President Bush to try convince
the American public that these two phenomena are the same.
President Bush also failed to differentiate between the
increasingly disparate elements behind the attacks. Some of the
violence may indeed come from those who have some connection with
Al-Qaeda who have infiltrated Iraq since the invasion this spring;
some may be supporters of Saddam Hussein’s former regime; some may
be radical Iraqi Islamists or independent Iraqi nationalists who
opposed the old regime but also oppose the U.S. occupation; still
others may be foreign fighters who see driving American occupiers
from Iraq as an act of pan-Islamic solidarity comparable to driving
Soviet occupiers from Afghanistan.
However, President Bush now declares that a successful
American-led pacification of the anti-occupation resistance in Iraq
would be an “essential victory in the war on terror.” In linking the
legitimate international struggle against Al-Qaeda with the
illegitimate U.S. occupation of Iraq, it becomes possible for the
administration to justify the president’s determination to “spend
what is necessary” in controlling this oil-rich country and to
depict those in the United States and elsewhere who oppose the
occupation as being soft of terrorism.
Below are some excerpts from the September 7 speech
that were particularly misleading:
“And we acted in Iraq, where the former regime sponsored
terror…”
The Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein indeed had sponsored terror
over its nearly one- quarter of a century in power. However,
according to both U.S. government agencies and independent
researchers, Iraqi support for terrorism primarily took place in the
1980s, when the United States was quietly supporting the regime, and
had dropped off dramatically since then. No significant Iraqi links
have been found to Al Qaeda or other terrorist groups that currently
threaten the United States.
“…possessed and used weapons of mass destruction,…”
Iraq did use weapons of mass destruction in the 1980s when the
regime was being supported by the U.S. government, but not since
then.
It also appears that virtually all of Iraq’s weapons of mass
destruction were destroyed or otherwise made unusable some time
between five and eight years ago. Neither the United Nations nor the
Bush Administration has been able to show any evidence that Iraq
possessed such weapons in more recent years.
“…and for 12 years defied the clear demands of the United
Nations Security Council.”
It is true that Iraq openly defied or otherwise failed for twelve
years to live up to demands of the UN Security Council regarding its
destruction of and accountability for weapons of mass destruction,
certain delivery systems, and other proscribed materials. However,
once Iraq allowed the UN inspectors into their country for
unfettered inspections last fall and ceded to UN demands regarding
aerial reconnaissance, interviews with Iraqi scientists, and other
means of insuring full Iraqi accountability several weeks later, one
could argue that Iraq may have finally been in compliance with most,
if not all, of those outstanding resolutions at the time of the U.S.
invasion.
It should also be noted that Morocco, Israel and Turkey have
failed to live up to demands of the UN Security Council for more
than twice as long as did Iraq. Several other countries -- including
Croatia, Indonesia, Sudan, Armenia, India, Pakistan and others --
continue to be in defiance of the UN Security Council from more
recent resolutions. Despite these transgressions, however, the Bush
Administration does not appear ready to invade these countries.
Indeed, most of these countries receive military and economic aid
from the U.S. government, raising serious questions as to whether
the Bush Administration has ever really been concerned about the
implementation of resolutions passed by the UN Security Council
after all.
“Our coalition enforced these international demands in one
of the swiftest and most humane military campaigns in history.”
First of all, the initial invasion was almost exclusively an
American military operation with the exception of British leadership
in some southern parts of the country. It could therefore hardly be
referred to as a “coalition.”
More importantly, the invasion of Iraq was not an enforcement of
these “international demands.” The United Nations Charter clearly
states that only the UN Security Council itself has the ability to
authorize military enforcement of its resolutions. The Security
Council, however, refused to authorize the United States to enforce
these resolutions through military means despite enormous pressure
by U.S. officials to do so.
Finally, it was hardly a humane military campaign. More than 5000
Iraqi civilians were killed in the U.S.-led assault, far surpassing
the number of American civilians killed in the terrorist attacks of
9/11.
“For a generation leading up to September the 11th, 2001,
terrorists and their radical allies attacked innocent people in the
Middle East and beyond, without facing a sustained and serious
response.”
This is not true at all. During this period, countries where
terrorists were harbored -- including Libya, Lebanon, Iraq, Sudan,
and Afghanistan -- were subjected to major bombing campaigns (though
more civilians than terrorists were killed during most of these
military operations.) Sustained and serious responses by a series of
American, Middle Eastern and European governments -- using a
combination of aggressive police work, intelligence efforts, and
paramilitary operations -- destroyed or severely weakened most of
the major terrorist groups during this period, including Abu Nidal,
the PFLP-GC, the PKK, Black September, and others.
“The terrorists became convinced that free nations were
decadent and weak.”
As anyone familiar with any serious study of Middle Eastern
terrorism recognizes, there is no doubt on the part of anti-American
extremists of the United States’ military power. Indeed, the
inability to take on U.S. military might directly is what has
prompted these extremists to utilize the kind of irregular warfare
that targets innocent civilians. Furthermore, the use of terror by
groups like Al-Qaeda comes in large part from the hope that the
United States will respond through disproportionate and
poorly-targeted military actions that further alienate the general
population and add to their ranks. Unfortunately, the Bush
Administration has fallen right into their trap.
“We have carried the fight to the enemy. We are rolling
back the terrorist threat to civilization, not on the fringes of its
influence, but at the heart of its power.”
If one wants to find a geographic center of the terrorist threat,
it is U.S. ally Saudi Arabia, from which most of the Al-Qaeda
leadership, sixteen of the nineteen 9/11 hijackers, and most of the
group’s financial support comes. By contrast, none of Al-Qaeda’s
leadership, none of the 9/11 hijackers and none of the money trail
appear to have come from Iraq.
However, the heart of terrorism’s power comes not from any
particular geographic location, but from the individual terrorists
whose violent anti-Americanism is rooted in large part to years of
U.S. support for repressive Arab dictatorships and Israeli
occupation forces. Current U.S. policy is making enemies faster than
we can kill them.
“In Iraq, we are helping the long suffering people of that
country to build a decent and democratic society at the center of
the Middle East. Together we are transforming a place of torture
chambers and mass graves into a nation of laws and free
institutions.”
Most observers in Iraq have reported that the country is far from
being “a decent and democratic society” and that foreign occupation
forces are currently in charge of the legal system and governmental
institutions.
Furthermore, the United States -- both currently and over the
past three decades -- has been the single largest supporter of
autocratic governments in the Arab world, raising serious questions
as to whether freedom and democracy is even the goal of the United
States in Iraq.
“The terrorists thrive on the support of tyrants and the
resentments of oppressed peoples. When tyrants fall, and resentment
gives way to hope, men and women in every culture reject the
ideologies of terror, and turn to the pursuits of peace. Everywhere
that freedom takes hold, terror will retreat.”
This is very true. This begs the question, then, as to why the
Bush Administration continues to arm and support tyrannical
governments like those in Saudi Arabia and Egypt? These countries
have produced far more anti-American terrorists that Iraq ever did,
even under Saddam Hussein.
“The north of Iraq is generally stable and is moving
forward with reconstruction and self-government.”
Actually, because northern Iraq had been an autonomous area under
Kurdish rule ever since mid-1991, the region had been generally
stable and was moving forward with reconstruction and
self-government well prior to the U.S. invasion. Since the U.S.
invasion, however, there has been an upsurge in ethnic clashes and
other violence.
“This violence is directed not only against our coalition,
but against anyone in Iraq who stands for decency, and freedom and
progress.”
Some of the violence may indeed come from those who oppose
decency, freedom and progress. However, history has shown that most
people who have taken up arms against foreign occupation troops do
so because they believe it is those who invaded and occupied their
country who actually threaten its freedom and progress.
“Two years ago, I told the Congress and the country that
the war on terror would be a lengthy war, a different kind of war,
fought on many fronts in many places. Iraq is now the central
front.”
The U.S. invasion of Iraq was justified primarily on the grounds
that Iraq supposedly possessed chemical and biological weapons and
had an active nuclear weapons program. Only now, as it is becoming
apparent that Iraq did not have such weapons or weapons programs
after all, is the Bush Administration suddenly claiming that the
reason for the United States to take over the country is that Iraq
is now “the central front” of the “war on terror."
“Following World War II, we lifted up the defeated nations
of Japan and Germany, and stood with them as they built
representative governments. We committed years and resources to this
cause. And that effort has been repaid many times over in three
generations of friendship and peace. America today accepts the
challenge of helping Iraq in the same spirit -- for their sake, and
our own.”
There are some key differences between Germany and Japan of 1945
and Iraq today. Germany had a democratic parliamentary system prior
to Hitler seizing power in the early 1930s and Japan had some
semblance of a constitutional monarchy prior to the rise of
militarism in the late 1920s, whereas Iraq has never had a
representative government. Germany and Japan were homogeneous
societies with a strong sense of national identity, whereas Iraq is
an artificial creation thrown together by colonial powers from three
Ottoman provinces by and has only been truly independent for just 45
years; fighting between various Iraqi religious and ethnic groups
has resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands in recent decades.
In addition, most Germans and Japanese recognized that their defeat
and occupation was a direct result of their leaders' aggression
against the countries’ neighbors, whereas the Iraqis -- whose
government was far weaker and less aggressive during its final
twelve years than it was in the past -- are more prone to see the
American takeover as an act of Western imperialism, not
self-defense. As a result, it will be quite difficult for the United
States to establish a widely accepted and stable regime. Finally,
the idealistic New Deal liberals who helped create open political
systems in post-war Germany and Japan arguably had a stronger
personal commitment to democracy than the right-wing
neoconservatives in the Bush administration, who have a history of
supporting dictatorial governments that support U.S. strategic and
economic interests.
“We are taking direct action against the terrorists in the
Iraqi theater, which is the surest way to prevent future attacks on
coalition forces and the Iraqi people.”
These kind of pro-active U.S. military operations against alleged
terrorists in crowded urban areas tend to result in civilian
casualties that will likely encourage attacks by both terrorists
targeting civilians as well as other armed units targeting
occupation soldiers.
More importantly, however, it is important to recognize that
prior to the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq, there were no car
bomb attacks against UN offices, foreign embassies or places of
worship. Since the U.S. takeover, however, Iraq has become a hotbed
of terrorism. This raises serious questions as to whether invading
other countries actually makes the world safer from terrorism or if
such actions actually help create terrorism.
“Some countries have requested an explicit authorization of
the United Nations Security Council before committing troops to
Iraq. I have directed Secretary of State Colin Powell to introduce a
new Security Council resolution, which would authorize the creation
of a multinational force in Iraq, to be led by America…. [W]e cannot
let past differences interfere with present duties. Members of the
United Nations now have an opportunity -- and the responsibility --
to assume a broader role in assuring that Iraq becomes a free and
democratic nation.”
It is unlikely that the UN Security Council would take the
unprecedented step of authorizing a multinational force to take part
in an occupation which came through what most UN members see as an
illegal invasion and a clear violation of the UN Charter. By
contrast, if the United States was willing to transfer
administration of Iraq to the United Nations -- creating a UN
trusteeship like the one the Security Council set up in East Timor
between the withdrawal of Indonesian occupation forces in 2000 and
independence last year -- most countries capable of providing
peacekeeping troops, financial support and technical expertise would
probably do so. The United States has refused to allow the United
Nations a significant role, however, insisting that the economic and
political future of Iraq should be shaped primarily by the United
States, not the international community. Until the United States
allows the United Nations to take leadership, however, it is unfair
to insist that UN members have a “responsibility” or a “duty” to
help ameliorate the mess the United States has gotten itself into
“I have expressed confidence in the ability of the Iraqi
people to govern themselves. Now they must rise to the
responsibilities of a free people and secure the blessings of their
own liberty.”
This statement may be preparing the way to convince Americans
that, should the Bush Administration’s policy fail, it will be the
fault of the Iraqis themselves, not the government that invaded and
occupied them.
“This budget request will also support our commitment to
helping the Iraqi and Afghan people rebuild their own nations, after
decades of oppression and mismanagement.”
Iraq and Afghanistan were indeed ruled by regimes which were
oppressive and mismanaged their economies. However, development
officials on the ground in these countries have argued that most of
the rebuilding that is needed is related to damage from years of
heavy bombing and economic sanctions, which – particularly in the
case of Iraq – were largely a result of U.S. policy. It is thus far
unclear as to how much of the $87 billion requested of Congress will
actually help in rebuilding these countries and how much will go to
supporting U.S. occupation forces and well-connected U.S.
multinational corporations involved in reconstruction and
administration.
“We will provide funds to help them improve security. And
we will help them to restore basic services, such as electricity and
water, and to build new schools, roads, and medical clinics. This
effort is essential to the stability of those nations, and
therefore, to our own security.”
Hopefully, this will indeed be the case. It should be pointed
out, however, that security in Afghanistan and Iraq has actually
decreased dramatically since the U.S. ousted the previous
governments and basic services like electricity and water are less
available in Iraq now than they were prior to the U.S. takeover.
“For the Middle East and the world, there will be no going
back to the days of fear, when a brutal and aggressive tyrant
possessed terrible weapons.”
Hopefully, this will be true as well. However, none of Iraq’s
neighbors had expressed particular fear of Saddam Hussein once the
1991 Gulf War and subsequent sanctions and UN-led disarmament
efforts apparently eliminated the regime’s weapons of mass
destruction and its offensive military capability. Not only did the
U.S. invasion do nothing to improve the regional security situation,
the Bush Administration has rejected calls for a weapons of mass
destruction free zone for the entire Middle East, which could help
prevent other tyrants from obtaining such weapons.
“We have learned that terrorist attacks are not caused by
the use of strength; they are invited by the perception of
weakness.”
Again, there are no doubts among extremists in the Middle East
regarding America’s military strength. The perceived weakness is in
regard to America’s moral strength. Millions of people in the Middle
East and beyond believe that it is morally wrong for the United
States to support Arab dictatorships and Israeli occupation forces.
They believe it is morally wrong that the amount of U.S. military
aid to the Middle East is six times that of its economic aid. They
believe it is morally wrong that the #1 U.S. export to the region is
not consumer goods, high-tech equipment or agricultural products,
but armaments. They believe it is morally wrong that a powerful
country from the other side of the world would invade a sovereign
Arab nation and justify it by falsely claiming that its government
currently had weapons of mass destruction and was supporting
Al-Qaeda. They believe it is morally wrong that U.S. bombing and
sanctions against Muslim countries has killed far more civilians
than have the terrorists themselves.
The unfortunate reality is that the more the United States has
militarized the Middle East, the less secure we have become.
“And the surest way to avoid attacks on our own people is
to engage the enemy where he lives and plans. We are fighting that
enemy in Iraq and Afghanistan today so that we do not meet him again
on our own streets, in our own cities.”
It is absurd to believe that those Iraqis and Afghanis currently
fighting U.S. occupation forces in their own countries actually want
to somehow sneak into the United States to fight Americans here.
Indeed, no Afghans or Iraqis are known to have ever committed an act
of terrorism against Americans on American soil.
The president’s statement is essentially a retread of the line
used by supporters of the Vietnam War that “If we don’t fight them
over there, we will have to fight them here.” However, more than 28
years after the Communist victory in Vietnam, we are yet to fight
the Vietnamese in our streets and there is no indication that we
ever will. The Iraqis and Afghans, as were the Vietnamese, are
fighting Americans because U.S. troops are in their country and,
like the Vietnamese, will stop fighting Americans once U.S. troops
leave their country.
Stephen Zunes is an associate professor of Politics and chair
of the Peace & Justice Studies Program at the University of San
Francisco. He is the author of Tinderbox: U.S. Middle East Policy
and the Roots of Terrorism http://www.www.commoncouragepress.com/ and serves as
Middle East editor of the Foreign Policy in Focus Project http://www.fpif.org/
where this analysis first appeared.
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