(1) Why did the
U.S. invade Iraq, in your view?
These are naturally speculations, and policy
makers may have varying motives. But we can have a high degree of
confidence about the answers given by Bush-Powell and the rest; these
cannot possibly be taken seriously. They have gone out of their way to
make sure we understand that, by a steady dose of self-contradiction
ever since last September when the war drums began to beat. One day the
"single question" is whether Iraq will disarm; in today's version (April
12): "We have high confidence that they have weapons of mass destruction
-- that is what this war was about and is about." That was the pretext
throughout the whole UN-disarmament farce, though it was never easy to
take seriously; UNMOVIC was doing a good job in virtually disarming
Iraq, and could have continued, if that were the goal. But there is no
need to discuss it, because after stating solemnly that this is the
"single question," they went on the next day to announce that it wasn't
the goal at all: even if there isn't a pocket knife anywhere in Iraq,
the US will invade anyway, because it is committed to "regime change."
The next day we hear that there's nothing to that either; thus at the
Azores summit, where Bush-Blair issued their ultimatum to the UN, they
made it clear that they would invade even if Saddam and his gang left
the country. So "regime change" is not enough. The next day we hear that
the goal is "democracy" in the world. Pretexts range over the lot,
depending on audience and circumstances, which means that no sane person
can take the charade seriously.
The one constant is that the US must end up
in control of Iraq. Saddam Hussein was authorized to suppress, brutally,
a 1991 uprising that might have overthrown him because "the best of all
worlds" for Washington would be "an iron-fisted Iraqi junta without
Saddam Hussein" (by then an embarrassment), which would rule the country
with an "iron fist" as Saddam had done with US support and approval (NYT
chief diplomatic correspondent Thomas Friedman). The uprising would have
left the country in the hands of Iraqis who might not have subordinated
themselves sufficiently to Washington. The murderous sanctions regime of
the following years devastated the society, strengthened the tyrant, and
compelled the population to rely for survival on his (highly efficient)
system for distributing basic goods. The sanctions thus undercut the
possibility of the kind of popular revolt that had overthrown an
impressive series of other monsters who had been strongly supported by
the current incumbents in Washington up to the very end of their bloody
rule: Marcos, Duvalier, Ceausescu, Mobutu, Suharto, and a long list of
others, some of them easily as tyrannical and barbaric as Saddam. Had it
not been for the sanctions, Saddam probably would have gone the same
way, as has been pointed out for years by the Westerners who know Iraq
best, Denis Halliday and Hans van Sponeck (though one has to go to
Canada, England, or elsewhere to find their writings). But overthrow of
the regime from within would not be acceptable either, because it would
leave Iraqis in charge. The Azores summit merely reiterated that
stand.
The question of who rules Iraq remains the
prime issue of contention. The US-backed opposition demands that the UN
play a vital role in post-war Iraq and rejects US control of
reconstruction or government (Leith Kubba, one of the most respected
secular voices in the West, connected with the National Endowment of
Democracy). One of the leading Shi'ite opposition figures, Sayed Muhamed
Baqer al-Hakim, who heads the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in
Iraq (SCIRI), just informed the press that "we understand this war to be
about imposing US hegemony over Iraq," and perceive the US as "an
occupying rather than a liberating force." He stressed that the UN must
supervise elections, and called on "foreign troops to withdraw from
Iraq" and leave Iraqis in charge.
US policy-makers have a radically different
conception. They must impose a client regime in Iraq, following the
practice elsewhere in the region, and most significantly, in the regions
that have been under US domination for a century, Central America and
the Caribbean. That too is well-understood. Brent Scowcroft, National
Security Adviser to Bush I, just repeated the obvious: "What's going to
happen the first time we hold an election in Iraq and it turns out the
radicals win? What do you do? We're surely not going to let them take
over."
The same holds throughout the region. Recent
studies reveal that from Morocco to Lebanon to the Gulf, about 95% of
the population want a greater role in government for Islamic religious
figures, and the same percentage believe that the sole US interest in
the region is to control its oil and strengthen Israel. Antagonism to
Washington has reached unprecedented heights, and the idea that
Washington would institute a radical change in policy and tolerate truly
democratic elections, respecting the outcome, seems rather fanciful, to
say the least.
Turning to the question, one reason for the
invasion, surely, is to gain control over the world's second largest oil
reserves, which will place the US in an even more powerful position of
global domination, maintaining "a stranglehold on the global economy,"
as Michael Klare describes the long-term objective, which he regards as
the primary motive for war. However, this cannot explain the timing. Why
now?
The drumbeat for war began in September 2002,
and the government-media propaganda campaign achieved a spectacular
success. Very quickly, the majority of the population came to believe
that Iraq posed an imminent threat to US security, even that Iraq was
involved in 9-11 (up from 3% after 9-11) and was planning new attacks.
Not surprisingly, these beliefs correlated closely with support for the
planned war. The beliefs are unique to the US. Even in Kuwait and Iran,
which were invaded by Saddam Hussein, he was not feared, though he was
despised. They know perfectly well that Iraq was the weakest state in
the region, and for years they had joined others in trying to
reintegrate Iraq into the regional system, over strong US objections.
But a highly effective propaganda assault drove the American population
far off the spectrum of world opinion, a remarkable
achievement.
The September propaganda assault coincided
with two important events. One was the opening of the mid-term election
campaign. Karl Rove, the administration's campaign manager, had already
pointed out that Republicans have to "go to the country" on the issue of
national security, because voters "trust the Republican Party to do a
better job of...protecting America." One didn't have to be a political
genius to realize that if social and economic issues dominated the
election, the Bush administration did not have a chance. Accordingly, it
was necessary to concoct a huge threat to our survival, which the
powerful leader will manage to overcome, miraculously. For the
elections, the strategy barely worked. Polls reveal that voters
maintained their preferences, but suppressed concerns over jobs,
pensions, benefits, etc., in favor of security. Something similar will
be needed for the presidential campaign. All of this is second nature
for the current incumbents. They are mostly recycled from the more
reactionary sectors of the Reagan-Bush administrations, and know that
they were able to run the country for 12 years, carrying out domestic
programs that the public largely opposed, by pushing the panic button
regularly: Libyan attempting to "expel us from the world" (Reagan), an
air base in Grenada from which the Russians would bomb us, Nicaragua
only "two-days driving time from Harlingen Texas," waving their copies
of Mein Kampf as they planned to take over the hemisphere, black
criminals about to rape your sister (Willie Horton, the 1988
presidential campaign), Hispanic narcotraffickers about to destroy us,
and on and on.
To maintain political power is an extremely
important matter if the narrow sectors of power represented by the Bush
administration hope to carry out their reactionary domestic program over
strong popular opposition, if possible even to institutionalize them, so
it will be hard to reconstruct what is being dismantled.
Something else happened in September 2002:
the administration released its National Security Strategy, sending many
shudders around the world, including the US foreign policy elite. The
Strategy has many precedents, but does break new ground: for the first
time in the post-war world, a powerful state announced, loud and clear,
that it intends to rule the world by force, forever, crushing any
potential challenge it might perceive. This is often called in the press
a doctrine of "pre-emptive war." That is crucially wrong; it goes vastly
beyond pre-emption. Sometimes it is called more accurately a doctrine of
"preventive war." That too understates the doctrine. No military threat,
however remote, need be "prevented"; challenges can be concocted at
will, and may not involve any threat other than "defiance"; those who
pay attention to history know that "successful defiance" has often been
taken to be justification for resort to force in the past.
When a doctrine is announced, some action
must be taken to demonstrate that it is seriously intended, so that it
can become a new "norm in international relations," as commentators will
soberly explain. What is needed is a war with an "exemplary quality,"
Harvard Middle East historian Roger Owen pointed out, discussing the
reasons for the attack on Iraq. The exemplary action teaches a lesson
that others must heed, or else.
Why Iraq? The experimental subject must have
several important qualities. It must be defenseless, and it must be
important; there's no point illustrating the doctrine by invading
Burundi. Iraq qualified perfectly in both respects. The importance is
obvious, and so is the required weakness. Iraq was not much of a
military force to begin with, and had been largely disarmed through the
1990s while much of the society was driven to the edge of survival. Its
military expenditures and economy were about one-third those of Kuwait,
with 10% of its population, far below others in the region, and of
course the regional superpower, Israel, by now virtually an offshore
military base of the US. The invading force not only had utterly
overwhelming military power, but also extensive information to guide its
actions from satellite observation and overflights for many years, and
more recently U-2 flights on the pretext of disarmament, surely sending
data directly back to Washington.
Iraq was therefore a perfect choice for an
"exemplary action" to establish the new doctrine of global rule by force
as a "norm of international relations." A high official involved in
drafting the National Security Strategy informed the press that its
publication "was the signal that Iraq would be the first test, but not
the last." "Iraq became the petri dish in which this experiment in
pre-emptive policy grew," the New York Times reported -- misstating the
policy in the usual way, but otherwise accurate.
All of these factors gave good reasons for
war. And they also help explain why the planned war was so
overwhelmingly opposed by the public worldwide (including the US,
particularly when we extract the factor of fear, unique to the US). And
also strongly opposed by a substantial part of economic and foreign
policy elites, a very unusual development. They rightly fear that the
adventurist posture may prove very costly to their own interests, even
to survival. It is well-understood that these policies are driving
others to develop a deterrent, which could be weapons of mass
destruction, or credible threats of serious terror, or even conventional
weapons, as in the case of North Korea, with artillery massed to destroy
Seoul. With any remnants of some functioning system of world order torn
to shreds, the Bush administration is instructing the world that nothing
matters but force -- and they hold the mailed fist, though others are
not likely to tolerate that for long. Including, one hopes, the American
people, who are in by far the best position to counter and reverse these
extremely ominous trends.
(2) There is some cheering in
the streets of Iraqi cities. Does this
retrospectively undercut the
logic of antiwar opposition?
I'm surprised that it was so limited and so
long delayed. Every sensible person should welcome the overthrow of the
tyrant, and the ending of the devastating sanctions, most certainly
Iraqis. But the antiwar opposition, at least the part of it I know
anything about, was always in favor of these ends. That's why it opposed
the sanctions that were destroying the country and undermining the
possibility of an internal revolt that would send Saddam the way of the
other brutal killers supported by the present incumbents in Washington.
The antiwar movement insisted that Iraqis, not the US government, must
run the country. And it still does -- or should; it can have a
substantial impact in this regard. Opponents of the war were also
rightly appalled by the utter lack of concern for the possible
humanitarian consequences of the attack, and by the ominous strategy for
which it was the "test case." The basic issues remain: (1) Who will run
Iraq, Iraqis or a clique in Crawford Texas? (2) Will the American people
permit the narrow reactionary sectors that barely hold on to political
power to implement their domestic and international agendas?
(3) There have been no wmd
found. Does this retrospectively undercut
Bush's rationales for
war?
Only if one takes the rationale seriously. The
leadership still pretends to, as Fleischer's current remarks illustrate.
If they can find something, which is not unlikely, that will be
trumpeted as justification for the war. If they can't, the whole issue
will be "disappeared" in the usual fashion.
(4) If wmd are now found, and verified, would that
retrospecitvely
undercut antiwar opposition?
That's a logical impossibility. Policies and
opinions about them are determined by what is known or plausibly
believed, not by what is discovered afterwards. That should be
elementary.
(5) Will there be democracy in
Iraq, as a result of this invasion?
Depends on what one means by "democracy." I
presume the Bush PR team will want to put into place some kind of formal
democracy, as long as it has no substance. But it's hard to imagine that
they would allow a real voice to the Shi'ite majority, which is likely
to join the rest of the region in trying to establish closer relations
with Iran, the last thing the Bushites want. Or that they would allow a
real voice to the next largest component of the population, the Kurds,
who are likely to seek some kind of autonomy within a federal structure
that would be anathema to Turkey, a major base for US power in the
region. One should not be misled by the recent hysterical reaction to
the crime of the Turkish government in adopting the position of 95% of
its population, another indication of the passionate hatred of democracy
in elite circles here, and another reason why no sensible person can
take the rhetoric seriously. Same throughout the region. Functioning
democracy would have outcomes that are inconsistent with the goal of US
hegemony, just as in our own "backyard" over a century.
(6) What message has been
received by governments around the world, with what likely broad
implications?
The message is that the Bush administration
intends its National Security Strategy to be taken seriously, as the
"test case" illustrates. It intends to dominate the world by force, the
one dimension in which it rules supreme, and to do so permanently. A
more specific message, illustrated dramatically by the Iraq-North Korea
case, is that if you want to fend off a US attack, you had better have a
credible deterrent. It's widely assumed in elite circles that the likely
consequence is proliferation of WMD and terror, in various forms, based
on fear and loathing for the US administration, which was regarded as
the greatest threat to world peace even before the invasion. That's no
small matter these days. Questions of peace shade quickly into questions
of survival for the species, given the case of means of
violence.
(7) What was the role of the
American media establishment in paving the way for this war, and then
rationalizing it, narrowing the terms of
discussion, etc.?
The media uncritically relayed government
propaganda about the threat to US security posed by Iraq, its
involvement in 9-11 and other terror, etc. Some amplified the message on
their own. Others simply relayed it. The effects in the polls were
striking, as often before. Discussion was, as usual, restricted to
"pragmatic grounds": will the US government get away with its plans at a
cost acceptable at home. Once the war began it became a shameful
exercise of cheering for the home team, appalling much of the
world.
(8) What is next on the agenda,
broadly, for Bush and Co., if they are
able to pursue their preferred
agendas?
They have publicly announced that the next
targets could be Syria and Iran -- which would require a strong military
base in Iraq, presumably; another reason why any meaningful democracy is
unlikely. It has been reliably reported for some time that the US and
its allies (Turkey, Israel, and some others) have been taking steps
towards dismemberment of Iran. But there are other possible targets too.
The Andean region qualifies. It has very substantial resources,
including oil. It is in turmoil, with dangerous independent popular
movements that are not under control. It is by now surrounded by US
military bases with US forces already on the ground. And one can think
of others.
(9) What obstacles now stand in
the way of Bush and Co.'s doing as they prefer, and what obstacles might
arise?
The prime obstacle is domestic. But that's up
to us.
(10) What has been your
impression of antiwar opposition and what ought to be its agenda
now?
Antiwar opposition here has been completely
without precedent in scale and commitment, something we've discussed
before, and that is certainly obvious to anyone who has had any
experience in these matters here for the past 40 years. Its agenda right
now, I think, should be to work to ensure that Iraq is run by Iraqis,
that the US provide massive reparations for what it has done to Iraq for
20 years (by supporting Saddam Hussein, by wars, by brutal sanctions
which probably caused a great deal more damage and deaths than the
wars); and if that is too much honesty to expect, then at least massive
aid, to be used by Iraqis, as they decide, which will be something other
than US taxpayer subsidies to Halliburton and Bechtel. Also high on the
agenda should be putting a brake on the extremely dangerous policies
announced in the Security Strategy, and carried out in the "petri dish."
And related to that, there should be serious efforts to block the
bonanza of arms sales that is happily anticipated as a consequence of
the war, which will also contribute to making the world a more awful and
dangerous place. But that's only the beginning. The antiwar movement is
indissolubly linked to the global justice movements, which have much
more far-reaching goals, properly.
(11) What do you think is the
relationship between the invasion of Iraq
and corporate
glboalization, and what should be the relation between the anticorproate
globalization movement, and the peace
movement?
The invasion of Iraq was strongly
opposed by the main centers of corporate globalization. At the World
Economic Forum in Davos in January, opposition was so strong that Powell
was practically shouted down when he tried to present a case for the war
-- announcing, pretty clearly, that the US would "lead" even if no one
followed, except for the pathetic Blair. The global justice and peace
movements are so closely linked in their objectives that there is
nothing much to say. We should, however, recall that the planners do
draw these links, as we should too, in our own different way. They
predict that their version of "globalization" will proceed on course,
leading to "chronic financial volatility" (meaning still slower growth,
harming mostly the poor) "and a widening economic divide" (meaning less
globalization in the technical sense of convergence). They predict
further that "deepening economic stagnation, political instability, and
cultural alienation will foster ethnic, ideological and religious
extremism, along with violence," much of it directed against the US --
that is, more terror. Military planners make the same assumptions. That
is a good part of the rationale for rapidly increasing military
spending, including the plans for militarization of space that the
entire world is trying to block, without much hope as long as the matter
is kept from the sight of Americans, who have the prime responsibility
to stop it. I presume that is why some of the major events of last
October were not even reported, among them the US vote at the UN, alone
(with Israel), against a resolution calling for reaffirmation of a 1925
Geneva convention banning biological weapons and another resolution
strengthening the 1967 Outer Space Treaty to ban use of space for
military purposes, including offensive weapons that may well do us all
in.
The agenda, as always,
begins with trying to find out what is happening in the world, and then
doing something about it, as we can, better than anyone else. Few share
our privilege, power, and freedom -- hence responsibility. That should
be another truism.
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