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by
Rahul Mahajan and Robert Jensen
March
20, 2003
Last night, our
president announced a war to the nation and the world. Let us be clear about
what this war is and what it is not.
This war is not the
result of a failure of diplomacy.
This war is not a
pre-emptive war.
This war is not about
weapons of mass destruction.
This war is not about
terrorism.
This war is not about
the liberation of the Iraqi people.
Diplomacy:
Nations typically engage in diplomacy to avoid having to go to war. After Iraq
invaded Kuwait in 1990, numerous attempts at diplomacy were made by France, the
Soviet Union, and the Arab League. They all foundered, primarily on the
intransigence of the first Bush administration. In this case, the second Bush
administration tried to use "diplomacy" to create a war out of whole
cloth, making no attempt to negotiate with Iraq. In fact, as Iraq made
concession after concession -- as it became increasingly clear that whatever
pitiful arsenal Iraq had could be found and dismantled if inspections were
allowed to continue -- U.S. attempts to strong-arm other countries into
supporting the war became increasingly crude and coercive. Although those
attempts mostly failed, they were hardly aimed at preventing the war.
Pre-emption:
In order to pre-empt a threat with war, there must be some credible reason to
believe that the threat exists and that no other strategies will address it. A
threat involves capability and intent. In this case, the Bush administration
was not able to show that Iraq has the capability, and no attempt was made to
show that it had the intent to attack.
Weapons
of Mass Destruction: As time passed, the administration's lies, half-truths,
and distortions became increasingly ridiculous. From scare stories about an
"unmanned aerial vehicle" that turned out to be a glider held together
with spit and baling wire, to forged documents claiming that Iraq was trying to
buy uranium from Niger, nothing has held water. Claims of mobile biological
laboratories were refuted by weapons inspectors, as were claims that Iraq had
or was about to get nuclear weapons. And, of course, ongoing inspections would
have ensured that no arsenal could be built.
Terrorism:
This claim is even more absurd. The best the Bush administration could come up
with was a Jordanian militant, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a member of Ansar al-Islam
whose ties to either al-Qaeda or the Iraqi government are completely
unsubstantiated. A recent British intelligence assessment concluded that there
is no link between Iraq and al-Qaeda.
Liberation:
The United States does not care about true democracy for Iraq. In 1991, when a
popular uprising after the Gulf War threatened to oust Hussein's government,
the United States intervened to keep Hussein in power. The reason, as officials
explained later, was that the United States wanted a military coup to preserve
what Richard Haas of the National Security Council called "Saddam's regime
without Saddam." Since 9/11, the Bush administration has funded a coup
attempt in Venezuela, installed a puppet regime in Afghanistan, and cracked
down on basic democratic protections in the United States. It would be ironic
if the administration wanted democracy for Iraqis but not for Americans. U.S.
plans for Iraq clearly involve establishing yet another puppet regime
So,
what is this war? It is an act of premeditated aggression. It is part of an
attempt to put the tremendous energy reserves of the Middle East more tightly
under American control. It is the key stage in the building of a new empire. It
is part of a long-term attempt to establish more clearly than ever the rule of
force in international affairs and sweep away any role for international law or
institutions beyond those in service to the empire.
Another
fact we must remember: This war did not begin last night.
March
19, 2003, was simply the start of a new, more intense phase of the U.S. attack
on Iraq that has been going on since the end of the 1991 Gulf War, through the
harshest economic embargo in modern history and through more than four years of
regular bombing.
Already,
hundreds of thousands -- possibly more than a million -- innocent Iraqis have died in this ongoing assault. As we count
the civilian casualities from this newest phase, they must be added to this
roster of the dead so that the costs of the U.S. war will not be obscured.
This
is crucial to understand, because when U.S. military forces topple the
government of Saddam Hussein, we shouldn't be surprised if ordinary Iraqis
cheer. Their celebrations will not be about only the demise of a dictator but
about the hoped-for end of a regime of fear and deprivation imposed by the
United States, in which parents have been forced to watch children die of
malnutrition and disease caused by the enforced poverty created by the embargo.
And,
finally: Just as the war against Iraq did not begin last night, the larger war
for empire will not end with Iraq. Other nations, notably Iran, are already on
the target list. Bush administration officials talk of remaking the map of the
Middle East. Beyond that is the desire to counter the rising power of China.
The
American takeover of Iraq likely cannot be stopped. But just as there has been
a time for war, there can come a time for justice if we -- the citizens of the
empire -- recognize that this battle
may be lost, but there is still a world to win.
Rahul Mahajan's latest book is
the forthcoming The U.S. War Against Iraq: Myths, Facts, and Lies. Robert Jensen, an associate
professor of journalism at the University of Texas at Austin, is the author of Writing
Dissent: Taking Radical Ideas from the Margins to the Mainstream. Both are
members of the Nowar Collective (www.nowarcollective.com).
They can be reached at rahul@tao.ca.