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by
Edward Said
April
21, 2003
In
a speech in the Senate on 19 March, the first day of war against Iraq, Robert
Byrd, the Democrat Senator from West Virginia, asked: 'What is happening to
this country? When did we become a nation which ignores and berates our
friends? When did we decide to risk undermining international order by adopting
a radical and doctrinaire approach to using our awesome military might? How can
we abandon diplomacy when the turmoil in the world cries out for diplomacy?'
No
one bothered to answer, but as the American military machine currently in Iraq
stirs restlessly in other directions, these questions give urgency to the
failure, if not the corruption, of democracy.
Let
us examine what the US's Middle East policy has wrought since George W. Bush
came to power. Even before the atrocities of 11 September, Bush's team had
given Ariel Sharon's government freedom to colonize the West Bank and Gaza,
kill and detain people at will, demolish their homes, expropriate their land
and imprison them by curfew and military blockades. After 9/11, Sharon simply
hitched his wagon to 'the war on terrorism' and intensified his unilateral
depredations against a defenseless civilian population under occupation,
despite UN Security Council Resolutions enjoining Israel to withdraw and desist
from its war crimes and human-rights abuses.
In
October 2001, Bush launched the invasion of Afghanistan, which opened with
concentrated, high-altitude bombing (an 'anti-terrorist' military tactic, which
resembles ordinary terrorism in its effects and structure) and by December had
installed a client regime with no effective power beyond Kabul. There has been
no significant US effort at reconstruction, and it seems the country has
returned to its former abjection.
Since
the summer of 2002, the Bush administration has conducted a propaganda campaign
against the despotic government of Iraq and with the UK, having unsuccessfully
tried to push the Security Council into compliance, started the war. Since last
November, dissent disappeared from the mainstream media swollen with a surfeit
of ex-generals sprinkled with recent terrorism experts drawn from Washington
right-wing think-tanks.
Anyone
who was critical was labeled anti-American by failed academics, listed on
websites as an 'enemy' scholar who didn't toe the line. Those few public
figures who were critical had their emails swamped, their lives threatened,
their ideas trashed by media commentators who had become sentinels of America's
war.
A
torrent of material appeared equating Saddam Hussein's tyranny not only with
evil, but with every known crime. Some of this was factually correct but
neglected the role of the US and Europe in fostering Saddam's rise and
maintaining his power. In fact, the egregious Donald Rumsfeld visited Saddam in
the early 80s, assuring him of US approval for his catastrophic war against
Iran. US corporations supplied nuclear, chemical and biological materials for
the supposed weapons of mass destruction and then were brazenly erased from
public record.
All
this was deliberately obscured by government and media in manufacturing the
case for destroying Iraq. Either without proof or with fraudulent information,
Saddam was accused of harboring weapons of mass destruction seen as a direct
threat to the US. The appalling consequences of the US and British intervention
in Iraq are beginning to unfold, with the calculated destruction of the
country's modern infrastructure, the looting of one of the world's richest
civilizations, the attempt to engage motley 'exiles' plus large corporations in
rebuilding the country, and the appropriation of its oil and its modern
destiny. It's been suggested that Ahmad Chalabi, for example, will sign a peace
treaty with Israel, hardly an Iraqi idea. Bechtel has already been awarded a
huge contract.
This
is an almost total failure in democracy - ours, not Iraq's: 70 per cent of the
American people are supposed to support this, but nothing is more manipulative
than polls asking 465 Americans whether they 'support our President and troops
in time of war'. As Senator Byrd said: 'There is a pervasive sense of rush and
risk and too many questions unanswered ... a pall has fallen over the Senate
Chamber. We avoid our solemn duty to debate the one topic on the minds of all
Americans, even while scores of our sons and daughters faithfully do their duty
in Iraq.'
I
am convinced this was a rigged, unnecessary and unpopular war. The reactionary
Washington institutions that spawned Wolfowitz, Perle, Abrams and Feith provide
an unhealthy intellectual and moral atmosphere. Policy papers circulate without
real peer review, adopted by a government requiring justification for illicit
policy. The doctrine of military preemption was never voted on by the American
people or their representatives. How can citizens stand up against the
blandishments offered to the government by companies like Halliburton and
Boeing? Charting a strategic course for the most lavishly endowed military
establishment in history is left to ideologically based pressure groups (e.g.
fundamentalist Christian leaders), wealthy private foundations and lobbies like
AIPAC, the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee. It seems so monumentally
criminal that important words like democracy and freedom have been hijacked,
used as a mask for pillage, taking over territory and settling scores. The US
program for the Arab world has become the same as Israel's. Along with Syria,
Iraq once represented the only serious military threat to Israel and,
therefore, it had to be smashed.
Besides,
what does it mean to liberate and democratize a country when no one asked you
to do it and when, in the process, you occupy it militarily while failing to
preserve law and order? What a travesty of strategic planning when you assume
'natives' will welcome your presence after you've bombed and quarantined them
for 13 years.
A
preposterous mind set about American beneficence has infiltrated the minutest
levels of the media. In writing about a 70-year-old Baghdad widow who ran a
cultural center in her home that was wrecked by US raids and who is now beside
herself with rage, New York Times reporter Dexter Filkins implicitly chastises
her for her 'comfortable life under Saddam Hussein' and piously disapproves of
her tirade against the Americans, 'and this from a graduate of London
University'.
Adding
to the fraudulence of the weapons not found, the Stalingrads that didn't occur,
the artillery defenses that never happened, I wouldn't be surprised if Saddam
disappeared suddenly because a deal was made in Moscow to let him, his family,
and his money leave in return for the country. The war had gone badly for the
US in the south, and Bush couldn't risk the same in Baghdad. On 6 April, a
Russian convoy leaving Iraq was bombed; Condi Rice appeared in Russia on 7
April; Baghdad fell 9 April.
Nevertheless,
Americans have been cheated, Iraqis have suffered impossibly and Bush looks
like a cowboy. On matters of the gravest importance, constitutional principles
have been violated and the electorate lied to. We are the ones who must have
our democracy back.
Edward Said is University
Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University, and is
a leading Palestinian intellectual and activist. Among his books are The End
of the Peace Process: Oslo and After (Pantheon, 2000), Peace and Its Discontents:
Essays on Palestine in the Middle East Peace Process (Vintage, 1996), and
Out of Place: A Memoir (Knopf, 1999). This article first appeared in the London
Observer (www.observer.co.uk/).