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Bush's
Military Defeat: The SuperPower of Peace is Our Only Hope
by
Harvey Wasserman
May
3, 2003
George
W. Bush has fittingly stopped short of declaring victory in Iraq. He doesn't want to claim a definitive
triumph because it would legally obligate the US to begin cleaning the place up
and enforcing human rights obligations.
But
in fact, the US attacks on Iraq and Afghanistan have been shattering
defeats.
Let's
count the ways:
*
At least three times US troops have fired live ammunition against angry crowds
of "liberated" Iraqis. Far
from "dancing in the streets" over the American presence, the people
of Iraq have made it clear they want the US out just days after the removal of
Saddam Hussein, who most Iraqis understand was put in power by the US in the
first place.
*
US troops have now killed at least twenty Iraqis in demonstrations that appear
to be nonviolent. Military claims of
self-defense are reminiscent of lies that Kent State students fired weapons
during the 1970 massacre there. Those
four deaths put the US in an uproar; in Iraq, 1/20 the size of the US, the
equivalent of 20 dead would be 400.
*
By independent count at least 3,000 Iraqi civilians were killed by the US in
the removal of Saddam Hussein. That
would equate to 60,000 Americans if the attack had been by Iraq on the US.
*
Like Osama bin Laden, Saddam Hussein is widely believed to be alive, but has
yet to be found.
*
The weapons of mass destruction used as a pretext for the American attack have
also yet to be found. None were used in
Iraq's defense.
*
The pillaging of Iraq's most treasured museums, for which the US is directly responsible,
has been widely ranked as one of the most barbaric and indefensible acts of
cultural desecration in world history.
*
US corporate media coverage of the Bush attack was so absurdly one-sided and
nationalistic it drew unprecedented contempt from critics worldwide.
*
The "victory" which has so enamored the US corporate media was an
assault by a rich nation of 280 million people which spends more on its
military than the rest of the world combined, against an impoverished,
disunited nation 20 times smaller which has been ruled by a hated dictator
installed by the US, subjected to international sanctions for 12 years,
continually bombed through that time, and which was recently disarmed by United
Nations weapons inspectors. Far from a
military triumph, its martial conduct drew mocking derision from the global
media outside the US.
*
The first female US soldier killed in Iraq was a divorced Hopi-Navajo mother of
two small children who joined the military to escape poverty. Her death, and the grim future facing her
children, received virtually no media attention, while the dubious
"rescue" of her white friend, Jessica Lynch, received ecstatic---and
wildly distorted---saturation hype.
*
Defense Secretary Rumsfeld openly and willfully violated explicit US law by
failing to establish a baseline health study of American troops entering
combat, reinforcing the failure to deal with Gulf War Syndrome from the
previous attack on Iraq.
*
Though less than a thousand US troops were killed or wounded in the 1991 Gulf War,
220,000 or more are now disabled.
Similar casualties are almost certain to surface in the wake of the
latest attack, though Rumsfeld's illegal refusal to lay the statistical
groundwork for a health study will again make these casualties hard to trace.
*
It is widely believed Bush launched a lethal attack on the Palestine Hotel in
Baghdad with the express intent of killing and intimidating foreign
journalists.
*
While profoundly disinterested in protecting the region's cultural history, or
its civil institutions, the US military took great pains to guard Saddam's
ministries of interior and oil, where crucial information on Iraq's petroleum
reserves are stored.
*
US military encampments during the attack were named after major oil companies.
*
No major nations of the world except Great Britain joined the attack on Iraq,
and none have come forward since to endorse it, despite Bush's alleged
"victory".
*
Though leading Bush hawks have raised the possibility of attacking Syria, Iran
or North Korea, all other major nations of the world---including Great
Britain---have denounced the possibility.
*
Bush has scorned his previous promise to Great Britain's Tony Blair, his one major
ally, that the rebuilding of Iraq would be largely done through the United
Nations.
*
Afghanistan, has sunk into tribal warfare, complete with the rebirth of the
"defeated" Taliban. American
soldiers are still fighting and dying there.
*
Despite Bush's effusive pre-war promises, there is virtually no money in the
latest US budget for rebuilding Aghanistan, or even for repairing the damage
done by the US attack.
*
Drug production, particular opium poppies, is back in full swing in Afghanistan
after having been successfully repressed by the Taliban.
*
Bush's violent assault and undiplomatic arrogance have infuriated much of the
Muslim world and made it highly likely fundamentalist Iran-style regimes will
eventually sweep over both Afghanistan and Iraq.
*
That likelihood has been enhanced by anti-Islam statements from close Bush
cronies, including Rev. Franklin Graham, who've confirmed Bush's initial
proclamation of a "crusade".
*
While crowing over "democracy" to Iraq, Defense Secretary Rumsfeld
says he will not "allow" fundamentalists to take power in Iraq, but
has not explained how he would stop it within a democratic framework.
*
By infuriating the Muslim world and isolating the US, Bush's conquests of Iraq
and Afghanistan will likely guarantee a horrific increase in terrorist attacks
against the US in years to come. Polls
show a large portion of the American population fears precisely this
outcome.
In
short, the Bush "triumph" has the taste and smell of a profound
defeat. The Iraqi people have made it clear
they want the US out, and that the demonstrations can only escalate. Afghanistan is in ruin and chaos.
World
opinion, so profoundly sympathetic to the US after the horrors of September 11,
has swung wildly against us. To the
vast bulk of humanity---especially 1.2 billion Muslims---the US is an
out-of-control bully that invaded Iraq without legitimate provocation,
primarily to grab its oil.
Only
the grotesquely unbalanced and intolerant US corporate media has supported this
attack with any consistency. Worldwide,
its credibility has sunk below zero.
The
United States may currently be the only military superpower. But it's a hollow shell, with its domestic
economy in profound crisis and the dollar in fast decline.
The
cynicism, arrogance and brutality with which Bush has carried out these attacks
has provoked a profound, deep-rooted worldwide hostility.
Far
from victory, the US has never been more weakened, isolated or insecure. In the long run, only one superpower---the
one for peace---holds any hope for any of us.
Harvey Wasserman is senior editor of www.freepress.org and author of The Last
Energy War (Seven Stories Press, 2001).