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by
Tariq Ali
May
27, 2003
Unsurprisingly,
the UN Security Council has capitulated completely, recognised the occupation
of Iraq and approved its re-colonisation by the US and its bloodshot British
adjutant. The timing of the mea culpa by the "international
community" was perfect. Yesterday, senior executives from more than 1,000
companies gathered in London to bask in the sunshine of the re-established
consensus under the giant umbrella of Bechtel, the American empire's most
favoured construction company. A tiny proportion of the loot will be shared.
So
what happened to the overheated rhetoric of Europe v America? Berlusconi in
Italy and Aznar in Spain - the two most rightwing governments in Europe - were
fitting partners for Blair while the eastern European states, giving a new
meaning to the term "satellite" which they had previously so long
enjoyed, fell as one into line behind Bush.
France
and Germany, on the other hand, protested for months that they were utterly
opposed to a US attack on Iraq. Schröder had owed his narrow re-election to a
pledge not to support a war on Baghdad, even were it authorised by the UN.
Chirac, armed with a veto in the Security Council, was even more voluble with
declarations that any unauthorised assault on Iraq would never be accepted by
France.
Together,
Paris and Berlin coaxed Moscow too into expressing its disagreement with
American plans. Even Beijing emitted a few cautious sounds of demurral. The
Franco-German initiatives aroused tremendous excitement and consternation among
diplomatic commentators. Here, surely, was an unprecedented rift in the
Atlantic alliance. What was to become of European unity, of NATO, of the
"international community" itself if such a disastrous split
persisted? Could the very concept of the west survive?
Such
apprehensions were quickly allayed. No sooner were Tomahawk missiles lighting
up the nocturnal skyline in Baghdad, and the first Iraqi civilians cut down by
the marines, than Chirac rushed to explain that France would assure smooth
passage of US bombers across its airspace (as it had not done, under his own
premiership, when Reagan attacked Libya), and wished "swift success"
to American arms in Iraq. Germany's cadaver-green foreign minister Joschka
Fischer announced that his government, too, sincerely hoped for the "rapid
collapse" of resistance to the Anglo-American attack. Putin, not to be
outdone, explained to his compatriots that "for economic and political
reasons", Russia could only desire a decisive victory of the US in Iraq.
Washington
is still not satisfied. It wants to punish France further. Why not a ritual
public flogging broadcast live by Murdoch TV? A humbled petty chieftain
(Chirac) bending over while an imperial princess (Condoleezza Rice) administers
the whip. Then the leaders of a re-united north could relax and get on with the
business they know best: plundering the south. The expedition to Baghdad was
planned as the first flexing of a new imperial stance. What better demonstration
of the shift to a more offensive strategy than to make an example of Iraq. If
no single reason explains the targeting of Iraq, there is little mystery about
the range of calculations that lay behind it. Economically, Iraq possesses the
second largest reserves of cheap oil in the world; Baghdad's decision in 2000
to invoice its exports in euros rather than dollars risked imitation by Hugo
Chavez in Venezuela and the Iranian mullahs. Privatisation of the Iraqi wells
under US control would help to weaken Opec.
Strategically,
the existence of an independent Arab regime in Baghdad had always been an
irritation to the Israeli military. With the installation of Republican zealots
close to Likud in key positions in Washington, the elimination of a traditional
adversary became an attractive immediate goal for Jerusalem. Lastly, just as
the use of nuclear weapons in Hiroshima and Nagasaki had once been a pointed
demonstration of American might to the Soviet Union, so today a blitzkrieg
rolling swiftly across Iraq would serve to show the world at large that if the
chips are down, the US has, in the last resort, the means to enforce its will.
The
UN has now provided retrospective sanction to a pre-emptive strike. Its
ill-fated predecessor, the League of Nations, at least had the decency to
collapse after its charter was serially raped. Analogies with Hitler's
blitzkrieg of 1940 are drawn without compunction by cheerleaders for the war.
Thus Max Boot in the Financial Times writes: "The French fought hard in 1940
- at first. But eventually the speed and ferocity of the German advance led to
a total collapse. The same thing will happen in Iraq." What took place in
France after 1940 might give pause to these enthusiasts.
The
lack of any spontaneous welcome from Shias and the fierce early resistance of
armed irregulars prompted the theory that the Iraqis are a "sick
people" who will need protracted treatment before they can be entrusted
with their own fate (if ever). Such was the line taken by David Aaronovitch in
the Observer. Likewise, George Mellon in the Wall Street Journal warns:
"Iraq won't easily recover from Saddam's terror" - "after three
decades of rule of the Arab equivalent of Murder Inc, Iraq is a very sick
society". To develop an "orderly society" and re-energise
(privatise) the economy will take time, he insists. On the front page of the
Sunday Times, reporter Mark Franchetti quoted an American NCO: "'The
Iraqis are a sick people and we are the chemotherapy,' said Corporal Ryan
Dupre. 'I am starting to hate this country. Wait till I get hold of a friggin'
Iraqi. No, I won't get hold of one. I'll just kill him.' " No doubt the
"sick society" theory will acquire greater sophistication, but it is
clear the pretexts are to hand for a mixture of Guantanamo and Gaza in these
newly occupied territories.
If
it is futile to look to the UN or Euroland, let alone Russia or China, for any
serious obstacle to American designs in the Middle East, where should
resistance start? First of all, naturally, in the region itself. There, it is
to be hoped that the invaders of Iraq will eventually be harried out of the
country by a growing national reaction to the occupation regime they install,
and that their collaborators may meet the fate of former Iraqi prime minister
Nuri Said before them. Sooner or later, the ring of corrupt and brutal
tyrannies around Iraq will be broken. If there is one area where the cliché
that classical revolutions are a thing of the past is likely to be proved
wrong, it is in the Arab world. The day the Mubarak, Hashemite, Saudi and other
dynasties are swept away by popular wrath, American - and Israeli - arrogance
in the region will be over.
Tariq Ali is a critically
acclaimed novelist and film-maker. His most recent book is The Clash of
Fundamentalisms: Crusades, Jihads and Modernity (Verso, 2002). His new
book, Bush in Babylon: Re-colonising Iraq, will be published by Verso in
the autumn. Email: tariq.ali3@btinternet.com. This essay
first appeared in the London Guardian
* See also Tariq Ali’s “Re-Colonizing Iraq”