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Hope
Out of Quagmire
New
Peace Movement Opportunities
by
Paul Rogat Loeb
July
31, 2003
In
the glow of the Iraq war's initial military success, most American peace activists
felt profoundly demoralized. Between the war's portrayal as a glamorous
spectacle and Bush's seemingly overwhelming support, many who'd recently
marched by the millions felt isolated, defensive, and powerless, fearing their
voices no longer mattered.
Now,
as Bush's occupation faces a deepening quagmire, shifting public sentiment
opens up major new opportunities for activism. Just two months ago, the
national mood felt so resistant that it was hard to raise the most cautious
dissenting questions. But polls now suggest the beginning of a very different
national mood, where large numbers of Americans are having significant doubts.
This gives us a chance to challenge the core fallacies of Bush's foreign
policy, revitalize peace movement activism, and perhaps change our national
direction. We can do this by launching a grassroots campaign to replace the US
control over Iraq with an international transitional authority under United
Nations command--an authority that would control not only military operations,
but also Iraq's political and economic affairs, including its oil-fields. We
can work to transform a beachhead for American empire into an interim
government that would actually have a shot at bringing democracy.
The
shifts in the polls are staggering, even if most peace activists haven't yet
noticed them. Driven by the steady US casualties in Iraq and continuing chaos,
a July Gallup poll found 43 per cent of Americans believing things are going
badly in Iraq, up from just 13 per cent in early May. In a mid-July Washington
Post-ABC News poll, six in ten of those surveyed said the war damaged the image
of the United States abroad, half said the conflict permanently damaged U.S.
relations with key allies, and 52 percent considered the level of US casualties
"unacceptable." A Zogby poll around the same time found a one percent
majority actually saying it was time for someone new in the White House. These shifts all emerged before Congress's recent
questioning of the occupation's political, economic and human costs.
Before
the war, we had a clear goal in trying to stop it. Once it started, this
drastically limited the peace movement's options. We could bear witness for the
future, but it was hard to influence the war's immediate outcome. Now the
landscape has shifted again, to one far more hospitable toward dissenting
views. Americans are developing significant reservations despite what until
recently has been scant critical media coverage, minimal questioning by
Democratic leaders, and little presence from the peace movement since late
February. If we can begin coalescing public concern around an alternative to US
troops remaining indefinitely in Iraq, we have a real chance to influence
national debate.
Although
the war has created precisely the kind of mess we predicted, we need to do more
than just repeat, "I told you so." Or gloat about how Bush's imperial
dream is unraveling. It's important to keep pushing on the ways Bush lied to
Congress and the American public. We also need to offer our own vision of what
needs to be done. We can do this by supporting European initiatives to end US
control over Iraq's political and economic future, and instead place the
country under UN charge, policing it with a multinational force with significant
Islamic representation.
To
most Iraqis, US troops have become symbols of colonialism and chaos. The longer
they stay, the more they become targets, and the more Iraqis will resent the US
for imposing our will and grabbing for oil while failing to secure basic needs
like electricity, clean water, and physical safety. Because the UN represents
the entire international community, including eighteen Arab states, a UN
administration, in contrast, would be far less likely to be seen as a foreign
military occupation. Although the new forces would probably still face some
opposition, both armed and unarmed, they won't be tarred with the same
neocolonial agenda. Iraqis wouldn't view them as simply in it to dominate their
country or project American power. Without the disruption of a growing armed
insurgency, efforts at restoring basic services, maintaining stability, and
setting up a democratic and representative Iraqi government would be far easier.
A UN Mandate might even allow a similar transition to when UN forces finally
ended Indonesia's bloody occupation of East Timor and supervised that country's
return to democracy.
A
shift away from unilateral US control already has broad potential support. In a
late-June Knowledge Network poll, 64% of Americans wanted the UN to take a
leadership role in Iraq, up from 50% in April.
Pushing for such a shift will also let us reach out to American soldiers
who are increasingly frustrated at being given a mission with neither a defined
end nor any clear boundaries between friend and foe. And to military families
angry that they see no clear timetable for the return of their loved ones. We could contrast Bush's chickenhawk bluster
of "Bring them on," with our own call to "Bring them Home,"
and include a vision that demands more than just abandoning Iraq to chaos.
Ideally,
this campaign would be as broad-based as possible, encouraging citizens to
reach out both in our communities and to elected officials. We'd circulate petitions,
table, canvass, and vigil in local neighborhoods, write letters to local
papers, pass civic resolutions, and resume all the other kinds of outreach we
began so successfully on the eve of the war.
We'd build to more visible rallies and marches. We'd work to ensure the
Iraqi quagmire remains a front-and-center issue, so the Bush administration
can't just move on and ignore it.
With
enough grassroots momentum, we could begin pressuring key elected officials to
take a stand in favor of a shift to full UN control. Presidential candidate
Dennis Kucinich has recently spoken out in favor of major US troop withdrawals.
It will take work to get the more conservative Democratic candidates and
elected representatives to follow suit (and maybe even some independent minded
Republicans). But given the shifting polls, if we muster enough citizen
pressure, at least a few will decide that the political risk is worth it. We'd
want to offer even those who supported the war the opportunity to say: "I
backed Bush in good faith and I'm glad Saddam Hussein is out. But now the WMD
evidence still hasn't surfaced. We've alienating the rest of the world by going
in alone. And I don't like having been lied to. Since the Iraqis want us out,
it's time to stop putting our brave young soldiers at risk."
Could
this campaign actually force Bush to turn Iraq over to UN administration?
Assuming that the situation continues to be a morass, Bush will face increasing
pressure to cut his losses, declare victory, and leave. Although some in his
administration are ideologically opposed to any major UN role whatsoever, with
enough pressure and media debate the pragmatist wing might actually view
withdrawal as politically preferable to facing an election year with American
soldiers continuing to come home from Iraq in body bags.
This
raises a difficult question. Is it the job of the peace movement-or the global
community--to help Bush clean up the mess that he's created? Shouldn't we
simply let him stew in it?
If
Bush quickly shifted Iraq to UN administration, it might raise his re-election
prospects. But it's extremely unlikely
that his administration will readily accede to this demand. Powerful economic, strategic and ideological
motivations led to them to attack this oil-rich nation to begin with. These
motivations make it extremely unlikely that they'll give up the opportunity to
try to control Iraq's political and economic future without a fight. And the more they dig in their heels and
resist, the more time the peace movement will have to expose the ways in which
this war was not about bringing freedom and democracy to a long-oppressed
people, but about controlling the future of Iraq's natural resources and
projecting American power in the world.
Forcing the US genuinely to release control over Iraq would be a major
setback for the politics of empire.
Working
to bring the troops home will also give us a chance to address related
questions, like the missing WMDs, America's long tradition of arming dictators,
the key role of oil politics, and the lies and manipulations that fueled our
rush to war-including the notion that we'd be universally hailed as liberators
and the attacks on generals who accurately warned of massive post-war troop
deployments. Raising these issues will lead to larger questions about the
dangers of Bush's belligerent unilateralism, and the contrast between the four
billion dollars a month he's spending in Iraq and his total neglect of a
sinking domestic economy. The more we succeed in this task, the more we have a
chance to breach Bush's image as national protector.
If
Bush does withdraw after sustained citizen pressure, his administration will
have been significantly tarnished. And we'll have a major peace movement
victory, which will itself empower further action. A key value of this campaign
would be its ability to help recover activist momentum and morale-giving people
a concrete focus for their actions. There's a huge reservoir of citizens who
became active in the opposition to the war, but who've since melted back to
private life. If we can get them re-engaged at this point, they have a chance
to become long-term activists. They may not yet have taken up the particular
issue of troop withdrawal, but that's because most were so demoralized by the war's
quick initial progress and seemingly overwhelming support that they felt that
what happened was totally out of their hands. Now it isn't. Citizens once again
can begin to have a voice, in a far more potentially receptive environment.
During
the countdown to the war, the clock was running against us. Our movement grew
at an amazing pace, but ran out of time before we could become powerful enough
to reverse the administration's course.
Now time should work in our favor. Unless Iraq suddenly becomes
miraculously pacified, the longer our troops are there, the more casualties
they'll take, and the stronger the case for withdrawal. As we continue to raid
houses, round up civilians, and generally stoke resentment, Iraqi resistance is
unlikely to die down. Bush is already calling for increased military
deployments. Although we'd want to launch a campaign for withdrawal well before
the November 2004 election (to avoid diverting resources and energy), if we do our
work well, it could play a major role helping unseat George Bush.
If
we build sufficiently broad coalitions for this effort, we have a chance to
make a major impact on national debate. Whether or not we can actually convince
the administration to pursue a wiser course, taking up this issue gives us the
chance to get people moving again, challenge the core politics of empire, and
support policies that would actually make for a safer world. It gives us the
chance once again to do more than watch from the sidelines as passive
spectators.
Paul Loeb is the author
of Soul of a Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time, and
board chair of Peace Action of Washington. See www.soulofacitizen.org for more information. For a more detailed
version of how a shift to UN control could proceed, see: http://www.fourthfreedom.org/php/t-d-index.php?hinc=UN_IN_IRAQ.hinc