|
.
An Engineered Crisis
The desire for hegemony over the Middle East - not Iraq's
weaponry or even its oil - is America's real motivation for war, writes
Brian Whitaker
Monday January 27, 2003
On the first day of war the United States will rain down 300-400 cruise
missiles on Iraq, according to a report by CBS news. That averages out at
one missile every four minutes around the clock, easily exceeding the
total fired over six weeks in the 1991 Gulf war.
The aim, according to the Pentagon sources quoted, is to
cause such "shock and awe" that Iraqi troops will lose their
will to fight at the outset. Just in case they do not get the message
immediately, the US plans do the same again on day two, CBS said.
Whether this is the actual plan or merely a
strategically timed bit of disinformation intended to terrify Baghdad in
advance, I have no idea, but anyone who has watched television over the
last few days can be in little doubt as to the awesome array of weaponry
that is now being assembled for the attack. To a world that remains mostly
unconvinced of the need for it, there is something surreal and not quite
believable about this. How has it come about? And why now?
In 1990 at least, the issue was clear: Iraq had invaded
a sovereign state (Kuwait) and could not be allowed to get away with it.
Everyone, including those who favoured a solution by diplomatic means,
could understand the principle at stake.
Since then, Iraq has done little to cause offence,
though there are many things that it might have done to redeem itself. It
could have made more effort to comply fully with UN resolutions, for
instance, but it is not alone in that and other countries are regularly
let off with a verbal slap over the wrist. Taken individually, none of
Iraq's transgressions over the last few years provides a case for war. And
taken collectively, they only tell us what we knew already: that Saddam
Hussein is not the sort of man you would trust to look after your
grandmother.
Overall, whatever military threat Iraq presents, it is
no greater now than it was when UN weapons inspectors first started their
work in the early 1990s and is almost certainly a great deal less.
Essentially, the weapons at the centre of the current furore are the
relatively small number of items that were still unaccounted for when the
inspectors pulled out under pressure from Iraq in 1998. On the nuclear
front, the best that the White House website can come up with is a
one-line statement that Iraq's declaration to the UN last month
"ignores efforts to procure uranium from abroad".
Until quite recently the prevailing view in Washington
was that any danger from Iraq could be effectively contained - as, indeed,
it has been for the last decade or so. This general lack of alarm about
Iraq's military capacity was reflected in security council resolution
1284, approved in 1999, which sought to get the Iraqi issue out of the way
by resuming weapons inspections in a less aggressive manner than
previously, and then suspending sanctions if nothing untoward was found.
Iraq raised a number of objections (which it probably
now regrets), but resolution 1284 remained the security council's
preferred way forward until last November, when the goalposts were
dramatically moved by the toughly worded resolution 1441 which, in one
interpretation or another, looks set to give the US its pretext for
military action.
What this amounts to is an engineered crisis that is
driven from Washington rather than Baghdad. It began with the election of
George Bush and a noticeably harder line on Iraq almost from the moment he
took office. Since then it has hardened further as the neo-conservative
hawks have gained predominance - helped in no small measure by Osama bin
Laden.
Those who say that oil lies at the root of it are right
up to a point, but it is not simply a matter of grabbing Iraqi oil. The
neo-conservatives see Iraqi oil as a political weapon which can be used to
undermine Saudi Arabia's influence and thus promote their grand design for
reshaping the entire Middle East. Whether they will succeed in achieving
their broader plans, even after an invasion of Iraq, is doubtful. But
there is no doubting the damage that will be done to the US in the
meantime.
Last week the US-based Middle East Institute published a
report by Edward Walker, a former assistant secretary of state for the
Middle East, who has also served as US ambassador in Israel, Egypt and the
United Arab Emirates. Following a visit to Egypt and Saudi Arabia, he
found that popular opinion in the region was "more antagonistic
toward the United States than at any time in recent memory".
"The perception is that we are driven by the six Cs
- cowboys; colonialism; conspiracy; Coca-Cola; cowardice; and clientitis,"
he wrote.
"The 'client' is Israel. The 'cowardice' is the
perception that we are the schoolyard bully. Coca-Cola is the symbol of an
alien consumer society; 'conspiracy' is based on unrealistic expectations
of US capabilities; 'colonialism' is premised on a US drive to control
oil; and 'cowboys' is drawn from a Hollywood style perception that the
administration shoots from the hip.
"The reality is that when Arabs think of the United
States they think of Israel - and when Americans think of the Arabs they
think terrorism. According to the leadership in both Saudi Arabia and
Egypt, these perceptions will be magnified tenfold if the United States
invades Iraq."
It may be far too late to halt the rush towards war, but
at least there are Americans who question what is happening. Last
Thursday, Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy defence secretary, gave a talk at the
council for foreign relations in New York. It was the usual sort of stuff,
with a large dose of September 11 thrown in for good measure.
"Iraq's weapons of mass terror and the terror
networks to which the Iraqi regime are linked are not two separate themes
- not two separate threats. They are part of the same threat," Mr
Wolfowitz said.
In the question-and-answer session that followed, he was
challenged by a reporter from the New York Times - hardly one of the
country's most dovish newspapers - who asked: "Given that we're
talking about matters of war and peace, does the administration plan to
make a further report and provide intelligence information to ... buttress
its claims that Iraq has resumed the production of weapons of mass
destruction? And if not, is this because of targeting concerns, sources
and methods, or do you simply not have reliable information that would
stand up in a public forum?"
Mr Wolfowitz replied: "I think the short answer ...
is there is a lot of evidence; as the evidence accumulates, our ability to
talk about it undoubtedly will grow. But we don't have a lot of time; time
is running out."
So we may get the evidence in due course, but not
necessarily before the war starts. The Iraqi affair has gone on for 12
years but now time is running out.
Why is it running out? Because Mr Wolfowitz says it is.
Another member of the audience summarised Mr Wolfowitz's
position as "We can't tell you what we have of information, but trust
us. It's there."
The questioner continued: "Isn't the fundamental
principle of a democratic free nation precisely not to trust government?
Why should Americans trust their government? We've heard that before in
Vietnam, we've heard it many times: 'Trust us,' and it turned out to be
untrustworthy.
"I don't see how this administration thinks it can
build a policy for war, preventive war, that would be accepted by our
allies and by American citizens on the basis of 'We've got the info; we
can't tell you how we got it or where we got it; we've got it, trust us.'
And isn't that a foolish and ultimately self-destructive way for this
administration to proceed?"
Mr Wolfowitz answered: "I must say I sort of find
it astonishing that the issue is whether you can trust the US government.
The real issue is, can you trust Saddam Hussein?"
Certainly no one in their right mind would trust the
Iraqi leader. But that does not mean they have to trust Mr Wolfowitz and
the US government either.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,883230,00.html


Join our
Daily News Headlines Email Digest
|
|
Information
Clearing House
Daily
News Headlines Digest |
HOME
COPYRIGHT
NOTICE
|