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Best Argument Against Invading Iraq
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Proponents of an American military assault on
Iraq, from President Bush all the way down to Joe Sixpack
armchair warriors, typically state their case in a manner
somewhat resembling the following: Saddam Hussein is not
supposed to have "weapons of mass destruction". Saddam
has not indicated that he has fully disarmed. He has defied
inspectors. He has ignored UN resolutions. He is not a nice guy.
He might give some of his weapons to Osama bin Laden, or some
similar figure, thereby creating the possibility of more
September 11-style disasters for this country. And by the way,
Saddam oppresses the Iraqi people. An American invasion and
occupation of Iraq will be quick and easy. This occupation will
allow the Iraqi people to experience the glories of
parliamentary democracy which will in turn enrich their lives,
fatten their wallets and inspire their Arab and Muslim brethren
throughout the world to love America and all the good she does
in her selfless efforts to improve the human condition.
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Virtually every presumption behind this line
of argumentation is false. However, it would be helpful if war
critics did a better job of exposing the depth of the fallacies
behind the administration's rhetoric. Typically, critics will
argue that war with Iraq should not be pursued, at least not yet
anyway, because Saddam has already been effectively disarmed
(the Scott
Ritter argument), or because the inspections have not been
given enough time to "work" (the typical argument
offered by limousine liberals
like Susan Sarandon), or because the US is not militarily
prepared (as Norman
Schwarzkopf claims), or because such a war "is not in
the national interest" (Pat
Buchanan's perspective). All of these arguments ignore one
basic question: Who exactly is the US government to insist that
another nation disarm itself and initiate military force against
that nation when its fails to comply with Washington's demands?
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I am willing to concede, for the sake of
argument, that Saddam is still doing everything within his power
to obtain formidable weaponry. I am willing to concede that
Saddam is attempting to evade UN inspectors at every step of the
way. It is also theoretically possible, though I think unlikely,
that Iraq may be a source of weaponry for free lance terrorists
at some point in the future. I am even willing to concede that
if clear, unmistakable proof were received that Iraq was indeed
planning a serious, specific attack on the US at some specific
future point, then a case for a "preemptive strike"
could indeed be made. I also aknowledge that Saddam Hussein is a
despotic head of state. None of this resolves the central issues
behind the dispute.
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The fact is Iraq has a legitimate defensive
interest in obtaining the forbidden weapons. Iraq has in the
past been attacked by three nuclear-armed nations (Israel,
England and America) and threatened by a fourth (Iran) that is
believed to be seeking, and might already possess, such weapons.
As for Iraq's failure to comply with UN orders to disarm, the
entire disarmament program is a farce. The program was imposed
on Iraq in a Versailles-like arrangement by an international
quasi-governmental body that is, by all reasonable standards,
illegitimate, even if one believes in government. The United
Nations is simply a front for First World imperialism and has
been ever since it was created by the victorious Allied powers
of World War Two, who proceeded to grant themselves permanent
seating on the Security Council, for the purpose of managing the
affairs of the world on their own behalf.
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If at some point in the future Iraq were to
sponsor a terrorist assault on the United States, this would
only be in retaliation for ongoing American terrorism against
Iraq. There is no reason whatsoever for the US to even be in
conflict with Iraq. I remember watching television network news
coverage of the Iraq-Iran war twenty years ago where Saddam
Hussein was depicted as a faithful American ally and a
benevolent friend of peace, democracy and freedom. Saddam has
never practiced imperialism outside of his own backyard. Iraq
invaded its border state of Iran in 1980 only after Iran
threatened to export its Shiah fundamentalist revolution to
secular Iraq. Iraq invaded its border state of Kuwait in 1990
only after Kuwait was found to be stealing oil from Iraqi oil
fields and only after having been given an implicit go-ahead by
the US. This is not to say that Iraq's aggression against its
neighbors has been justifiable. However, this aggression has
been no more comprehensive than aggression by the American state
against border nations (Mexico and the Indian nations) early in
its history. Certainly, the US has had no legitimate defensive
interest in inserting itself into conflicts between Iraq and its
neighbors. The effective way for the US to reduce the risk of
potential future terrorist threats from Iraq would be a
unilateral cessation of hostilities with Iraq and the
undertaking of a peace intiative towards that nation.
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Saddam Hussein is a despotic ruler but no more
so than many, if not most, other heads of state. Until their
nation was reduced to a pre-industrial state by the US/UN
military assault of 1991 and twelve subsequent years of
tyrannical sanctions, the Iraqis maintained the highest standard
of living of any Arab nation. Christians and other religious
minorities continue to enjoy greater freedom of worship and
higher social standing in Iraq than in virtually any other
Muslim country. From what I understand, firearms
are sold retail and over the counter in Iraq. This is
certainly not the case in allegedly "free" or
"pro-American" nations such as England, Australia or
Japan. The conservative
journalist Taki Theodoracopulos observed during his many
visits to Iraq that ordinary citizens are typically left alone
so long as they do not threaten or publicly attack the
government. Such is the case in most Third World nations. Among
America's formal or tacit allies in the Middle East and South
Asia, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia prohibit public worship by any
non-Islamic religious community, India is ruled by a
Hindu-fascist party that sanctions private mob violence against
its Muslim and Christian minorities, Egypt allows police torture
of criminal suspects, Pakistan is a one-man military
dictatorship, Indonesia has engaged in Pol Pot-like genocide
against the Timorese people and, of course, there is Israel's
ongoing brutalization of the Palestinians.
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Last year, Saddam granted amnesty to virtually
all prisoners in Iraq, foreign spies excepted. Thieves were
pardoned on the condition that they repay victims. Even
murderers were given clemency provided the victim's mother
agreed. This is far more magnanimous a gesture than Dubya would
ever agree to. Mr. Bush presides over a federal prison system
where thousands languish. More than three quarters of these
people are imprisoned under byzantine federal tax, firearms,
drug or environmental laws or became snared in the legal maze
that typically accompanies federal regulatory schemes. Bush has
the power of executive pardon and could, with a word, order the
release of all of these people. Of course, Mr. Hussein's
granting of near universal amnesty was not done out of his own
innate goodness. Saddam likely needs his prison guards, and
probably the prisoners as well, for his regular army and
civilian militias that are currently being mobilized to resist a
US invasion.
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Whenever the state begins to beat the drums of
war, real or imaginary atrocities perpetrated by the official
enemy begin to be played up and blown out of proportion, usually
with a good deal of hypocrisy on the part of the war
propagandists. Thus far, I have heard, from various sources,
tales of Saddam publicly beheading his political rivals. Saddam
rules his regime the way mob bosses run their respective crime
"families" — merciless to enemies but generally
ignoring everyone else. I suspected most of these decapitatees
were simply rival political thugs seeking to replace Hussein's
state with a tyrannical regime of their own so I see no reason
to be concerned about their fate. Recently, I heard a story
about how Saddam allegedly had his operatives shoot
schoolchildren who failed to cheer loudly enough at a
state-sponsored rally. While it would not surprise me a bit if
this were indeed true, it should be remembered that even the UN
has aknowledged that hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children
have died needlessly from malnutrition or preventable diseases
as a direct result of Western sanctions targeting Iraq's
civilian population, an acceptable cost according to former US
Secretary of State Madeleine Half-Wit.
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War propaganda often takes on absurd
characteristics. The current war is no exception. Recently,
White House Secretary of Lies Ari Fleischer, an Israeli citizen
(hey, no conflict of interest there), insisted that the
President "knows things" that we ignorant commoners do
not and therefore we should simply follow the Maximum Leader
blindly into war. I was immediately reminded of a television
interview with Richard Nixon I watched years ago where the
interviewer (Mike Wallace, if I remember correctly) pointed out
that Mr. Nixon had campaigned for the Presidency in 1968 on a
promise that he possessed a "secret plan" to end the
war in Vietnam. When asked if there had indeed been such a plan,
Nixon matter-of-factly shook his head to indicate a
"no" answer and stated that the alleged plan was
simply a "figment of the imagination". Bush continues
to insist that this a war for "freedom", as if he had
any conception of the idea, and as if Saddam is going to invade
the US and declare the Bill of Rights null and void, something
that George's buddy John Ashcroft is doing quite well on his
own.
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The proposed invasion of Iraq is also
presented as an effort to "liberate" the Iraqi people
which will doubtlessly be met with unceasing gratitude on their
part. Perhaps this is why gun shops in Iraq are selling out
their inventory to private Iraqi citizens preparing for the
invasion and civilian
militias, some created by the state but others organized
privately by tribal and clan leaders, are beginning to form. Few
people welcome a foreign invasion of their country, no matter
how much they may hate their own government. Even Soviet
citizens living under the arch-tyrant Stalin rallied to the
defense of "mother Russia" when the German invaders
came. Speaking of Germany, the Hitler analogy is once again
being invoked to justify an assault on Iraq. Saddam must be
stopped lest the mistake of failing to curb Hitler's ambitions
in time to prevent World War Two and the Holocaust be repeated.
Aside from the fact that Hitler commanded one of the most
powerful states in history while Saddam controls a militarily
and economically crippled Third World country, there are some
other problems with this argument. Hitler was actually moving
eastward toward the Soviet Union and away from the Western
democracies when militarily unprepared England and France
initiated a declaration of war against Germany. Subsequently,
France was militarily defeated after six weeks and the Germans
almost made it across the English channel into England itself
before being turned back at the Battle of Britain. The Western
nations could have slowed down the escalation of the Holocaust
considerably by simply bombing and disrupting European railroad
lines and allowing Jewish refugees into their respective nations
and colonies, both of which they failed to do, although England
and America both engaged in large scale terror bombings of
civilian targets at Dresden and elsewhere while the Holocaust
was in progress.
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No doubt there are many reasons why the Bush
administration wishes to conquer Iraq. After months of denying
that oil was in any way a factor in the formulation of Iraq
policy, administration sources have now indicated that they
might be interested in Iraq's
oil deposits (the second largest in the world) after all,
but only for the purpose of "rebuilding" an Iraq that
the US has spent a dozen years trying to destroy and
"sharing the wealth" allegedly denied to Iraqis by
Saddam Hussein, but not by US/UN sanctions, of course. The
picture becomes more complete when we recognize the ties of Dick
Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld to the Haliburton oil corporation,
which rushed to do business in Iraq following a partial lifting
of sanctions in 1998. Israel has predictably been a leading
cheerleader for a US war with Iraq, and with the Israeli
lobby being one of the strongest of all US lobbies and
prominent Israeli partisans like Richard Perle and Paul
Wolfowitz holding high-level positions in the administration,
the Israelis are likely to get their way. There is also the
matter of the fanatically pro-Israel dispensationalist
Christian elements among Bush's grassroots support base, the
influence of neoconservative ideology on the administration, the
ongoing family feud between the Bushes and the Husseins, the
President's concern for his own legacy, possibly
Iraq's outstanding international debts and, of course, the
US government's desire to consolidate the New
World Order under its own rule and to eliminate NWO-resistant
nations like Iraq, Iran, North Korea, Libya, Syria, Venezuela,
Cuba, et al. The biggest gang in town wishes to eliminate its
smaller, less powerful rivals. Consequences of a US attack on
Iraq are potentially catastrophic.
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The best possible scenario that has any chance
of actually transpiring would be a short and quick war, with few
civilian or military casualties on either side, followed by the
replacement of Saddam with a regime that is at least tolerable
to the average Iraqi with a US military withdrawal following
soon afterward and the avoidance of both internal ethnic or
religious skirmishes in Iraq or terrorist retaliation against
America. Of course, this is the least likely scenario. It is
quite possible that hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians or
conscripts will be killed in the invasion along with thousands
of American soldiers who have been seduced into military service
under largely
fraudulent pretenses. The invasion could escalate into
ethnic cleansing or civil war within Iraq or even a large scale
regional war in the Middle East. Reportedly, the Pentagon has
been ordered to draw up plans for a potential invasion of Iran
or Syria
as well. If such a plan is carried out, the US would likely find
itself immersed in World War Three with the entire Muslim world
and facing ongoing terrorist assaults of the 9-11 variety.
Neoconservative ideologues and Zionist fanatics, such as the
repulsive Norman
Podhoretz, have expressed hopes for precisely such a
scenario. With nothing left to lose, Saddam may well unload his
arsenal of chemical and biological weapons on American troops,
Israel, surrounding nations or even his own people, or maybe he
will secretly ship these weapons to whatever bands of terrorists
express an interest in them. Even those arch-doves at the CIA
have argued that this is the main danger posed by Saddam
Hussein, in direct contradiction of the Bush administration's
rhetoric.
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From an anarchist perspective, one of the most
intriguing aspects of the US-Iraq conflict is the magnificent
way in which the true nature of the state is being exposed. The
great sociologist Franz Oppenheimer argued that the state is
fundamentally rooted in conquest and slavery and exists for no
real purpose other than the maintenance of its own power.
Rothbard, echoing Augustine, insisted that the state is nothing
more than a criminal gang writ large. One of the most important
aspects of libertarian theory is the idea that ordinary rules of
civilization ought to apply to states as well as private
individuals. It is just as unacceptable for the state to engage
in murder, robbery and slavery as it is for an ordinary citizen
to do so. With this in mind, the solution I might favor to the
US-Iraq conflict is the one suggested at one point by the Iraqi
Vice-President. Namely, an old
fashioned duel between Bush and his cronies and Saddam and
his cronies. These two teams of degenerates, leaders of criminal
gangs that they are, should simply meet at some neutral
location, like the Swiss Alps, and "have it out" in
the same manner as the Clantons and the Earps at the OK
Corral. Whichever side came out the loser, it would not
exactly be a tremendous loss to mankind.
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The most cheerful aspect of Bush's drive to
war is that so many people are already on to him. Most other
nations have refused to endorse his agenda and much of the US
public is skeptical as well. An antiwar movement, the largest to
date to form prior to the commencement of an actual war, is
already beginning to grow and develop. Even the likes of General
Schwarzkopf have expressed doubts about the administration's
motives and competence and called for granting the inspectors
more time. Inspections or no inspections, a US military assault
on Iraq would be an act of naked aggression with all of the
usual, predictable consequences of aggression for both victim
and perpetrator alike. And this is the best argument against
invading Iraq.
Source: http://www.anti-state.com
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