US Middle
East Wars: Social Opposition and Political Impotence
Everywhere I visit from
Copenhagen to Istanbul, Patagonia to Mexico City,
journalists and academics, trade unionists and
businesspeople, as well as ordinary citizens, inevitably ask
me why the US public tolerates the killing of over a million
Iraqis over the last two decades, and thousands of Afghans
since 2001?
By James Petras
“You cannot win the peace unless you know
the enemy at home and abroad”
US Marine Colonel from Tennessee. |
07/08/07 "ICH"
--- - Why, they ask, is a public, which opinion polls
reveal as over sixty percent in favor of withdrawing US
troops from Iraq, so politically impotent? A journalist from
a leading business journal in India asked me what is
preventing the US government from ending its aggression
against Iran, if almost all of the world’s major oil
companies, including US multinationals are eager to strike
oil deals with Teheran? Anti-war advocates in Europe, Asia
and Latin America ask me at large public forums what has
happened to the US peace movement in the face of the
consensus between the Republican White House and the
Democratic Party-dominated Congress to continue funding the
slaughter of Iraqis, supporting Israeli starvation, killing
and occupation of Palestine and destruction of Lebanon?
Absence of a Peace Movement?
Just prior to the US invasion of Iraq in March 2003 over one
million US citizens demonstrated against the war. Since then
there have been few and smaller protests even as the
slaughter of Iraqis escalates, US casualties mount and a new
war with Iran looms on the horizon. The demise of the peace
movement is largely the result of the major peace
organizations’ decision to shift from independent social
mobilizations to electoral politics, namely channeling
activists into working for the election of Democratic
candidates – most of whom have supported the war. The
rationale offered by these ‘peace leaders’ was that once
elected the Democrats would respond to the anti-war voters
who put them in office. Of course practical experience and
history should have taught the peace movement otherwise: The
Democrats in Congress voted every military budget since the
US invaded Iraq and Afghanistan. The total capitulation of
the newly elected Democratic majority has had a major
demoralizing effect on the disoriented peace activists and
has discredited many of its leaders.
Absence of a National Movement
As David Brooks (La Jornada July 2, 2007) correctly reported
at the US Social forum there is no coherent national social
movement in the US. Instead we have a collection of
fragmented ‘identity groups’ each embedded in narrow sets of
(identity) interests, and totally incapable of building a
national movement against the war. The proliferation of
these sectarian ‘non-governmental’ ‘identity’ ‘groups’ is
based on their structure, financing and leadership. Many
depend on private foundations and public agencies for their
financing, which precludes them from taking political
positions. At best they operate as ‘lobbies’ simply
pressuring the elite politicians of both parties. Their
leaders depend on maintaining a separate existence in order
to justify their salaries and secure future advances in
government agencies.
The US trade unions are virtually non-existent in more than
half of the United States: They represent less than 9% of
the private sector and 12% of the total labor force. Most
national, regional and city-wide trade union officials
receive salaries comparable to senior business executives:
between $300,000 to $500,000 dollars a year. Almost 90% of
the top trade union bureaucrats finance and support pro-war
Democrats and have supported Bush and the Congressional war
budgets, bought Israel Bonds ($25 billion dollars) and the
slaughter of Palestinians and the Israeli bombing of
Lebanon.
The Unopposed War Lobby
The US is the only country in the world where the peace
movement is unwilling to recognize, publically condemn or
oppose the major influential political and social
institutions consistently supporting and promoting the US
wars in the Middle East. The political power of the
pro-Israel power configuration, led by the American Israel
Political Affairs Committee (AIPAC), supported within the
government by highly placed pro-Israel Congressional leaders
and White House and Pentagon officials has been well
documented in books and articles by leading journalists,
scholars and former President Jimmy Carter. The Zionist
Power Configuration (ZPC) has over two thousand full-time
functionaries, more than 250,000 activists, over a thousand
billionaire and multi-millionaire political donors who
contribute funds both political parties. The ZPC secures 20%
of the US foreign military aid budget for Israel, over 95%
congressional support for Israel’s boycott and armed
incursions in Gaza, invasion of Lebanon and preemptive
military option against Iran.
The US invasion and occupation policy in Iraq, including the
fabricated evidence justifying the invasion, was deeply
influenced by top officials with long-standing loyalties and
ties to Israel. Wolfowitz and Feith, numbers 2 and 3 in the
Pentagon, are life-long Zionists, who lost security
clearance early in their careers for handing over documents
to Israel. Vice President Cheney’s chief foreign policy
adviser in the planning of the Iraq invasion is Irving Lewis
Liebowitz (‘Scooter Libby’). He is a protégé and long-time
collaborator of Wolfowitz and a convicted felon.
Libby-Liebowitz committed perjury, defending the White
House’s complicity in punishing officials critical of its
Iraq war propaganda. Libby-Liebowitz received powerful
political and financial support from the pro-Israel lobby
during his trial. No sooner did he lose his appeal on his
conviction on five counts of perjury, obstructing justice
and lying, than the ZPC convinced President Bush to
‘commute’ his prison sentence, in effect freeing him from a
30 month prison sentence before he had served a day. While
Democratic politicians and some peace leaders criticized
President Bush, none dared hold responsible the pro-Israel
lobby which pressured the White House.
The Presidents of the Major American Jewish Organizations (PMAJO)
– numbering 52 – and their regional and local affiliates are
the leading force transmitting Israel’s war agenda against
Iran. The PMAJO, working closely with US-Israeli Congressman
Rahm Emmanuel and leading Zionist Senators Charles Schumer
and Joseph Lieberman, succeeded in eliminating a clause in
the budget appropriation setting a date for the withdrawal
for US troops from Iraq.
In contrast to the successful vast propaganda, congressional
and media campaigns, organized and funded by the pro-Israel
lobbies for the war policies, there is no public record of
the big oil companies supporting the Iraq war, the Israeli
invasion of Lebanon or the military threats of preemptive
attacks on Iran. Interviews with investment bankers, oil
company executives and a thorough review of the major
Petroleum Institute publications over the past seven years
provide conclusive evidence that ‘Big Oil’ was deeply
interested in negotiating oil agreements with Saddam Hussein
and the Iranian Islamic government. ‘Big Oil’ perceives US
Middle East wars as a threat to their long-standing
profitable relations with all the conservative Arab oil
states in the Gulf. Despite the strategic position in the US
economy and their great wealth '‘Big Oil' was totally
incapable of countering their political power and organized
influence of the pro-Israel lobby. In fact Big Oil was
totally marginalized by the White House National Security
Advisor for the Middle East, Elliot Abrams, a fanatical
Zionist and militarist.
Despite the massive and sustained pro-war activity of the
leading Zionist organizations inside and outside of the
government and despite the absence of any overt or covert
pro-war campaign by ‘Big Oil’, the leaders of the US peace
movement have refused to attack the pro-Israel war lobby and
continue to mouth unfounded clichés about the role of ‘Big
Oil’ in the Middle East conflicts.
The apparently ‘radical’ slogans against the oil industry by
some leading intellectual critics of the war has served as a
‘cover’ to avoid the much more challenging task of taking on
the powerful, Zionist lobby. There are several reasons for
the failure of the leaders of the peace movement to confront
the militant Zionist lobby. One is fear of the powerful
propaganda and smear campaign which the pro-Israel lobby is
expert at mounting, with its aggressive accusations of
‘anti-Semitism’ and its capacity to blacklist critics,
leading to job loss, career destruction, public abuse and
death threats.
The second reason that peace leaders fail to criticize the
leading pro-war lobby is because of the influence of
pro-Israel ‘progressives’ in the movement. These
progressives condition their support of ‘peace in Iraq’ only
if the movement does not criticize the pro-war Israel lobby
in and outside the US government, the role of Israel as a
belligerent partner to the US in Lebanon, Palestine and
Kurdish Northern Iraq. A movement claiming to be in favor of
peace, which refuses to attack the main proponents of war,
is pursuing irrelevance: it deflects attention from the
pro-Israel high officials in the government and the
lobbyists in Congress who back the war and set the White
House’s Middle East agenda. By focusing attention
exclusively on President Bush, the peace leaders failed to
confront the majority pro-Israel Democratic congress people
who fund Bush’s war, back his escalation of troops and give
unconditional support to Israel’s military option for Iran.
The collapse of the US peace movement, the lack of
credibility of most of its leaders and the demoralization of
many activists can be traced to strategic political
failures: the unwillingness to identify and confront the
real pro-war movements and the inability to create a
political alternative to the bellicose Democratic Party. The
political failure of the leaders of the peace movement is
all the more dramatic in the face of the large majority of
passive Americans who oppose the war, most of whom did not
display their flags this Fourth of July and are not led in
tow by either the pro-Israel lobby or their intellectual
apologists within progressive circles.
The word to anti-war critics of the world is that over sixty
percent of the US public opposes the war but our streets are
empty because our peace movement leaders are spineless and
politically impotent.
James Petras, a former
Professor of Sociology at Binghamton University, New York,
owns a 50 year membership in the class struggle, is an
adviser to the landless and jobless in Brazil and Argentina
and is co-author of Globalization Unmasked (Zed).
Visit his website
http://petras.lahaine.org/index.php