The Bipartisan
Guarantee of More War in Iraq
No Light, Just
Tunnel
By Chris Floyd
08/15/07 "ICH"
-- -- Our text for today is from the New York Times:
"Even as they call for
an end to the war and pledge to bring the troops home,
the Democratic presidential candidates are setting out
positions that could leave the United States engaged in
Iraq for years. John Edwards, the former North Carolina
senator, would keep troops in the region to intervene in
an Iraqi genocide and be prepared for military action if
violence spills into other countries. Senator Hillary
Rodham Clinton of New York would leave residual forces
to fight terrorism and to stabilize the Kurdish region
in the north. And Senator Barack Obama of Illinois would
leave a military presence of as-yet unspecified size in
Iraq to provide security for American personnel, fight
terrorism and train Iraqis."
My word, this is certainly a
surprise! Who ever would have thought that the most
"serious" Democratic candidates would take such a position?
Why, I suppose this means that if a "serious" Democrat gets
elected president, the war crime in Iraq (which is what the
old-timers used to call it when you aggressively invaded a
country that hadn't attacked you and occupied their land
with your troops) will go on -- just the same as if a
"serious" Republican gets elected!
And they say there is no
unity in our politics, no bipartisan consensus in
Washington!
The NYT article is a hoot
and a half -- or it would be, if the farce was not spattered
with so much blood. Dig, if you will, this serious knitting
of analytical brows:
"Among the challenges
the next president could face in Iraq, three seem to be
resonating the most: What to do if there is a genocide?
What to do if chaos in Iraq threatens to engulf the
region in a wider war? And what to do if Iraq descends
into further lawlessness and becomes the staging ground
for terrorist attacks elsewhere, including in the United
States?"
Grave challenges, indeed.
But why do they await the next president, when they
are happening right now -- when, in fact, they were
guaranteed to happen as soon as the criminal action was
launched?
The very serious John
Edwards says, seriously, that he would keep an unspecified
number of troops on hand because "we have to be prepared for
the worst possibility that you never hear anyone talking
about, which is the possibility that genocide breaks out and
the Shi'a try to systematically eliminate the Sunni." But of
course, Mr. Edwards himself is noticeably reticent on the
subject of the genocide that's going on over there right
now: the genocide against the Iraqi people. The number of
deaths caused by the war that Bush launched is nearing or
has surpassed one million. At least 4 million have fled
their homes (an equivalent number in the US would be around
50 million), with most of them living in great hardship in
places where they are not wanted. (But not in the United
States, of course, which has allowed in the barest trickle
of Iraqis since we destroyed their country.)
The nation is nearing a
state of collapse as a direct result of the war that was
launched by Bush, approved by Congress, countenanced by the
American people and set to continue under every "serious"
Democratic candidate running for president. Oxfam's recent
study of the humanitarian catastrophe put in plainly:
"While horrific violence
dominates the lives of millions of ordinary people
inside Iraq, another kind of crisis, also due to the
impact of war, has been slowly unfolding. Up to eight
million people are now in need of emergency assistance.
This figure includes:
o four million people
who are 'food-insecure and in dire need of different
types of humanitarian assistance'
o more than two million
displaced people inside Iraq
o over two million
Iraqis in neighbouring countries, mainly Syria and
Jordan, making this the fastest-growing refugee crisis
in the world....
"Iraqis are suffering
from a growing lack of food, shelter, water and
sanitation, health care, education, and employment. Of
the four million Iraqis who are dependent on food
assistance, only 60 per cent currently have access to
rations through the government-run Public Distribution
System (PDS), down from 96 per cent in 2004.
"Forty-three per cent of
Iraqis suffer from 'absolute poverty'. According to some
estimates, over half the population are now without
work. Children are hit the hardest by the decline in
living standards. Child malnutrition rates have risen
from 19 per cent before the US-led invasion in 2003 to
28 per cent now.
"The situation is
particularly hard for families driven from their homes
by violence. The two million internally displaced people
(IDPs) have no incomes to rely on and are running out of
coping mechanisms. In 2006, 32 per cent of IDPs had no
access to PDS food rations, while 51 per cent reported
receiving food rations only sometimes.
"The number of Iraqis
without access to adequate water supplies has risen from
50 per cent to 70 per cent since 2003, while 80 per cent
lack effective sanitation. The 'brain drain' that Iraq
is experiencing is further stretching already inadequate
public services, as thousands of medical staff,
teachers, water engineers, and other professionals are
forced to leave the country. At the end of 2006, perhaps
40 per cent had left already."
What's more, the national
power grid is breaking down -- in the midst of summer
temperatures that make the US heat wave look like a wintry
chill, as the BBC reports:
"Iraq's national power
grid is on the brink of collapse, the country's
electricity ministry has warned. Water supplies to
Baghdad have also been cut off for days at a time, with
summertime pressures on key systems said to be more
intense than ever. The ministry blamed poor maintenance,
fuel shortages, sabotage by insurgents and rising demand
for the problems, and said some provinces hold onto
supplies."
And what is the answer of
the occupying power to this crisis? Not surprisingly, it is
an echo of Vice President Cheney's famous remarks to Senator
Pat Leahy on the floor of the Senate: GFY.
"The US Army told the
BBC that Iraq must now take charge of fixing the
problems. The general in charge of helping Iraq rebuild
its infrastructure, Michael Walsh, said that although
Iraqi authorities only have one-quarter of the money
needed for reconstruction, solving the problem was now
up to them."
So the Iraqis don't have the
money to rebuild the infrastructure destroyed by the war
launched by the Americans -- doubtless because billions upon
billions of reconstruction dollars have been looted by the
crony conquistadors and their local bagmen. The Pentagon
knows the Iraqis don't have the money to rebuild the
infrastructure destroyed by the war launched by the
Americans; but they don't care. Bush doesn't care. The
Democratic leaders in Congress don't care. The "serious"
Democratic candidates don't care. Thousands of innocent
Iraqis -- the young, the sick, the injured, the poor, the
abandoned -- will be added to the death count this summer
from this collapse of basic services. But none of this is an
American responsibility. Not the collapse of the state, not
the collapse of the society, not the plunge into wholesale
sectarian violence by forces being armed on all sides by the
Americans. No, it's all the Iraqis' responsibility now.
This unspeakably hideous
attitude is not just the stance of the Pentagon, of course;
it's also the credo the most serious Democratic candidate of
all, the breakaway leader for the nomination, Hillary
Clinton. As the Times tells us:
"In February, [Clinton] said her message to the Iraqi
government would be simple: 'I would say 'I'm sorry, it's
over. We are not going to baby-sit a civil war.'"
We invaded your country. We
occupied your country. We wrote your constitution, in which
the arbitrary decrees of our colonial viceroy were imposed
as fundamental law. We looted your money. We armed your
sectarians. And we are going to keep a large number of
troops in your country, come what may. But we aren't going
to baby-sit you anymore. No, if you don't get your act
together -- and sign the goddamned Oil Law already -- we are
just going to withdraw to our permanent bases and watch you
kill each other. -- That is the sum total of the
leading Democratic candidate's position on Iraq.
It is of course an
incoherent mish-mash, because it is just a smokescreen to
obscure Clinton's true policy: to continue the war, largely
as it is being fought now. Such a course is absolutely
inevitable if you leave American forces in Iraq, to "fight
terrorism," to "keep the civil war from spilling across the
border," to "protect American personnel" (including, er, the
troops you have left in the country), and so on. How will
you "fight terrorism" in Iraq without raiding residential
areas where "terrorist units" are located and launching
airstrikes on "terrorist targets" and rounding up "suspected
terrorists" and subjecting them to "strenuous interrogation"
without charges in mass prisons and mounting checkpoints to
check for terrorists and wreaking the usual "collateral
damage" from "force protection" incidents? In other words,
how you will operate any differently than the Bush-led
operation in Iraq right now? The only difference under
Clinton and her "serious" rivals is that there will be fewer
troops -- which will actually mean an increased reliance on
airstrikes, and hair-trigger "force protection," and even
more mercenaries to fill the gaps.
And if the mission of your
"residual force" is to "prevent genocide" (that is, a
different genocide from the one going on now), how will
you do that without intervening -- with airstrikes, troops,
checkpoints, arrests, interrogations, "force protection,"
the whole schmeer -- on behalf of one side or the other? Or
both sides? And again, how will this be different from
what's going on now?
I've said it before and I'll
say it again: anyone who advocates leaving even a "residual
force" of American troops is Iraq is actually supporting the
continuation of the war, on largely the same terms as it is
being waged now. There is no "middle way," there is no
magic, bipartisan compromise. There is only no war, or more
war.
American troops were sent
into Iraq on a criminal mission, an act of aggression that
was the moral and legal equivalent of the Nazi invasion of
Poland or the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Their
continued presence in Iraq only exacerbates all the evils
that the "serious" people say will happen if America
withdraws. (As if these things weren't happening in Iraq
right now.) The Iraqis will never hammer out any kind of
political accommodation as long as American troops are in
the country, dividing the nation into "collaborators" and
"insurgents" just by their very presence (much less by their
alliance with one faction or another). The Iraqis will never
come to any kind of fair agreement on the distribution of
the nation's oil wealth as long as American troop are in the
country, emblems of the nearly universal (and certainly
correct) belief among Iraqis that the West is out to steal
their oil.
It may be too late for any
kind of accommodation or agreement now. The ruination that
Bush and his willing executioners in Congress have brought
to Iraq may be irreparable. As for "destabilizing the
region," the war crime has already done that. (Indeed, it
was one of the aims of the invasion, as its architects and
champions once boasted. "Creative destruction" was the
phrase used by the very serious Michael Leeden, I believe.)
There will be an inevitable escalation of the proxy war
between Iran and Saudi Arabia that is now going on the
country; but that will happen no matter what. Sectarian
violence will also continue to spiral no matter what, with
one possible exception: if the Americans leave the country
and are no longer there arming the factions, stirring them
up, setting one against the other, and killing and
imprisoning civilians, thereby radicalizing more and more
Iraqis every day. The only possible chance Iraq has to see a
lessening of sectarian violence lies in the complete
withdrawal of American troops.
What would happen next?
Well, I think a windfall profits tax on the oil companies
and the weapons peddlers -- and the private equity sharks
like Carlyle and Wall Street firms and investment banks who
have gorged themselves with blood money like big ole ticks
on a hand -- would produce a very sizable fund for the
massive reparations the United States should pay to the
Iraqis for destroying their country and murdering their
people. Special prosecutors investigating the origins and
conduct of the war would also be in order: a Homeland
Nuremberg, on national TV -- bigger and better than the
Watergate hearings!
But we all know that none of
that is going to happen. Certainly not the reparations, the
investigations and prosecutions -- not in a million years,
not in the "shining city on a hill." Nor will an American
withdrawal -- which, as I said, is the only hope Iraq has of
lessening the hell that now rages there. The sainted General
Petraeus -- who has been one of the most egregiously
mendacious blowhards touting the war's "success" for years
-- is now telling U.S. lawmakers that his "surge" strategy
will take 9-10 years to work, as The Hill reports.So anyone
relying on Petraeus -- as Bush and all the "serious"
Republicans are doing -- is buying into at least 10 more
years of the present situation. And as we outlined above,
anyone touting a "residual force" is essentially doing the
same thing.
Moreover, the same strategic
and economic concerns that motivated the invasion in the
first place will still obtain for the next president. In
order to "preserve America's sacred way of life," the United
States must have privileged access to the world's oil
heartlands. The latter will not only allow America to
continue using a vastly disproportionate share of the
world's energy resources but also be a vital asset in
containing the growth of any potential rivals and putting
the squeeze on recalcitrant client states (or allies) who
get out of line. No president dedicated to maintaining
America's global dominance -- via a worldwide empire of
military bases and a gargantuan war machine far surpassing
that of any other nation -- can afford to willingly give up
control of Iraq to a Shiite majority closely allied with
Iran. (Unless of course there is a favorable "regime change"
in Tehran.) This is part of the evil genius behind the Bush
Regime's invasion of Iraq: it essentially commits any
Establishment candidate -- one pledged to the aforesaid
military-based global dominance (as all of the
"serious" candidates of both parties are) -- to continuing
the Bushists' policies. Now that the Rubicon of invading
Iraq has been crossed, there is no going back. Saddam
Hussein was a neutral in the war for energy supremacy: he
could be counted on to sell his oil to anyone -- indeed, the
United States was his best customer, even during the
sanctions regime, even as Bush was building up his invasion
force. But a sectarian-based Iraqi government allied with
Iran -- or some other unknown quantity seizing power in the
vacuum created by the invasion -- could very well curtail or
cut off the flow to America for ideological reasons. If you
are committed to American hegemony, American empire, then
you will have to stay militarily involved in Iraq, now that
Bush has led America into it. What's more, the logic of
imperial geopolitics will lead inexorably to an attack on
Iran as well, to secure the now-necessary dominion over
Iraq.
Most people persist in
believing that the Bush Administration has "mishandled" or
"bungled" the war in Iraq, when in fact they have achieved
almost all of their goals. They have vastly enriched their
cronies. They have installed a U.S. military presence in
Iraq. They have expanded the size, power and scope of the
armed forces and the intelligence services (which now have
their own secret armies) beyond the wildest dreams of the
most hawkish Cold War militarist. They have not only gutted
the Constitution but proved that you can get away with it --
an invaluable lesson for dictators to come. And, as noted,
they have committed the American Establishment to continuing
the radical course they have set in motion -- because the
Establishment will never allow the election of any candidate
who would seek to institute the rollback of the empire and
the restoration of genuine constitutional government.
Especially as the latter would entail bringing justice to
the war makers and the war profiteers, all of them honored
stalwarts of the Establishment.
Thus turning over ostensible
authority to a "sovereign" Iraqi government was another
masterstroke by the Bushists, a truly audacious scam. While
still occupying the country and controlling its affairs, the
United States has divested itself of the legal
responsibilities of an occupying power. The leaders of both
parties in Washington are now busy washing their hands of
the blood they have shed, putting the onus on the occupied,
co-opted and controlled nation to "put its own house in
order." But of course, the Iraqis don't own their house
anymore; the largest and most powerful armed force in the
world is squatting there, and will keep squatting there for
years to come, if the "serious" leaders of both parties have
their way.
And they will.
Chris Floyd is an
American journalist based in the UK. He is the author of
Empire Burlesque: High Crimes and Low Comedy in the Bush
Imperium. He writes the
Empire Burlesque blog.