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http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=15&ItemID=2376

The Case Against Bush's War

by Anthony Arnove
Inernational Socialist Review
September 23, 2002

IRAQ
Once again, the U.S. government is gunning for Iraq. After twelve years of
imposing the most comprehensive and deadly sanctions in history, after
destroying much of the country and killing tens of thousands of civilians in
the 1991 Gulf War, and after periodically bombing the country in the years
since, U.S. warmongers are now openly planning another major invasion,
including possibly an occupation of the country that could last for years.

The need to build a movement against this attack on Iraq is urgent. Any
escalation of the war on Iraq will lead to enormous numbers of casualties,
will further devastate Iraq�s badly damaged infrastructure, and will lead to
an even greater expansion of U.S. military power and use of that power to
wreak havoc around the globe.

Every argument now being used to go to war with Iraq is a lie or is the
rankest hypocrisy.

The United States needs to go to war to bring democracy to Iraq. The United
States has been the single greatest opponent of democracy not just in Iraq
and the Middle East, but in the world. For decades the U.S. government has
backed the corrupt dictatorships of Saudi Arabia, Iran under the Shah, the
Gulf monarchies, and Iraq itself. Saddam Hussein was backed for years by
Washington, and even when Bush I turned against him, he and his buddies
preferred to keep Hussein in power at the end of the Gulf War. The Bush
administration preferred an iron-fisted Iraqi junta, in the words of the New
York Times, to the threat of the people of Iraq determining their own
future. Washington feared that the rebellion could spark uprisings
throughout the region, especially among the oppressed Kurds of Turkey.

The so-called Iraqi opposition now being funded and trained by the United
States is a collection of corrupt opportunists with absolutely no social
base or legitimacy within Iraq. The group met recently with the brother of
the late King Hussein of Iraq, who aspires to restore the Hashemite monarchy
to Iraq.

Moreover, we don't hear Bush talking about engineering a regime change to
bring democracy to Pakistan, where Bush's friend General Pervez Musharraf
just single-handedly rewrote the constitution to give him even more power
than he had already amassed since assuming the presidency in a coup. Nor do
we hear any complaints about any of the other dictatorial regimes in Central
Asia that the U.S. has on the payroll as allies in the ongoing war on
Afghanistan.

Saddam Hussein is such a madman that he used chemical weapons against his
own people. This line has become a mantra of the �bomb Iraqi crowd. But what
they neglect to mention is that Iraq was a patron of the U.S. government
when he did so. After the brutal attacks on Kurds in Halabja in 1988,
Secretary of State George Shultz met with Saadoun Hammadi, Iraq�s minister
of state for foreign affairs in Washington, and said: The approach we want
to take [toward Iraq] is that, We want to have a good relationship with you,
but that this sort of thing [the Halabja massacre] makes it very
difficult,�� in the words of one State Department official.

In fact, the U.S. continued aid to Iraq, providing hundreds of millions of
dollars in export credit guarantees through the Agriculture Department's
Commodity Credit Corporation and the Export-Import Bank. From June 6�8,
1989, a delegation of U.S. businesspeople representing �23 U.S. banks, oil
and oil-service companies, and high-tech, construction, and defense
contractors, with cumulative annual sales of $500 billion visited Iraq and
had high-level talks with the Ba'athist regime.

On April 12, 1990, five top U.S. senators arrived in Baghdad on a trip that
has received little notice. The senators carried a private message from
President Bush that the United States wanted to improve relations with Iraq
notwithstanding the record of President Saddam Hussein. Three of the five
Bob Dole, Howard Metzenbaum, and Frank Murkowski returned to lead the charge
against sanctions against Iraq for its use of chemical weapons. This is
classic U.S. foreign policy: back a ruthless dictator when he does your
bidding, then turn on him as a vicious monster when he disobeys.

Iraq has weapons of mass destruction that threaten the United States as well
as Iraq�s neighbors. According to Vice President Dick Cheney, There is no
doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction; there is no
doubt that he is amassing them to use against our friends, against our
allies, and against us.

The rabidly Zionist New York Times columnist William Safire wrote recently
that Iraq is gaining the power to threaten our cities with annihilation. We
must therefore liberate Iraq. This cannot be taken seriously. The very same
day, the Times acknowledged that Iraq has no more than 40 missiles with a
range longer than 90 miles, none of which has a range of more than 390 miles
(a few miles short, it turns out, of being able to reach the U.S. border).
Even the CIA admitted last March that Most agencies believe that Iraq is
unlikely to test before 2015 any [intercontinental ballistic missiles] that
would threaten the United States, even if UN prohibitions were eliminated or
significantly reduced in the next few years.

According to Scott Ritter, the former head of the United Nations weapon's
inspection team in Iraq (Unscom), by 1998 Iraq had been disarmed. According
to Ritter, The people who claim that Iraq has these weapons today are also
the same people saying We should not send weapons inspectors back to Iraq,
because they know very well that if you send weapons inspectors back to
Iraq, the basis upon which they�ve made these outlandish claims will be
reduced to about zero.� Whatever weapons Iraq may or may not have, the
country has gone through more than ten years of devastating bombing,
sanctions, and weapons inspection that have destroyed the country�s
infrastructure. Iraq was not a military threat to the U.S. in 1991, when its
military forces smashed Iraq in a matter of days the idea that Iraq is a
threat today is a bad joke. In an interview broadcast on National Public
Radio, Ritter joked,  We used to joke that the only way an Iraqi biological
weapon would ever kill you is if it hit you on the head.

Mo Mowlan, writing in the UK Guardian, points out that Even if Saddam had
such weapons, why would he wish to use them? He knows that if he moves to
seize the oilfields in neighboring countries the full might of the Western
world will be ranged against him. He knows that if he attacks Israel the
same fate awaits him. Indeed, Iraq�s invasion of Kuwait, taken to seize a
greater share of Middle East oil, took place under conditions in which
Saddam Hussein thought he had a tacit green light to go ahead with it from
Washington, which then considered him an ally. Outside of Israel America's
Middle East watchdog here isn't a state in the region that has expressed any
fear of an Iraqi threat. But even if Iraq did have a proven capacity to
develop or use weapon's of mass destruction, we must oppose military action
on the grounds that the purposes of the invasion are to enhance U.S.
imperial power in the region and strenghten its capacity to threaten others.

It is the purest hypocrisy for the U.S. to justify going to war on the basis
of perceived threats from countries that might posses weapons of mass
destruction. Not only does the U.S. government have the world�s largest
collection of weapons of mass destruction, it has used them in Hiroshima and
Nagasaki (the atomic bombs that killed 200,000 people and caused generations
to suffer the damages of radiation); in Vietnam (where the United States
dropped napalm, a deadly chemical weapon that maimed and killed thousands);
and even on its own people (secretly testing biological, chemical, and
nuclear weapons on the domestic population).

And the U.S. government threatens to use its nuclear weapons. The New York
Times recently published a leaked Bush administration Nuclear Posture
Review. The secret Pentagon report calls for developing new nuclear weapons
that would be better suited for striking targets in Iraq, Iran, North Korea,
Syria, and Libya and �indicates that the Pentagon views nuclear weapons as
an important element of military planning. The document �calls for improving
the intelligence and targeting systems needed for nuclear strikes and argues
that the United States may need to resume nuclear testing.

The hypocrisy goes deeper. Where did Iraq get its weapons of mass
destruction capacity in the first place? Much of it, in fact, came from the
United States and its allies, such as Germany and Britain. No one worried
too much about these weapons when Iraq was allied with the United States
during the brutal Iran-Iraq war. In fact, the United States armed both
sides, and encouraged Iraq to invade Iran. So much for the integrity of
international borders declared as the pretext for the invasion of Iraq in
1991, after it moved into Kuwait in August 1990. Iraq also used chemical
weapons against Iranian troops without falling out of favor with its friends
in Washington.

If war on countries with weapons of mass destruction is justified, then the
U.S. had better start discussing its plans to bomb its allies Israel (which
still denies officially that it has nuclear weapons, though it has been well
established that it has a sophisticated nuclear program and perhaps 200
nuclear warheads), Pakistan, and India.

The fact is, the plans to bomb Iraq are not about �combating terrorism. They
are not about democracy in the Middle East. And they are not about
protecting the United States or Iraq�s neighbors from an attack by Iraq.
Iraq�s neighbors have expressed no worry that Iraq poses any kind of threat.
The war is about U.S. imperialism advancing its interests in the world,
taking advantage of the environment created by the attacks of a year ago on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

Iraq is a thorn in the side of the Bush administration because it is a
country that the U.S. government does not control. But it is a threat
because Iraq is situated in the Middle East, home to two-thirds of the
world�s oil. Oil is vital to the world capitalist economy, and the U.S.
government has been committed for decades to doing whatever is necessary to
control the profits from that oil; to control the governments that pump that
oil; to reap all the political advantages that flow from this control; and
to suppress any outside forces, any regional powers, or any social movements
that threaten to limit�or, worse, democratize access to it. Smashing Iraq
this time with Israel pitching in is Washington's prelude to reshaping its
control of the region.

The drive to war could take many routes. We should not be confused if Bush
is pressured by his allies or critics, like former Secretary of State James
Baker III, to seek approval from Congress or the United Nations. Bush first
said he didn�t need UN or congressional approval. Now he says he will seek
congressional approval, and he may well decide to use the UN as a cover for
this invasion. Make no mistake, if he wants such backing, there is hardly
any doubt that both would roll over. If Bush announced the bombs had been
launched, all of the people seemingly criticizing Bush now would rally
around the flag, and announce that we have to support our president and
support our troops.

In fact, those pushing for Congress or the UN to endorse the war are merely
arguing for a different strategy for selling the war. Rather than going it
alone, as most of the Bush hard-liners want to do, they think the invasion
can be sold as a multilateral action. We should not forget that the last
Gulf War was carried out under the banner of the UN (just like the
sanctions). In reality, what the UN cover meant is that the U.S. military
called the shots, but Europe and Middle Eastern states filled in the gaps
and paid the bill.

It will be harder for Bush to bring Middle Eastern states on board this
time, but not as hard as many think. The gap between what King Abdullah of
Jordan, for example, says for public consumption and what he says to Bush is
large. And the U.S. will use all of its economic and military power to bully
the world into submission, just as it did in creating the international
coalition that fought the Gulf War.

According to the Financial Times, [T]here are growing signs that Russia and
China two key members of the UN Security Council would support passage  of a
new resolution authorizing a strike on Iraq. One British government official
noted that Chinese president Jiang Zemin is due to visit Bush at his ranch
in Crawford, Texas, in October. You dont go and see Bush in Crawford and
then block him in the UN, he told the Financial Times. The report also notes
that British Prime Minister Tony Blair would not back the idea of a UN
resolution if it were to delay dealing with the fundamental issue which was
depriving Mr. Hussein of his weapons of mass destruction. If seeking a new
UN resolution is going to become a bone of contention then it isn�t going to
work, said one [Blair ally].�

Another war scenario will involve deliberately provoking a conflict over
weapons inspections. This is the scenario favored by Blair, as well as by
some of Bush�s rightwing critics who argue, in the words of the Financial
Times, that a rebuff [of weapons inspectors] by Baghdad would strengthen
Washingtons justification for military action.

�The inspectors have to go back in under our terms, under no one else�s
terms, Colin Powell recently told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
ignoring as has the media Iraq�s concerns over the well-documented fact that
the last inspection team in Iraq passed on intelligence information to the
U.S. government. Despite the hype about Iraq kicking out the inspectors, as
Scott Ritter notes, the United States deliberately manipulat[ed] the
inspection process. After withdrawing inspectors, in advance of a planned
attack on Iraq in December 1988, the United States bombed targets that had
been developed through the inspection process.

Here again the hypocrisy is outrageous. Last year, the Bush administration
denied international inspectors access to U.S. chemical and biological
weapons-related facilities almost certainly the source the so-called Ames
anthrax strain that has killed five people in the United States because it
might violate proprietary commercial interests. The U.S. government has also
consistently undermined chemical weapons treaties to which it did not want
to be subject. But no UN resolutions have been passed authorizing the use of
force against Washington.

The illusion among liberals that Colin Powell is some kind of moderate who
may temper Bush's move toward war is simply wishful thinking. Powell was a
key architect of the last Gulf War slaughter, a man who explained that for
him the number of Iraqi casualties was a matter of indifference. Powell's
role in the current situation is explained by Norman Solomon in a September
5 Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting commentary:


Instead of undermining prospects for a military conflagration, Powell's
outsized prestige is a very useful asset for the war planners. The retired
general is seen by many of Washington�s friends and allies abroad as
essential to the credibility of Bush's foreign policy, the French news
agency AFP noted as September began.

Powell's role, as Solomon shows, is to help the administration line up
international support for an all-out war on Iraq. Under Powell's direction,
Solomon continues, U.S. diplomats diligently laying down groundwork for war
are brandishing carrots and sticks at numerous countries.


The real threat to the world today is not Iraq, but the United States the
world's leading rogue state. A rogue state which has weapons of mass
destruction, has used them, and is threatening to do so again, with far more
credibility than an Iraq still badly damaged from the Gulf War and suffering
from a twelve-year-long embargo. A rogue state that is simultaneously arming
Israel's occupation and state terrorism against Palestinians, funding
Colombia's death squad government, sending troops into the Philippines,
Malaysia, and Georgia, and waging an open-ended war on the world. The people
of Iraq can be forgiven for thinking that George Bush a man who threatens
their already-devastated country daily with imminent military action by the
worlds best-armed collosus is the real madman with his finger on the
trigger.

No doubt an Iraq war will make the world a much more unstable place, as
ruling classes around the world jump on the Bush Doctrine bandwagon much as
they did in the early phases of the war on terror and assert their right to
take preemptive action against claimed threats. A movement has to be built
here to confront U.S. imperialism. The circumstances for organizing today
are challenging, but public sentiment could quickly turn against broadening
the war on terrorism to include a preemptive strike on Iraq, especially if a
movement of opposition can be formed in the United States and if the
movements in the United Kingdom, in Europe, and in the Middle East can grow.
The New York Times nervously reported in August 2002 that Blair is facing
mounting domestic opposition to the prospect of an American invasion of
Iraq. A Channel 4 poll found that a majority in Britain opposes the UK
supporting a U.S. war on Iraq. Meanwhile, a CNN, Gallup, and USA Today poll
showed that only a slight majority of Americans still favors sending U.S.
forces into Iraq to overturn the regime of Saddam Hussein.

This tide can be turned. As historian Howard Zinn notes in Terrorism and
War, the war on terrorism has obscured the fact that many people in this
country are still in need. We need to dig under the rubble of war and point
out that the Bush administration is using the war as a cover for worsening
the income gap in this country, while paying no attention to the problems of
most of the American people, while enriching corporations. I think
concentrating on the class issue, concentrating on the benefits being given
to corporations, is critical.

Zinn adds: Seymour Melman of Columbia University.... [has] made an important
point about the tactics of the antiwar movement. He said that the left is in
a position of continually opposing war after war after war, without getting
at the root of the problem which is the economic system under which we live,
which needs war and makes war inevitable.

Socialists have a critical role to play in the coming months, not only in
building the broadest possible campaign against an attack on Iraq, but in
explaining why capitalism inevitably produces wars and all the suffering
that goes with it. With that analysis, we can also understand how to end the
system that breeds war and replace it with a humane, democratic one.

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