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WSWS : News & Analysis : Middle East : Iraq

The Iraqi oppositionists and US plans for “regime change” in Baghdad

Part 2

By Peter Symonds
1 October 2002

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Below is the concluding part of a two-part series on the Iraqi opposition. The first 
part
appeared on September 30.

The humiliating debacle suffered by the CIA and Iraqi opposition groups in northern 
Iraq in
1996 was to have political ramifications in Washington. The Clinton administration was
already under fire from the Republican right wing for failing to pursue US interests 
in the
Middle East with sufficient aggression. The collapse of the Iraqi oppositionists was 
added to
the long list of Clinton’s sins and a campaign mounted in Congress that culminated, in 
1998,
with the passage of the Iraq Liberation Act. Under the legislation, “regime change” in 
Iraq
was enshrined as part of US law—an unprecedented step—and military aid to the tune of
$97 million was provided to nominated opposition groups.

Among those who backed the Iraq Liberation Act, and then berated Clinton for failing to
fully implement its provisions, were the chief organisers of war against Iraq
today—Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Perle. After the law was passed, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz
wrote as private citizens to Clinton, demanding he use the funds for operations inside 
Iraq.
As Wolfowitz declared to Congress in 1998: “The heart of the problem is that the United
States is unable or unwilling to pursue a serious policy in Iraq.”

In the course of the 2000 election campaign, Perle, speaking as Bush’s foreign policy
adviser, declared: “Governor Bush has said... he would fully implement the Iraq 
Liberation
Act. We all understand what that means. It means a serious and sustained effort to 
assist
the opposition with a view to bringing down Saddam’s regime.” Perle ridiculed the 
Clinton
administration for providing only non-lethal assistance to the Iraqi opposition and
denounced its “sustained hypocrisy” for failing to implement the Act.

But Iraq was part of a far broader agenda. The Bush election campaign became the 
vehicle
for those layers of the American ruling elite who were determined to use the US 
military to
establish America’s unchallenged global predominance, in particular in the key 
strategic and
oil rich areas of Central Asia and the Middle East. Once in office, having stolen the 
2000
election, the Bush administration rapidly proceeded to press ahead with these foreign 
policy
objectives.

Funds available under the Iraq Liberation Act began to flow to Iraqi oppositionists. 
The
September 11 terror attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were seized
upon by Rumsfeld, Perle, Wolfowitz and others as a pretext to accelerate their 
long-held
agenda for regime-change in Iraq—irrespective of whether or not Saddam Hussein was
actually involved.

The chief beneficiary of the renewed activity was the Iraqi National Congress (INC). 
After
1996, it had reestablished itself in London. According to the US State Department, by
February 2002, the INC had received over half the $24 million that had been 
appropriated
under the Iraq Liberation Act.

There is no doubt that for Perle, Rumsfeld and Co., Chalabi is the preferred 
replacement
for Hussein. But, even within the Bush administration, opinion is sharply divided. As 
one
staunch defender of Chalabi noted, he has the reputation among CIA and State Department
officials of being “a small-time opportunist and trying to use his position in the INC 
to make
something of himself.” Supporting evidence includes his conviction for financial fraud 
over
the collapse of the Petra Bank. Chalabi fled Jordan in 1989 and, despite proclaiming 
his
innocence, failed to return in 1992 to defend charges that he had fleeced the bank of 
$200
million. The INC’s detractors also point out that the group commands no serious support
inside Iraq.

Significantly, however, the obvious deficiencies of Chalabi and the INC do not appear 
to
concern his champions in the Bush administration. In a recent interview on the 
Australian
Broadcasting Commission’s program Four Corners, Perle lavished praise on Chalabi
declaring he “very much reflects Western values”. And, when asked on the same program
about Chalabi’s conviction in Jordan, one of Perle’s co-thinkers, Danielle Plekta from 
the
American Heritage Foundation, declared: “It’s absolutely immaterial.”

In the eyes of hardliners like Perle, Chalabi’s weaknesses are more than made up for 
by his
loyalty to American interests. He has long advocated a US military invasion of Iraq and
backs the Bush administration’s policy in the rest of the Middle East, including 
support for
the Israeli state. On the most crucial question of all—who controls Iraqi oil—Chalabi 
has
already indicated where he stands. He recently told the Washington Post that he 
favoured
the creation of a US-led consortium to develop Iraqi oil fields. “American companies 
will
have a big shot at Iraqi oil,” he declared.

The military defectors

Those in the CIA and State Department critical of Perle, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz have no
fundamental objections to a US military invasion of Iraq. But they regard the idea 
that the
US army can march into Baghdad and install a figure like Chalabi, without serious
repercussions in Iraq or the region, as utterly light-minded.

Reflecting these views, Bob Baer, an ex-CIA operative with 20 years experience in the
Middle East, scathingly denounced the “neo-conservatives” on the Four Corners program.
“What everyone knows in Washington is that there’s no endgame plan. Who’s going to
replace Saddam? They don’t have the slightest idea... Do you have to go in and destroy 
the
military, which would create a vacuum in Iraq? No-one’s dealing with that,” he 
exclaimed.

Critics of Bush’s “regime change” fear that if the Iraqi government is completely 
destroyed
the country will rapidly disintegrate. They point to the experience of Bush’s father, 
who
stopped short of ousting Hussein in 1991 when the Shia and Kurdish revolts threatened 
to
break up the country. Their alternative is to push for a greater role for various 
military
defectors, with the aim of refashioning a defeated Iraqi army as a key instrument of US
policy.

There is no shortage of candidates with the credentials for such a job. In addition to 
the
remnants of the Iraqi National Accord, there are various cliques of former Iraqi 
military
officers, all of whom maintain contact with the CIA and/or other intelligence agencies.

The list includes Brigadier General Najib Al-Salhi, leader of the Free Officers 
Movement,
who was Chief of Staff for the First Mechanised Division of the Fifth Corps of the 
Iraqi Army
until he defected seven years ago. He lives near Washington, claims to be able to raise
30,000 fighters and will explain his detailed plan for a three-pronged attack on 
Baghdad to
anyone willing to listen. He is facing a war crimes investigation in Denmark over the 
use of
chemical weapons during the Iran-Iraq war.

Another group of ex-Iraqi officers known as the Iraqi National Coalition helped 
organise a
gathering of 80 military exiles in London in July. Among other decisions, the meeting
grandly decided to establish a military council to prepare for a post-Hussein regime.
General Fawzi Al-Shamari, who heads the Iraqi Officers Movement, did not attend the
London meeting, because, as he explained to Four Corners he had already established his
own military council two years ago. He admits to having used chemical weapons against
Iranian soldiers during the Iran-Iraq war.

The State Department has attempted to seek out another military defector, General Nizar
Khazraji, a former Iraqi army chief-of-staff, who was invited last December to a 
meeting of
Iraqi oppositionists at a US thinktank known as the Middle East Institute. He is under
investigation in Denmark for his role in the use of mustard and nerve gas against the
Kurdish population of Halabja in 1988 that resulted in an estimated 3,000 deaths. 
Khazraji
led the army during the months-long repression of the Kurdish population in 1998, 
during
which an estimated 100,000 people were killed.

The purpose of enlisting the services of figures like Khazraji and Al-Salhi is all too 
obvious.
Their proven military skills can be exploited in crushing opposition, while their 
military
contacts can lay the groundwork for reforging the Iraqi army as the basis for a 
US-backed
regime. As Baer bluntly commented in reference to General Al-Salhi: “He could go back 
and
set up a military government to replace Saddam, which is the most logical thing to do 
if
you’re really interested in holding this country together. What you don’t—can’t 
introduce
into Iraq is democracy. It would be total chaos.”

As for the remaining Iraqi opposition groups, the Bush administration regards them as
useful, if expendable, auxiliaries.

Not wanting to be left out of any post-Hussein arrangement, the two Kurdish 
organisations
have both lined up in support of a US invasion. The KDP and PUK ended the brutal 
fighting
of 1993- 1996 through a settlement brokered by Washington that divided northern Iraq 
into
separate Kurdish fiefdoms. The former bitter enemies have decided they will have more
clout at the negotiating table if they join forces. To that end, Barzani and Talabani 
met in
early September and agreed on a plan for Kurdish autonomy as well as to convene the
Kurdish regional assembly.

The KDP and PUK claim to be able to jointly muster at least 40,000 fighters. But the US
views the Kurdish militia with mixed feelings. While they may be of assistance to the 
US
military in ousting Hussein, the Kurdish fighters pose a threat to any regime that
Washington sets up in Baghdad and are regarded with deep suspicion in Turkey, Iran and
Syria. Moreover, the groups have ambitions to extend the area under their influence to
Kirkuk, with its extensive oil and natural gas fields—an aim which will conflict with 
US plans
to control Iraqi oil from Baghdad.

Washington has even less reason to cooperate with the Shiite-based SCIRI, estimated to
command between 5,000 and 10,000 fighters, except for immediate tactical reasons. Asked
on Four Corners whether the US could “stomach a leader that came from a possibly
Teheran-leaning Shia,” the American Heritage Foundation’s Danielle Pletka summed up the
general attitude in Washington to the various Shiite organisations. “Do we want the 
Iranians
to have a controlling interest?” she replied. “No. No question. We don’t want the 
Iranians to
have a controlling interest. To the contrary, we want Iraq to be the exemplar for 
Iran, and
then get rid of those guys.”

The least significant of the Iraqi opposition groups is the Constitutional Monarchy 
Movement
which is closely identified with the INC. Iraq’s would-be king Sharif Ali Bin Hussein 
may have
taken heart when Zahir Shah, Afghanistan’s octogenarian former monarch, was hauled out
of his Italian villa to preside over that country’s loya jirga in June. But Sharif Ali 
Bin Hussein
has even less claim to any legitimacy than his Afghan counterpart.

The Iraqi monarchy is a concoction of British imperialism, cooked up in 1920 as the
preferred method of rule for its newly-acquired League of Nations mandate territory. 
The
Hashemite Amir Faisal was offered the job as Faisal I. When he died in 1933, his 
playboy
son King Ghazi took over, but died in a car accident in 1939. The third king Faisal 
II, then
only three, mounted the throne in 1953, but was executed in the military revolt of 
1958. On
the basis of this short and inglorious history, Sharif Ali Bin Hussein, who was 
two-years-old
when his uncle was killed, offers himself as a “uniting influence” for Iraq.

The World Socialist Web Site holds no brief for Saddam Hussein. But, like the regime 
they
propose to replace, none of the Iraqi opposition groups seeking US patronage 
represents in
any way the interests and aspirations of the Iraqi masses. Their thoroughly mercenary
character is the surest indication of the type of “regime-change” being hatched by the 
Bush
administration. Like Karzai in Kabul, any new incumbent in Baghdad will be nothing but 
a
neo-colonial puppet, totally dependent on US military, financial and political support 
for
survival.

Concluded







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