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17 years later: A history of the Iraq War

By Ramy Saba

Mar 19, 2020


*
<https://www.liberationnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/jan18-horizontal-new.jpg>*On
Feb. 15, 2003, the ANSWER Coalition, together with other groups, organized
rallies of millions of people across the U.S. This was done in coordination
with countries around the world, with rallies being held in over 60
countries worldwide. There is a need to revive the anti-war movement today.
Here, a 2003 protest against a war in Iraq in Washington, DC. | Photo:
ANSWER Coalition

Seventeen years ago today, the U.S. launched an invasion and occupation of
Iraq. The results were devastating. Millions of Iraqis and thousands of
Americans died. Years later, the country is still in ruins. But this year
Iraqis of all walks of life are rising up. In one demonstration alone,
*millions
took to the streets*
<https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/01/29/the-world-demands-us-out-of-the-middle-east/>
to
demand that the U.S. get out. This anniversary provides an opportunity to
look back and review the lessons of the war to best combat current U.S.
interventions around the globe.

*Media acts as Pentagon mouthpiece*

 The run-up to the 2003 Iraq War is a textbook example of how the corporate
media and capitalist state work hand in hand to manufacture consent for the
Empire’s wars. Without a shred of evidence, the news media obediently
repeated allegations of the George W. Bush administration that the Ba’ath
government of Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction. The
truth is that, in compliance with many UN inspections, Iraq had *destroyed
its chemical weapons*
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2004/oct/07/usa.iraq1> stockpile and
halted its biological and nuclear weapons programs a decade before the U.S.
attack.

Every news pundit regurgitated the same canned phrases — that Saddam
Hussein was a danger to his own people and a danger to the world.
Then-Secretary of State Colin Powell even brought a vial of fake anthrax
powder to his speech at the UN to scare viewers. This drumbeat of theatrics
and lies was used to get a consensus for the U.S. invasion.

*Democratic Party leadership complicity*

The Democratic Party leaders in Congress acquiesced to the war. Even though
the calls and l*etters to Congress against the war were running 200 to 1*
<https://www.answercoalition.org/setting_the_record_straight>, both the
Senate and the House of Representatives, by lopsided margins, passed
resolutions on Oct. 11, 2002, authorizing Bush to use force against Iraq.

In March 2003, the U.S. launched “Shock and Awe,” with 400,000 troops,
dropping thousands of bombs on Iraq.  While the U.S. claimed it hit only
government targets, thousands of Iraqi civilians were killed in this
initial phase of the war. U.S. ground troops captured Baghdad by April 9.
That the U.S. was able to so quickly capture Iraq’s capital was due in
great part to the Iraqi state and military having been hollowed out by the
previous U.S. war and sanctions.

*First war and sanctions paved the way*

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, which had acted as a deterrent to
U.S. expansion, Washington sought to regain direct control of the oil-rich
Middle East.  It began by waging war on Iraq in 1991, bombing and
destroying its infrastructure. While there were many contradictions with
the rule of Saddam Hussein, until 1991 Iraq had one of the highest
standards of living in the Arab world, including free education and free
quality health care. But the destruction of infrastructure and a near total
12-year embargo on trade, including essential medicines, caused tremendous
suffering and needless death.

A few weeks after the taking of Baghdad, President George W. Bush gave his
infamous “Mission Accomplished” speech, claiming that major combat
operations were over. Unbeknownst to him, the actual Iraqi insurgency had
yet to begin and combat would rage on for years.

*Looting Iraq’s wealth*

 U.S. official Paul Bremer, installed as head of the Coalition Provisional
Authority then ruling Iraq, tore up the Iraqi Constitution. He moved to
completely privatize Iraq’s economy, destroying its elements of central
planning, nationalization of resources, and social programs.

Laws were passed allowing foreign investment and ownership of Iraqi assets,
with full rights to repatriate profits. Some 200 state-owned banks,
factories, and utility companies were sold off to foreign investors. Even
agricultural products were privatized, allowing for companies like Monsanto
to control Iraq’s agricultural market with their patented seeds.

Tariffs and other regulations for foreign contractors were removed. Foreign
contractors were given complete immunity from Iraqi law, allowing for
companies such as Blackwater to act with impunity.

Huge reconstruction contracts were awarded to foreign companies like
Halliburton, using money borrowed against future Iraqi oil revenues. These
contractors pocketed billions of dollars and did very little
reconstruction. Iraqis are still struggling with crumbling infrastructure
and a shortage of electricity, clean drinking water, sewage, and sanitation..

*Making Iraq ‘a capitalist dream’*

Iraqi oil was the grand prize of privatization, and U.S. troops secured the
oil fields as soon as they entered the country. The U.S. pushed hard to
privatize Iraq’s oil fields. They even attempted to rebuild an old oil
pipeline that ran from Kirkuk to Haifa, in occupied Palestine. These
attempts were thwarted by fierce resistance from the Iraqi people,
including sabotaging the oil pipelines. The U.S. settled for
semi-privatization of the oil fields through service contracts with the
Iraqi government. Companies also signed more exploitative oil
production-sharing agreements with the regional government of Kurdistan.

The U.S. vision for Iraq can best be summed up in 2003 in The
Economist*,* which
stated, “If it all works out, Iraq will be a capitalist’s dream.” This
capitalist dream turned out to be a nightmare of poverty and exploitation
for Iraqis.

*Sectarianism and the destruction of society*

 To grease the wheels for privatization, Bremer undertook a policy of
“De-Ba’athification.” Members of the Ba’ath Party were dismissed from their
posts, including almost the entire Iraqi professional class, as membership
in the party was a virtual requirement for employment and advancement.

Hundreds of thousands of Iraqi workers including soldiers, teachers,
doctors, and civil servants were suddenly jobless. Unemployment reached 40
percent. With the most qualified people to run the country removed, the new
dysfunctional Iraqi state was left in the hands of corrupt, inexperienced
compradors. The desperate and angry population was soon to rebel.

The tenacity and scale of the Iraq insurgency took the U.S. by surprise.
Insurgent militias took over large portions of the country, both in
predominantly Sunni areas near Fallujah and Tikrit and in predominantly
Shia areas such as Najaf, Nasiriyah, Amarah, and Basra. Dozens upon dozens
of attacks took place daily against U.S. troops. The U.S. feared a unified
Iraqi insurgency and thus sought to quell the uprisings by exploiting
sectarian differences in a “divide and rule” strategy.

The U.S. exploited long-held Kurdish grievances against the former Iraqi
state and encouraged Kurdish separatism by making federalization much
easier under the new Iraqi constitution. They then turned their attention
to the Sunni and Shia Arab population, stoking sectarian tensions between
them. Prior to the invasion, sectarian tensions were present but were
minimal. Many Iraqis came from mixed, inter-married Sunni-Shia families.

Under the Ba’ath Party, the Iraqi government and its institutions were
secular. Bremer and the CPA cemented sectarian and ethnic divisions by
installing a governmental system similar to the one installed by French
colonialists in Lebanon, where the government is rigidly divided along
religious and ethnic lines. This system led to a bloody civil war in
Lebanon and similarly led each sect in Iraq to compete against the others
for power.

The U.S. began training sectarian Shia militias, which were incorporated
into the Iraqi Interior Ministry and police. There, they were trained by
former U.S. Colonel James Steele, who had trained right-wing death squads
in El Salvador and Nicaragua in the 1980s. The result was torture,
kidnappings and reprisals on the Sunni population.

At the same time, the Sunni insurgency was quickly overtaken by foreign,
right-wing Islamist factions like Al Qaeda, which had the political and
financial backing of U.S. clients such as Saudia Arabia, the UAE, Turkey,
and Jordan.

Sectarian tensions exploded in 2006 as insurgents from Al Qaeda bombed Shia
religious sites and civilian targets. This drew a response from Shia
militias. The result was a bloody tit-for-tat civil war that took the lives
of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and destroyed the concept of a unified
Iraqi society.

Entire neighborhoods were ethnically cleansed as members of the opposite
sect were forced out of their homes or killed. Car bombs and kidnappings
became a part of daily life in Iraq as the country descended into chaos, a
far cry from the stable democracy promised by the U.S. These deaths are
often conveniently left out when discussing the death toll of the Iraq War.

*U.S. war crimes*

The U.S. has committed numerous war crimes during the occupation. At Abu
Ghraib, just one of many U.S.-run prisons in Iraq where abuses have been
documented, U.S. military and CIA personnel tortured, raped, abused and
murdered Iraqi prisoners.

The U.S. bombarded the city of Fallujah in 2004 with depleted uranium
munitions and white phosphorus, resulting in a dramatic rise of birth
defects, childhood cancer, and infant mortality. Iraqis are still dealing
with the fallout from these chemical weapons today.

Finally, the disintegration of Iraqi society, sectarian tensions, and the
flow of money and weapons to insurgents in Iraq and Syria, led to the rise
of ISIS. The group took over large swaths of land and committed unspeakable
acts of terror on the Iraqi and Syrian people. The U.S. then used this
crisis to prolong its occupation in Iraq and extend it to Syria as well.

It was only with the committed efforts and sacrifices of the Iraqi and
Syrian people that ISIS was finally defeated after years of fighting. Yet
U.S. troops continue occupying both countries under the pretext of fighting
ISIS.

*Lessons from Iraq War*

Today, the Iraq War is often brought up in the context of it being a
“mistake.” It wasn’t a mistake but rather a premeditated crime on the part
of the U.S. ruling class to destroy Iraq as a sovereign state and plunder
its wealth. Washington relies on organized violence, or the threat of
violence, to maintain its dominant world position. The U.S. has invaded or
bombed one country after another since the end of the so-called Cold War.

Sanctions; outrageous media lies, including racist vilification of the
leaders of oppressed nations; and the complicity of the Democratic Party
establishment were also preludes for the bombing and destruction of Libya
as a sovereign state, and for the imperialist war that has caused so much
suffering in Syria. U.S. economic sanctions against Iran, Syria, Venezuela,
Cuba and the DPRK, and Washington’s economic war on China, are meant to
destroy those sovereign nations. It is up to anti-imperialists in the U.S.
to combat this propaganda, draw parallels to the outright lies fed the
population here about Iraq, and expose the disastrous results of U.S.
intervention.

The invasion of Iraq succeeded in creating mass human suffering and death,
but it could not stop the struggle. What the Pentagon did not anticipate
was that the people of Iraq, like people everywhere, would never willingly
accept life under occupation. Today, Iraqis from every ethnic and religious
group and every region are taking to the streets to demand that all U.S.
troops leave their country.

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