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US barbarism in Iraq
The way forward in the struggle against imperialist war
Statement of the World Socialist Web Site Editorial
Board and the Socialist Equality Party
11 April 2003
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The following statement is being distributed by supporters
of the WSWS and the Socialist Equality Party at antiwar demonstrations
taking place this weekend in Washington, San Francisco and Los
Angeles. It has been posted on the WSWS as a PDF file. We urge
all of our readers to download this statement
and distribute it at antiwar rallies and meetings, as well as
at work locations and other public venues.
Having watched in horror the slaughter of Iraqi soldiers and
civilians alike, people around the world are demonstrating this
weekend to express their revulsion over the US-British war of
aggression. In Washington, San Francisco and Los Angeles large
numbers will march on April 12-13 to disassociate themselves from
the murderous policies of the Bush administration and express
their solidarity with the Iraqi people.
Those who march today are well aware that global antiwar protests
by millions earlier this yearthe largest in the history
of the worldfailed to halt the US invasion. All who are
determined to fight against this and future acts of imperialist
barbarism confront the need for a new political strategy to carry
forward this fight.
An effective struggle against war must find firmer political
foundations than moral outrage alone. It requires an understanding
of the underlying causes of militarism and the development of
a program capable of mobilizing the social forces that can put
an end to war and the system that creates it.
The US-British conquest of Iraq is an atrocity of world-historic
proportions. Confirmed civilian casualties already number in the
thousands. Hospitals are admitting 100 patients an hour. They
are awash in the blood of women and children hit by tank fire,
cluster bombs and shrapnel from cruise missiles. Overworked surgeons
are performing amputations without anesthesia and lack even water
to clean wounds. Corpses are stacked like cords of wood.
The roads to Baghdad are littered with the burnt-out hulks
of civilian vehicles, their passengers lying dead in the road
beside them. These killings are calculated and premeditated. Once
the US military encountered unexpected resistance from both Iraqi
soldiers and civilians in the opening days of the invasion, the
order was given to implement a policy of mass slaughter.
So-called pockets of resistancesnipers bullets
and small arms fireare being answered with air strikes and
devastating artillery barrages. The infamous prescription of the
Vietnam War eraWe had to destroy the village to save
itis being applied in heavily populated urban areas.
The number of Iraqi soldiers killed remains unknown. Most of
them draftees as young as 17, these troops have been incinerated
in carpet bombing by B-52s, artillery barrages and strafing by
attack helicopters. Those who survived have launched heroic attempts
to stop the US and British invaders, only to be mowed down by
fire from tanks and armored vehicles that have proven largely
immune to the light arms of the Iraqi defenders. In its first
drive-by assault on the streets of the Iraqi capital,
the US military claimed to have killed some 3,000 Iraqis, while
suffering only one American casualty.
An entire generation of Iraqi young men is being exterminated.
Not since the European rape of Africa or the Indian wars in the
US has there been such an unequal conflict. With a population
more than 10 times as large as Iraqs and a military budget
that is nearly 3,000 times greater, Washington launched its cowardly
invasion of the Middle Eastern country only after first subjecting
it to continuous bombardment and economic sanctions that starved
it of the most basic resources over the course of a decade.
Those waging this war in the name of freedom and
democracy have deliberately targeted journalists who
dare to report the carnage and fail to toe the line of the Pentagon
censors. Nothing could make more explicit the depravity of the
American media than the attempt of many US commentators to justify
the bombing of Al-Jazeera and shelling of journalists quarters.
The carnage continues
While the US military has seized control of Baghdad, no one
should be under any illusion. The carnage will continue. There
are not enough troops to police a city of 5 million, much less
the rest of the country, and those who are there will resort to
overwhelming force and terror as they settle into an open-ended
occupation of Iraq.
It is only a matter of time before the US soldiers and marines
are ordered to fire upon the same cheering crowds of impoverished
looters that have inspired such repellent triumphalism among the
media and the right-wing supporters of the war.
Even as fighting continued in Iraq, a report came from Afghanistan
that US warplanes had bombed a house, massacring 11 civilians,
most of them women and children. More than 8,000 American troops
remain there 18 months after the US invaded.
The warmongers in the Bush administration have already threatened
that Iran and Syria will be held accountable for allegedly
interfering with the US invasion. American forces
attacked a clearly marked convoy of Russian diplomats leaving
Iraq. The logic of imperialist conquest means that the next war
of aggression is already well beyond the planning stage.
It is increasingly apparent to people all over the world that
the greatest threat facing mankind is the global eruption of American
militarism.
A war of imperialist plunder
The US governmentboth the Republicans in the Bush administration
and the Democrats in Congressthe major corporations and
banks, the media and every other institution of the American establishment
have blood on their hands. The war in Iraq is being waged for
imperialist plunder. It is in flagrant violation of international
law. Its aim is the seizure of the vast oil wealth of the country
and its transformation into a colonial protectorate.
Behind the lies about Baghdads weapons of mass
destruction and alleged ties to terrorism, as well as the
hypocritical denunciations of Saddam Husseins tyranny, the
gangsters in the White House decided they could steal an entire
country and nobody could stop them. They are guilty of war crimes,
including the most serious under the standards of the Nuremberg
Trials of Nazi leaders: the planning and execution of a war of
aggression.
The war cabal in Washington attempts to implicate the entire
American people in this atrocity. But the war is being fought
in the interests of the American financial oligarchy. The violent
subjugation and colonization of Iraq in no way expresses the interests
of American working people. On the contrary, this war crime only
strengthens those forces most rabidly hostile to the social conditions
and democratic rights of the working class.
While the young American soldiers sent to kill or be killed
in Iraq will return home to find that jobs, money for education
and benefits for veterans are all being slashed, those who have
promoted the warthe oil companies, arms contractors, construction
firms and their political stoogeshope to reap a windfall
from the shattered country.
Behind the jingoism and cynical calls to Support our
troops, the US war fever is driven by a profound social
crisis within the US, whose most essential feature is an historically
unprecedented level of social inequality between the vast majority
of working people and a thin layer of multimillionaires and billionaires
who control the government, the media and the Pentagon.
Crisis of American capitalism
The gangsterism in foreign policy, like the criminality in
the corporate boardrooms and finance houses, is not simply the
product of the twisted politics of the clique in Washington. Rather,
their rise to power and their policies express the desperate attempt
of Americas ruling elite to defend its economic interests
under conditions of a deepening crisis of American capitalism.
Hand-in-hand with war abroad, the administration is embarked
upon the destruction of democratic rights at home. Its aim is
to create an atmosphere of fear and intimidation in which all
political opposition to the policies of the ruling elite can be
silenced. The roundup of Arab and Muslim immigrants and the gutting
of Constitutional protections have now been joined with violent
repression against opponents of the war.
The use of wooden and rubber bullets, concussion grenades and
other paramilitary weapons against demonstrators and dockworkers
in Oakland, California April 7, as well as the mass arrest the
same day of over 100 people engaged in legal protest in New York
City, constitute a grave warning. The administration in Washington
would welcome its own Kent State-style massacre.
Backed by the corporate-run mass media, the administration
is attempting to mobilize its base among the police
and the most backward and reactionary sections of the population.
Contained within these dangerous developments are the seeds of
a fascist movement.
Despite the campaign of government intimidation and the propaganda
spewed out by the media, the majority of the American population
does not share these views. No one should be fooled by the illusory
claims of the opinion pollsters. Stunned by the eruption of violence
and benumbed by the senseless cheerleading of the embedded
journalists, broad layers of working people remain deeply disturbed
and repelled by the slaughter being carried out in their name.
The same administration that cynically promises the liberation
of Iraq and a new life of liberty and prosperity for its people
pursues policies that condemn growing numbers of American working
people to lives of privation. More than 2 million workers have
lost their jobs since Bush took office, nearly half a million
of them in the past two months alone.
Even an early end of the fighting in Iraq will not reverse
the downward economic spiral, which is the product of a fundamental
crisis within the capitalist economy, expressed most sharply in
the protracted decline in the profit rates of manufacturing industries.
Complicity of the Democratic Party
Just as it has backed Bush on the war in Iraq, the Democratic
Party provides the administration with the support it needs to
carry out an oppressive social policy at home. On all essential
questions, it stands with the Republicans in defending the profits
and privileges of the American financial oligarchy.
Those who suggest that protest can push this party of big business
into fighting the policies of Bush and claim that the election
of a Democrat in 2004 will reverse the global rampage of American
imperialism are engaging in either self-delusion or political
charlatanry. The interests of the vast majority of the working
people, those who depend upon a paycheck for their livelihood,
can find no expression in the two-party system.
Similarly, the illusion that the United Nations or the European
powers can serve as a bulwark against war has been thoroughly
exposed. All of them are now seeking to make their accommodation
with American imperialism, offering to legitimize the war and
US occupation of Iraq in return for a share of the spoils.
The struggle against war requires the organization of the great
mass of the American working population as an independent political
force, fighting for its own interests against those of the financial
oligarchy. It aloneallied with the working people internationallyhas
a potential power greater than that of the ruling elite with its
smart bombs and cruise missiles.
The struggle against militarism and imperialist war can be
carried forward only through the mobilization of the working classindependent
of the Democrats and Republicansagainst the entire capitalist
system of class privilege and oppression.
Such a movement must be based on internationalism: the fundamental
principle that working people in every country share common interests
and a common oppressor and must unite in a struggle to harness
the world economy to serve the interests of mankind as a whole.
The simultaneous eruption of antiwar mobilizations in every
corner of the world foreshadows the emergence of an independent
political movement of workers internationally on the basis of
a common perspective of social equality, the defense of democratic
rights, and peace.
The development of such a conscious world movement is the political
goal of the World Socialist Web Site. Its aim, and that
of the Socialist Equality Party, is not to organize more and bigger
protests for their own sake. Rather, we strive to prepare working
people all over the world to take political power and create the
foundations of a socialist society that can put an end to war.
We call upon all those searching for a means to fight against
this criminal war to participate in this historic task by actively
working for the WSWS, building its readership, contributing articles
and supporting it financially. We urge you to study the program
and history of the Socialist Equality Party and make the decision
to join and build it.
See Also:
Liberation by murder: Baghdad falls to
American invasion
[10 April 2003]
Into the maelstrom: the crisis of American
imperialism and the war against Iraq
[1 April 2003]
The crisis of American capitalism
and the war against Iraq
[21 March 2003]
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