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WSWS : News
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Poland sends troops to Iraq
By Stefan Steinberg
7 August 2003
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On August 1, the Polish government sent more than 2,000 soldiers
to help relieve beleaguered US troops in Iraq. The Polish contingent
is part of a planned 9,200 Polish-led multinational division,
which will take over responsibility for one of the four districts
of Iraq currently under the control of American and British soldiers.
The Polish government was one of the first to offer practical
assistance to the US and British operation sending a small unit
of 200 elite soldiers to fight in the Iraq war.
The latest Polish-led contingent will be supplemented by soldiers
from a number of eastern European countries and comprise 1,640
Ukrainian troops, 500 from Bulgaria, several hundred from Hungary,
150 from Romania and Latvia, and 85 respectively from Slovakia
and Lithuania.
The Polish reinforcements come at a time when US military commanders
on the ground and politicians in Washington are increasingly concerned
at the growing number of US troop casualties in Iraq. In a comment
headed US struggles to cobble together troop force,
the British Financial Times commented last Friday: An
administration forced to go it nearly alone during the war in
Iraq is now being forced, hat in hand and chequebook at the ready,
to cobble together international troops to help secure a country
where guerrilla attacks are a daily occurrence.
Already on July 3 the Washington Post had pointed out
that the presence of troops with a nationality other than American
or British could not only help divert fire from US troops, but
also have positive propaganda benefits: Many hope a larger
international presence could reassure Iraqis that they are not
being colonised and help get Americans out of the line of fire.
Last week, the acting US army chief of staff General John Keane
told a congressional hearing that American soldiers could not
start returning home until international reinforcements were in
place, but hectic US diplomatic activity over the past weeks has
had very limited success in the attempts to persuade other countries
to contribute to the Iraq war campaign.
Following his recent trip to the region, Deputy Defence Secretary
Paul Wolfowitz admitted last week that it was unclear when, or
if, Pakistan or Turkey would send a division of troops to Iraq.
Turkey has already sent troops to the north of Iraq, but US plans
to strengthen Turkish military participation have been bedevilled
by conflicts between the two countries against a background of
broad popular hostility to Turkish army involvement. Wolfowitz
also conceded that it was unclear how quickly it would be possible
to train Iraqis to take over security duties in the country.
Meanwhile, US general Richard Myers travelled to New Delhi
to intensify American pressure on India to send troops. India
recently declined to send 17,000 troops to the region, stating
that a new UN resolution was necessary before it could intervene
in the war.
The Washington administration still hopes to persuade India
to send a contingent some time next year. Even with aid from India
and eastern Europe, however, the US will be confronted with the
necessity of posting at least 100,000 troops for the foreseeable
future with all of the costs that entails. The cost of the current
US operation is running at $3.9 billion a month. Desperate to
insure participation from eastern Europe, the US has agreed to
foot the preliminary expenses ($230 million for transport, food
and medical expenses) for the Polish contingent.
Together with Italy, Poland will be the largest continental
European contributor to the US-led occupation. Although the leaders
of both Italy and Spain fully supported the Bush war in Iraq,
under conditions of massive domestic public opposition and daily
troop casualties both nations have been reluctant to send large
numbers of troops to the region. Italy has just 2,800 soldiers
in the region operating in the British-controlled sector. Britain
currently has 11,000 troops posted in Iraq. Spain has announced
plans to send 1,300 soldiers to take part in the Polish-led mission.
The commitment by the Polish government to the Iraq war is
highly controversial inside Poland itself. Currently, more than
half of the Polish population oppose participation by its troops
in Iraq, and the original decision in March to send a unit of
elite Polish troops to fight in the war was made by government
leaders in the face of huge domestic opposition.
In the period immediately preceding the war, 70 percent of
the Polish population opposed any sort of participation. Then
on March 17, three days before the war started, Polish president
Aleksander Kwasniewski and Prime Minister Leszek Miller demonstrated
their contempt for public opinion and stated bluntly at a press
conference that they had agreed to send troops. Under conditions
where the country was already involved in the war, Kwasniewski
and Miller were later able to acquire agreement by a large minority
of the acquiescent Polish parliament for their actions.
The new Polish-led division will operate in a territory a quarter
the size of Poland (31,000 square miles) and includes four predominantly
Shiite Muslim provinces south of Baghdad now occupied by the US
Marine Expeditionary Force. The risks involved in such an operation
were underlined last Friday when Polish troops already stationed
in Iraq were attacked in their base by mortars.
Doubts about the Polish engagement extend to the Polish military
itself. In the conservative daily Rceczpospolita, Polish
general and strategy expert Stanislaw Kosiey warned of the increasing
number of attacks taking place on occupying troops. The
attacks could last many years and they are more and more better
organised, he said, and they could give rise to a new
Vietnam.
Poland and America
Before the collapse of the Stalinist bloc countries at the
beginning of the 1990s, Poland enjoyed close relations with Iraq,
and more than 16,000 Polish workersmainly engineersworked
in infrastructure projects and the Iraqi oil industry.
One consideration in Polands recent alliance with the
US are hopes by the Polish elite, whose roots all lie largely
in the pre-1990 Stalinist apparatus, to be able to restore their
influence in the regionthis time under the protective umbrella
of American imperialism. Poland has already re-opened the Baghdad
office of the Polish Oil Company Nafta Polska. In an attempt to
conceal the colonial character of the operation, Marek Siewik,
head of the Office for National Security, stated: What brought
us to Iraq is not greed, but a certain responsibility...which
we had from the very beginning of the operation.
The chief of the international committee of coordination in
Iraq is the former Polish finance minister Marek Belka, once a
Fulbright scholar in the US. His role is to coordinate the cooperation
of the colonial administration with non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) and the United Nations, as well as foreign governments
and organisations involved in the reconstruction of the infrastructure.
Belka also works in the leading committees of USAID, which awards
major contracts for Iraq.
During the past year, Poland has been accepted as a full member
of the European Union, but the Iraq war demonstrated that the
countrys leadership was also anxious to deepen its relations
with the US and was prepared to operate as a sort of Trojan horse
for American interests in Europe. Confronted with French and German
opposition to the war, US defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld provocatively
drew a distinction between old Europeby which
he meant France and Germanyand new Europe, a
number of eastern European countries, with Poland to the fore,
that have established close links with Washington since the collapse
of the Stalinist bloc.
On a number of occasions Rumsfeld and the administration in
Washington have sought to play the old Europe card
in order to isolate and put pressure on France and Germany. Earlier
this year and against expectations, Warsaw decided against re-equipping
its air force with the new Euro-fighter and instead wrapped up
a deal for F-16 fighter jets with US company Lockheed Martin.
The value of the contract is $3.53 billion and is the biggest
struck in eastern Europe. The deal led some media outlets to comment
that, although Poland has its heart in Europe, it keeps its wallet
in the United States. Then in May of this year, amidst premature
jubilation over an American victory in Iraq, Bush travelled to
Europe, pointedly ignoring France and Germany and stopping off
in Poland for talks with Kwasniewski, where the US president called
for a strong transatlantic alliance.
There is a further reason for the close alliance struck between
the Polish and US leaderships. Both President Aleksander Kwasniewski
and Prime Minister Leszek Miller began their careers inside the
Polish Stalinist governing party, the PZRP. Following the collapse
of the Polish and Soviet Stalinist bureaucracies, both men were
instrumental in transforming the PZRP into the Democratic Party
of the Left (SLD), which was elected in 2001 following the electoral
disaster of the incumbent AWS (Solidarity Bloc). In 1995, Kwasniewski
quit the SLD after his election to the post of state president.
Elected on the basis of cleaning up Polish politics and restoring
economic health, the balance sheet of the SLD after two years
in office is disastrous, with catastrophic repercussions for broad
layers of the Polish population. According to official figures,
Poland has one of the highest levels of unemployment in eastern
Europe20 percent.
Isolated and under pressure at home, against the background
of a growing economic crisis, the Polish government has sought
to deepen its relationship with the one government with which
it has most in commonthe criminal administration in Washington.
See Also:
Eastern European workers
to pay the cost of membership in European Union
[30 May 2002]
Poland: Democratic
Left Party heads new coalition government
[12 October 2001]
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