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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
New York Times discovers the opposition to war in Iraq
By Bill Vann
21 January 2003
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In a January 20 editorial entitled A Stirring in the
Nation, the New York Times issued a belated and hypocritical
welcome to the mass movement that has emerged against the Bush
administrations drive to war against Iraq.
In this mealy-mouthed piece, the Times adopts the posture
of a knowing and tolerant authority, dispensing its blessings
on the January 18 demonstrations that mobilized hundreds of thousands
in Washington, San Francisco and cities throughout the country.
The newspaper declares the protests a legitimate part of a nascent
debate that supposedly involves the Bush administration
and the American people. It asserts that the legions of people
who marched in sub-freezing temperatures in the US capital did
so to raise nuanced questions in the name of patriotism
about the premises, cost and aftermath of the war the president
is contemplating.
This description grotesquely distorts the present state of
political relations in the US, as well as the spirit animating
those who are demonstrating against war. It also serves to cover
up the role of the newspaper itself.
Anyone who paid the slightest attention to the protests in
Washington, San Francisco and elsewhere knows full well that the
predominant sentiment was not nuanced differences
with the Bush administration, but rather passionate opposition
to an unprovoked war that the demonstrators consider a criminal
enterprise.
One of the most popular slogans in the ralliesNo
War for Oilreflected the widespread and growing sense
that behind the official talk of weapons of mass destruction and
UN resolutions lies a drive to seize Iraqs rich petroleum
holdings, pointing to the imperialistic character of the coming
war. But the Times editors discreetly omit any mention
of oil in connection with either the war preparations of the Bush
administration or the mass opposition they have provoked.
The editorial goes on to praise Bush and his aides for having
welcomed the demonstrations as a healthy manifestation of
American democracy at work. This is a bit rich, even for
the sycophants of the Times editorial board, whose specialty
is attributing moral considerations and democratic principles
to the predatory policies of the Bush administration.
Hundreds of thousands took to the streets to protest the policies
of an administration that came to power by nullifying the popular
vote and has used that power to prepare an illegal war, abrogate
fundamental democratic rights and transfer vast amounts of wealth
from the working peoplethe vast majorityto the financial
elite. Far from a sign of American democracys
health, the protests are an indication of the profound political
and social polarization that has developed under the rule of a
corrupt plutocracy.
The editorial manages to evade the most essential question:
how to account for what is acknowledged as the largest antiwar
rally at the Capitol since the Vietnam era under conditions
of overwhelming support for war by the politicians of both major
parties as well as the mass media, including the Times
itself?
From the outset, the Times, the erstwhile mouthpiece
of establishment liberalism, has accepted uncritically the pretexts
for war advanced by the Bush administration. Its chief foreign
affairs columnist Thomas Friedman has gone so far as to publish
proposals for how best to provoke an invasion and apologias for
the US seizure of Iraqs oil wealth.
Until now the Times has done its best to conceal mass
opposition to a new war in the Persian Gulf. When tens of thousands
demonstrated in Washington and San Francisco last October, the
newspaper failed to even publish a news report on the protests.
Mass public opinion in the US is forming independently of and
in opposition to the entire structure of official politics and
the establishment media. This phenomenon is a reflection of the
social chasm that exists between the broad mass of working people
and the ruling elite.
The effective disenfranchisement of the vast majority of the
American people by the two-party system and the failure of the
mass media to provide even a pale reflection of existing popular
sentiment are symptoms of a profound crisis that is leading inevitably
to political upheavals. These struggles can find a way forward
only through the building of an independent political movement
of the working class based on a socialist program and fighting
for social equality.
This is what the publishers of the Times fear, and what
lies behind their hypocritical embrace of the anti-war
protests.
See Also:
Hundreds of thousands protest US war
drive vs. Iraq
Demonstrations in Washington, San Francisco and cities worldwide
[20 January 2003]
New York Times Thomas Friedman:
No problem with a war for oil
[15 January 2003]
Inventing a pretext
for war against Iraq
Friedman of the Times executes an assignment for the Pentagon
[3 December 2002]
Hundreds of thousands
in US protest Iraq invasion plans
[28 October 2002]
New York Times
urges debate to prepare war
[5 October 2002]
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