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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Wall Street Journal editorial reveals imperialist arrogance
and racism behind US war drive
By Patrick Martin
13 March 2003
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An editorial published Wednesday in the Wall Street Journal
drops the pretense that human rights and democracy
are the motivation for a US war against Iraq, and fulminates in
unabashedly chauvinist and imperialistic terms against any international
opposition to the Bush administrations war plans.
The editorial, entitled Bush in Lilliput, presents
the United States as a world-straddling Gulliver, beset by opponents
so insignificant that they should be brushed aside with contempt.
It is focused on the six countriesGuinea, Angola, Cameroon,
Mexico, Chile and Pakistanwhich have so far, despite enormous
US pressure, refused to commit themselves to support the US-British
resolution authorizing war.
The Journal bemoans the Bush administrations decision
to seek a second resolution from the UN body, complaining, The
US has already been reduced to bribing these countries with cash
or other favors in return for their support. Yet theyve
all played hard to get, posing as Hamlet for their 10 minutes
of fame on the world stage.
The leading US business newspaper describes the six undeclared
countries in racist terms, lashing out at the Mexican and
Chilean fandango, sneering at the always strategically
vital Cameroon, and referring to the six countriesincluding
three African nationsas pygmies. (There is ignorance
as well as racism here, since the six countries have a combined
population of 293 million, greater than that of the United States).
The Journal editorial denounces the UN weapons inspectors
for siding with Iraq, particularly Mohammed ElBaradei, head of
the International Atomic Energy Agency, which inspects nuclear
facilities. Mr. El Baradei made a public fuss last week
about one British-US claim that turns out to have been false,
but which was in any case peripheral to Iraqs weapons of
mass destruction, the newspaper said. This is a cavalier
dismissal of the issues raised in the Security Council debate.
ElBaradei noted that the US-British charges of a secret Iraqi
effort to obtain uranium for an atomic bomb were based on forged
documents.
There is, however, one true sentence in the editorial. The
Journal declares, As each day passes, the evidence
mounts that the UN inspections regime is not about containing
Saddam; it is about containing America. In other words,
it is the Bush administration, not the regime in Baghdad, which
is regarded by most of the world as the greatest threat to international
peace and security.
The vitriolic language of the Journal exposes the real
attitude of the US ruling elite to democracy and national sovereignty,
even in the extremely limited and distorted form in which they
find expression in the United Nations. As far as the warmongers
in Washington and on Wall Street are concerned, the only national
sovereignty that counts is that of the United States, which refuses
to accept any international check on its own use of force and
violence to attain its ends.
The UN is based, at least in theory, on the equality of nations,
with every state casting one vote in the 191-member General Assembly.
The Security Council is a far more restricted body, with five
states holding permanent membership and wielding veto power, and
the remaining 10 states, elected by the General Assembly, holding
rotating membership.
None of these procedures alters the fact that the UN, since
its inception, has been a tool of the major imperialist powers,
above all of the United States, which customarily employs a mixture
of bribery and threats to have its way. The outburst of venom
from the Journal expresses the outrage in the US ruling
elite over its inability to work its will in the usual fashion,
primarily due to the opposition of France, Germany, Russia and
China.
The Journal makes the claim that Bushs opponents
on the Security Council will be responsible for the deaths of
American and British soldiers once war begins, and is to blame
for the ongoing economic havoc brought on by the looming threat
of war. But its real fear is that the US government will be held
responsible for the colossal loss of life that will ensue once
the dogs of war are unleashed in the Middle East.
It is worth noting in this context that UN Secretary General
Kofi Annan appeared Monday at a ceremony in The Hague, opening
the first session of the International Criminal Court, the war
crimes tribunal which the Bush administration has adamantly opposed
and whose jurisdiction it refuses to accept. The UN chief declared
that a war against Iraq launched in defiance of the Security Council
would violate international law. Given the venue for his comments,
it was a pointed reminder that war crimes tribunals could be convened
in the aftermath of a new Persian Gulf war, with US and British
leaders facing prosecution.
According to a report March 12 in the Washington Post,
British Prime Minister Tony Blair has already been told he could
face such charges: British officials also expressed fresh
concern that failure to obtain a resolution authorizing war against
Iraq would expose them to potential prosecution by a newly established
International Criminal Court with jurisdiction over war crimes.
Britain is a signatory to the treaty establishing the tribunal,
but the United States is not. Blair was advised by his attorney
general last October that military action to force regime
change in Baghdad would violate international law.
See Also:
The Wall Street Journal spells
it out: Turkey could lose oil spoils of war
[7 March 2003]
Bugging, bribes and bullying: US thuggery
in advance of UN vote
[6 March 2003]
After Powells speech
Media pundits in lockstep behind US war drive
[8 February 2003]
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