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After the Iraq war
Editorial of the magazine Gleichheit
By Peter Schwarz
13 May 2003
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The war against Iraq represents a turning point in international
politics. The US has made it unmistakably clear that it is no
longer prepared to recognise international institutions or universally
accepted laws. Instead, it is determined to rely on military strength
to further its interests. Other countries are left with a choice:
either side with the US and receive a few crumbs; or be ignored,
punished...or bombed. Either you are with us or against
us, as President Bush himself put it.
Iraq, as the US government has spelled out, is just the first
step. The ultimate aim of the White House is the reorganisation
of the entire region and the establishment of a new world order.
What is the content of this world order? The submission of the
entire planet to the needs of American big business through the
most naked forms of robbery and capitalist exploitation. The plundering
and destruction of thousands of years of Iraqi culture side by
side with the careful protection of oil wells and the oil ministry
as a prelude to their privatisationthat is Operation
Iraqi Freedom in a nutshell.
Avoiding terms used by another world conquerorsuch as
master race and lebensraumBush has
carried out his campaign in the name of freedom and
democracy. But what exactly does he mean by these
terms?
Freedom means the right to property and unlimited
self-enrichment. Its embodiment is the figure of Ahmed Chalabi,
a crook convicted for embezzlement and favoured by the Pentagon
to head the new Iraqi government. Democracy means
that the Iraqi peopleat gunpointare given the choice
of supporting a government imposed by Washington or facing starvation.
As one satirist noted recently, the despotic oil sheiks of the
Gulf have lost their fear of democracy after witnessing the way
in which it is practised by George W. Bush.
The responsibility for this policy rests with a right-wing
clique in the White House who stole the presidency after already
demonstrating their contempt for democratic rights by trying to
overthrow an elected president with a trumped-up sex scandal.
This policy has been supported, however, by the entire American
elite. With the exception of a few dissenting voices, the leadership
of the Democratic Party has expressed its support for Bushs
politics. This demonstrates that a more profound logic is at work.
America occupies a place on the world stage today that bears
comparison to the position of Germany within the European system
of one hundred years ago. Germanythe most advanced and dynamic
capitalist power in Europewas only able to develop further
by bursting apart the old continents tightly meshed system
of nation states. Twice it attempted the violent reorganisation
of Europe, and on both occasions it failed miserably. Europe was
bled white in the process, and America emerged from the two wars
as the undisputed hegemonic world power. Today, America is attempting
the violent reorganisation of the world.
The framework of international rules and institutions no longer
serves Washingtons drive to exert its hegemony. The internal
tensions wracking the US economy and society are impelling American
capitalism to seek unrestricted access to all the worlds
resources. The US cannot allow a sovereign government anywhere
on the globe to make decisions that have repercussions for America
itself. The global economy is incompatible with self determination
by individual nations. Nor can America tolerate any potential
rival. Control of the oilfields of the Middle East will enable
it to put Europe and Asia on rations.
The dissolution of the Soviet Union has encouraged American
imperialism to drop any remaining inhibitions. It is no longer
compelled to contemplate the risk of a self-destructive nuclear
war.
The course undertaken by the American government will inevitably
lead to catastrophe. The predatory clique holding the reins of
power of a nation embracing no more than 5 percent of the worlds
population cannot dictate terms to the remaining 95 percent forever.
The brutal assault on Iraq is a foretaste of what is to come.
There are few historic parallels for a war fought on the basis
of such unequal weapons. Primitively equipped Iraqi conscript
soldiers and civilians were literally massacred by American high-tech
weaponry. In the US itself, basic democratic rights are being
systematically dismantled in the war against terror.
Already horrendous levels of economic inequality will increase
even more as the costs of the war are placed on the backs of working
people.
Europe has demonstrated its complete inability to oppose this
train of events. Under American pressure, the much vaunted common
foreign policy of the European Union collapsed like a house of
cards. The US has deliberately used its influence to split the
European continent. Even those governments that rejected the war
restricted their resistance to verbal and diplomatic gestures.
The decision by the German SPD-Green Party government to open
German airspace for the war and allow the free use of US bases
on German territory was of far greater practical significance
than its rejection of a United Nations resolution in favour of
the invasion.
After the US military success, declarations of loyalty to the
American government are pouring in. Dont send wrong
signals to Washingtongoes the maxim. Both Paris and
Berlin are trying hard to reconcile themselves with the White
House and acknowledge the new set of relations established by
the war.
A new tone prevails in the press as well. The stomach heaves
when Wolfgang Koydl in the Süddeutsche Zeitung jubilantly
describes the American neo-conservatives as visionaries
who have taken up the task of assembling the framework of a new
order for a world spinning out of control and when he counterposes
them to the Europeans who are intent on hanging onto their
old dreams. Or when Jan Ross, in a contribution for Die
Zeit, contrasts US audacity with the European
culture of law which, he says, has something malevolently
unproductive about itthe pleasure at coming up with obstacles
on the part of someone lacking any drive* The philosopher
Nietzsche is once again back in mode.
The inability of European governments to provide any serious
alternative to the threat arising from America is rooted in their
own social programmes. Chancellor Gerhard Schröders
Agenda 2010aimed at introducing American conditions
in Germanyhas brought it into confrontation with broad layers
of the population. The same applies to the social policies of
the French Chirac-Raffarin government, which have provoked a series
of strikes and protests. The conflict between these governments
and their own people drives them into the camp of the strongest
imperialist power.
In 1940, when France was defeated by Germany, the majority
of the ruling class decided in favour of a Vichy France, seeking
a position as junior partner to the victorious Great Power. After
the Iraq war, we confront the danger of a sort of Vichy Europe,
which plays the role of junior partner to American militarism.
The internal relations of such a Europe would be no better than
those of Vichy France. It would be dominated by the most powerful
economic and financial interests and characterised by the dismantling
of social services, the introduction of cheap labour, militarism
and the suppression of democratic rights. It is no accident that
it was the most right-wing governments in Europein particular
those of the former Eastern bloc, which all rest on a decidedly
narrow social basethat were the first to line up behind
the American flag.
There was virtually no popular support in Europe for the war
against Iraq. Millions took to the streets to express their opposition.
But the outcome of this war confronts these same millions with
tasks that cannot be resolved by a movement limited to the issue
of peace. The struggle against war must be bound up with the fight
for a different society. The only possibility of uniting Europe
in a progressive and harmonious fashion and to make it a counter-pole
to American imperialism is a unification from below. The alternative
to the fractured Europe of the big banks and corporations is the
United Socialist States of Europe.
Such a perspective would find a positive response in America
itself. The American people regard the right-wing clique in the
White House with a mixture of mistrust and rejection. Only an
independent and international movement of the working class can
put a halt to a rampant American militarism.
* Süddeutsche Zeitung, 3-4 May 2003, Americas
Visions and Die Zeit, 16 April 2003, Morals
under arms
See Also:
US tables a transparent plan for plundering
Iraqi oil
[12 May 2003]
Summit of Four in Brussels
Schröder and Chirac pledge their allegiance to Washington
[3 May 2003]
European Union summit: France,
Germany seek rapprochement with US
[19 April 2003]
A major step for European
militarism
EU takes over NATOs mission in Macedonia
[10 April 2003]
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