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War, oligarchy and the political lie
By David North
7 May 2003
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On April 30 David North, the chairperson of the editorial
board of the World Socialist Web Site, addressed a meeting of
students at Notre Dame University in South Bend, Indiana. We print
below an edited transcript of his remarks.
Less than one month has passed since the end of the US war
against Iraqor, perhaps it is more accurate to say, the
end of the most recent stage of the war; for it should not be
forgotten that the United States has been engaged in military
operations against Iraq, in one form or another, for 12 years.
Iraq has the tragic distinction of being the country that has
been subjected to the longest military operation ever undertaken
by the United States.
There has been no comprehensive analysis of the cumulative
impact on Iraqi society of the devastation wrought by the United
States through either military or economic measures.
As a matter of policy, the United States military has refused
to provide a rough estimate, let alone a precise count, of the
number of Iraqi military personnel it has killed in the course
of operations since the beginning of the first Gulf War in January
1991. There can be little doubt that in the period of the most
intense military operationsin January-February 1991 and
March-April 2003the number of Iraqi military casualties
ran into the tens, if not hundreds, of thousands. In the aftermath
of the first Gulf War, there were ghastly reports of the massacre
of thousands of retreating and defenseless Iraqi soldiers on the
so-called Highway of Death leading north from Kuwait.
During the past month, thousands of computer-guided bombs and
missiles were used to destroy entire units of the Iraqi army that
lacked any means of defending themselves against this type of
attack.
Just how defenseless the Iraqi troops actually were was made
clear by the accounts, however limited, of the outcome of the
American assault on Baghdads airport. According to press
reports, approximately two to three thousand Iraqis were killed,
while the US military suffered less than a half-dozen casualties.
A day or two later, US tanks rampaged through a section of Baghdad,
once again killing thousands of soldiers (and a substantial number
of civilians) while suffering only a handful of casualties.
The vast disparity in the military resources of the opposing
armies makes it difficult to describe their engagements as battles.
Rather, they recall the bloody one-sided massacres of the colonial
era, such as the infamous Battle of Omdurman in which somewhere
between ten and fifteen thousand Sudanese natives were slaughtered
by British troops who suffered only a few dozen casualties.
There is also little precise information about the number of
Iraqi civilian deaths directly caused by US military operations,
either in January-February 1991 and March-April 2003 or during
the innumerable bombing raids conducted by the United States in
the course of the last decade. We are somewhat better informed
about the impact of US-imposed economic sanctions on Iraqi society,
particularly on young children. It has been estimated that the
sanctions regime that has been in place since the end of the first
Gulf War has cost the lives of somewhere between 500,000 and one
million children.
I would hope that no one in this room has forgotten that the
principal justification given by the United States government
for not only the invasion of Iraq last month but for much of the
suffering it has inflicted upon the Iraqi people since the end
of Desert Storm in 1991 is that the regime of Saddam Hussein was
in possession of so-called Weapons of Mass Destruction
that posed an immense and imminent danger to the United States
and the rest of the world.
It would require an entire book to review and analyze the massive
propaganda campaign that was developed over the past decade upon
the Weapons of Mass Destruction theme. This was not
the invention of the present Bush administration. Saddams
weapons of mass destruction were invoked by the Clinton
administration to justify the bombing campaign that it initiated
against Iraq in 1998. In fact, the campaign dates all the way
back to the immediate aftermath of the first Gulf War, as right-wing
factions disappointed by the failure of Bush I to seize Baghdad,
overthrow Saddam Hussein and occupy the country sought a justification
for a second invasion of Iraq.
Let us only concentrate on the most recent period, leading
up to the outbreak of war.
On September 12, 2002, President George Bush declared before
the United Nations General Assembly that Hussein continues
to develop weapons of mass destruction. The first time we may
be completely certain he has a nuclear weapon is when, God forbid,
he uses one.
On October 7, 2002, Bush declared that Iraq possesses
and produces chemical and biological weapons. ... Iraq could decide
on any given day to provide a biological or chemical weapon to
a terrorist group or individual terrorists. ... Knowing these
realities, America must not ignore the threat gathering against
it. Facing clear evidence of peril, we cannot wait for the final
proofthe smoking gunthat could come in the form of
a mushroom cloud.
The claim that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction provided
the foundation for the non-negotiable demand advanced by the Bush
administration. As Bush stated on October 7, 2002, Saddam
Hussein must disarm himself, or, for the sake of peace, we will
lead a coalition to disarm him.
Of course, this demand presupposed that Iraq possessed the
weapons of mass destruction that the US claimed it had. If Iraq
did not possess such weapons, the demand was meaningless. It could
not divest itself of weapons that it did not have. But the United
States insisted that there was no question whatever about Iraqs
possession of weapons of mass destruction and its willingness
to use them. Indeed, after the inspectors arrived in Iraq under
the direction of Hans Blix and Mohamed ElBaradei, their failure
to find weapons of mass destruction or even credible evidence
that such weapons existed was trumpeted by the Bush administration
as proof that they existedthat is, only a regime that possessed
weapons of mass destruction would hide them so carefully!
In an article published in the New York Times on January
23, 2003, entitled Why We Know Iraq is Lying, National
Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice asserted:
Instead of a commitment to disarm, Iraq has a high-level
political commitment to maintain and conceal its weapons, led
by Saddam Hussein and his son Qusay, who controls the Special
Security Organization, which runs Iraqs concealment activities.
Powells case for war
The climax of the Bush administrations weapons of mass
destruction campaign came on February 5, 2003, when Secretary
of State Colin Powell appeared before the United Nations Security
Council to present the US governments case for war. I will
cite several passages from his speech:
1. While we were in this council chamber debating resolution
1441 last fall, we know, we know from sources, that a missile
brigade outside Baghdad was dispensing rocket launchers and warheads
containing biological warfare agents to various locations in western
Iraq.
2. We know that Iraq has at least seven of these mobile,
biological agent factories. The truck mounted ones have at least
two or three trucks each.
3. There can be no doubt that Saddam Hussein has biological
weapons and the capability to rapidly produce more, many more.
And he has the ability to disperse these lethal poisons and diseases
in ways that can cause massive death and destruction.
4. Our conservative estimate is that Iraq today has a
stockpile of between 100 and 500 tons of chemical weapons agents.
That is enough to fill 16,000 battlefield rockets.
5. Saddam Hussein has chemical weapons ... we have sources
who tell us that he recently has authorized his field commanders
to use them.
6. Iraqi denials of supporting terrorism take their place
alongside the other Iraqi denials of weapons of mass destruction.
It is all a web of lies.
7. Leaving Saddam Hussein in possession of weapons of
mass destruction for a few more months or years is not an option,
not in the post September 11th world.
The mass media was enthralled by Powells UN performance,
proclaiming unanimously that he had presented an irrefutable indictment
of the Iraqi regime. The most politically significant response
came from its liberal segment, which seized upon the opportunity
provided by Powell to fall completely in line with the war plans
of the Bush administration.
Richard Cohen of the Washington Post proclaimed in a
column published the day after Powells presentation:
The evidence he presented to the United Nationssome
of it circumstantial, some of it absolutely bone-chilling in its
detailhad to prove to anyone that Iraq not only hasnt
accounted for its weapons of mass destruction but without a doubt
still retains them. Only a foolor possibly a Frenchmancould
conclude otherwise.
Mary McGrory of the Washington Post wrote on the same
day:
I dont know how the United Nations felt about Colin
Powells Jaccuse speech against
Saddam Hussein. I can only say that he persuaded me, and I was
as tough as France to convince. ... I had heard enough to know
that Saddam Hussein, with his stockpiles of nerve gas and death-dealing
chemicals, is more of a menace than I had thought.
One week later, on February 15, 2003, the New York Times
asserted:
There is ample evidence that Iraq has produced highly
toxic VX nerve gas and anthrax and has the capacity to produce
a lot more. It has concealed these materials, lied about them,
and more recently failed to account for them to the current inspectors.
It must be stressed that the mass media was not duped by the
Bush administration, but functioned as its willing accomplice
in the deliberate deception of the American people. There was
nothing that was particularly sophisticated in the governments
propaganda campaign. Much of what it said was contradicted by
both established facts and elementary logic. Even when it was
established that the administrations claim that Iraq had
sought to obtain nuclear material was based on crudely forged
documents, the media chose not to make a major issue of this devastating
exposure.
Now the war is over at the cost of countless thousands of Iraqi
lives. The country lies in ruins. Much of its industrial, social,
and cultural infrastructure has been destroyed. During the past
three weeks US military forces have combed Iraq in search of the
weapons of mass destruction that could be seized upon by the administration
and media to justify the war. And what has been found? Nothing.
The media has adapted its line to the failure to find the deadly
weapons whose supposed existence provided the justification for
the war and the deadly sanctions that preceded it.
The New York Times published on April 25 a front-page
close-up photograph of a skull, which was purported to be that
of a victim of Saddam Husseins regime. And that is what
it may well be. No one has ever doubted the brutal character of
Saddams regimethough those familiar with the history
of Iraq know that his worst crimes were committed when he enjoyed
the political support of the United States.
It has long been known among Iraqi socialists that the first
Baathist seizure of powerin the coup of February 1963was
carried out with the support of the Kennedy administration. The
CIA provided the Baathists with the names of Iraqi communists
and socialists whom it wanted liquidated. The relations between
the Baathists and the United States waxed and waned over
the next 27 years, depending on international and regional conditions
and their influence on the nuances of American foreign policy.
With some knowledge of this history, one could hardly doubt
that the photograph had been placed on the front page of the Times
for definite political reasonswhich were soon to become
clear. Two days later the Times published a column by Thomas L.
Friedman, entitled The Meaning of a Skull. It began
as follows:
Fridays Times carried a front-page picture
of a skull, with a group of Iraqis gathered around it. The skull
was of a political prisoner from Saddam Husseins regime,
as the grieving Iraqis were relatives who had exhumed it from
a graveyard filled with other victims of Saddams torture.
Just under the picture was an article about President Bush vowing
that weapons of mass destruction will be found in Iraq, as he
promised.
As far as Im concerned, we do not need to find
any weapons of mass destruction to justify the war. That skull,
and the thousands more that will be unearthed, are enough for
me. Mr. Bush doesnt owe the world any explanation for missing
chemical weapons (even if it turns out that the White House has
hyped this issue).
Friedman continued:
Who cares if we now find some buried barrels of poison?
Do they carry more moral weight than those buried skulls? No way.
The timing of Mr. Friedmans attempt to find in the discovery
of the corpses of the Husseins victims an ex post facto
justification for the war against Iraq was not exactly felicitous.
On the very weekend his column was published the world was being
reminded that the United States has plenty of skeletons of its
own lying in unmarked graves all over the world. Prosecutors in
Honduras announced the discovery of at least four secret cemeteries
that were used by military death squads, who were trained and
funded by the United States, to bury victims of government repression.
Among the remains uncovered in one of these cemeteries were those
of James Francis Carney, an American Jesuit priest, who disappeared
in Honduras 20 years ago. The number of deaths in that country
during the 1980s ran into the tens of thousands. Many of the Honduran
army officers who were part of government death squads received
their training in the United States.
The case of Honduras is not exceptional. There is hardly a
Latin American or Central American country that has not carried
out gruesome acts of repression with the direct support of the
United States.
The political significance of government lies
But my purpose tonight is not to counterpose the crimes committed
by puppet regimes of the United States to those of the Iraqi state
under Saddam Hussein. Rather, I think that it is important that
we dwell a bit longer on the deeper political significance of
the fact that the war against Iraq was justified by the US government
on the basis of lies, and that, when these lies are clearly exposed,
the response of the American media is one of dismissive indifference,
a big So what.
There has never been a golden age in American politics. The
last genuinely and indisputably honorable administration in the
history of the United States, wholly and unequivocally devoted
to the highest democratic ideals, was that of Abraham Lincoln.
And yet, a portrayal of modern American history as one vast and
unending reactionary saga would be caricature of reality.
Even within the framework of bourgeois politics, there have
been not a few periods of momentous social struggles, in which
democratic and egalitarian sentiments reverberated throughout
broad strata of society. These sentiments found reflection even
within the media, whose owners were still obliged to recruit at
least some of their writers, broadcasters and editors from sections
of the middle class who were sincere in their commitment to democratic
principles.
A generation ago it was still possible to find reporters and
editors who actually believed that government lying should be
exposed and condemned. The term credibility gapreferring
to the chasm between the claims made by the Johnson administration
to justify American involvement in Vietnam and the historical,
political and social truths of that conflictwas so widely
popularized by the media in the 1960s that it became a household
phrase. A decade later, the lies of the Nixon administrationalready
shaken by the publication of the Pentagon Papers by the New
York Timesculminated in the eruption of the Watergate
scandal that forced the resignation of a criminal president.
Now, it is apparent that the administration has lied grossly
and openly to the American people and the entire world to justify
the launching of a war that was, in any event, in violation of
international law.
But the exposure of this massive political lie does not produce
condemnation, but new and even more insolent justifications in
the media.
We are dealing here with a serious political and social phenomenon
that needs to be analyzed and explained. This situation is telling
the American people something important and very disturbing about
the nature of the society in which they are living.
First, let us consider the objective significance of the political
lie. It must be considered not as a moral problem, but rather
as a social phenomenon. The lie is a manifestation of contradictions
within society. When an individual lies, he does so to bridge
or cover over the chasm between his personal interests and accepted
social norms. The lie, in this sense, arises out of the inherent
conflict between the individual and society. The extent, depth
and acuteness of that conflict will determine the scope and severity
of the liewhether it assumes the form of a relatively benign
and good-humored white lie or the more distressing
form of perjured testimony.
The lies told by a government are also the manifestations of
contradictionsnot those between the individual and society,
but between social classes. In the final analysis, the state is
an instrument of coercion that serves and protects the interests
of the dominant class within societythat is, the capitalist
class. But in a bourgeois democracy, that coercive role is mediated
and to some considerable extent concealed by the elaborate political
and legal superstructure that allows the state to appear as a
more or less impartial arbiter of diverse class and social interestsserving
the nation as a whole. The legitimacy of the state in the eyes
of the broad mass of the population depends upon it being viewed
in precisely this wayas the democratically elected representative
of the people as a whole.
As long as economic and political conditions permit and even
favor a policy of class compromise, the democratic illusion is
preservedand the political lies of the state are kept within
certain acceptable bounds. But in periods of increasingly acute
social tensions, when the interests of social classes diverge
ever more dramatically, the essential role of the state as an
instrument of class rule tends more and more to erode the democratic
veneer. It is precisely in such periods that the lies of the state
assume an ever more blatant and odious character. That is, the
function of the lie is to cover over the widening chasm between
the interests of the ruling elite that controls the state and
the broad mass of the population.
The weapons of mass destruction campaign rose organically out
of the need of the ruling elite to conceal from the broad mass
of the American people the rapacious class interests that underlay
the drive for war.
What would a speech that honestly explained the reasons for
war have sounded like? Let us imagine for a moment that Mr. Bush
had decided to explain to the American people the real reasons
for the war against Iraq. It might have gone something like this:
My fellow Americans: Tonight the United States has
initiated a massive bombardment of Iraq that will soon be followed
by a ground invasion of that countrys territory. Insofar
as this action is in complete violation of international law,
it is all the more necessary that I give you an honest explanation
for the actions of your government.
As you know, most members of my cabinet have occupied
very lucrative positions in major corporations, and quite a few
of us are intimately connected with the oil industry. My dad,
as you might know, made his fortune in that business and continues
to follow it closely. The only serious job I ever held before
entering politics was also in the oil business, and though I was
not particularly successful, I am highly sensitive to its concerns.
Our vice president, Dick Cheney, a good man, served recently as
CEO of Halliburton and is still receiving annual payments of $600,000
from that company, which plays a major role in the oil exploration
business.
This makes my administration acutely sensitive to
the problems of the international oil industry. Oil happens to
be a finite resource and there are many who believe that the world
will face critical shortages by 2025. So although there is a great
deal of money to be made in the oil industry, our decision to
go to war is not driven exclusively by personal considerations.
We also think it is important that the United States secure its
dominant world position by establishing through military means
unrestricted access to the oil reserves of the Persian Gulf region.
As a matter of fact, plans for the conquest of Iraq
have been in the works for about a decade. After the fall of the
Soviet Union, it became pretty clear that no one could stop the
United States from doing what it wanted; and so the United States
began developing plans for establishing an unchallengeable position
of global hegemony. In these plans, oil plays a big role and Iraqwhich
has the second largest proven oil reserves of any country in the
worldbecame a prime target for attack. Of course, we couldnt
just say that the United States wanted Iraq for its oil, so we
had to come up with some other reason. Thats how we all
came up with the idea of weapons of mass destruction.
Especially after September 11, the weapons of mass
destruction theme really came into its own. Frankly, we knew that
Iraq had nothing to do with September 11let alone with the
anthrax attacks in the United States, which were carried out by
some of the over-enthusiastic right-wing maniacs among my own
supporters. But whos asking any questions?
Anyway, the wars getting started today. It will
cost God-knows how many billions. But we figure that we can keep
the planned tax cut and still pay for the war by implementing
cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, and education.
You probably wont like the consequences, but,
hey, thats life. Anyway, 2004 is just around the corner,
and well all pretend to have an election then.
Thank you and God bless you all. My friends and I
will take care of ourselves.
No one, of course, expects this sort of candor in a speech
by an American presidentespecially one whose very tenure
in office is based on electoral fraud.
Still, the massive and blatant character of the lies upon which
this war was based, and the indifferent and cynical response of
the media, are significant manifestations of the general breakdown
of bourgeois democratic norms. The political life of the United
States reflects in ever more grotesque forms the increasingly
oligarchic character of the American state.
As an ever-greater percentage of the nations wealth is
concentrated in an ever smaller percentage of the population,
the ruling elites are unable to generate any genuine mass support
for the policies of the state. As the coincidence between the
interests of the oligarchy that controls the state and the broad
mass of the people becomes increasingly tenuous, lies play a critical
role in the daily manipulation of popular consciousness and the
concoction of what is palmed off in the media as public
opinion. Temporary and short-term successes may be achieved
on this basis. But the longer-term result of this daily process
of manipulation and deception is the irreparable alienation of
the people from official politics.
This alienation initially assumes a form that the superficial
observer mistakes for indifference and apathy. But beneath the
surface of official politics a complex social and intellectual
process is at work. The pressures of everyday life are slowly
but surely having their impact on mass consciousness.
It is true that consciousness lags behind being. But the link
between imperialism and the intensified exploitation and oppression
of the working class is not a socialist myth but an objective
fact. Inevitably the social implications of this new eruption
of American imperialism will be felt ever more acutely by the
working class in the United States.
Socialists must not only anticipate but also accelerate the
renewal of political class consciousness by establishing, socially
and programmatically, a new foundation for political struggle.
This means recognizing that the real mass base for the development
of a movement against imperialismwithin the United States
and internationallyis the working class. And it requires
a clear understanding that the fight against war cannot be separated
from the fight against the capitalist system.
See Also:
Into the maelstrom: the crisis
of American imperialism and the war against Iraq
[1 April 2003]
The war against Iraq
and Americas drive for world domination
[4 October 2002]
The crisis of American capitalism
and the war against Iraq
[21 March 2003]
The US war against Iraq: the
historical issues
[24 March 2003]
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