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Analysis : Middle
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The New York Times: a proposal for ethnic cleansing
in Iraq
By Bill Vann
26 November 2003
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With popular resistance mounting to its military occupation
of Iraq, the Bush administration is casting about in increasing
desperation for a new strategy to salvage the principal aims of
its warthe seizure of oil resources and the establishment
of a US client regime in a strategically vital region.
While plans have been announced for Washington to erect a sovereign
Iraqi regime by the middle of next year, this hollow exercise
holds little prospect for ending a bitter conflict that is claiming
the lives of American soldiers daily and creating growing political
unrest in the US itself.
Enter the New York Times with a modest proposal for
a bloodbath. It advances what it terms a three-state solution,
based on the partition of Iraq along ethnic and religious lines.
The proposal appeared in a November 25 column by Leslie Gelb,
a former editor and senior columnist for the Times. Gelb
calls for dividing Iraq between the Kurds in the north,
Sunnis in the center and Shiites in the south.
He continues: Almost immediately, this would allow America
to put most of its money and troops where they would do the most
good quicklywith the Kurds and Shiites. The United States
could extricate most of its forces from the so-called Sunni Triangle,
north and west of Baghdad, largely freeing American forces from
fighting a costly war they might not win. American officials could
then wait for the troublesome and domineering Sunnis, without
oil or oil revenues, to moderate their ambitions or suffer the
consequences.
Gelbs proposal is a clear manifestation of another trianglea
reactionary nexus between the US State Department, Israeli intelligence
and the editorial board of the New York Times.
Until recently, Gelb headed the Council on Foreign Affairs,
the influential Washington think tank that provides a forum for
corporate executives, CIA and State Department officials, and
a select group of establishment journalists and academics with
intimate ties to these camps. Gelb himself followed stints at
the Pentagon and the State Department with his position as columnist
and editor at the Times. There is no doubt that his piece
on Iraq gives voice to policies that are under active consideration
within the top levels of the US government.
The obvious attraction for Washington in the partition proposal
advanced by Gelb is that by dismembering Iraq it would allow the
deployment of US troops in the areas that are of the greatest
strategic concern: the oilfields in the predominantly Shiite south
and the largely Kurdish north, while the Sunni population, which
has dominated Iraqi political life since the days of Ottoman rule
and has been the most hostile to the US occupation, would be left
stranded in an isolated mini-state stripped of its resources.
Just as Iraqs boundaries were artificially drawn by the
British after World War I to further colonial ambitions and establish
control over oil reserves, so, according to Gelbs thesis,
they can be redrawn by the regions new US imperialist master
to further similar aims.
It is not only in Washington, however, that this proposal finds
support. The partition of Iraq has long been a strategic objective
of the Israeli regime. An article that appeared in the World Zionist
Organizations publication Kivunim in 1982, on the
eve of Israels invasion of Lebanon and in the midst of the
Iran-Iraq war, spelled this out. Written by Oded Yinon, an official
in the Israeli foreign ministry, the article was entitled, A
Strategy for Israel in the 1980s. It stated, in part:
Iraq, rich in oil on the one hand and internally torn
on the other, is guaranteed as a candidate for Israels targets.
Its dissolution is even more important for us than that of Syria.
Iraq is stronger than Syria. In the short run it is Iraqi power
which constitutes the greatest threat to Israel. An Iraqi-Iranian
war will tear Iraq apart and cause its downfall at home even before
it is able to organize a struggle on a wide front against us.
Every kind of inter-Arab confrontation will assist us in the short
run and will shorten the way to the more important aim of breaking
up Iraq into denominations as in Syria and in Lebanon. In Iraq,
a division into provinces along ethnic/religious lines as in Syria
during Ottoman times is possible. So, three (or more) states will
exist around the three major cities: Basra, Baghdad and Mosul,
and Shiite areas in the south will separate from the Sunni and
Kurdish north. It is possible that the present Iranian-Iraqi confrontation
will deepen this polarization.
Israel actively sought to promote this agenda, offering covert
support both to the Khomeini regime in Iran and the Kurdish separatist
movements in Iraq itself.
Washington had previously opposed such a partition on the grounds
that it would destabilize the entire region and remove a strategic
counterbalance to Iran, which in the wake of the 1979 revolution
was seen as the greater threat to US interests. Clearly, however,
if the US is planning to maintain permanent military bases on
Iraqi soil and preparing further wars in the region, these calculations
have changed.
What is most breathtaking about Gelbs proposal is its
utter indifference to the welfare of the Iraqi population, not
to mention international law.
He warns that the Sunni population in central Iraq might
punish the substantial minorities left out of the ethnic
states to be created in the north and south. These minorities
must have the time and the wherewithal to organize and make their
deals, or go either north or south, he writes. This
would be a messy and dangerous enterprise, but the United States
would and should pay for the population movements and protect
the process with force.
What is proposed here is the uprooting of masses of people
and the igniting of an ethnic bloodbath the likes of which has
not been seen since the British partition of India 55 years ago,
when a million Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs were slaughtered and
some 14 million people were driven from their homes.
Baghdads largest neighborhood, Sadr City, a sprawling
slum named after a Shiite leader killed under the Saddam Hussein
regime, is home to some 2 million residents, most of them Shiites.
These impoverished masses, the vast majority of whom have never
lived anywhere else, are supposed to make their deals
or move south. The same presumably holds true for the substantial
Assyrian and Turkoman populations in the north.
It should be recalled that in the mid-1990s Gelb, together
with Times columnist Anthony Lewis, was one of the principal
media advocates for US intervention in the Balkans, demanding
that Washington punish the Serbs for ethnic cleansing.
Now it is precisely such a bloody process that Gelb advocates
for Iraq.
Indeed, Gelb cites the dismemberment of the Yugoslav federation
along ethno-nationalist lines beginning in 1991 as a hopeful
precedent for what his plan envisions in Iraq. The column
makes clear once again thatthe human rights propaganda used
to justify the 1999 US/NATO attack on Serbia notwithstandingthe
attitude of US policy makers towards ethnic cleansing is quite
flexible. It depends upon who is doing it and whether it furthers
Washingtons strategic interests.
Overwhelming force was the best chance for keeping Yugoslavia
whole and even that failed in the end, Gelb writes. Meantime,
the costs of preventing the natural states from emerging had been
terrible.
Here the former official of the Pentagon/State Department and
Times editor offers a false and self-serving explanation
for Yugoslavias disintegration, while providing a glimpse
of the reactionary conceptions underlying what Washington depicts
as a crusade for democracy in Iraq. Yugoslavias breakup
was not the triumph of natural states against overwhelming
force. It was the byproduct of economic shock therapy
policies imposed by the International Monetary Fund and other
world financial institutions that led to the collapse of the countrys
national economy and the destruction of the jobs and living standards
of masses of working people.
In an attempt to divert the resulting social unrest, Stalinist
bureaucrats and communalist demagogues fomented nationalist sentiments
while seeking patrons among the major powers. The principal aim
of Washington and the other imperialist powers became the transformation
of the splintered territories of the former Yugoslavia into a
collection of semi-colonies.
A carve-up of Iraq will similarly be a process imposed by US
imperialism against the interests of all Iraqi people, rather
than any realization of pent-up demands for ethnic self-determination.
The idea that Iraq is no more than a collection of natural
states composed of different ethnic groups yearning to live
separately is not only backward but also, from the standpoint
of US policy in the region, wholly inconsistent.
If Washington were truly to embrace this conception of natural,
i.e., ethnic states, then it could not but welcome the unification
of the Kurdish people, presently divided by the borders separating
Iraq, Turkey, Iran and Syria. Likewise, it would have to support
the unification of the Shiites of southern Iraq with their coreligionists
in neighboring Iran, not to mention eastern Saudi Arabia, in one
contiguous state. But, in fact, the Bush administration has made
it clear it is prepared to use overwhelming military force against
anyone daring to attempt such a natural form of statecraft.
The proposal to dismember Iraq along ethnic lines is a stark
expression of the predatory character of the US intervention.
Notwithstanding the Bush administrations rhetoric about
liberating Iraq and turning it into a beacon
of democracy for the Middle East, the conceptions advanced
by Gelb demonstrate that Washington has no answers to the complex
historical and political problems posed in Iraq. Its only aim
is to exploit existing divisions to further the profit interests
of the oil conglomerates and other US-based corporations and banks.
An ethnic carve-up of Iraq would have far-reaching implications
throughout the Middle East, where the boundaries of none of the
existing states are a natural reflection of ethnic
identity, but rather are the legacy of the previous division of
the region between British and French imperialism. Any number
of these states could also be dismembered, and proposals already
exist to do just that. Within the civilian leadership in the Pentagon,
for example, there has been discussion of the US fostering a breakaway
Shiite Muslim republic of east Arabia, as a means
of prying loose the vast oil reserves of Saudi Arabia from the
crumbling monarchy.
Such policies have an attraction for the Israeli regime that
goes well beyond its security concerns and regional ambitions.
The principle that borders should be drawn according to ethnic
and religious identity finds direct expression in the demand by
elements within Israels right-wing Likud government for
a policy of transfer, i.e., the forced expulsion of
the Palestinian population from both the occupied territories
and Israels pre-1967 borders so as to realize the exclusively
Jewish character of the Zionist state. Should the US begin massive
population transfers in Iraq, the Israelis could well be emboldened
to follow suit.
For its part, the New York Times publication of
its former editors recommendation to the Bush administration
for the carve-up of Iraq represents the continuation of its promotion
and justification of the illegal war, as well as its long-standing
defense of Israeli interests. With the Gelb column, however, the
newspaper has abandoned its pretense of liberal humanitarianism
to openly promote a war crime of world-historic proportions.
See Also:
The New York Times sours
on Bushs new plan for Iraq
[19 November 2003]
Israel: Ethnic cleansing
is now official government policy
[3 December 2002]
US attitude toward
ethnic cleansing depends on whos doing it
[3 April 1999]
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