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Hands off Iraq! Withdraw all US forces from the Middle East
now! Build an antiwar movement based on the international working
class!
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party
24 October 2003
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The following statement is being distributed in Washington
DC, San Francisco and other cities on October 25 at protests organized
against the US war and occupation in Iraq. It has also been posted
in PDF format, and we urge our readers
and supporters to download and distribute it in their areas.
As tens of thousands prepare to march October 25 in Washington
DC and other cities to demonstrate their opposition to the Bush
administrations policies of war and conquest in Iraq, the
Socialist Equality Party calls for the building of an international
antiwar movement based on the working class.
Six months after Bush declared the end of major combat operations,
it is time to draw a balance sheet on the various strategies that
have been advanced for the antiwar movement. Those who headed
the mass demonstrations in the run-up to the war advocated a strategy
of protest and pressure on the institutions, governments and political
parties of the ruling class. What have been the results?
The war was launched in defiance of the largest international
protest demonstrations in history. These protests clearly expressed
the views of the majority of the worlds population. But
the US government pushed ahead with military action, responding
to the only constituency that actively lobbied for warcorporate
America, which dominates the two political parties and the media.
This experience demonstrates that the fight against war requires
not a strategy based on illusions that the ruling elite can be
persuaded to abandon its policies of militarism and war, but rather
a political struggle for power against the governments responsible
for aggression.
The role of the Democratic Party
This means opposing not simply Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld &
Co., but also the Democratic Party, which shares political responsibility
for the war. One year ago the congressional Democratic leadership
backed the resolution giving Bush the authority to wage war. Six
months ago they overwhelming approved $79 billion to pay for the
conquest of Iraq.
The sponsors of the October 25 march on Washington recently
issued an appeal to Congress to reject the Bush administrations
proposed $87 billion appropriation for the continued occupation
of Iraq. Within days of this appeal, both houses of Congress approved
the request by top-heavy bipartisan majorities: 87-12 in the Senate
and 303-125 in the House. The vast majority of Senate Democrats
and half of the Democrats in the House of Representatives voted
for the bill.
Bush lied in order to conceal the real motives for the warthe
conquest of Iraqs oil resources and the seizure of a key
strategic position in the Middle Eastbecause the American
people would not have supported a war for these objectives. The
Democratic politicians share these secret motives. The Democratic
Party, no less than the Republicans, is a party of American imperialism
that defends the national interests of the giant corporations
and banks.
Howard Dean, the current front-runner for the Democratic presidential
nomination, may posture as a diehard opponent of the war, but
he supports the US occupation of Iraq, as does General Wesley
Clark, who commanded NATO forces in the 1999 bombing blitz of
Yugoslavia. These candidates try to have it both ways, claiming
the war was unnecessary and illegal, while sanctioning continued
US control of the country and its oil wealth.
Democrat Dennis Kucinich adopts a superficially more militant
antiwar stance, calling for immediate withdrawal of American troops
from Iraq. But in advocating a UN peacekeeping force to replace
US troops, Kucinich simply proposes to substitute one form of
colonial-style rule for another. It is no more humanitarian
for Iraqis to be shot down by Turkish or Pakistani troops than
by American or British forces.
The United Nations is not a force for peace. It is an instrument
of the imperialist powers. In the period leading up to the war,
opposition from France, Germany and Russia blocked a resolution
authorizing the US attack on Iraq. These countries were acting
to secure their own imperialist interests, which they saw threatened
by US domination of the Persian Gulf and its oil resources. Since
then, they have adapted themselves to the new US role.
The UN Security Council ratified the US conquest and most recently
adopted a resolution giving its seal of approval to the long-term
American occupation of Iraq. The UN has thereby countenanced the
transformation of Iraq into a virtual colony of the United States.
The Socialist Equality Party rejects the claim that continued
US control of Iraq is in the interests of the American people.
On the contrary, this colonial occupation leads inevitably to
ever greater sacrifices, whose cost, in both blood and money,
will be extracted from the working class of the United States.
More and more American youth will be killed and maimed while the
attacks on workers social conditions, jobs and living standards
are intensified. Bushs $87 billion is only the down payment.
The more the United States maintains its grip on Iraq, the
more the Bush administration will be emboldened to carry out new
military adventures. Already the campaign of lies and propaganda
against Syria, Iran and North Korea shows the next targets for
US aggression. Within the United States, the growth of militarism
threatens the democratic rights of the American people, already
eroded by the repressive measures enacted in the name of the war
on terror.
A strategy to fight militarism and war
There is only one mass social force in the US and around the
world whose basic interests are irreconcilably in conflict with
those of the capitalist ruling elite and can marshal the power
to put an end to imperialist war. That force is the working class.
A serious struggle against war must be based on mobilizing
working people in a political movement directed against the Bush
administration and the two-party system. It must connect the struggle
against war with the struggle against the destruction of jobs,
social services, living standards and democratic rights.
The Socialist Equality Party calls on workers and young people
to oppose the US occupation of Iraq and demand the immediate and
unconditional withdrawal of all American military forces from
the Middle East and Central Asia.
We oppose the substitution of indirect colonialism through
the United Nations for direct American rule. All foreign forces
must be withdrawn from Iraq and the Iraqi people freed to decide
their own fate.
The only international involvement in Iraq should be the provision
of massive economic and technical aid, financed by reparations
paid by the United States and Britain, as well as by countries
such as France, Germany, Japan and Russia that supported the preceding
12 years of economic blockade that devastated Iraqs economy.
The SEP demands an investigation into the background of the
decision to go to war, which should include the criminal indictment
and prosecution of those government officials in the United States
and Britain who plotted aggressive war against the people of Iraq.
On the basis of such an investigation, reparations to Iraq should
be combined with compensation to US soldiers and their families
for the deaths and injuries caused by the decisions of the Bush
administration.
Such an investigation should also include a thorough examination
of the September 11 terrorist attacks, including the role played
by American foreign policy in the Middle East, the direct involvement
of US intelligence agencies in the creation, training and ongoing
activities of Al Qaeda, and in the terrorist attacks on New York
and Washington themselves.
The lineup of the Democrats behind the US occupation of Iraq
demonstrates that the Democratic Party represents no alternative
to the Bush administration. American working people are politically
disenfranchised, saddled with a two-party system in which both
parties are controlled by the corporate elite. The working class
must build a new political party of its own, based on a socialist
program and steadfastly opposed to American imperialism.
American working people must learn the lessons of history.
Our enemy is not the people of Iraq, or of the Muslim world, or
of great power rivals like France, Germany, Russia and China.
Our enemy is the American corporate elite, the government which
they control, and their political servants in both the Democratic
and Republican parties. The great strategic task is to build the
Socialist Equality Party as the political instrument of the working
class.
See Also:
White House bans news coverage of coffins
returning from Iraq
[23 October 2003]
As Bush lies, Iraq seethes against US
occupation
[18 October 2003]
UN estimate for rebuilding Iraq half
that of Bushswheres the money going?
[11 October 2003]
WMD report: more proof Iraq war was based
on lies
[4 October 2003]
As Washington readies reconstruction
Iraqis riot over unemployment, corruption
[2 October 2003]
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