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Desperate over growing debacle:
Bush justifies Iraq occupation with lies on terror
By the Editorial Board
8 September 2003
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Faced with the deepening debacle of the US military occupation
of Iraq and growing popular opposition at home, President Bush
delivered a televised speech to the American people Sunday in
which he attempted to justify the continuing slaughter there with
claims that are recognized internationally as patent lies.
Timed just four days before the second anniversary of the September
11 attacks, Bushs speech started from the deceitful premise
that Iraq was somehow responsible for the tragic events in New
York City and Washington that day.
Nearly two years ago, following deadly attacks on our
country, we began a systematic campaign against terrorism,
Bush began, asserting that first the war in Afghanistan and then
the invasion of Iraq were carried out in retaliation for September
11.
We acted in Iraq, Bush said, where the former
regime sponsored terror, possessed and used weapons of mass destruction
and for 12 years defied the clear demands of the United Nations
Security Council. Our coalition enforced these international demands
in one of the swiftest and most humane military campaigns in history.
Bushs speech followed the release last week of a poll
indicating that nearly 70 percent of the American public believes
that Iraq was somehow responsible for attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon, despite the fact that not a single Iraqi
was among the 19 people identified as the airplane hijackers and
the acknowledgement by administration officials themselves that
there is no evidence tying the regime of Saddam Hussein to the
attacks.
The public misconception is the product of an extraordinary
level of complicity between the Bush administration and the media
to distort reality, conceal information and terrorize the public
into supporting a war of aggression.
It is significant that this lie is recycled for public consumption
in the United States on the very weekend that the press in Europe
and elsewhere around the globe has taken note of a comprehensive
article by a former leading cabinet minister in the British government
(see: British official charges US stood
down on 9/11) charging that the Bush administration
allowed the September 11 attacks to take place in order to create
a pretext for launching longstanding plans to conquer Iraq and
lay hold of its oil wealth.
Bushs resurrection of the false claim that Iraq was responsible
for September 11 is a measure of his administrations desperation
as the other main lie floated to justify the warthat US
intervention was required to eliminate dangerous stockpiles of
weapons of mass destructionhas been totally discredited.
Having scoured the country for five months, the US military has
found not a trace of the tens of thousands of liters of deadly
chemical and biological weapons materials that Washington claimed
were in Iraq in the months leading up to the invasion.
Meanwhile, the other claims made by the White House and the
Pentagonthat Iraqis would welcome US troops as liberators
and that Iraqi oil would finance the occupation as well as lucrative
contracts for US corporations to reconstruct the war-ravaged countryhave
proven equally false.
Mounting US casualties
US soldiers are dying on a daily basis in ambushes and attacks
that those on the ground in Iraq attribute to a growing resistance
movement that enjoys broad popular support. The inability of 130,000
US troops to maintain even a semblance of security has been brought
painfully home by a series of four deadly car bombings that have
sent the United Nations and other international agencies fleeing
the country and caused the countrys majority Shiite community
to demand the end of the foreign occupation and the deployment
of its own armed militias.
Oil production, subjected to continuous sabotage attacks, is
at less than half the pre-war level and is projected by optimistic
US administrators to reach that levelonly a fraction of
what Iraqs oil fields are capable of producingonly
after another year.
Bush described those resisting US occupation as a collection
of killers and terrorists whose attacks are
directed against decency, freedom and progress.
They want us to leave Iraq before our work is done,
he said. They want to shake the will of the civilized world.
This remarkperhaps the only true statement in the speechserves
as an apt description of every movement of oppressed peoples to
throw off the domination of the colonizers and oppressors of the
civilized world. The work that the Bush
administration set out to do in Iraq is plunder. Its aim was to
use overwhelming military force to conquer the country, seize
control of its oil fields and turn it into an American-controlled
protectorate.
Perhaps the most amazing aspect of the Bush administrations
strategy was its apparent belief that all this could be accomplished
without provoking mass resistance from a people with a powerful
tradition of struggle against colonial rule.
The decency, freedom and progress that the US occupation
has brought to Iraq has included the killing of thousands, brutal
daily raids on the civilian population, the mass imprisonment
of suspected opponents, the wiping out of the vast majority of
workers jobs and a shattered infrastructure that is unable
to provide the population with regular electricity, clean water
and other basic necessities. It is these conditions that have
created popular support for those Bush brands as terrorists.
The one piece of new information contained in the US presidents
speech was his announcement that he will seek an additional appropriation
from Congress of $87 billion. He said that out of this total,
the vast majority$66 billionwould go to cover military
and intelligence operations in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere,
while just $21 billion would be earmarked for reconstruction costs
in both of those countries.
According to conservative estimates, at least $15 billion is
needed to rebuild Iraqs electricity system alone. Another
$12 billion would be required to restore its water system.
While the money proposed will not even begin to repair the
damage done by US bombings and economic sanctions, the vast sums
that are being expended on the military will further swell a record
federal deficit that is now projected to reach nearly $500 billion.
Washingtons shakedown operation
Bush said that one of his central objectives was expanding
international cooperation in the reconstruction and security of
Iraq. Essentially, this amounts to an international shakedown
operation. Having contemptuously rejected the objections of other
governments to an illegal and unilateral US war, the Bush administration
is now demanding that they ante up to pay for the American occupation.
While Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld dismissed France and
Germany as old Europe, when they opposed a United
Nations resolution sanctioning a US invasion, the US administration
is reduced to begging for some of their old money,
to bail it out of what has clearly become a bloody quagmire.
Bushs argument that these countries are obliged to finance
US operations because the war in Iraq is being waged against terrorism
is unlikely to have the desired effect in Europe, where the US
war of aggression is largely seen as producing a far greater threat
of terrorist actions against Western targets.
On the eve of Bushs speech, Secretary of State Colin
Powell made his own address, claiming that Washington was still
committed to multilateralism and appealing for a new spirit of
unity between the major imperialist powers.
For too many years, too many centuries, the imperial
habits of great powers squandered untold resources, and talent
and lives, jousting for real estate, glory and gold, Powell
said. Instead of wasting lives and treasure opposing each
other as in the past, todays powers can pull in the same
direction to solve problems common to all.
Yet in Iraq, this common good is presented as Europe
bankrolling an occupation that leaves Washington in complete control
of Iraq and in a position to dictate the terms for the privatization
and takeover of its vast oil industry. Moreover, the consolidation
of a military stranglehold over the Persian Gulf region places
US imperialism in a position to dictate economic terms to its
major rivals in both Europe and Japan. Sermons about the folly
of imperial rivalries are unlikely to convince these rivals to
bow to US demands.
Finally, Bush said he was pushing for the United Nations Security
Council to approve a new resolution creating a so-called multinational
force to be placed under US command. This planessentially
to bring troops from countries such as India and Pakistan to take
over the security posts where American soldiers are presently
being shot on a daily basishas met with broad opposition
because of Washingtons refusal to cede any of its unilateral
control over Iraq. Even with a UN resolution, it is by no means
clear that the troops would be forthcoming, given the broad popular
opposition to any participation in the US occupation.
Bushs rhetoric about US troops serving on the front
lines of freedom will not likely have the desired effect
on American soldiers in Iraq, who are demanding with increasing
anger that they be brought home and who heard no suggestion from
the president that they will be.
The mounting hostility within the American military toward
the neo-colonial project in Iraq found sharp expression in a speech
delivered last week by retired General Anthony Zinni to an audience
of active-duty US Marine and naval officers.
There is no strategy or mechanism for putting the pieces
together, Zinni, the former commander of US forces in the
Middle East, told the assembled officers. Were in
danger of failing.
The retired general drew a direct parallel between the present
quagmire in Iraq and the catastrophe suffered by the US military
in Vietnam, strongly suggesting that senior commanders feel betrayed
by the Bush administration.
My contemporaries, our feelings and sensitivities were
forged on the battlefields of Vietnam, where we heard the garbage
and the lies, and we saw the sacrifice, Zinni said. I
ask you, is it happening again? The Washington Post
reported that after the meeting officers bought tapes and compact
discs of the speech to give to their colleagues.
It is now just over four months since Bush strutted across
the deck of the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln in a flight suit,
declaring major combat operations over and the US militarys
mission accomplished. Since that day nearly 150 US
soldiers have died in Iraq and perhaps ten times as many have
been woundedcasualties that already exceed the numbers incurred
during the invasion itself.
Having launched a illegal war based on predatory aims, the
administration now confronts the disintegration of its entire
policy and all of the ideological assumptions upon which it was
based. Whether the Bush White House achieves its aims of securing
European money and south Asian troops or not, continued US occupation
will only mean increasing numbers of deadboth US and Iraqiand
stepped up attacks on social conditions, jobs and incomes of American
workers to pay for the suppression of the justified opposition
of the Iraqi people to foreign domination.
Against the Bush administrations desperate schemes for
salvaging this criminal enterprise, American working people must
raise the demand for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal
of all US troops from Iraq and Afghanistan.
See Also:
Bush seeks UN bailout of Iraqi occupation
[4 September 2003]
The Najaf bombing: US occupation yields
catastrophe
[1 September 2003]
Iraq: Attack on UN spurs plans
for international military force
[30 August 2003]
The UN, de Mello and the US
occupation of Iraq
[28 August 2003]
The Iraq quagmire
[21 August 2003]
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