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Stop the war on the Iraqi people
By the Editorial Board
7 April 2004
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Little more than a year after the invasion of Iraq and four
months after the capture of Saddam Hussein, the Bush administration
has unleashed a new and bloody military offensive against the
Iraqi people.
These attacks against civilian population centers constitute
war crimes. They are being carried out with the deliberate aim
of intimidating the growing popular resistance to the US occupation.
The Iraqi dead surely number in the hundreds, though a precise
figure is not known. Many hundreds more men, women and children
have been wounded as rockets, shells and heavy machine-gun fire
rain down on densely populated urban neighborhoods.
American working people must demand an immediate halt to this
slaughter and the withdrawal of all US troops from Iraq. The claim
that this violence is justified retaliation for attacks on Iraqs
occupiers merits only contempt.
What is unfolding in Iraq is an uprising by the countrys
most oppressed workers and, in response, a brutal campaign of
colonial subjugation. While mouthing phrases about democracy,
the US governmentDemocrats and Republicans alikeis
seeking to drown the democratic aspirations of the Iraqi working
people in blood.
Both the Shiite slums of Baghdads Sadr City and the largely
Sunni population of Fallujah have been hit with massive firepower
from helicopter gunships, tanks and artillery. The casualties
include women and children slain by 50-caliber bullets crashing
through the walls and doors of their homes. Hospitals have been
shelled as well as ambulances. In one case, US forces fired on
an ambulance carrying a wounded pregnant woman to the hospital,
killing both the woman and her unborn child.
The operation conducted by US Marines in Fallujah has unfolded
under a veil of secrecy, with the media barred from the scene.
The US military has subjected this town of 500,000 to a siege,
barricading all roads in and out. Food deliveries have been halted
and people prevented from going to work. Access to Fallujahs
main hospital, which is situated across the Euphrates River, has
been cut off. A smaller private hospital inside the city has been
shelled by tanks and helicopters.
The correspondent from Aljazeera, one of the only sources
reporting from the besieged city, witnessed a burning car outside
the hospital with the body of the driver still inside. He also
reported that the residential neighborhood of Golan had been struck
by missiles and cluster bombs, with a number of houses destroyed.
Ostensibly, the siege of Fallujahdubbed Operation Vigilant
Resolveis in retaliation for the killing and mutilation
of four American paramilitary operatives in the city last week.
The incident, in which large numbers of men and youth participated,
laid bare the depth of popular hostility toward the occupation.
In reality, this operation is a further, planned escalation
of iron-fisted tactics already introduced by US forces in the
week leading up to the killing of the four American mercenaries.
Marines had already blockaded the main roads, in what now appears
to have been a dress rehearsal for the present lockdown of the
city. The stage is set for house-to-house raids that will inevitably
result in the random killing of many more Iraqis.
The simultaneous popular revolt that has spread from Baghdads
impoverished Shiite neighborhoods to Najaf, Nasiriya, Basra and
other parts of the predominantly Shiite south is likewise in response
to gross provocations on the part of the US occupation authorities.
First, US occupation chief Paul Bremer ordered troops to shut
down the weekly newspaper Al Hawza, which reflects the
views of the Shiite Muslim faction led by Moqtada al-Sadr, the
scion of a clerical clan whose prominent members were murdered
by the Saddam Hussein regime. Al-Sadr has adopted a posture of
militant opposition to the US occupation, winning the support
of Shiite workers and youth and the ire of the US authorities.
Even as they proclaimed their commitment to democracy, Bremer
and his cohorts decided to silence the criticism of Al Hawza
through the use of armed force.
Then came the arrest of a prominent aide to al-Sadr and the
threat to arrest al-Sadr himselfor, in the words of the
US military spokesman, to see that he was hunted down and
captured or killed. These provocative actions and threats,
combined with the gunning down of unarmed demonstrators by US-led
Iraqi security forces, ignited the pent-up anger of Iraqs
Shiite majority against the occupation.
It is difficult to say where the ignorance and arrogance of
the Bush administration and the Republican right operatives running
the US occupation authority end, and political calculation begins.
There are a number of reasons, however, to believe that the US
administration has deliberately sought to provoke a confrontation
in which it can carry out another set of shock and awe
military operations aimed at crushing the resistance of the Iraqi
people.
There is the looming self-imposed deadline of June 30 for what
is described as handing over sovereignty or a transfer
of power to an Iraqi interim government. That
this government will represent nothing more than an extension
of the puppet Governing Council created by the occupation authorities
is clear. It will enjoy no credibility, much less popular support,
among the Iraqi people. Real power will remain in the hands of
the US military and a massive US embassyplanned as the largest
in the world, with a staff of over 4,000 functionariesthat
is being set up in Baghdad.
Still, Washington is fearful that even the pretense of granting
authority to a Quisling regime can trigger popular upheavals that
may prove impossible to contain. The present operations are aimed
at crushing opposition elements before this political charade
takes place.
Related to this deadline are the petty political calculations
of the Bush administration, which is anxious to avoid an explosion
in Iraq in the immediate run-up to the US elections in November.
It hopes somehow to pull off a transfer of power,
however fraudulent, in order to stave off mounting opposition
to the continued occupation within the US itself.
Finally, there is the question of tactical opportunity. It
seems more than fortuitous that fighting has erupted throughout
the country at the very moment when US troop strength is at its
peak. The massive rotation of US forcesinvolving the deployment
and withdrawal of a combined total of 250,000 troopsis in
full swing. At present, there is an overlap that has temporarily
increased the number of US soldiers in Iraq from 120,000 to 134,000.
The Pentagon and the Bush White House see this increased firepower
as an opportunity to escalate their war against the Iraqi people.
More conscious elements within the US ruling elite have for
some time been warning that the situation in Iraq is spinning
out of control, and urging that the Bush administration carry
out more intense repression. Thus, the Washington Post
published an editorial Tuesday entitled A Necessary Fight,
which welcomed the eruption of the bloodiest combat since the
US military marched into Baghdad a year ago.
...[T]here may ultimately be a benefit to this confrontation,
which began just 88 days before the scheduled transfer of sovereignty
from the US-led occupation authority to a new Iraqi government,
the Post declared in response to hundreds of Iraqi casualties,
and the death of over a dozen US soldiers in a 24-hour period.
It described the bloodletting as a painful but necessary
battle and declared that US commanders should not
hesitate to act quickly and use overwhelming force to suppress
the common revolt of Sunni and Shiite workers and youth.
While acknowledging that the fighting had a cost in Iraqi
and American lives, the newspaper of record of the Washington
establishment insisted that the alternativeto step
back from confrontation with Iraqs extremistswould
invite even worse trouble.
What is emerging in Iraq is a war of national resistance that
has transcended the religious divides that many had predicted
would erupt into an internecine civil war. The Iraqi resistance
against US occupation is just as legitimate as the struggles waged
by the French resistance against German occupation in the 1940s
and the liberation struggles that swept the colonial countries
in the 1960s and 1970s. The claims of the administration and its
apologists that the US is fighting only a small minority of extremists
and terrorists in Iraq will be rejected by all those
in the US who are capable of independent and critical thought.
The tactics employed against both the people of Fallujah and
the Shiite rebels are reminiscent of the methods of reprisal and
collective punishment perfected by the Nazi regime in occupied
Europe 60 years ago. They are aimed at intimidating the population
as a whole through the use of overwhelming military violence and
the policy of exemplary punishment. That such measures can be
carried out without provoking even a murmur of protest from the
corporate media and the Democratic politicians is a telling measure
of the degradation of establishment politics in the US.
The presumptive Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry,
giving full-throated support to the US colonial enterprise in
Iraq, has criticized the Bush administration for seeking to cede
authority to the Iraqis too soon. I think they wanted to
get the troops out and get the transfer out of the way as fast
as possible without regard to the stability of Iraq, Kerry
declared.
How is that stability to be achieved? It requires
the ruthless repression of all those who oppose the US domination
of Iraq and believe that the country should be run by the Iraqi
people themselves, rather than US proconsuls, generals and corporate
profiteers.
The Democratic program amounts to a protracted bloodbath to
secure the control of US corporations and banks over the oil wealth
of Iraq and the entire region. To prosecute this policy, Kerry
and others in the Democratic leadership have repeatedly demanded
that the number of US occupation troops be increased, ensuring
that US casualtiesalready reaching nearly 625 dead and many
thousands woundedlikewise mount.
This is the policy that is being peddled by those who claim
the struggle against war and reaction must be reduced to the slogan
of anybody but Bushthat is, the replacement
of a Republican administration by a Democratic one. It means support
for continued war and occupation in Iraq, and the attacks on democratic
rights and social conditions that are the inevitable domestic
expression of this militarist policy.
The Socialist Equality Party places at the center of its election
platform the demand for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal
of all US and coalition troops from Iraq.
American soldiers were sent to war based on the lie that they
were protecting the American people from weapons of mass destruction
and terrorism, and liberating the Iraqi people. They are now being
ordered to carry out actions that many know are morally indefensible.
It is imperative that they be taken out of harms way before
more are killed or irreparably maimed, both physically and psychologically.
Against Kerry and other Democrats who claim that failure
is not an option in Iraq, we insist that failure
is both inevitable and necessary. A US success in
the recolonization of Iraq by means of military aggression, mass
killings and violent repression would only set the stage for even
bloodier imperialist crimes.
A defeat for the US government in Iraq would represent a devastating
setback for American imperialism. It would intensify popular opposition
to militarism, and thoroughly discredit the neo-colonialist agenda
of the US ruling elite.
As the devastating consequences of this war of choice
become increasingly obvious to the broad mass of working people,
the demand for the full exposure and punishment of those responsible
for this criminal enterprise will grow.
Against the program of militarism, global hegemony and colonial
conquest supported by Democrats and Republicans alike, the SEP
advocates a socialist foreign policy that would guarantee the
right of the working people of the Middle East to determine their
own political destiny and control the natural resources of their
region.
The SEP and its presidential and vice presidential candidates,
Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence, demand that the vast resources
now being squandered to subjugate and slaughter people in Iraq
and elsewhere be utilized to raise the living standards of working
people in the US and the rest of the world, and create the conditions
for genuine worldwide cooperation and social equality.
See Also:
Operation Iraqi Bloodbath: US prepares
reprisals against uprising
[6 April 2004]
Shiite uprising erupts against US occupation
of Iraq
[5 April 2004]
The real lessons of Fallujah
[3 April 2004]
US shuts down anti-occupation
Iraqi newspaper
[30 March 2004]
One year since the US invasion
of Iraq
[19 March 2004]
Iraq's illegitimate interim
constitution
[13 March 2004]
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