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Analysis : Middle
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WSWS Chairman David North denounces Iraq war at Dublin debate
By David North
15 October 2004
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The Philosophical Society of Trinity College in Dublin,
Ireland held its annual debate on American foreign policy on the
evening of October 14. The proposition debated before an audience
of more than 200 people was: This House Believes that America
is Still the Worlds Peacekeeper.
World Socialist Web Site Chairman David North, invited by
the Philosophical Society to participate in the debate, spoke
in opposition to the proposition. Other speakers opposing the
resolution included Irish Senator David Norris, Chris Marsden,
national secretary of the Socialist Equality Party in Britain,
and Leonard Doyle, the foreign editor of the Independent newspaper
in Britain.
Speakers in support of the resolution included John Micktlethwait,
the United States editor of the London Economist, Richard
Aldous, a historian and international relations specialist at
University College in Dublin, and Paul MacDonald of the Open Republic
Institution. Following the speeches, the debate audience voted
overwhelmingly to reject the resolution.
We reprint below the speech delivered by David North.
First of all, I would like to thank the Philosophical Society
for inviting me to participate in this debate on the foreign policy
of the United States. I welcome this opportunity to speak on behalf
of those many millions of Americans who are irreconcilably opposed
to the occupation of Iraq, loathe the Bush administration and
everything it stands for, and are deeply ashamed of what has been
done and is being done by the US government in the name of the
American people.
An unbridgeable moral chasm divides the political establishment,
intoxicated with delusions of imperialist grandeur, from the millions
of working class people who hate war, want no part of an American
empire, do not want to kill or conquer anyone, have no financial
interests in the oil fields of the Middle East and Central Asia,
and believe in their hearts the words of Lincolnthat it
is right that makes might, and not the other way round.
The proposition before this House, That the United States
is still the worlds peacekeeper, turns international
political reality on its head. To call the United States a peacekeeper
is akin to describing an undertaker as an after-life enhancement
specialist.
American imperialism, in pursuit of global hegemony, is the
principal instigator of violence, exploitation and inhumanity
in the world today. Its foreign policy has assumed the character
of a vast international criminal exercise. While proclaiming a
war against terrorism, the United States has become the only nation
in the world whose head of state has publicly and officially embraced
terrorism as the foundation of the strategic doctrine of his government.
This is the essential significance of President Bushs proclamation
in September 2002 of the doctrine of pre-emptive war.
The word terrorism has a complex historical pedigree
and, over time, has acquired many different political usages.
But if we are to employ this term in its broadest and most general
modern senseas the premeditated and illegal use of violence
(or the threat to use violence) against other states and their
people in order to achieve certain strategic political and economic
aims; as the deliberate infliction of terrible injury and death
calculated to intimidate, frighten and coerce other states and
their civilian populations into submitting to the demands of the
perpetrator of terrorthen the supreme and most dreadful
form of terrorism is war itself.
From this standpoint, the doctrine of pre-emptive war, and
its initial implementation in the form of the invasion and subjugation
of Iraq, represent a dangerous historical regressionaway
from principles of international law established in response to
the blood-soaked events of the first half of the twentieth century,
towards a revival of the sort of imperialistic criminality once
practiced by the Nazi Reich.
In the nineteenth century, von Clausewitzs dictum that
war was, in essence, politics conducted by other means guided
the diplomacy and military policies of the great powers. But in
the aftermath of World War I, the transformation of Europe into
a slaughterhouse could not be described as simply another form
of politics. The concept of war guilt emerged: that governments
could be held responsible and accountable for waging aggressive
war. The resort to war in pursuit of strategic geo-political and
economic objectivesthat is, for reasons other than self-defense
defined in the strictest sense of the termbegan to be seen
in international law as a crime that could not be justified on
the basis of traditional and conventional reasons of state.
The next major step toward the criminalization of aggressive
war was the famous treaty for the Renunciation of War, negotiated
by the American secretary of state, Frank Kellogg, in 1928. The
Kellogg-Briand Pact did not explicitly make its violation a punishable
offense, a weakness that the Allied Powers were determined to
correct at the conclusion of World War II. Article 6(a) of the
Charter of the International Military Tribunal, upon which the
Nuremberg prosecution of Nazi leaders was based, defined as crimes
against peace the planning, preparation, initiation
or waging of a war of aggression, or a war in violation of international
treaties, agreements or assurances, or participation in a common
plan or conspiracy for the accomplishment of any of the foregoing.
The International Tribunal declared, moreover, that War
is essentially an evil thing. Its consequences are not confined
to the belligerent states alone, but affect the whole world. To
initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international
crime, it is the supreme international crime differing from other
war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil
of the whole.
In 1945-46, the United States was the most emphatic advocate
of the proposition that the waging of aggressive war constituted
a crime. Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson, who headed the
American prosecution staff, stated that the legal principles underlying
the Nuremberg prosecutions were universally valid. He insisted
that if certain acts in violation of treaties are crimes,
they are crimes whether the United States does them or whether
Germany does them, and we are not prepared to lay down a rule
of criminal conduct against others that we would not be willing
to have invoked against us.
Much has changed since those words were uttered. The promulgation
of the doctrine of pre-emptive war in September 2002 and its implementation
in March 2003 with the launching of an aggressive war against
Iraq represents nothing less than the unequivocal repudiation
by the United States of the legal principles that were enforced
against the Nazi ringleaders at Nuremberg and, therefore, the
criminalization, in the full and most profound legal sense of
the word, of American foreign policy.
The National Security Strategy proclaimed by the Bush administration
on September 17, 2002 asserts the right of the United States to
take unilateral military action against another country without
offering credible evidence that it is acting in self-defense,
as defined by international law. This assertion of all-encompassing
powers to resort to violence whenever the US decides to do so
is justified with loosely constructed language that cannot withstand
even a cursory analysis: We must be prepared to stop rogue
states and their terrorist clients before they are able to threaten
or use weapons of mass destruction against the United States
and our allies and friends.
Who defines what a rogue state is? Is it any state
that challenges, directly or indirectly, American interests? The
assertion of the right to take military action against rogue
states before they are able to threaten or use WMD
can only mean that the United States claims the right to attack
whatever state it identifies as a potential threat. A definition
of threat that requires no overt action against the
United States, but merely the potential to pose a danger at some
point in the future, would place virtually every country in the
world on the list of possible targets for an attack. As a matter
of fact, the document speaks not only of enemies,
but also of potential adversaries. A potential adversary
is any country that might at some point pose a challenge, or be
seen in some way as an obstacle, to the global hegemony of the
United States. How many countries meet the very general criteria
used by the United States government to identify potential
adversaries? Well, how many countries are there in the world?
Countries that might suddenly find themselves targeted for
attack in the name of the war against terror are by
no means limited to the usual suspects in the Middle
East and Central Asia. A new book, that has been praised by a
former close aide to President Bush, makes the following lurid
accusation: The cold truth is that, since the early 1980s,
Canada has become a source country of international terrorism
... Canada has provided a haven, money, propaganda, weapons and
foot soldiers to the globes deadliest religious, ethnic
and political extremist movements... turning this country into
a base for international terror. And you probably thought
the film Canadian Bacon was merely a spoof!
The claims of self-defense asserted by the United States government
when it attacked Iraq lacked any semblance of credibility, let
alone legality. They were as bogus as those invoked by the Nazis
when the Wehrmacht crossed into Poland on September 1, 1939.
We all know today that all the claims made by the United States
about Iraqs weapons of mass destruction were lies. But it
must be pointed out that even had Iraq possessed such weapons,
that would not in and of itself have justified, under international
law, the invasion of Iraq.
The consequences of this war have been horrifying. Cities and
villages are being bombed and strafed on almost a daily basis
by US warplanes and helicopters. More than 30,000 Iraqis and 1,000
American soldiers have been killed since the invasion began. No
one knows how many tens of thousands more Iraqis have been injured
and maimed. The Bush administration and the Pentagon do not bother
to keep count.
Inevitably, the criminal decision to go to war against Iraq
has led to further crimes, such as the brutalization of Iraqi
citizens at Abu Ghraib prison. Under international law, the authors
of the Iraq war are fully culpable for the sick, sadistic and
perverted abuse of Iraqi citizens.
There is another critical aspect of international law, arising
out of Nuremberg, that is highly relevant in judging the legal
culpability of the American decision makers responsible for the
war against Iraq. A crime against peace is a criminal act.
But the crime is not completed unless it is accompanied by
criminal consciousness. It must be established that there was
an intent to undertake an aggressive war.
When legal proceedings on the Iraq war are finally heldand
that day will comeit will be possible to demonstrate that
the war in Iraq was planned and implemented by high officials
in the American state for the purpose of achieving long-term geo-strategic
political, economic, and military objectives entirely unrelated
to the bogus self-defense arguments that were later concocted
to provide some legal cover, however threadbare. Deputy Secretary
of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, among others, has left behind a long
paper trail in which his decade-long and fervent advocacy of force
as a means of guaranteeing the strategic dominance of the United
States is irrefutably established.
As for Iraq, on January 26, 1998, Mr. Wolfowitz and his colleagues
from the now-infamous Project for a New American Century wrote
a letter to President Clinton advocating the use of military force
to remove Saddam Hussein from power.
President Bush, Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, and Deputy Secretary
Wolfowitz may argue, using that rather shop-worn phrase, that
9/11 changed everything, that new conditions justify
the resort to war, etc. Such claims, as Justice Jackson explained
so well 58 years ago, should be directed to historians, who take
great interest in questions of political and strategic motivation.
But they have no standing in international law, which holds that
planning and launching an aggressive war is illegal.
I urge this House to reject the resolution. The vote you will
take is freighted with immense political and moral significance.
Whether justified in the name of Lebensraum or the
flimflam of national security, humanity must not tolerate
the reversion to imperialist barbarism of which the invasion of
Iraq by the United States is a terrible omen.
See Also:
The struggle against war and
the 2004 US elections
[27 April 2004]
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