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Analysis : Middle
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Britain agrees to troop redeployment to back Fallujah offensive
By Julie Hyland and Chris Marsden
23 October 2004
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On October 21, the Labour government of Prime Minister Tony
Blair confirmed that it would accede to a US request to redeploy
approximately 850 troops and support staff from their base in
southern Iraq to positions near to the capital Baghdad.
Announcing the decision in parliament, Defence Secretary Geoff
Hoon said that the Labour cabinet had unanimously agreed to the
request.
After careful evaluation, the chiefs of staff have advised
me that UK forces are able to undertake the proposed operation,
that there is a compelling military operational justification
for doing so, and that it entails a militarily acceptable level
of risk for UK forces, Hoon said.
His announcement brought an end to the governments pretence
that it was still considering the US militarys request,
first made on October 10.
Even whilst ministers were claiming that no decision on redeployment
had been made, the Daily Mirror revealed that a British
soldier had sent an angry e-mail to a forces web site disclosing
that his unit was being prepared for the move. The Black Watch
regiment, which is to be sent to Baghdad, is part of 7,500 UK
troops in Iraq, mostly based around Basra port.
In the days leading up to Hoons announcement, there had
been demands from Liberal Democrats and some 44 Labour MPs that
any redeployment of UK forces should first be put to a parliamentary
vote, as it could significantly increase the risk
to British troops.
The area around Baghdad has been described as a valley
of death by US forces that face fierce resistance from opponents
of the occupation.
But the major cause for concern is that the troop redeployment
is being sought in order to free up American marines for an all-out
assault against Fallujah.
The last major US offensive against Fallujah, home to 300,000
people, led to hundreds of civilian deaths and was met with ferocious
resistance that eventually forced a ceasefire agreement with the
insurgents. In the past weeks, however, the US has resumed its
assault on the city, sealing off much of its roads and subjecting
it to a daily air bombardment. Hospitals report scores of civilians
have been killed and injured in the last week.
It is believed that a full-scale ground and air assault will
be mounted sometime in the immediate aftermath of the US presidential
elections on November 2. This is being justified on the grounds
that the city is home to a terrorist outfit led by Abu Musaab
a-Zarqawia claim that has been bitterly contested by the
Fallujah council. The real motive for the attack is that Fallujah
is the focus of Iraqi national opposition to the US-led occupation,
which must be crushed if Washingtons free elections
in January, designed to confer a mantle of legitimacy on its puppet
regime, are to proceed as planned.
The Bush administration and the US military do not want to
announce an additional call-up of American forces at such a sensitive
time, which explains their appeal to the Blair government for
assistance.
The prospect of direct involvement in such a potentially bloody
offensive has raised legitimate anxiety amongst millions of Britons.
For many it has only confirmed their opposition to the Iraq war
and the governments participation in the occupation. The
scale of public disquiet is such that the government has intimated
that the redeployment has a limit of 30 days. Blair himself pledged
that the Black Watch would be home before Christmasan evocative
phrase that may yet return to haunt him.
But this progressive public sentiment has found barely the
faintest echo within the Labour Party and the political establishment
more generally.
The support for the move by the Conservative Party as militarily
necessary made sure that the government was never in any
danger of being thwarted in its plans. But neither was there scarcely
anyone within the Labour Party who stood against the decision
based upon a principled opposition to the war.
One pro-war Labour MP, Andrew Mackinlay, advised Prime Minister
Blair that he should telephone President Bush and ask him
to withdraw the request because Labour MPs would never approve
it. In the event, such predictions of a major rebellion
and a change of heart amongst Labours pro-war backbenchers
failed to materialise.
All that was articulated were vague criticisms of Blair for
being unable to successfully counter the allegation that he was
politically aiding Bush, or fears of the possible repercussions,
military and political, in aiding the assault on Fallujah.
There is something deeply unedifying about the concerns voiced
by the pro-war lobby. The charge that British troops are being
sacrificed to bolster Bushs reelection hopes
is a diversion from the real issue at hand.
Contrary to Blairs rhetoric, Britains participation
in the war against Iraq was never benignhelping out an old
ally while establishing the basis for democratic renewal. British
motives were dictated by the self-same considerations as those
of the US ruling class, namely the need to assert its geopolitical
interests in the oil-rich Middle East. As such, it can no more
accept the military and political consequences of a defeat in
Iraq than its American counterpart.
Should the US fail in its object of pacification,
then it is not only the political fortunes of a US presidentwhether
Bush or his Democrat challenger John Kerrythat is at stake,
nor even that of the Blair government. The entire foreign policy
strategy of Britains ruling elite has come to rest on the
subjugation of the Iraqi people.
That is why calls for an exit strategy have to
date been only half-heartedly voiced by a few lone establishment
voices. Even amongst those who opposed the decision to go to war
without United Nations backing, the majority now insist that the
occupation must be a success and limit themselves to considerations
of how best to involve other countries in what is a criminal venture.
Not a few of these are pinning their hopes on a Kerry victory,
because they believe this would signal a move away from the unilateralism
of the Bush administration.
These are not the opponents of war and occupation, but the
advocates of its more effective prosecution.
The other great concern expressed by the latter-day Cassandras
within the Labour Party is that an offensive against Fallujah
will undermine the myth that Britain plays a humanitarian role
in Iraq and is not complicit in the type of violence associated
with US operations.
Voicing such concerns, former Defence Secretary Robin Cook
wrote in the October 22 edition of the Guardian of his
belief that the problem was not a lack of US troops but that America
does not have any troops trained in peacekeeping.
They have brought their military culture of overwhelming
force to Iraq and have met any resistance with escalation. Most
of the current resentment of the occupation is provoked by the
heavy-handed military tactics of US forces and their implicit
assumption that every Iraqi is a potential enemy.
An inescapable consequence of the decision to embed British
troops in the US sector is that our forces will become tarred
by association with US methods and held responsible for the civilian
casualties that result.
It is true that because of its long imperial history, Britain
is adept at subjugating an occupied people while cultivating support
amongst sections of the local bourgeoisie and petty bourgeoisie.
But the portrayal of British-held Basra as an island of civilised
behaviour is a fiction belied by repeated accusations of brutality
and the killing of unarmed civilians.
In any event, with the decision to redeploy troops to Baghdad,
this facile attempt to put a clean gloss on what has been from
the very start an illegal war of aggression and neo-colonial enslavement
has come unstuck.
To speak of the danger of mission creep ignores
the fact that brutality and violence were implicit in the mission
from the very beginning. There is no doubt a political element
to the troop redeployment, which was expressed in Hoons
statement to parliament: Were we to refuse the request it
would go to the heart of our relationship not only with the US
but with other members of the Alliance.
However, it is also true that there is a military logic to
the move. Once one agrees to take part in an occupation, then
one must also do what is necessary to maintain it.
Consequently, every day that Iraq remains under the control
of the US and British armies guarantees further bloodshed. The
only exit strategy that can be endorsed by the working
class in Britain is the demand for the immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of all occupying troops from the country, in order
to allow the Iraqi people to determine their own fate.
See Also:
Iraq: US assault underway on Fallujah
[21 October 2004]
US troops storm Iraqi city of Samarra
[4 October 2004]
Britain: Labour Party conference endorses
occupation of Iraq
[2 October 2004]
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