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As the 1,000th US soldier dies in Iraq
The fight to end the war means opposing both Bush and Kerry
By Bill Van Auken, SEP presidential candidate
9 September 2004
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The passing of the grim milestone of 1,000 American soldiers
killed in Iraq must be the occasion for redoubling the fight for
an immediate end to the US occupation of that war-ravaged country.
This means a struggle not only against the Bush administration,
but also against the Democratic Party and its presidential candidate
John Kerry, who voted to authorize the war and has vowed to continue
it.
After the Iraqi people themselves, who have seen tens of thousands
of their countrymen killed, wounded and tortured by the US occupation
army, the American troops are the principal victims of this war.
Every reason given for sending them to fight and die has proven
a lie. There were neither any weapons of mass destruction nor
any Al Qaeda-Baghdad connection. The Bush administrations
promise to turn Iraq into a beacon of democracy has produced a
puppet regime headed by a homicidal thug and long-time CIA agent
who is despised by the majority of the population.
Stripped bare of all these false pretexts, the war stands as
a criminal colonialist enterprise aimed at militarily subjugating
Iraq in order to control its vast oil reserves.
More than half of the soldiers killed in Iraq were under 30,
drawn overwhelmingly from the working class. Many of those whose
lives have been needlessly sacrificed in what Washington insiders
describe as a war of choice joined the military straight
out of high school to get a job or money for college. These young
men and women are now dying at the rate of three a day.
While the identity of the 1,000th soldier killed in Iraq is
not yet known, names released by the Pentagon Wednesday included
those of Tomas Garces, a 19-year-old army specialist from Weslaco,
Texas, a Rio Grande Valley town where the unemployment rate is
close to 15 percent, and Devin Grella, 21, a private first class
in the reserves from Medina, Ohio, who was the 35th soldier from
that state to die.
In addition to the dead, there are some 7,000 wounded, among
them many who are permanently disabled. Some 1,100 soldiers and
Marines were wounded in the month of August alone, as US forces
faced determined resistance in heavily populated Iraqi cities.
There is every reason to believe that casualty rates will rise
substantially after the November election. The Bush administration
has deliberately postponed launching far more intense counterinsurgency
operations to suppress the Iraqi resistance and retake cities
that it now controls for fear of the impact the carnage would
have on the November vote.
The preparations for a brutal offensive are already under way.
General Richard Myers, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff,
told a Pentagon press briefing Tuesday that the US military in
Iraq is now working to set the conditions for the successful
use of force later against cities and areas where the Iraqi
resistance has gained control. Military commanders in Iraq have
indicated that any such action will be delayed for two to four
months.
The administration dismissed any significance to the 1,000th
US military fatality in Iraq. Defense Secretary Rumsfeld described
the number of casualties as relatively small and obscenely
lumped them together with the lives lost in the terrorist attacks
on New York and Washington on September 11, 2001, as all part
of the global war on terrorism.
Kerry took note of the figure, calling it tragic
and incorporating it into a new tack that the Democratic campaign
has taken on the Iraq war.
It should be recalled that during the Democratic primaries
Kerry cast himself as an antiwar candidate, opposed to Bushs
policies in Iraq. Once he had the votes needed for the nomination,
Iraq became a non-issue. Kerry deliberately disassociated himself
from the broad popular opposition to the war. He adopted the slogan
that failure is not an option, and vowed to continue
the occupation and even increase the number of US troops there.
Then, last month, Kerry announced thateven if he had
then known that Iraq had neither the weapons nor terrorist ties
alleged by the administrationhe still would have cast his
vote of two years ago giving Bush the authority to launch a preemptive
invasion. With this statement the Democratic campaign essentially
ceded the issue of Iraq to Bush.
Now, following relentless attacks against him by the Republicans,
and a drop in the pollsparticularly among those describing
themselves as strongly committed to the Democratic candidateKerry
has resurrected Iraq as a campaign theme.
Beginning on Labor Day, Kerry described Iraq as the wrong
war in the wrong place at the wrong time. The candidate
traveled Wednesday to Cincinnati, Ohio, to deliver a speech in
the same hall where Bush made his fraudulent case for war nearly
two years earlier. Kerry censured the Bush administration for
a series of miscalculations.
His miscalculation was going to war without planning
carefully and without the allies we should have had, said
Kerry. As a result, America has paid nearly 90 percent of
the bill in Iraq. Contrast that with the Gulf War, where our allies
paid 95 percent of the costs.
What precisely is it that Kerry finds wrongaside
from Washington footing the billabout the war in Iraq, a
war that he and his running mate John Edwards both voted to authorize?
That the war was based upon lies and waged in blatant violation
of international law merits no mention by Kerry. Nor did the Democratic
candidate say a word about the continuing bombardment of crowded
urban neighborhoods in Baghdad, Fallujah, Najaf and elsewhere
in Iraq, which constitutes a war crime. The sadistic torture of
Iraqi civilians at Abu Ghraib and other US detention camps in
Iraq also failed to feature among the things Kerry found wrong
about the war.
What has been done to the Iraqi population is, to put it bluntly,
not an issue for Kerry. As we mark the 1,000th US fatality, it
should be noted that no one in the Washington establishment has
even bothered to estimate the casualties inflicted upon Iraqi
civilians in the year and a half since the US invasion.
Estimates range as high as 37,000 killed and many more wounded.
In a country where 60 percent of the population is under the age
of 18, a large proportion of those who have been slain or maimed
by US bombs, missiles, shells and bullets are children. Their
deaths and agony go unrecorded, continuously censored from the
major medias coverage of the war.
So whats wrong about the war for Kerry? His differences
are a matter of tactics and style. He is committed to a successful
consummation of the criminal and reckless aggression launched
by the Bush administration, but insists that his election could
win Washington greater international backing, while lulling the
growing antiwar sentiment within the US itself.
Kerry has suggested that US troops could be withdrawn from
Iraq after his first term, meaning four more years of war and
thousands more US soldiers and tens of thousands more Iraqis killed.
Kerry qualified even this halfhearted promise with a warning that
withdrawing from Iraq too soon could leave a political vacuum.
In other words, he is determined to continue the occupation until
a pro-US regime is consolidated, a goal that means unending colonial
war.
While the Republicans have undoubtedly smeared Kerry and grossly
distorted his political record, their derisive singsong chant
of flip-flop, flip-flop has some political basis.
Bush and his handlers portray Kerrys twists and turns
on the Iraq war as merely a matter of political opportunism, driven
by the polls or some personal indecisiveness that disqualifies
him from assuming the exalted title of commander-in-chief.
In reality, Kerrys problem is that from the outset of
his campaign he has been compelled to speak to two audiences.
The first is the majority of the population which is opposed to
the occupation of Iraq and wants US troops withdrawn.
The secondand for him the most importantare the
predominant sections of the US corporate and financial oligarchy,
which in no way want the election turned into a referendum on
the Iraq war and global US militarism.
To the extent that Kerry is forced to criticize Bush on Iraq
once again in order to boost his flagging campaign, it amounts
to empty demagogy. When it comes to the fundamental aims of US
imperialism in Iraq, there are no differences between the two
candidates.
Kerrys statement that he would still have voted for the
war, like the vote itself, was no accident. The war on Iraqwhatever
tactical differences existed over timing and diplomatic preparationwas
a consensus policy of the ruling elite. It is the culmination
of a strategy developed by both Republicans and Democrats since
the dissolution of the Soviet Union 13 years agothe use
of overwhelming US military superiority to achieve global hegemony
by securing a stranglehold over markets and sources of strategic
raw materials, foremost among them oil.
Kerrys election would not spell an end to either the
US occupation of Iraq or the continuing campaign of global militarism
under the pretext of a war on terrorism. Whatever sympathy he
feigns for the working class youth in uniform who are being killed
and maimed in this war, he is committed to continuing the slaughter
for years to come.
Bringing a halt to the war and to the entire bipartisan program
of world domination is possible only by means of a break with
the two-party system and the emergence of a new mass political
movement of working people, based on a socialist program. Only
this kind of a movement, representing the needs and desires of
the vast majority of the population, can end the domination of
US foreign policy and every other vital social question by the
predatory interests of a tiny financial elite.
The vital role played by the Socialist Equality Party campaign
in the 2004 election is that of laying the political groundwork
for the emergence of such a movement. Ours are the only candidates
who unequivocally advance the demand for the immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of all US troops from Iraq and Afghanistan. We call
for those who conspired to drag the American people into war based
upon lies to be placed on trial for war crimes.
Above all, our campaign is directed to preparing the struggles
to come, no matter whether Kerry or Bush wins the November election.
See Also:
Complaint filed with Pentagon over
Kerry medals
The anatomy of a right-wing provocation in US election campaign
[8 September 2004]
The US sinks deeper into the Iraqi quagmire
[7 September 2004]
The Republican convention and the specter
of dictatorship
[4 September 2004]
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