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The New York Times closes ranks with Bush on Iraq war
By Barry Grey
30 June 2005
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On Tuesday night President Bush went on national television
and rehashed the lies his administration is using to justify the
slaughter in Iraq. On Wednesday, the New York Times published
an editorial that sums up the position of the so-called liberal
establishment and the Democratic Party. Oozing evasion and duplicity,
the editorial testifies to the commitment of the entire American
ruling elite to the war and the complicity of the Democrats in
the imperialist enterprise.
The editorial chides Bush for raising the bloody flag
of 9/11 over and over again to justify a war in a country that
had nothing to do with the terrorist attacks. But the conclusion
of the Times is not that the perpetuation of this lie exposes
the predatory character of the war, but rather that this particular
canard has become counterproductive and should be set aside in
the interests of winning the conflict.
The entire argument advanced by the editors proceeds from the
premise that the origins of the war, and the lies used to launch
it, bear no relation to the character of the war itself. The only
questions that matter are whether the war is winnable,
and what measures are needed to achieve victory. To this end,
the Times urges Mr. Bushs critics to
put aside... their anger at the administration for its hubris,
its terrible planning and its inept conduct of the war in return
for a frank discussion of where to go from here.
The content of this frank discussion is summed
up by referencing a letter from an opponent of the invasion
who urged the American left to get over its anger over President
Bushs catastrophic blunder and start trying to figure
out how to win the conflict that exists.
Since, according to the Times, no one wants disaster
in Iraq, Democrats and Republicans must rally behind the
war effort. For its part, the newspaper suggests that more US
troops should be sent to the killing fields.
Leading Democrats echoed the same line in their comments on
Bushs speech. What we need is a policy to get it right
in Iraq, said Massachusetts Senator and 2004 presidential
candidate John Kerry Wednesday morning on NBCs Today
show. The previous evening he was more explicit. Appearing with
Republican Senator John McCain on CNNs Larry King
Live program, Kerry agreed with McCain that the US needed
more troops in Iraq.
Senator Joseph Biden, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee and an announced candidate for the partys
2008 presidential nomination, said on ABCs Good Morning
America program on Wednesday that theres not
enough force on the ground now to mount a real counterinsurgency.
In its editorial, the Times counsels that Bush should
not continue to obsess about self-justification and the
need to color Iraq with the memory of 9/11. The nation does not
want it and cannot afford it. With these concluding words,
the newspaper offers the administration a blanket amnesty
for its past lies, the better to promote new ones.
Chief among them is the claim that the US is occupying Iraq
in order to produce a democratic country. This is
a lie, the newspaper evidently believes, that retains its utility.
Hence the editorials references to the elected
government and the democratic elections that
installed the current puppet regime. The grotesque claimretailed
by both parties and the entire mediathat an election held
at gunpoint, in which opponents of the American occupation are
excluded, can be democratic goes hand in hand with the equally
absurd identification of foreign military occupation with sovereignty.
The overarching deception that links all of the others is the
claim that a judgment on the desirability and political significance
of a US victory in Iraq can be separated from the conspiracy of
lies used to justify the war in the first place.
The success of a war waged on the basis of liesitself
a monstrous violation of democratic rightscould only encourage
and accelerate anti-democratic tendencies within the US. It would
strengthen the most right-wing sections of the ruling elite and
further enhance the influence of the military in American political
life.
Such an outcome could only embolden the forces that authored
the Iraq war to proceed with their plans for other, even bloodier
adventures. A number of nations have already been targeted as
potential victims of US-style democratization: Iran,
North Korea, Syria, Cuba, China. A US victory in Iraq would bring
the entire world closer to the danger of a new world war.
The fact that the war was based on lies is not some extraneous
or secondary question: it speaks to the essence of the war itself.
Not that long ago, in the Vietnam era, the revelation that the
government lied was sufficient to discredit the war itself. The
exposure of President Lyndon Johnsons lies in the 1964 Gulf
of Tonkin incident played a major role in de-legitimizing the
intervention in Southesast Asia.
Now we are told by the politicians of both parties and by the
media that the Bush administrations far more massive and
systematic lying in no way diminishes the legitimacy of Americas
actions in Iraq.
The US government lied in order to conceal its real aims in
invading, without provocation, a country that played no role in
the events of 9/11 and represented no threat to the American people.
Those aims hadand havenothing to do with democracy
or weapons of mass destruction. They were predatory and imperialist:
the American ruling elite invaded Iraq and took over the country
in order to seize control of its oil resources and establish a
permanent military presence that would give it a huge strategic
advantage over its rivals in Europe and Asia. This aggression,
following the invasion of Afghanistan, was part of a broader drive
to establish US hegemony throughout the world.
The American people had no say in the matter. They were lied
to and kept in the dark by all of those who supposedly represent
them, and by the media. Moreover, political power in the US, notwithstanding
the holding of elections, does not reside with the people, but
rather with a financial oligarchy that controls both of the major
parties and systematically excludes any working class, socialist
alternative.
When the Times declares that nobody wants to see a disaster
in Iraq, it reveals the indifference of the American ruling elite
to the carnage and suffering it has wrought.
The disaster has already happened. The war is the disaster,
having to date cost the lives of tens of thousands of Iraqis and
reduced the country to ruinswithout regular electricity,
water, sanitation or jobs for the majority of its inhabitants.
The people live under the permanent condition of terror that attends
any military occupation, subject to be seized at any moment by
American forces or their Iraqi military counterparts and thrown
into prison or killed.
Already nearly 1,750 Americans, having been sent to a distant
battlefield on false pretenses, are not coming back. They leave
behind orphans, widows and shattered families. Then there are
the hundreds of thousands of Iraqis maimed by US missiles and
bombs, and the thousands of US soldiers who have been permanently
crippled and disfigured.
There is the vast squandering of resourcessome $200 billion
to datewhich will ultimately mean new cuts in funding for
schools, health care, housing and other essential needs. And there
are the poisonous political consequences of the war, including
ideological justifications for torture and unprecedented attacks
on democratic rights.
What the Times and those for whom it speaks want to
avoid is being held accountable for this disaster. The only way
to end it, however, is for the US to get out of Iraq.
The Democratic Party and the Times are aware that more
and more Americans are coming to this conclusion. In an attempt
to confuse and dissipate the rising anti-war sentiment, they resort
to two further arguments. The first is stated in Wednesdays
editorial as follows: ...if American forces were withdrawn,
Iraq would probably sink into a civil war that would create large
stretches of no mans land where private militias and stateless
terrorists could operate with impunity.
This type of argument goes under the heading of justifying
new crimes with old ones. In reality, the US intervention has
arguably done more to fuel sectarian and ethnic tensions and violence
than anything carried out by Saddam Hussein.
As for the claim that a US withdrawal would create a vacuum
that would be filled by terrorists intent on harming the American
people: Can any sane person deny that the US occupation of Iraq
does more every day to foment anti-American hatred and create
terrorist recruits than any fatwa by Al Qaeda?
Finally, there is the last resort of scoundrels: the argument
that we have to stay the course in order to support our troops.
Here, those who are responsible for placing American men and women
in harms wayon the basis of lies, and in pursuit of
selfish and predatory aimshide behind the very troops they
have victimized.
Why are the New York Times and the Democratic Party
so intent on continuing the war? Because they speak for a political
establishment that supports the project of global hegemony. Whatever
disagreements emerge between Democrats and Republicans, liberals
and conservatives, they are always over tactics, not aims. They
all believe that the economic and political viability of American
capitalism depends on US domination of the worlds strategic
resourcessuch as oilas well as international markets
and sources of cheap labor.
They fear, moreover, that a Vietnam-style defeat would profoundly
discredit the existing social and political order in the eyes
of the American working class, with far-reaching and dangerous
consequences.
The lineup of all factions of the American political establishment
behind the warand against the majority of Americans who
oppose itdemonstrates that the struggle against the war
is inseparably bound up with a struggle against the entire social
and political system. Just as it is not possible to discuss where
we go from here in Iraq outside of a discussion of the origins
of the war, it is not possible to seriously oppose the war without
opposing the capitalist system which gave rise to it, and the
American financial oligarchy which authored it and in whose interests
it is being waged.
The starting point for a struggle against the war must be the
demand for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of all US
troops. The US government must pay full reparations for the destruction
it has wreaked in Iraq, and reparations to the families of US
soldiers killed in the war, as well as to soldiers wounded in
the fighting.
All those involved in the criminal conspiracy that produced
the war must be held accountable both politically and legally.
They must be placed before an independent tribunal and tried for
war crimes.
This will not happen of itself. The Socialist Equality Party
calls for the development and building of a new independent mass
movement against war and social reaction. It is clear that the
fight against war cannot be directed just against the Bush administration.
It must also be a fight against the administrations accomplices
in the Democratic Party.
It is necessary to break out of the straitjacket of the two-party
system. Already it is obvious that, in advance of the 2006 congressional
elections, both parties are working to frame the debate on the
war along the lines of how the war can be won. This must be rejected.
The only legitimate response to the killing in Iraq is the demand
for the withdrawal of all US troops.
There is enormous opposition to the war among the American
people, and it is growing. There is also political confusion.
How could it be otherwise when the government lies systematically
and the media either covers up the lies or minimizes their significance?
What is needed is a fight to link the growing opposition to
the war to rising social discontent over the attacks on workers
jobs, wages and pensions. There is a profound connection between
militarism abroad and the ever-greater concentration of wealth
at home, between foreign predations and the assault on the working
class within the US.
The struggle against war requires a break with the Democratic
Party and the building of a mass, independent party of the working
class fighting for the socialist reorganization of society.
See Also:
Bush at Fort Bragg--fear-mongering, lies
and desperation
[29 June 2005]
Washington in crisis over opposition
to Iraq war
[28 June 2005]
The Washington Post and the Downing
Street memo
[22 June 2005]
Bush faces growing opposition to Iraq
war
[18 June 2005]
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