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Iraq suicide bombing campaign: a reactionary diversion from
the political struggle against imperialism
By the WSWS International Editorial Board
4 March 2005
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The suicide car bomb attack in the Iraqi town of Hilla on Monday
has produced the greatest death toll from a single such incident
since the US invasion toppled the regime of Saddam Hussein nearly
two years ago. Those targeted in the blast were young men seeking
medical tests needed to join the US-organized Iraqi police and
military. The victims, who numbered as many as 125 dead and at
least 130 more wounded, included passers-by and people shopping
in a nearby market.
The attack in Hillaa predominantly Shiite cityis
only the latest and bloodiest in a string of terrorist attacks
that have continued to escalate over the past two months. According
to a count provided by the Associated Press, 234 people were killed
and 429 wounded in some 55 separate attacks in January. The death
toll rose to 311 while the number of injured increased to 433
as a result of 38 such attacks in February.
This slaughter of Iraqi non-combatantsincluding working
class youth lured into joining the police and army by the prospect
of a job and salary in a country where the majority is jobless
and destituteis a political atrocity and deserves to be
condemned.
This is not a question of mere moral outrage. These are political
crimes. Far from undermining the illegal American occupation of
Iraq, the principal outcome of such attacks is deeper political
confusion among the masses, which can lead to debilitating sectarian
conflicts.
The opposition of the World Socialist Web Site to terrorist
bombings has nothing in common with the hypocritical denunciations
of the Hilla bombing and similar attacks by the Bush administration
and the big business media, whose sole aim is to justify US imperialisms
crimes in Iraq.
Few bother recalling that Hilla is no stranger to mass carnage,
having suffered one of the bloodiest attacks at the beginning
of the US war on Iraq. On April 1, 2003, the US military targeted
the town with cluster bombs, killing at least 60 people, many
of them children, and leaving hundreds more wounded. The use of
this weapon constituted another war crime in a continuing criminal
war.
Washington is ultimately responsible not just for the killing
conducted by its own military forceswhich accounts for the
bulk of the tens of thousands who have died since the US invasionbut
for all of the bloodshed in Iraq. This is indisputably true from
the standpoint of international law, as the US is an occupying
power. But more fundamentally, the American war and occupation,
coming on top of a decade of devastating economic sanctions, have
decimated Iraqi society, provoking resistance while reducing Iraq
to a state of social and economic disintegration.
The crimes of US imperialism, however, in no way justify tactics
that result in the pointless slaughter of Iraqisincluding
many who undoubtedly are opponents of the American occupation.
While armed struggle is a legitimate and inevitable tactic
in the struggle against foreign military occupation, it is not
an end in itself and cannot take the place of a political program
that educates, guides and inspires masses of people. There is,
moreover, a profound link between ends and means. Just as the
utterly predatory objectives of the Iraqi occupation find expression
in the sadistic practices carried out by the United States at
Abu Ghraib, the mass killings of Iraqis expose the essentially
reactionary perspective of the political forces responsible for
the suicide bombings. It is noteworthy that these attacks are
conducted without even a suggestion that they are aimed at winning
the population to a particular political platform or galvanizing
popular opposition to the US colonialist presence in Iraq.
The struggles of the anti-colonial movements in an earlier
epoch were unquestionably accompanied by violence, including,
as in the case of Algeria, the utilization of terrorist bombings.
But these actions were carried out by movements that advanced
political programs or demands thatwith all the limitations
and illusions of bourgeois nationalismwere presented to
the masses to win their support.
The organizers of these atrocities make no pretense of appealing
to widespread discontent and political unrest, or attempting to
tap into the broad opposition to US imperialism that predominates
throughout the region as a whole. Rather, they cynically exploit
the anger, spirit of self-sacrifice, and genuine hatred of oppression
of young men and women by using them as cannon fodder in an ignoble
venture.
These tactics are not based on a struggle to defeat imperialism.
They are conducted in contempt of the Iraqi masses and the deep
historical traditions of working class struggle in Iraq. They
serve to undermine social consciousness and sow political confusion.
An Islamist web site reported that a group calling itself the
Al Qaeda Organization for Holy War in Iraq had claimed responsibility
for the Hilla bombing. Whether the group even exists as more than
a name is far from clear.
It cannot be excluded that forces loyal to pro-American stooges
like Ahmed Chalabi and Iyad Allawi would carry out such provocations
in order to foment internecine violence, with the aim of preventing
the ascension of a government from which they are excluded, as
well as to provide a continued justification for the US military
occupation upon which they depend.
It is in the nature of such terrorist bombings that the precise
identity of their organizers and the character of their political
aims are not entirely discernible. Bombings can be carried out
in the name of a non-existent organization to further hidden agendas,
including those of the CIA itself.
But these tactics are by no means foreign to either the Islamist
forces or the remnants of the Iraqi Baathist regime. Both have
played a significant role in misdirecting a broad resistance to
US occupation that has won the support of not only many Iraqis,
but peoples throughout the Middle East.
Neither Baathists nor Islamists represent the interests of
the working class and oppressed. The Baathist regime, like secular
bourgeois nationalism throughout the Arab world, sacrificed the
social needs and basic democratic rights of the Iraqi people to
further the interests of a ruling elite. It fell victim to the
imperialist power that it previously looked to for support.
The Islamists owe their rise primarily to this historic failure
of bourgeois nationalism. They were supported by Washington in
attacking the Soviet-backed regime in Afghanistan in the 1980s,
and they continue to enjoy at least tacit support from elements
within the Saudi elite and other regimes in the region, which
are loath to see the emergence of a Shiite-dominated state in
Iraq. Both the Baathists and Islamists would be prepared to do
a deal with imperialism if it furthered their own narrow interests.
These are the retrograde social ends that are pursued through
the criminal means of suicide bombings against Iraqi civilians.
Neither of these forces is capable of winning mass supporteither
for the restoration of the Baathist regime or the imposition of
a reactionary Islamic utopia like that of the Taliban in Afghanistan
or the Mullahs in Iran.
Underlying these methodsto the extent that they are not
the result of an imperialist provocation or a deliberate attempt
to provoke an ethnic civil waris a profound pessimism that
pervades both these forces and their political apologists. They
categorically reject the possibility of a unified struggle against
imperialism based on the conscious political mobilization of the
Iraqi masses.
The socialist movements opposition to terrorism has a
long history and powerful political foundations. Lenin, Trotsky
and the other leaders of the October 1917 Revolution forged their
political program and perspective precisely in struggle against
the politics of terrorism. They opposed such methods not from
the standpoint of abstract morality, but because they served only
to obstruct the development of political consciousness and independent
political struggle on the part of the working class.
In our eyes, individual terror is inadmissible precisely
because it belittles the role of the masses in their own consciousness,
reconciles them to their powerlessness, and turns their eyes and
hopes towards a great avenger and liberator who some day will
come and accomplish his mission, Trotsky wrote in his 1909
article Why
Marxists Oppose Individual Terrorism.
Trotsky and his comrades, of course, were battling against
the terrorism practiced by a layer of the Russian petty-bourgeois
intelligentsia, in the form of assassination attempts against
tsarist ministers, not the wholesale slaughter of unarmed and
impoverished people.
While the struggle against imperialism in an occupied country
must inevitably assume violent forms, to believe that such actions
as the Hilla bombing will further this struggle is both delusional
and reactionary.
The critical question in the struggle against the US occupation
and attempt to recolonize Iraq is the emergence of an independent
movement of the Iraqi working class, fighting to unite with working
people throughout the region and internationally on the basis
of a common socialist and internationalist program.
In the face of a powerful mass movement of workers, the US
would be unable to maintain political control. The reaction of
the American occupation authorities when tens of thousands of
Shiites took to the streets in early 2004 demanding direct elections
was instructive. Confronting the masses, US imperialism was forced
to retreat and rework its plans.
The perverse effect of the bombing campaign is that even the
possibility of mass mobilizations is undermined by the ever-present
threat that they will be met with anonymous violence.
The emergence of a genuinely independent movement of Iraqi
working people can take place only through an irreconcilable struggle
against the forces that have historically held the Iraqi working
class back. These include the gangsters of the Baathist regime,
the religious-based movements that foster extreme political backwardness,
and the Iraqi Communist Party, which bears a particular responsibility
for the present dilemma confronting the workers of Iraq.
The Stalinists of the Iraqi CP have remained consistent only
in their steadfast determination to oppose the political independence
of the working class. They integrated themselves into the Baathist
regime, despite the Baathists massacre of thousands of the
partys members following the CIA-backed coup of 1963. The
Iraqi CP clung to Saddam Hussein until he launched another bloody
purge of the Stalinists in 1978-1979. Now the ICP is the de facto
supporter of the US occupation, joining the puppet regime and
operating a US-sanctioned trade union federation that opposes
neither occupation nor the wholesale privatization of the Iraqi
economy.
A new political party of the Iraqi working class must be built
based upon the historic and often tragic experiences of the international
socialist and anti-imperialist struggles of the twentieth century.
There is no alternative to the construction of a revolutionary
political party of the working class, based on an internationalist
perspective.
See Also:
What is bin Ladenism?
Al Qaeda leader's letter to Americans
[29 November 2002]
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