|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
A mea culpa on Iraq by pro-war journalist Johann Hari
By Paul Bond
22 April 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
One of the most forthright defenders of the war, Johann Hari,
has recently published an article in the Independent (UK)
described as A melancholic mea culpa. The article
ran under the headline After three years, after 150,000
dead, why I was wrong about Iraq. In it, Hari grimly acknowledged
that the situation in Iraq had worsened since the invasion, contrary
to his original prognosis. (The article can be found on the authors
web site at http://www.johannhari.com/archive/article.php?id=831.)
Hari was among the most gung-ho supporters of the invasion.
Unlike many of the pro-war lefties with whom he aligned
himself, he rejected what he describes as the obviously
fictitious arguments about weapons of mass destruction as
a reason for the war. Rather, he argued, a war for regime change
was necessary because the Baathist government of Saddam Hussein
was so barbarous that its overthrow was necessary by any means
necessary. Imperialist intervention would pave the way for the
building of democracy in Iraq, he claimed.
Hari now says that the violence following the occupationviolence
by both the occupying forces and the contending militiasis
worse than the death toll under the Baathists, and is escalating.
He notes the comments of other pro-invasion journalists that
far from democratic rights being restored to the Iraqi people,
the occupying forces have effectively ceded power
to armed criminal gangs. Some 10,000 have vanished into secret
prisons without trial, and kangaroo sharia courts are given free
rein in many parts of the country. The invading forces have used
banned chemical weapons (white phosphorus), cluster bombs and
depleted uranium weaponry. The US has imposed an IMF-ed
up economic model and cancelled reconstruction funds, causing
unemployment to spiral to 60 percent.
To the extent that these comments acknowledge the scale of
his error, they are welcome. But they do not exonerate Hari for
the role he played in the build-up to the war. Nor, it must be
said, do they indicate any fundamental reconsideration of the
views that led him to support the war in the first place.
Haris arguments have had their consequences in that he
helped Bush and Blair mount an illegal war that has cost thousands
of lives. He wrote in 2003, Sometimes the only way to spread
peace is at the barrel of a gun. Now he admits: I
am not hiding in my home, rocking and clutching a Kalashnikov.
Millions of Iraqis are, and many thousands more did not live to
see even that future because of the arguments of people like me.
He bears a direct political responsibility for championing
the governments lies. Only a year ago, just prior to the
Iraq elections, he was still defending the invasion beside government
spokesman Eric Joyce at a debate organised by the Independent
newspaper, and insisting that calls for a withdrawal of US and
British troops were premature.
Hari was vigorous in his tirades against opponents of the war.
Early in 2003, he reacted furiously to antiwar demonstrations
under the headline Stop the war? Tell that to the tyrannized
people of Iraq. When Hari spoke alongside Joyce last year
he attacked the left for its failure to show solidarity
with oppressed peoples.
Anyone who had the temerity to oppose the positions being advanced
by imperialism has been denounced by Hari. When playwright Harold
Pinter received the Nobel Prize for Literaturea decision
based in part on his stand against escalating military interventions
in the Gulf and the BalkansHari suggested that not only
was Pinter an undeserving recipient, but the ravings
of his acceptance speech should not be broadcast.
In his mea culpa, Hari states that although it was evident
that the Bush administration was pursuing a disgusting
rationale for the war, he had convinced himself that it was possible
to ride this beast [the US drive for strategic access to a major
source of oil] to a better Iraq. He now looks at the lost
lives and the devastated country, and hopes that we understand
what led him to this position in the first place.
This is an extraordinary admission. Barely five months ago,
in his dispute with the World Socialist Web Site over his
attack on Pinter, he complained, Whatever I say, Paul
Bond of the WSWS seems to just hear rah rah imperialism
imperialism imperialism hurrah! Now he is forced
to concede that, at least with regard to Iraq, support for US
imperialisms supposedly liberating role was the very reason
for his disastrously wrong position.
Haris support for the war was explicitly based on the
premise that imperialist intervention could play a progressive
role in spreading liberal democracy. He wrote in 2003 that war
is the only means to achieve democracy for the
Iraqi people. In another article that year, entitled The
lesson of this conflict: America can be a force for good in the
world, he argued, Anti-war movements must never again
simplistically assume that they speak for the people who are about
to be bombed. Sometimes they will be right; but sometimes a civilian
population will prefer American bombs to the totalitarian status
quo.
Although US imperialism was doing obscene things
in some parts of the world, there were still other American
instincts and foreign policy traditions. The role of the
liberal left was to steer US imperialism towards spreading
the values of its own American revolution: the overthrow of tyranny
and the birth of democracy.
So enamoured was Hari of US military might and the readiness
of the Bush administration to use it that he called on the European
powers to do the same. He wrote on February 12, 2003, of how the
US neo-conservative Robert Kagan had contrasted how Europes
peoples believed that the sole legitimate foreign policy
tool is dialogue; violence is taboo, whereas the American
people believe that confronting evil (a word
used without embarrassment), even at the risk of war, pays off
in the end. It is only through the threat of violence that peace
and freedom can ultimately prevail.
Hari commented, By using his model, we can see more clearly
some of the flaws in the current European position towards Iraq....
Nation-building and the spread of democracy require both an acceptance
of violence as a means to an end (overthrow Saddam, build democracy)
and a degree of optimism and self-confidence that Europeans seem
to have lost.
It would be wrong, he concluded, to oppose democracy
for the Iraqi people (and the war that is the only means to achieve
it, unless Saddam goes into exile) because of the flaws of the
military power [the US] bringing it into place. If Europeans want
more say in projects like this, then they too must develop
a far more substantial military, reject pacifism and support
the Americans when they constructively rebuild the world
around us. His orientation towards what he describes as
the pro-war left was based on a rejection of the anti-imperialist
stand he explicitly associated with Marxism. He saw a layer of
media professionals who had been members of the Stalinist Communist
Party as his main co-thinkers. He quoted approvingly the New
Statesmans John Lloyd that We centre-left ex-communists
believe passionately in democracy because weve reasoned
ourselves towards it, so we are perhaps more prepared to support
wars that establish or defend it. Hari oriented towards
these peopleand still doesbecause they are most prepared
to accept the concept of necessary violence by the
imperialist powers.
Even now, Hari has made no reckoning with his record of supporting
military intervention prior to Iraq. Having convinced himself
that the US could do good in Iraq, he now acts as though what
happened was unforeseen and without precedent. It was not. Although
he points to the record of the US in Central America and parts
of eastern Europe as reasons why he really should have known better,
he still maintains that imperialist intervention in Bosnia, Kosovo
and Afghanistan were beneficial. Indeed, in our polemic with him
over Pinter he was scornful of any mention by us of Iraq. He said
we had artificially introduced it into the argument, when his
diatribe against Pinter was based on events in the Balkans. But
as we pointed out, Hari supported the invasion of Iraq on the
same basis as he had supported the war in Yugoslavia. His refusal
to connect them stems from his constant willingness to seek out
the exceptional circumstances that justify renewed
colonialist actions.
As we have sought to explain, there is a consistency to US
foreign policy, and therefore a causal connection between interventions
in Bosnia, Afghanistan, and Iraq, and the new threats against
Iran:
In the final analysis, we wrote, the threat
of a war of aggression against Iran and the use of nuclear weapons
express the historic crisis of American and world capitalism,
and the accelerating disequilibrium within the entire capitalist
nation-state system. This disequilibriumand its malevolent
product, the danger of a new world warhas been exacerbated
both by the collapse of the Soviet Union and the relative decline
of US capitalisms position within the world economy.
Within Americas ruling oligarchy, these parallel
developments have fostered a consensus strategy of exploiting
US imperialisms military superiority for the purpose of
reorganizing the world economy in the interests of US-based banks
and transnational corporations. This means the seizure of strategic
positions and resourcesas in the Persian Gulfand the
use of militarism and war to preclude the emergence of any rival,
even of a regional character, that would challenge Americas
bid for global hegemony.
Hari finds himself facing the failure of his own predictions.
His original defence, that sometimes a short war is preferable
to an endless tyranny, looks threadbare in light of the
ongoing problems of the occupation. But his change of heart is
based solely on the debacle that has followed the invasion.
Socialists do not reserve their opposition to imperialism for
when its plans go wrong. It is an issue of political principle
derived from the necessity to elaborate a strategy that meets
the historic interests of the international working class. The
task facing socialists is to oppose the barbarous colonial redivision
of the world and mobilise the working class against it, not merely
to disown individual acts of imperialist aggression that are descending
into ignominy.
Haris shift in Iraq to no small degree expresses nervousness
within the ranks of imperialisms professional media apologists
at how exposed they have become. Hari has received a great deal
of flak for supporting the Bush and Blair administrations in Iraq,
and his hand-wringing represents an attempt to claw back some
of his radical and left credentials.
To this end, he maintains that his position is in fact consistent
because his support for invasion was out of solidarity with
Iraqis who he claims overwhelmingly supported intervention
to topple Hussein and who have now expressed their clear
desire for the US-UK troops to leave now.
Even if it were true that the majority of Iraqis had illusions
in the consequences of US intervention, this would only emphasise
the necessity to provide political leadership based on a historically
grounded understanding of the real nature of imperialism.
Today, Hari is somewhat cautiously opposed to military action
against Iran, though late last year he was on British television
complaining that the exposure of the lies about Iraqs WMDs
meant that people would unfortunately be less likely to believe
Britain and the US when they warned of the real danger posed by
Iran. But his retreat on Iraq still leaves open the possibility
of him supporting imperialist intervention, whether against Iran
or elsewhere in the world, while offering high-sounding moral
justifications for removing a dictatorial regime that oppresses
its own peoples.
In any event, Haris belated admission of how singly he
failed to understand the political consequences of his support
for US and British military aggression against Iraq underscores
the necessity of a scientific historical outlook that clearly
distinguishes socialist policies from the pseudo-liberal apologetics
peddled by himself and others. Only by developing a Marxist understanding
amongst broad layers of workers, intellectuals and youth will
it be possible for the international working class to politically
combat further acts of barbarism by Washington, London and other
major powers.
See Also:
Imperialist apologetics from
Johann Hari: Independent journalist who attacked Harold
Pinter turns on World Socialist Web Site
[12 January 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |