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SEP candidate for US Senate from New York: The war in
Lebanon is a world historic crime
By Bill Van Auken
1 August 2006
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The following is a report given by the Socialist Equality
Party candidate for US Senate from New York, Bill Van Auken, to
a meeting held July 30 at the SEP election headquarters in New
York City. The meeting marked the halfway point in the campaign
to gain the necessary signatures to place the party on the New
York ballot.
SEP campaigners have thus far gathered the signatures of
10,000 New York voters, who have responded powerfully to the partys
demand for an immediate withdrawal of US troops from Iraq and
its fight for the independent political mobilization of the working
class on the basis of a socialist program.
Today marks the 19th straight day of Israelis one-sided
war against the Lebanese people. This war, which has already claimed
the lives of some 600 civilians and left thousands more wounded,
is a joint project undertaken by the United States and Israel.
Its aim is to widen and escalate the so-called war on terrorismthe
all-purpose euphemism for US imperialisms drive to seize
control of the Middle East and its vast oil wealth as a means
of asserting global hegemony.
This morning has brought yet another Israeli war crime, the
worst since the attacks began. A pre-dawn Israeli bombing raid
against the southern Lebanese town of Qana demolished several
homes, including a four-story building that was sheltering families
who had fled earlier bombings in the region. At least 57 people
were killed as they slept, more than 30 of them children, with
others still trapped beneath the rubble. Rescue workers said it
was nearly impossible to evacuate the wounded because Israeli
warplanes have bombed nearby highways and bridges.
The Israeli military issued a perfunctory statement declaring
the deaths the responsibility of the victims themselves, saying
that Israel had warned all Lebanese south of the Litani River
to get out, and that those who stayed would be regarded as terrorists.
It appears that the Zionist regime now claims a license to act
on this assumption, unleashing a bloodbath that will dwarf what
has taken place over the past three weeks.
The rationale for this massacre was spelled out in advance
by Israels justice minister, Haim Ramon, who declared the
following:
What we should do in southern Lebanon is employ huge
firepower before a ground force goes in. Everyone in southern
Lebanon is a terrorist and is connected to Hizbollah. Our great
advantage vis-a-vis Hizbollah is our firepower, not in face-to-face
combat.
The truth of this last point had been proven in the severe
losses suffered by Israeli ground troops during their limited
incursion into Lebanon last week. It now appears that the huge
firepower option is to be unleashed in a vastly intensified
form before a more extensive Israeli invasion is launched.
This latest bombing has disrupted US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rices diplomatic charade in the Middle East. Her trip was
designed as a macabre form of shuttle diplomacy between Jerusalem
and Beirut, designed to give the appearance of working toward
a cease-fire and expressing phony sympathy for the Lebanese, while
Washington is rushing deliveries of bombs for Israel to kill more
of them. In reality, Rice is working to stonewall any cessation
of the bombing and give the Israelis the time they need to carry
out wholesale slaughter.
The Lebanese government cancelled her trip to Lebanon. The
countrys prime minister, Fouad Siniora, said he would not
talk to Rice until a cease-fire is declared. There is no
place on this sad morning for any discussion other than an immediate
and unconditional cease-fire as well as an international investigation
into the Israeli massacres in Lebanon now, he announced
at a Beirut news conference. He referred to the Israeli regime
as war criminals.
There may have been some concern by the Lebanese leaders that
they could not guarantee the US secretary of states safety.
News of the massacre in the south touched off rioting in Beirut.
Thousands of protesters stormed the United Nations headquarters
in the city, smashing offices and setting the building on fire
in an expression of fury over the unwillingness and inability
of the worlds governments to do anything to stop the US-Israeli
aggression.
What is unfolding in Lebanon is a world historic crime and
tragedy. In addition to the dead and wounded, more than three-quarters
of a million people have been displaced, turned into homeless
refugees. This constitutes close to one-quarter of the countrys
population, and a growing humanitarian crisis threatens to claim
even more lives from starvation and disease. A principal tactic
of the Israeli offensive has been to use this wave of internal
refugees to exert pressure on the Lebanese government and even
bring about regime change in Beirut. This is truly
terrorism on the most massive scale.
Meanwhile, the Israeli version of shock and awe
has demolished Lebanons infrastructure, destroying its airports,
seaports, highways and bridges as well as factories and even a
dairy farm. The impoverished neighborhoods of southern Beirut
have been bombed into rubble, more or less the equivalent of pulverizing
large sections of the Bronx. Aid and refugee convoys flying white
flags along with ambulances bearing prominent red crosses have
also been targeted.
The scale and brazenness of the destruction that is being unleashed
against Lebanon has little historic parallel outside of the aggression
conducted by the fascist regimes of Hitler and Mussolini at the
height of their power and insanity in the 1930s. The present conflict
recalls in many ways fascist Italys 1935 invasion of Ethiopia,
also justified as a response to a border incident. Likewise, the
pathetic appeals of Lebanons Siniora for the world community
to stop the dismemberment of his country resembles the futile
pleas of Ethiopias Hailie Selassie to the League of Nations
70 years ago.
The war in Lebanon is an imperialist war. Its principal aim
is to impose unrestricted US-Israeli domination over Lebanon and
to create the conditions for an even wider war in the region,
directed in the first instance at both Syria and Iran.
The pretext for the warthe capture of two Israeli soldiershas
been forgotten long ago by virtually everyone outside their families.
They are watching along with the rest of the world in horror at
the wanton devastation that is being wreaked against the Lebanese,
with an absolute lack of concern over its implications for the
fate of these two young men.
The pretext of democracy
The Bush administration has suggested, obscenely, that the
war is really about spreading democracy throughout
the Middle East. Condoleezza Rice has spoken of the carnage in
Lebanon as the birth pangs of a new Middle East. Bush,
for his part, called the killing a moment of opportunity
and a chance for broader change in the region.
Whether the befuddled occupant of the White House comprehends
the meaning of the words he mouthsor, for that matter, the
extent to which he is even informed of the real policies being
pursued by Dick Cheney and others who run his governmentis
an open question.
As is known, thanks to a microphone inadvertently left on at
the G-8 Summit in St. Petersburg, he gave his servile ally Tony
Blair his own solution to the Lebanese problem: What they
need to do is get Syria to get Hizbullah to stop doing that shit,
and its over.
This is the same Bush who, it should be recalled, only a few
short months ago was championing the Lebanese peoples right
to decide their own destiny, free of Syrian control and domination,
and who hailed the withdrawal of Syrian troops from the country
as a triumph for democracy.
As for democracys supposed role in the present
conflict, Washington has sought, with increasingly less success,
to win the support of police state regimes and monarchies in Egypt,
Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the Gulf for the extermination of Hezbollah,
a movement that has broad popular support among the impoverished
Lebanese Shiites reflected in the election of its members to parliament.
And finally, as is now well known, Israels war on Lebanon
is not the reaction to an immediate provocation on the part of
Hezbollah, but rather the product of joint US-Israeli strategic
planning that has been going on for several years.
The present war is in many ways the execution of the doctrine
laid out in a document entitled Clean Break: a New Strategy
for Securing the Realm, written in 1996 for the incoming
Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. Its authors included
Douglas Feith, who became the Pentagons policy director
in the Bush administration, Richard Perle, a top Pentagon adviser,
and David Wurmser, Cheneys Middle East adviser.
The document states, in part: An effective approach,
and one with which America can sympathize, would be if Israel
seized the strategic initiative along its northern borders by
engaging Hizballah, Syria, and Iran as the principal agents of
aggression in Lebanon.
We have always separated ourselves from those elements of the
petty bourgeois leftas well as those on the extreme rightwho
cast the policies of the present administration as the outcome
of the White House and Pentagon having been hijacked by a cabal
of pro-Israeli neo-conservatives.
The heart of this thesis, which in some cases draws inspiration
from the putrid well of anti-Semitism, is the conception that
the government in Washington represents some malignant cancer
on an otherwise healthy body politic. Or that Israeli influence
has somehow diverted US foreign policy. Nothing could be further
from the truth.
It is undeniable that the presence of such prominent right-wing
Zionists at the heart of the US national security establishment
is significant. But this is not a case of the Israeli tail wagging
the American dog. In the current war, there is every indication
that Washington is prodding Israel to continue and intensify its
attacks.
The US-backed and US-financed war in Lebanon, like the US war
in Iraq and the growing threats of military aggression against
Iran and Syria, is the product, in the final analysis, not of
the twisted ideology of the neo-conservativeswho apparently
see high explosives as an all-purpose devise for social engineeringbut
rather the profound contradictions of American capitalism and
the predatory strivings of the US ruling oligarchy as a whole.
The clearest proof of this is the fact that the Bush administrations
doctrine of preemptive wars to reshape the Middle
East has been embraced not just by the Republican right, but by
the entire American political establishment, including the US
media and the Democratic Party. This includes, most prominently,
my opponent, Hillary Clinton.
The Democrats are going into the 2006 midterm elections, to
be held in just 100 days, attempting to ignore the war in Iraq
entirely. While the Iraq war is the most burning political issue
confronting the American people, it does not even feature in the
Democrats campaign program, which promises beefed up national
security and tax cuts for the middle class. This peculiar silence
is to be explained by the fact that the Democratic leadershipClinton
includedsupports the continued occupation of Iraq and the
waging of a war against its people until US domination of the
country and its oil resources is assured.
The same relative silence is reflected in the media. In his
column today, Frank Rich of the New York Times cites a
recent survey that shows coverage of Iraq by the major network
news outlets has declined by 60 percent over the past three years.
His conclusion, reflecting the demoralization gripping layers
of left Democrats, is that things have gone so badly
for the US imperialist enterprise that the American people no
longer have the stomach to watch.
This, of course, can be said only of the comfortable middle
class, for whom the war is a matter of television coverage. As
we have all seen in the course of our petitioning campaign in
New York, outrage over the war within the working classwhose
sons and daughters are suffering the consequenceshas grown
exponentially. And, as Rich himself points out, this outrage has
been directed at the media for its failure to tell the truth about
what is going on in Iraq.
No such silence or reticence, it should be said, applies to
Israels war against the people of Lebanon. Democrats have
sought to attack the Bush administration from the right over its
alleged failure to defend Israeli interests with sufficient enthusiasm.
This reached the level of the absurd with the boycott staged
by some Democrats of the speech to the joint session of Congress
given by Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. His offense was
having joined with the entire Arab world in branding Israels
bombing of Lebanon as criminala definition that fits the
strictest interpretation of the Geneva Conventions. The Democrats
demanded that al-Maliki declare his support for Israel and denounce
Hezbollah, and suggested that the Bush White House was failing
to control its puppet.
Hillary Clinton, Lebanon and American
values
Meanwhile, as we noted, Hillary Clinton has issued statements
and delivered speeches approving in advance any and all military
actions Israel might take in Lebanon. In massacring women and
children from the air, Israel is standing up for American
values, Clinton declared, as well as sending a message
to Iran and Syria.
Clinton has carved out her position as the most unconditional
and slavish supporter of Israel in the US Congress. As a result,
she is also the recipient of the greatest amount of campaign contributions
from the Israel lobby of any US legislator.
But her position is hardly unique. Not a single voice has been
raised by a prominent figure in either party to condemn the war
crimes against the Lebanese people. Much less has there been any
suggestion that the US should stop supplying the $3 billion in
annual US funding that underpins the Israeli military machine.
This enormous expenditure of US funds to arm Israel has the
same aim as the illegal war and occupation of Iraq. It is not
to defend democracy or defeat terrorism,
but rather to secure US domination of the Middle East and project
American economic and military power throughout the world.
In the end, these policies are setting the stage for a far
wider war. In Iraq itself a massive increase in violence is being
prepared. The sending of an additional 4,000 US troops this week
into Baghdad is both an admission of the abject failure of the
occupation to pacify the Iraqi population and a preparation for
a full-scale confrontation with the Shiite population in the slums
of Sadr City, under conditions in which the Iraqi Shiites have
grown increasingly restive over the slaughter of their co-religionists
in Lebanon.
Meanwhile, the United Nations Security Council is preparing
to pass a resolution delivering an ultimatum to Iran to cease
its uranium enrichment activities by next month. While the measure
does not include the threat of sanctions demanded by the US, there
is little question that Washington will utilize it as a justification
for escalating its own provocations against the Iranian regime,
much as it employed the UNs resolutions in the run-up to
the invasion of Iraq.
Underlying what appears to be the insanity of the US policy
of global militarism is the increasingly desperate position of
American capitalism, confronted with growing economic challenges
from both Europe and China. Washington is determined to secure
its position as the worlds preeminent imperialist power
by means of military force. Its strategy is to establish unchallenged
control over the worlds principal oil resources, both to
assure its own needs and to have the ability to place its rivals
and potential rivals on energy rations. This is a path that leads
ultimately to world war.
On a more fundamental level, US militarism is a reflection
of the deep-going and malignant social contradictions within US
society itself. The dominant layer within the ruling elite has
enriched itself enormously over the past two decades through what
amounts to the looting of the economy and the systematic transfer
of wealth from the masses of working people to the top 1 percent.
It has become dependent for its ballooning personal fortunes upon
cheap wages at home and the importation of cheap raw materials.
It is prepared to utilize violence to preserve both.
This is why we have insisted that the struggle against war
is inseparable from the struggle to mobilize the working class
independently through the building of a new mass political movement,
based on a socialist program and perspective.
This is the very heart of our election campaign and it is on
this basis that we have already won the support of some 10,000
New Yorkers who have signed our nominating petitions.
The label of shock and awe chosen by the Pentagon
to describe its campaign against Iraq is now being used in relation
to the Israeli campaign in Lebanon as well. This method of warfare
has a dual significance. It was meant not only to suppress any
Iraqi resistance, but also to shock and awe the American
pubic and demoralize opponents of the war.
In the face of the new crimes in Lebanon, we cannot allow ourselves
to be either shocked or awed. We cannot forget that the US president
currently enjoys the support of less than one-third of the American
population. Nor can one lose sight of the mass disaffection of
the great majority of working people from both big business parties.
Finally, the economic underpinnings of American militarism
are becoming ever more rotten. This fact has found its latest
expression in the report of the US Commerce Department disclosing
that the growth rate of the American economy over the last quarter
fell to less than half the rate recorded over the previous period.
At the same time, inflation is growing once again, far outstripping
the anemic growth in wages.
There is growing fear that the onset of a new period of stagflation
in the US could spell a catastrophic crisis for the world economy,
which has grown dangerously dependent on an ever-expanding US
market. The economic house of cards characterized by a ballooning
US trade deficit financed by the inflow of funds from the rest
of the worldto the tune of $2 billion a daymay soon
come crashing down.
This is the sharp political situation in which we are now intervening.
We have a powerful program that establishes the objective unity
of the struggles against US militarism and social inequality,
as well as the defense of democratic rights.
Only our program, which advances the fight for the political
independence and international unity of the working class, offers
a way forward for working people, both in the US and the Middle
East.
Despite the formidable difficulties we face in getting on the
ballot as a result of the absurdly high demands set by the Democrats
and Republicans who write the New York State election laws, we
should have the greatest confidence that our campaign is serving
to further the political education of working people and laying
the foundations for a powerful growth of the international socialist
movement.
See Also:
Hillary Clinton celebrates
Israeli war crimes
[19 July 2006]
Hillary Clinton and New York's
gay marriage ruling: a calculated bow to the right
[15 July 2006]
Hillary Clinton woos
Wall Street and health industry
[13 July 2006]
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