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The New York Times and the crisis of American imperialism
in Iraq
By Barry Grey
9 July 2007
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The New York Times on Sunday published a major statement
on the war in Iraq. Running the entire length of the newspapers
editorial page, the statement was clearly conceived of as a definitive
pronouncement on the failure of the Bush administrations
strategy in Iraq and the assertion of an alternative policy.
The editorial is an expression of the enormity of the crisis
facing the US ruling elite. In its own way, the statement acknowledges
that what was intended to be a demonstration of American mightthe
conquest of Iraqhas dealt a shattering blow to the US drive
for global hegemony.
Exuding a sense of hopelessness and despair, riddled with internal
contradictions, raising more questions than it answers, the editorial
reflects more than anything else the perplexity of the US political
establishment in the face of a catastrophe of its own making.
Beginning with its title, The Road Home, the statement
reveals as well the duplicity of the Democratic Party and the
liberal wing of the political establishment for which the Times
speaks. As one reads the statement, it becomes clear that
the newspaper is not really calling for a withdrawal of
American forces from Iraq, but rather a redeployment leading to
a permanent US military presence in Iraq and an expansion of American
forces in the region. Such is the real content of the alternative
to the Bush administrations policy being promoted by the
Democratic Party in the name of ending the war.
The editorial begins with the somber assertion: It is
time for the United States to leave Iraq, without any more delay
than the Pentagon needs to organize an orderly exit.
It continues: Like many Americans, we have put off that
conclusion, waiting for a sign that President Bush was seriously
trying to dig the United States out of the disaster created by
invading Iraq without sufficient cause, in the face of global
opposition, and without a plan to stabilize the country afterward.
In fact, as the editorial later admits, the majority of the
American people reached the conclusion that the war must be ended
months ago. That was the unambiguous meaning of the Republican
rout in the November, 2006 congressional elections, and since
then opinion polls have shown an ever-rising tide of antiwar sentiment.
In the course of its ensuing attempt at a balance sheet of
the US invasion and occupation of Iraq, the Times editorial
paints a picture of devastation and chaos in Iraq and recklessness,
irresponsibility and criminality in the highest echelons of the
US government that amounts to a colossal indictment of not only
the Bush administration, but the entire political and media establishment
of which the Times is a part.
What the Times admits
Among the facts listed in the course of the statement are the
following: the United States has destroyed Iraqs government,
army, police and economic structures; the security
forces Washington has trained behave more like partisan militias;
civil war in Iraq is raging, right now, and it may take
years to burn out; a slow-motion ethnic and religious
cleansing... has contributed to driving one in seven Iraqis from
their homes; there are already nearly two million
Iraqi refugees, mostly in Syria and Jordan, and nearly two million
more who have been displaced within their country.
The penultimate paragraph of the editorial states: President
Bush and Vice President Cheney have used demagoguery and fear
to quell Americans demands for an end to this war. They
say withdrawing will create bloodshed and chaos and encourage
terrorists. Actually, all of that has already happenedthe
result of this unnecessary invasion and the incompetent management
of this war.
Far more important to the Times than the devastation
of Iraqi society are the disastrous consequences of the war for
American imperialism. Even as it excoriates the Bush administration
for its failed policy in Iraq, the newspaper uncritically upholds
the overarching political framework and pretext for the war and
the broader eruption of American militarismthe so-called
war on terrorism.
On this score, the editorial asserts that Bushs stated
goal of building a stable, unified Iraq is lost;
acknowledges that additional military forces poured into
the Baghdad region have failed to change anything; complains
that the war is sapping the strength of the nations
alliances and its military forces; warns that it has given
Al Qaeda new base camps, new recruits and new prestige;
and declares that it has alienated essential allies in the
war against terrorism.
What the Times proposes
When the Times turns to proposing a way out of the Iraq
quagmire the perplexity and disorientation gripping the American
ruling establishment emerge even more palpably. It soon becomes
clear that the newspaper has no coherent policy to reconfigure
US forces in Iraq while averting a disastrous defeat for US imperialism.
It begins by acknowledging that its proposals could very well
exacerbate the bloodbath in Iraq and lead to a fracturing of the
country along sectarian lines.
When Congress returns this week, the Times writes,
extricating American troops from the war should be at the
top of its agenda.
That conversation must be candid and focused. Americans
must be clear that Iraq, and the region around it, could be even
bloodier and more chaotic after Americans leave. There could be
reprisals against those who worked with American forces, further
ethnic cleansing, even genocide. Potentially destabilizing refugee
flows could hit Jordan and Syria. Iran and Turkey could be tempted
to make power grabs. Perhaps most important, the invasion has
created a new stronghold from which terrorist activity could proliferate.
The administration, the Democratic-controlled Congress,
the United Nations and Americas allies must try to mitigate
these outcomesand they may fail. But Americans must be equally
honest about the fact that keeping troops in Iraq will only make
things worse.
Reprisals, further ethnic cleansing, even genocidesuch
are the potential consequences of a drawdown of US troops, the
Times declares. Even the mechanics of a withdrawal of the
present occupation force presents massive and possibly disastrous
problems.
The editorial states: The United States has about 160,000
troops and millions of tons of military gear inside Iraq. Getting
that force out safely will be a formidable challenge. The main
road south to Kuwait is notoriously vulnerable to roadside bomb
attacks. Soldiers, weapons and vehicles will need to be deployed
to secure bases while airlift and sealift operations are organized.
Withdrawal routes will have to be guarded. The exit must be everything
the invasion was not: based on reality and backed by adequate
resources.
What is the newspaper saying here? What are the implications
of establishing secure bases, carrying out airlift
and sealift operations, guarding withdrawal routes and providing
adequate resources? How much more Iraqi and American
blood will be shed? Does the Times contemplate an even
larger deployment of US troops to effect a withdrawal?
The editorial continues: The United States should explore
using Kurdish territory in the north of Iraq as a secure staging
area. Being able to use bases and ports in Turkey would also make
withdrawal faster and safer. Turkey has been an inconsistent ally
in this war, but like other nations, it should realize that shouldering
part of the burden of the aftermath is in its own interest.
Why would the Turkish ruling elite, which considers the consolidation
of a Kurdish stronghold in Iraqs north a mortal threat to
itself, consent to US staging areas in the region
and even agree to facilitate such a development by making its
own ports and bases available to the US military? The Times
does not say.
Permanent bases
As for the prospects for Iraqis of a US withdrawal
as envisioned by the Times, the newspaper writes that the
war has created a new front where the United States will
have to continue to battle terrorist forces and enlist local allies
who reject the idea of an Iraq hijacked by international terrorists.
The military will need resources and bases to stanch this self-inflicted
wound for the foreseeable future.
This can only mean a permanent US military presence and continual
bomb and missile attacks against alleged terrorists,
punctuated by US Special Forces raids on Iraqi towns and communities.
This scenario is spelled out somewhat more concretely in a section
entitled The Question of Bases. The editorial declares:
The United States could strike an agreement with the
Kurds to create those bases in northeastern Iraq. Or, the Pentagon
could use its bases in countries like Kuwait and Qatar, and its
large naval presence in the Persian Gulf, as staging points.
There are arguments for, and against, both options. Leaving
troops in Iraq might make it too easyand too temptingto
get drawn back into the civil war and confirm suspicions that
Washingtons real goal was to secure permanent bases in Iraq.
Mounting attacks from other countries could endanger those nations
governments.
The White House should make this choice after consultation
with Congress and the other countries in the region, whose opinions
the Bush administration has essentially ignored. The bottom line:
the Pentagon needs enough force to stage effective raids and airstrikes
against terrorist forces in Iraq, but not enough to resume large-scale
combat.
Again, what does this really mean? How much force is enough?
50,000 troops? 100,000? 500,000? Will it require the restoration
of the military draft?
How exponentially must the already massive US military presence
in the region be increased to stage effective raids and
airstrikes against terrorist forces in Iraq? How many, and
which, governments in the region will be destabilized by a permanently
expanded US military presence in the region? Jordan? Saudi Arabia?
Kuwait? Egypt?
Partition: the Bosnian solution
There follows a section entitled The Civil War,
which states: Iraq may fragment into separate Kurdish, Sunni
and Shiite republics, and American troops are not going to stop
that from happening.
It continues: Iraqs leadersknowing that they
can no longer rely on the Americans to guarantee their survivalmight
be more open to compromise, perhaps to a Bosnian-style partition,
with economic resources fairly shared but with millions of Iraqis
forced to relocate.
It was not so long ago that Bosnia was a watchword
of the US political and media establishment for war crimes and
genocide. Indeed, the charge of genocide leveled against the Serbsa
deliberate exaggeration of the crimes of Serb militia against
Bosnian Muslimsplayed a central role in the preparing public
opinion for the eventual air war against Serbia in 1999. Now the
Times calmly proposes such a solution for Iraqeuphemistically
using the term relocation to denote the brutal ethnic
cleansing and sectarian warfare that would inevitably result in
a country where Sunnis and Shia still live side by side in many
regions.
Next, the Times raises the specter of massive refugee
flows further destabilizing the entire Middle East, spreading
Iraqs conflict far beyond its borders. It declares
that all six countries bordering IraqTurkey, Iran, Kuwait,
Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Syriaalong with other nations must
cooperate in containing the refugee crisis. They, along with the
nations of Europe and Asia, must, the newspaper asserts, join
with the US in contributing cash to defray the costs of such a
project.
The new governments in Britain, France and Germany, the Times
writes, must do their part to deal with the crisis because
to put it baldly, terrorism and oil make it impossible to
ignore.
One of the trickiest tasks, the editorial continues,
will be avoiding excessive meddling in Iraq by its neighborsAmericas
friends as well as its adversaries.
Just as Iran should come under international pressure
to allow Shiites in southern Iraq to develop their own independent
future, Washington must help persuade Sunni powers like Syria
not to intervene on behalf of Sunni Iraqis. Turkey must be kept
from sending troops into Kurdish territories.
Exactly how the US will impose its will on these countries,
under conditions in which a fractured Iraq has brought long-standing
tensions and rivalries in the region to the boiling point, the
Times does not say. By diplomatic blackmail? By military
force?
At one point, the editorial declares, The administration
should use whatever leverage it gains from withdrawing to press
its allies and Iraqs neighbors to help achieve a negotiated
solution. This underscores one of the most glaring of the
contradictions that abound in the editorial.
What international leverage will the United States gain from
tacitly admitting defeat and pulling out the bulk of its combat
forces from Iraq? Why should other countries, allies and adversaries
alike, be more inclined to tow Washingtons line after it
has suffered a military and political humiliation?
No accountability for an unnecessary
war
There is, however, an even more fundamental contradiction.
In its opening passages, the editorial announces that the Times
has dropped its previous opposition to setting a withdrawal
date because, It is frighteningly clear that Mr. Bushs
plan is to stay the course as long as he is president and dump
the mess on his successor.
Thus the premise for the policy shift outlined by the Times
is the unwillingness and inability of Bush and Cheney to change
course and avert a full-scale catastrophe. Yet the statement repeatedly
appeals to the White House to do precisely that.
It states, for example, Congress and the White House
must lead an international attempt at a negotiated outcome. To
start, Washington must turn to the United Nations, which Mr. Bush
spurned and ridiculed as a preface to war.
The New York Times, considered the most authoritative
organ of the US ruling elite, outlines a crisis of historic proportions
and describes a level of irresponsibility, incompetence and criminality
in the White House that has no precedent. A serious response,
from the standpoint of the interests of American imperialism,
would begin with the demand that the current government resign,
or that Congress initiate immediate impeachment proceedings against
both Cheney and Bush. That would be the prerequisite for the candid
and focused conversation on the war which the newspaper
claims to desire.
But the Times proposes nothing of the kind. In fact,
it proposes no measures to hold any of those responsible for dragging
the country into an unnecessary war accountable. This,
above all, is what gives its entire pronouncement an aura of unreality.
There are many reasons for this glaring silence. In the first
place, the entire political establishment, including its liberal
wing, is implicated in the Iraq disaster. The Times itself
supported the invasion, with whatever tactical quibbles, and played
a critical role in promulgating the lies about weapons of mass
destruction that were used to justify the invasion. To this day,
it has concealed from the American people the scale of the death
and destruction the US was wreaked on the Iraqi people.
Beyond that, there is the organic cowardice of the liberal,
Democratic Party establishment, and its fear of the political
consequences within the US of an attempt to dislodge the current
administration. These sections of the ruling elite sense that
an open attack on Bush and Cheney could unleash pent-up social
anger and popular forces that could spiral out of the control
of the entire political establishment.
An international disaster for US imperialism of such magnitude
as that which the Times describes cannot but have the most
far-reaching economic and political consequences within the US
itself. This side of the matter is not even broached by the newspaper.
But the US debacle in Iraq will have profound ramifications
for which American working people must prepare. The crisis of
American imperialism in Iraq cannot be left as a matter for debate
within the ruling elite. Those responsible for an illegal and
unprovoked war that has already cost hundreds of thousands of
Iraqi lives and killed or maimed tens of thousands of Americans
cannot be allowed to prepare further atrocities in Iraq and new
wars of aggression. The decisive question is the independent political
intervention of the working class in opposition to imperialist
war and the capitalist ruling elite in whose interests it is waged.
See Also:
The New York Times
has to correct itself again this time on Iran
[26 June 2007]
Another damning admission from
the New York Times: whitewashing Iraq war
[19 March 2007]
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