|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Britain: As Basra burns, Iraq inquiry call supported by just
12 Labour MPs
By Julie Hyland
31 March 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
As Iraqs puppet army launched its bloody assault on Basra
on March 25, Britains parliament once again rejected an
inquiry into the Iraq war.
The motion, tabled by the Conservative Party, was supported
by the Liberal Democrats. But the Brown government won the day
comfortably. The motionfor an entirely circumscribed inquiry
to be conducted in secret by the Privy Councilwas defeated
by 299 to 271 votes.
Demonstrating once more the absence of any significant or principled
opposition to militarism within the government, just 12 Labour
MPs broke ranks to support the inquiry call. A government amendment,
acknowledging the need for an inquiry but only after important
operations in Iraq end, was then passed by 299 to 259 votes.
Little was said during the debate regarding the offensive just
then being launched by Prime Minister Nouri al-Malikis government
in the southern city of Basra. With US support, tens of thousands
of Iraqi troops were initiating Saulat al-Fursan (Charge of the
Knights)a major military campaign against militias loyal
to Shiite leader Moqtada al-Sadr.
Despite this silence, the mounting concern over the Iraq quagmire
within ruling circles was evident.
In 2003, William Haguenow Conservative foreign secretaryhad
accused those opposed to war of appeasement and endorsed
then-Prime Minister Tony Blairs decision to back the US,
despite massive popular opposition, describing it as absolutely
in the interests of this country and the wider world. In
parliament last week, Hague defended his support for the war but
argued it was now vital to learn all possible
lessons from the invasion and its aftermath. Clearly motivated
by the failure of British and US forces to establish a swift and
successful occupation over the country and its oil resources,
Hague said that it was time to convene an immediate inquiry into
the origins and conduct of the war.
Hague made clear that the purpose of the inquiry would not
be to hold anyone to account for the human catastrophe created
in Iraq, nor the flagrant abuse of democratic accountability that
accompanied it. He warned rather that the credibility of future
military actions had been jeopardised by events in Iraq. The
passage of time, the urgent need to learn for the future, the
need to reinforce the credibility of future decision-taking and
the diminished role in Iraq of British forces all pointed
to the need for an inquiry, he said.
Writing in the Guardian prior to the vote, Hague cited
the poor co-ordination and lack of expertise that
had surrounded the invasion and warned that this had implications
beyond Iraq.
At this very moment in Afghanistan, we and our allies
are struggling with somewhat different but nonetheless parallel
problems of the co-ordination of both military and economic efforts
in a vast and sometimes hostile land, he wrote. The
need to learn the lessons of Iraq in terms of how government should
function and countries should be rebuilt is transparently urgent.
So too is the need to have studied, to the satisfaction of the
British people, the actual origins of the war. For until that
is done, any British government setting out to explain to parliament
and people that military action is necessary to deal with a threat
it believes to be serious will face a wall of scepticism and disbelief.
Former Conservative Foreign Secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind reiterated
the need for Privy Council inquiry, pointing to the inadequacy
of the Governments preparation for one of the worst conflicts
that any British Government has been responsible for in the last
100 years. Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesman Ed
Davey said, Frankly one would have thought that an inquiry
ought to be automatic when a decision of the magnitude of going
to war goes so catastrophically wrong. To put such an inquiry
off, even five years afterwards, is nothing short of a scandal.
Again and again, the words Iraq and catastrophe
appeared together.
Referring to the current military campaign, the Independent
complained, When British troops handed over power in the
province of Basra to the Iraqi government in December, we were
told that the withdrawal was confirmation of the growing stability
in the south of the country. Now we see just what nonsense that
was.
Our own government might have managed to see off last
nights attempt in the House of Commons to force an immediate
public inquiry into the 2003 invasion of Iraq. But, as Basra burns
and yet another fanciful claim of progress in the country disintegrates,
the charge sheet against those who embroiled us in this catastrophe
grows still longer.
In an attempt to assuage public hostility over the Iraq war,
on his succession to Labour leadership, Brown pledged to reduce
the number of British troops in Iraq from 4,100 to 2,500 by May
of this year. Even before the latest offensive in Basra and Baghdad,
that proposal was being quietly shelved. In February, the Observer
had forecast that a final all-out battle for Basra
was inevitable. It cited Colonel Richard Iron, military
adviser to Iraqi Commander General Mohan, stating that plans for
further troop withdrawals were optimistic given that
the Iraqi Security Force was preparing for confrontation
in Basra.
The military confrontation now underway in Basra,
its surrounding areas and parts of Baghdad, was thus in preparation
for some time with Britains full knowledge. Yet, for the
last week, the government and the media have claimed that no British
forces are involved in the Charge of the Knights.
And, unlike President George W. Bush, Brown did not rush to give
his support to Malikis actions, so as to maintain the fiction
that Britain is no longer seriously engaged in the
occupation.
Given that Britain took responsibility for policing southern
Iraqthe main oil-producing centreat the time of the
invasion, this is not credible. Moreover, the claim that British
troops remained in their barracks near to Basra airport while
US and Iraqi troops battled with Sadrs supporters led some
political commentators to question the point of maintaining any
forces in the country.
In the last days, the story began to shift. British assistance
was limited to providing logistical help and air support
to the Iraqi forces, it was said. On Saturday, the Telegraph
admitted that British forces were directly involved for
the first time in the battle to stamp out militias from the Iraqi
city of Basra, engaging suspected Mehdi Army positions with artillery.
The newspaper continued, Military analysts estimate that
three British battlegroupseach of about 650 men armed with
Challenger 2 tanks and Warrior armoured vehiclesare on hand
to re-enter the city, citing one unnamed British official
complaining, Its ridiculous for Britains position
in Iraq that weve got this firepower down there and were
not willing to help the Iraqis out.
The government is caught in a bindwanting to relegate
Iraq to the political sidelines, while acutely aware that the
interests of British capital depend on eradicating and containing
all opposition to the imposition of foreign dictates.
Prior to the parliamentary vote, Brown had pledged that an
inquiry would be convened but argued that it would be inappropriate
to hold one now, as the situation in Iraq remained fragile.
Foreign Secretary David Miliband, in an oblique reference to the
Maliki offensive, argued that the dispute between the Conservative
and Labour parties does not concern substance but timing,
warning that the mission has not yet been accomplished.
In holding this line, Brown could count on the overwhelming
support of his own party. The Conservatives had sought to court
a rebellion amongst Labour MPs, calculating that the limited character
of their proposed inquiry, and a desire to retain some public
credibility, would convince a sufficient number of backbenchers
to back their demand. In the end, even fewer Labour MPs were prepared
to defy the government over Iraq than the 19 who voted against
its plan to close Post Offices.
See Also:
The sieges of Basra and Sadr City: another
US war crime in Iraq
[29 March 2008]
Iraqi regime launches assault on Basra
[26 March 2008]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |