Recent viewpoints

*Viewpoints of BRussells Tribunal members: 

 

 

* Selected writings of some members of the Advisory committee of the BRussells Tribunal

* More Viewpoints (on this page)

* Go to Viewpoints Page 2

 

De geheime oorlog tegen de toekomst van Irak (Inge Van De Merlen) 17 March 2006

Iraqi academics in the killing zone (Dirk Adriaensens) 02 Feb 2006

In Defence of International Law (Jean Bricmont) 19 Jan 2006

Humanitarian Imperialism (Interview with Jean Bricmont by Michel Collon)  09 Jan 2006

We are not alone: WE are the majority!  (Dirk Adriaensens) 01 Dec 2005

Interview with Dr. Salam Ismael (Inge Van De Merlen) 28 Nov 2005 - Dutch version

White Phosphorous, Daisy cutters, Depleted Uranium, Thermobaric bombs, Clusterbombs, Napalm…. The US uses WMD against civilians  (Dirk Adriaensens) 11 Nov 2005

What political process? (Abdul Ilah & Hana Al Bayaty) 10 Nov 2005

Het verzet van een volk (Inge Van De Merlen) 24 Oct 2005

Letter to Amnesty International on the Iraqi Constitution (English - ESP - FR - NL - IT - Deutsch) 07 Oct 2005

Exit strategy, step one (Hana Al Bayaty) 22 Sept 2005

Global blowback (Lieven De Cauter) 15 Sept 2005

The storms gather (Hana Al Bayaty) 08 Sept 2005

Iraq broken  (Hana Al Bayaty) 01 Sep 2005

The primary divide (Hana Al Bayaty) 18 Aug 2005

Propaganda Offensive  (Jean Bricmont about the June 22 Brussels conference) 14 July 2005

Iraq's sectarian myth (Hana Al-Bayaty) 16 June 2005

The politics of sovereignty. Iraqi resistance  represents the continuity of the Iraqi state (Abdul Ilah & Hana Al-Bayaty)  June  2005

“He called me from Iraq: ‘I have no idea what we’re doing here, mom.’ (Nadia McCaffrey - Inge Van De Merlen) May 2005 

De kinderen van Irak…hun leven, hun toekomst (Inge Van De Merlen i.s.m. Dirk Adriaensens)  14 April 2005

an answer to "Rise of Extremism, Islamic Law Threaten Iraqi Women" (Dirk Adriaensens) 01 April 2005

Media zien Irakese doden, noch chemische wapens (Ludo De Brabander )  22 March 2005

Quelques remarques sur la violence, la démocratie et l’espoir (Jean Bricmont) 20 Feb 2005

Fortress Iraq (American plans to deny the Arab-Muslim identity of Iraq will fail - Abdul Ilah &  Hana Al-Bayaty) Dec 2004

Allawi's leugen:   Open brief aan de premier Balkenende en de Europese leiders   (Lieven De Cauter)  Nov 2004

Bush 'Exceptionalism' Led to Abu Ghraib (interview with Lieven De cauter)  11 Sept 2004

Le déguisement d'une occupation illegale  (Hana Al-Bayaty) June 2004

De uitzonderingstoestand in actie: wandaden zijn "part of the process"  (executive committee BRussells Tribunal) May 2004


*Selected writings of some members of the BRussells Tribunal


*More Viewpoints:

Jacques Derrida | Louis Michel | Michael Meacher | Dave Brooks & Answer from Lieven De Cauter| Third World Resistance and Western Intellectual Solidarity (James Petras 07 April 2004) | Women in uniform (May 30 2004 ) | The Warlords of America - John Pilger (Sept 9 2004) | US struggles to “encircle” China: Experts (Sept 19 2004)| The antiwar movement and the Iraqi resistance (Nov 8 2004) Patrick Cockburn: ‘When you have an occupation, you have resistance’ (Dec 15 2004)| Intelligence Estimate States the Obvious: Bush is Losing Iraq (Dec 19 2004)| The End Of Warfare  (Jan 2005) | It's Vietnam Again! ( Dec 22 2004) | A New American Century? Iraq and the hidden euro-dollar wars (Dec 31 2004)| Bush will lose in Iraq (Dec 31 2004)|  James Petras: The meaning of war: A heterodox perspective (Jan 2005) | A man-made tsunami (Jan 11, 2005) | The Coming Wars (Jan 24 2005)| 2020 Vision (Jan 26 2005)| What I Heard about Iraq (Feb 3 2005) | Lies about the “oppression of the Shi‘ah” and others (25 March 2005) | The Agony of War (April 25 2005) | Ain't But One Way Out (May 10 2005) | The Rise Of Legitimate Resistance Movement (April 29 2005) | Regulated Resistance: Is it possible to change the system when you are the system? Part 1 (April 26, 2005) - Part 2:  The Gatekeepers of the So-Called Left (May 03, 2005) | Do The People Of Iraq Have A right To Resist U.S. Occupation? (May 29, 2005) |  Welcome to Iraq… but call it Vietnam (June 15 2005) | Resistance in Iraq, true and false (June 2005) | The Trial of Saddam Hussein / Anti-war Movement Must Reject Colonial 'Justice' (Dec 9 2005)|  Why Saddam is important (Dec 15 2005) | The War on Iraq in the Context of the Forces that Shape US Foreign Policy (14 March 2006) | Why is the Left Understating the Carnage? (14 March 2006) |

 

De uitzonderingstoestand in actie: wandaden zijn "part of the process"  

De misbruiken in Abu Graib zijn oorlogsmisdaden en volgens rapporten van het Rode Kruis en Human Rights Watch zijn ze daarenboven systematisch. Daar is niets verwonderlijks aan. De regering Bush heeft heel openlijk en zelfverzekerd verklaard dat het handvest van de Verenigde Naties en de conventie van Genève niet van toepassing waren op de gevangenen van Guantanamo en andere Amerikaanse basissen of  voormalige gevangenissen, waar tienduizenden 'verdachten' worden vastgehouden. Vaak gaat het om onschuldige burgers die op het verkeerde moment op de verkeerde plaats waren. Volgens het Rode Kruis-rapport zijn in Abu Graib 70 tot 90 % 'vergissingen '. Ze worden vastgehouden zonder beschuldiging, zonder recht op een advocaat, zonder bezoekrecht, zonder dat hun familie op de hoogte wordt gebracht van hun 'verdwijning' - kortom, waar ze worden vastgehouden buiten elke rechtsnorm om.

Something is rotten in the state Denmark (om het met Hamlet te zeggen). De Nieuwe Imperiale Wereldorde die door de regering Bush wordt geïnstalleerd berust op het invoeren van de uitzonderingstoestand. Dat is het systematisch opheffen van de wettelijke normen (zie daarover ook DS 26.05.03). De inval en bezetting van Irak maar een try out van de nieuwe militaire hegemonie en de 'War on Terror' het alibi. Ze noemen het zelf "American exceptionalism". En helaas: there is method in this madness: het opzeggen van Kyoto, het opzeggen van het Nonproliferaiteverdrag, de theorie en praktijk van de preventieve oorlog, het niet erkennen van het Internationaal Gerechtshof in Den Haag, the Hague invasion act (als er toch een Amerikaanse staatsburger in de haag zou worden vastgehouden dan eigent Amerika bij wet het recht toe om Den Haag binnen te vallen), Patriot Act, dat grondwettelijke burgerrechten opheft en bijvoorbeeld huiszoekingen zonder huiszoekingsbevel toelaat, het overlaten van allerlei ordehandhavingsopdrachten aan privé-firma's (die daarmee een einde maken aan het geweldsmonopolie van de Staat en boven de wet staan, en die eigenlijk de echte 'nonlegal combattants' zijn, want bij de gevangenen van Guantanamo zitten ook gewone burgers), en natuurlijk Guantanamo zelf en nu ook Abu Graib. Er bestaat een technische naam voor die plaatsen buiten elk wettelijkheid, uitstulpingen buiten het territorium: concentratiekampen. Het zijn plekken waar de mensen die er binnenkomen worden ontdaan van hun burgerrechten en van hun mensenrechten en tenslotte ook van hun menselijkheid.

Bush en Rumsfeld zijn hypocriet als ze doen alsof de (oorlogs)misdaden in deze 'gevangenissen' het werk zijn van enkelingen. Of doen alsof ze geschokt zijn. Je kan niet eerst de wetteloosheid uitroepen met een zekere trots op "American exceptionalism" - het recht van Amerika, als supermacht, als wereldsoeverein, om het recht aan de kant te schuiven - en dan vervolgens verbaasd zijn dat dit tot wandaden leidt. Wanneer het Rode Kruis in oktober al deze vreselijke praktijken vaststelde in Abu Graib en het bezoek onderbrak om uitleg te eisen, zei de militaire inlichtingen officier van dienet dat dit "part of the process" was (International Herald Tribune, 11.05.2004). En gelijk had hij. Dat wordt ook bevestigd door een nieuw artikel van Seymour Hersh in the New Yorker: het systeem van seksuele vernedering dat moest gebruikt worden tegen islamitische topverdachten van de Taliban en Al Quaida (omdat volgens een boek dat zij gebruikten de islamieten zo gevoelig zijn voor seksuele vernedering)  werd, naar mate de situatie in Iraq verslechterde, uitgebreid tot Irak. De foto's moesten dienen om de gevangenen te dwingen om informant te worden door ermee te dreigen deze scènes te verspreiden onder hun familie en kennissen. 

De ondervragingsmethodes van de Amerikaanse inlichtingendienst bevatten methodes die alleen maar als foltertechnieken kunnen worden gecatalogeerd. Alleen laten ze geen zichtbare blijvende letsels na.(ontzeggen van alle slaap, dagenlang zonder voedsel, naakt in koude donkere cel, urenlang in de zon, dagenlang vastgebonden in een pijnlijke houding, dagenlang in isoleercel met fel licht,...). Decennia lang hebben de Amerikaanse inlichtingendiensten duizenden militairen en politieofficieren opgeleid in ondervragingstechnieken en anti-guerilla oorlogsvoering in de befaamde "School of the Americas" in Panama en Fort Benning, Georgia. Talloze folteraars uit vrijwel alle Latijns-Amerikaanse landen hebben hier hun opleiding gekregen. Dat heeft er toe geleid dat de Amerikaanse Congres in 2000 bijna de school liet sluiten. Uiteindelijk werd alleen de naam veranderd. De opleiding bleef.

Na 11 september 2001 werd in de Amerikaanse media openlijk de discussie gevoerd over het gebruik van martelingen als een gerechtvaardigde methode om het terrorisme te bestrijden. Daarbij lieten een aantal vooraanstaande intellectuelen zoals prof. Alan Dershowitz zich niet onbetuigd. "Alan Dershowitz, een rechtspecialist van Harvard en een van Amerika's meest befaamde verdedigers van burgerrechten, is tot de conclusie gekomen dat marteling niet verboden is door de Amerikaanse grondwet. Hij argumenteert dat de 'Fifth amendment', dat zelfbeschuldiging verbiedt, alleen betekent dat verklaring losgeweekt door foltering niet kunnen worden gebruikt als bewijs tegen gefolterde verdachten. Hij argumenteert verder dat de 'Eighth Amendment' dat "wrede en ongebruikelijke straffen verbiedt, ook niet door foltering wordt overtreden. Omdat het alleen van toepassing is nadat een individu is veroordeeld. (Dayly Telegraph, 15/12/2002). Fraaie redenering. 

De gehele politiek van de behandeling van gevangenen, openlijk en voor het oog van de camera's en van de gehele wereld, is er op gericht om de rechteloosheid van de gevangene duidelijk te maken. Gevangenen worden geketend en er wordt een kap over het hoofd getrokken. De ontmenselijking door het gezichtloos maken van de gevangene is niet alleen onmenselijk op zich, maar zet de toon hoe gevangenen zullen worden behandeld. Ze zijn niet langer mens. Wanneer daar bovenop het isolement komt, in al zijn brute openheid in Guantanomo, of buiten de schijnwerpers van de wereldpers tot in de meest afgelegen streken van Afghanistan of Pakistan, zonder bezoekrecht, zonder toegang van advokaten, is de poort wijd open voor alle misbruik, tot en met de meest sadistische seksuele vernederingen. Dat is ook de mening van The independant Army Times, een legerkrant die in zijn editoriaal het ontslag eiste van Rumsfeld: "De hele affaire is een gebrek aan leiderschap van begin tot einde. Vanaf het moment dat ze worden gevangen genomen worden gevangenen de kap overgetrokken, geïsoleerd en geboeid. De boodschap aan de troepen: Alles kan".

Wanneer de hoogste leiders van het land, de president en zijn minister van Defensie, alle rechtsregels terzijde schuiven, is het hek van de dam. Een land wordt illegaal bezet. Naar schatting veertigduizend Irakezen worden gedood (10.000 burgers en 30.000
soldaten). Maar daarvoor reeds werd Afghanistan aangevallen, werden "terroristen" rechteloos verklaard, bepaalden een president en een minister van defensie, naar eigen goeddunken, wanneer iemand krijgsgevangen is of "nonlegal combatant", wanneer de Conventie van Genève geldt en wanneer niet. De folteringen komen nu aan het licht, precies omdat ze zo routineus waren, omdat ze zo gewoon waren.Dat betekent dat het Amerikaans leger, met medeweten van de Amerikaanse regering, zich op grote schaal schuldig maakt aan misdaden tegen de menselijkheid. 

De internationale publieke opinie (en in eerste plaats de Westerse publieke opinie) moet eisen dat aan deze uitzonderingstoestand een einde wordt gemaakt. Sinds de inval blijven Bush en Blair er maar op hameren dat het Iraakse volk nu eindelijk opgelucht kon ademhalen. Amerika en het Verenigd Koninkrijk hadden de democratie naar Irak gebracht. Speech na speech blijft Bush daarbij dezelfde zin herhalen: "Iraq is free of rape rooms and torture chambers". Het was de nieuwe ultieme rechtvaardiging voor de oorlog. Ze klinkt nu wel heel erg pijnlijk en ongeloofwaardig. 

Het is volgens het VN-Handvest de plicht van elke (wereld)burger om deze oorlogsmisdaden, misdaden tegen het international recht en misdaden tegen de menselijkheid aan te klagen, zoals het sinds Nürenberg de plicht is van elke soldaat om dienst te weigeren indien hij verplicht wordt om deel te nemen aan oorlogsmisdaden en misdaden tegen de menselijkheid. Het is tijd dat alle wereldburgers en alle betrokken militairen hier een gewetenskwestie van maken, en ernaar handelen (een oproep aan GI's circuleert al in Amerika). Zoals het ook tijd is dat alle advocatenverenigingen en balies van de hele wereld hun stem verheffen. Want zo kan het absoluut niet verder. Het is tijd voor verzet. Zoals Michael Moore zei in een mail toen hij zijn anti-bush campagne begon: "I don't ask much. I want them out of the white house in handcuffs".

Namens het comité van het BRussells Tribunal.  

prof. Lieven De Cauter, filosoof, Kuleuven

Patrick Deboosere, demograaf, VUB

prof. Francois Houtart, centre tricontinental, UCL

prof. Pierre Klein, internationaal recht, ULB

Le déguisement d'une occupation illegale

             La ratification de la résolution 1546 adoptée à l’unanimité par le Conseil de Sécurité des Nations Unies est une insulte. En un paragraphe, en effet, les mots démocratie, souveraineté, droit à l’autodétermination des peuples et occupation sont vidés de leur sens. Ce nouveau gouvernement intérim désigné par les ministères américains de la Défense et des Affaires étrangères, n’a pas le droit d’abroger les lois émises pendant le mandat de l’administrateur civil américain Paul Bremer, sa sécurité est assurée par une force d’occupation déguisée en force multinationale dont la date de départ n’a pas été fixée, et ses ressources dépendent d’un fond de développement géré par la Communauté Internationale. Si l’on résume la souveraineté de ce gouvernement, on découvre qu’il a deux pouvoirs : celui d’exercer une répression arbitraire sur son peuple insurgé, et celui d’agrandir la dette nationale de son pays aux moyens d’emprunts faits auprès des institutions financières internationales pour sa reconstruction.

Le 28 juin, le consul américain Paul Bremer a cèdé le pouvoir à un « gouvernement irakien », en toute hâte, et a quitté le pays comme un voleur dans la nuit. Et, le « monde libre » reconnaît pleinement souverain Iyad Allawi formidable patriote, qui ne se cache pas d’avoir était agent double du Baas et des services de renseignements britanniques jusqu’en 1971, pour ensuite travailler en étroite collaboration avec les services de la CIA dans la planification de la chute du régime de Saddam Hussein (avec entre autres l'exploit d' un attentat dans un cinéma avec beaucoup de victimes innocents). Il n'a aucun contrôle sur les contrats pétroliers. Il doit veiller à ce que l'économie suive les voies stipulées par les Etats-Unis. Il n'a aucune possibilité de juger les opérations de maintien de l’ordre entrepris par la coalition. Huit ministres viennent d'organisations financées et dirigées par le gouvernement américain. Deux ministres sont carrément citoyens américains. Le gouvernement ne peut promulguer des lois qu'avec l'autorisation des Américains.

Nous apprenons également plus loin, que le peuple irakien désire non seulement construire un état démocratique mais qu’il veut que celui-ci soit fédéral.Alors que les hauts dignitaires sunnites de Falluja se sont déplacés à pied dans une marche symbolique jusqu’à Najaf pour soutenir la lutte de leurs frères chiites. Alors que les habitants de Baghdad, toutes confessions confondues, ont organisé une chaîne humanitaire pour venir en aide à leurs cousins assiégés de Falluja. Depuis l’occupation de ce pays, les Irakiens n'ont pas eu l’occasion d’engager une réflexion sur la forme d’état qui pourrait le représenter.

L’ONU ouvre un précédent extrêmement dangereux pour la paix internationale. Ce n’est pas le premier, certes, ils ont déjà inventé le droit d’ingérence humanitaire. Mais ils légitiment à présent une guerre d’agression préventive,  juste au moment où il est prouvé que tous les motifs invoqués par Bush & Co pour partir en guerre étaient des mensonges: les armes de destruction massive et la collaboration entre Al Qaida et Saddam, au moment où le caractère de l'occupation et de la guerre est marqué par les pratiques de torture dans les prisons irakiennes. On nous entraîne dans une ère obscure, où toutes les méthodes seront bonnes pour résister.

Non satisfaits d’avoir soutenu pendant plus de 20 ans un régime sanguinaire, d’avoir mené deux guerres qui ont détruit l’infrastructure du pays, d’avoir imposé un embargo inhumain qui a coûté la vie à plus d’ 1,5 millions de personnes, d’avoir pillé et endommagé les richesses culturelles, la dirigents Americains se félicitent à présent de reconnaître entièrement souverain un pouvoir qui dès sa première déclaration nous éclaircit sur sa stratégie pour rétablir la sécurité dans le pays. Dès le transfert de pouvoir, Iyad Allawi a l’intention d’utiliser la loi n°4 datant de 1965, qui permet: la limite des libertés individuelles, la perquisition et l’arrestation de personnes sans mandats, l’expulsion des étrangers, l’interdiction de manifester, et la dissolution d’associations telles que les partis politiques. C’est donc ça, la démocratie qu’ils veulent établir!

Le projet néo-conservateur pour l’Iraq est voué à l’échec, car il est contraire aux intérêts du peuple irakien. L’administration Bush a fait une erreur de jugement en pensant que l’Iraq et sa population étaient tellement affaiblis par douze ans d’embargo, qu’ils ne rencontreraient aucune résistance. En s’appuyant tour à tour sur les Kurdes et sur les Chiites pour marginaliser les Sunnites, l’administration pensait pouvoir construire un état faible, paralysé par ses divisions. Il n’en est rien. La coalition s’est aliénée l’ensemble des communautés du pays, y compris celles qui étaient plutôt en clin à les accueillir. C’est mal connaître le poids d’une mémoire collective millénaire, et la fierté du sentiment national irakien. Tous les mouvements de résistance, coordonnés ou non, affirment dans leur lutte acharnée, leur allégeance à leur patrie, multiculturelle, multiconfessionnelle, multiethnique, arabo-musulmane et unie.

Selon les dernières estimations faites dans le pays, plus de 65% de la population irakienne soutiendrait, au moins en sympathie, les mouvements de résistance, car en l’espace de 14 mois, le gouvernement de transition bientôt dissolu n’a ni rétabli l’eau, ni la sécurité, ni l’électricité, et environ 70% de la population demeure au chômage. Qu’a donc fait le premier gouvernement appointé? Un drapeau métaphore de la libanisation du pays, un hymne national dont l’Iraq avait bien besoin dans ces temps troubles, mais surtout, il a eu le temps d’abroger la législation sur les femmes la plus moderne et laïc du Moyen-Orient pour la confier en accord avec la Charia aux instances religieuses. Les voiles se multiplient dans ce pays qui était le plus laique du Moyen Orient. 

Ne nous étonnons pas du développement de forme de résistance et de mouvements de pensées extrémistes lorsque nous nous ingérons avec tant d’arrogance dans les affaires d’un pays, dont on méprise la culture et humilie le peuple. Il est clairement stipulé dans les accords de Genève, textes fondateurs des Nations Unies, qu’un peuple a le droit de résister à l’occupant et qu’un état est occupé tant que des troupes étrangères stationnent sur son sol.  Prenons l’exemple de l’orphelin Moqtada Sadr, devenu un véritable symbole. Il est en train de créer un contre-pouvoir qui permet à la population de se défaire de sa tutelle et de sa dépendance à l’occupant. Il organise des élections locales, constitue des comités d’autogestion au sein des industries. Enfin, il crée une armée de libération nationale capable de combattre la coalition. Je me félicite de son refus de participer à cette farce.  Il serait naïf de la part de n’importe quel analyste politique, de penser que ce jeune mouvement peut perdurer sans le soutien des forces traditionnelles du pays. Loin de se combattre entre elles, les différentes factions de la résistance se sont unies pour lutter, au grand désespoir des forces d’occupations. Ce n’est pas la première fois dans l’histoire que le peuple irakien sait qu’il doit compter sur lui-même. Il a une grande tradition révolutionnaire, n’a ni oublié celle de 1920, ni celle de 1958, ni les multiples trahisons de l’ONU à son égard.

A l'approche de la guerre de 2003, le mouvement de la paix avait mis ses espoirs sur la France, l’Allemagne et la Belgique. Ils étaient même prêts l'an dernier à utiliser leur veto contre l'engagement de l'Otan. Maintenant ils veulent contribuer à la construction d'une armée et d'une police collaboratrices. Ils ont trompé le peuple irakien et le mouvement de la paix. Les Irakiens tombent jour après jour au combat. L’Iraq est sur ses genoux, dans un état d’anarchie et de chaos généralisé, déchiré par des violences autant physiques que symboliques. Il faut soutenir la résistance irakienne sous toutes les formes qu’elle développe dans le combat qu’elle mène contre l’occupant et ses collaborateurs. Le mouvements de la paix devons très rapidement établir un dialogue avec la résistance irakienne pour la soutenir dans son combat et lui offrir une ouverture sur le monde. Au nom des principes de la Charte des Nations Unies, les exigences sont et doivent rester: le retrait immédiat et unilatéral des troupes étrangères du sol irakien; l’abrogation de toutes les lois et mesures illégales prises par les forces de l’occupation; la compensation de toutes les destructions matérielles et humaines causées par l’occupation; la libération de tous les prisonniers politiques, illégalement détenu; et le jugement par un tribunal pénal de l’ensemble des responsables de cette guerre d’agression pour les crimes commis depuis l’invasion de l’Iraq le 20 Mars 2003.

Le transfer de pouvoir est une farce. Loin de favoriser la stabilité internationale, en adoptant cette résolution, nos dirigents ne font qu’agrandir le divorce déjà entamé entre les peuples du monde et les institutions sensées les représenter. Ils en sortiront bien évidemment affaiblis, car jusqu’ici, l’histoire de l’humanité nous a montré que seul le peuple est souverain.

Hana Al Bayaty,

documentariste Franco-Irakienne,

membre du comité du BRussells Tribunal


Allawi’s leugen:    Open brief aan de premier Balkenende en de Europese leiders    

 

Geachte heer Balkenende. Ik richt me tot u in uw tijdelijke hoedanigheid van voorzitter van de Europese ministerraad. Het gaat hierover: Allawi, de “president van Irak”, had tijdens zijn bezoek in Brussel de volgende boodschap voor u, de Europese leiders:  “If you beat terrorism in Iraq, you beat it everywhere”. Ik moet u met aandrang melden dat dit een grove leugen is. Het is twee keer fout. Het verzet in Irak is geen terrorisme (maar wordt er eerder door besmeurd en bedreigd) en de escalatie in Irak zal het terrorisme wereldwijd alleen maar versterken.

Het is vreselijk dat een Irakees het legitieme verzet van zijn volk tegen een illegale bezetting met terrorisme gelijkstelt. Verzet is legitiem volgens de conventie van Genève als een land illegaal wordt binnengevallen en bezet. De invasie in Irak was niet alleen illegaal (overtreding van het internationaal recht, want zonder resolutie en toestemming van de veiligheidsraad), ze was ook zonder legitimiteit (er waren geen massavernietigingswapens en er waren geen banden tussen Saddam Hussein en Al Quaeda).

Het terrorisme is als een spook dat het legitieme verzet van de Iraakse bevolking besmeurt en verdacht maakt. De bewoners van Fallujah schrijven in een open brief aan Kofi Annan (De Standaard 24.10), dat als Al Zarqawi al bestaat, hij zich zeker niet in Fallujah bevindt en dat het Irakese volk met wandaden zoals de onthoofdingen niets te maken heeft. En dat het gedoe over terrorisme en de zogenaamde aanvallen op Al Zarquawi alleen maar een alibi vormen om het verzet te breken en er alleen maar toe leiden dat duizenden burgerslachtoffers vallen, vooral vrouwen en kinderen.

Volgens een onderzoek van Johns Hopkins University, gepubliceerd in het gezaghebbende tijdschrift The Lancet, zijn er in Irak al minstens 100.000 slachtoffers gevallen. 100.000! Honderdduizend mensen zijn gestorven in een oorlog die voor geen enkele goede reden is ontketend en die (denk aan Istanbul en Madrid) het terrorisme alleen maar heeft aangezwengeld en de wereld onveiliger gemaakt.

De Europese leiders zouden er goed aan doen the Lancet te lezen en niet te luisteren naar de gevaarlijke leugen van Allawi, zogenaamd president van Irak maar in feite een stroman van Amerika, die voor de CIA heeft gewerkt en er nog trots op is ook. En die dus in de ogen van de Irakezen nooit iets anders zal zijn dan een Pétain, een colloborateur. Zijn regime is even gehaat als Vichy.

Het is bijna overbodig nog te benadrukken dat vergeleken met de misdaden die Allawi nu tegen zijn volk begaat de collaboratie van Pétain en Quisling in het niet zal verbleken. Europa is goed geplaatst om te weten wat bezetting en collaboratie inhouden. Laat ons dus alsjeblief - om het in Bijbelse termen waar u van houdt te zeggen - niet recht praten wat krom is en rechtvaardig verzet in Irak over dezelfde kam scheren als blind terrorisme. Het komt erop aan de juiste keuze te maken en de scheidslijn te leggen waar ze moet liggen, namelijk tussen gerechtigheid en onrecht. Helpen om zo snel mogelijk een einde te maken aan de illegale en illegitieme bezetting van Irak is op termijn de belangrijkste investering in de strijd tegen het terrorisme, maar is volgens ons ook de enige keuze die in de ogen van de geschiedenis de juiste zal blijken te zijn.

Leiders van Europa, premier Balkenende, Commissievoorzitter Barosso, wij smeken en bezweren u: werk niet mee met dit regime. Het zal het terrorisme alleen maar verder verspreiden, omdat de hemeltergende hypocrisie van de westerse politiek onder Amerikaanse imperiale paraplu de Islam verder radicaliseert. De escalatie van de oorlog, die nu, na de Amerikaanse presidentsverkiezingen, begonnen is met de totale vernietiging van Fallujah, vormt een wanhoopspoging van de VS en zijn coalition of the willing om het verzet te breken. Deze escalatie zal nog eens duizenden slachtoffers kosten en het fundamentalisme als antiwesterse regressie in de Islam en het terrorisme als laatste wapen alleen maar in de hand werken. Net als de video van Osama enkele dagen voor de verkiezingen - dat wordt toch een beetje verdacht, dat moet Osama toch ook hebben geweten – is de uitspraak van Allawi enkele dagen na de verkiezingen een godsgeschenk voor Bush. Maar het is ook een cadeau voor fundamentalisten en extremisten. Als de Europese unie in de logica mee stapt die Irak met massale bombardementen wil ‘pacificeren’, zijn we niet alleen medeplichtig aan oorlogsmisdaden en misdaden tegen de menselijkheid (de bezetting neemt genocidaire trekken aan en helaas zijn die 100.000 slachtoffers met het oog op de escalatie maar een begin), maar ook zal dit, en in zekere zin niet geheel ten onrechte, Europa tot doelwit maken van terroristische aanslagen. Als het “Westen” 100.000 onschuldige burgers mag doden, dan zullen ‘zij’ niet blijven toekijken (om Allawi’s sneer tegen de Europese staten die zijn blijven toekijken, ook maar even te gebruiken).

John Pilger, de gezaghebbende politieke analist, zei voor de oorlog, in maart 2003, iets dat Allawi’s uitspraak spiegelt, namelijk dat de toekomst van de wereld van de sterkte van het Iraakse verzet zou afhangen. Dat was een gedurfde uitspraak. Als het verzet zwak zou zijn, dan zou Amerika in serie Syrië en Iran aanpakken en overal ter wereld het script uitspelen van ‘The Empire strikes first’: vanuit de lucht of zelfs de ruimte met een verpletterende technologische en militaire overmacht alle rebellen treffen en zijn nieuwe dominantie opleggen: The New American Century waar de neoconservatieven luidop van dromen. Nu is deze strategie spaak gelopen op het verzet in Irak. Men zal het alleen kunnen breken, als men het al kan breken, door hele delen van de bevolking de dood in te bombarderen. Het Iraakse volk is met de dag meer slachtoffer van een illegale, en ongerechtvaardigde oorlog die totaal uit de hand loopt. Dus is het erg belangrijk dat de Europese Unie, het Iraakse volk steunt en niet Allawi die geen vertegenwoordiger is van dat volk. Een eerste taak voor Europa is: te protesteren tegen de escalatie die nu begonnen is. En in elk geval met alle middelen medeplichtigheid aan deze misselijke en misdadige oorlog vermijden. Het is al erg genoeg dat er individuele staten medeplechtig aan zijn. Zoals, helaas, ook uw land, Meneer Balkenende.

100.000 mensen zijn reeds gestorven in deze illegale, misselijke oorlog; een oorlog  gebaseerd op leugens en gevoerd in het belang van Amerikaanse wereldoverheersing (volgens het Project for the New American century zelf, de denktank achter de oorlogstrategie van de regering Bush); een oorlog in het belang van het militair industrieel complex, van de olielobby, van likud-politiek en christelijk fundamentalisme. 100.000 mensen, vooral vrouwen en kinderen. En honderden doden vallen, terwijl ik, mij de haren uit het hoofd rukkend van verontwaardiging bij het stilzwijgen van de wereldgemeenschap, deze brief onderteken. Met de meeste hoogachting.  

Prof dr. Lieven De Cauter

Filosoof (Kuleuven, Rits, P.A.R.TS, Berlage Institute); auteur, o.a. van het pas verschenen boek “De capsulaire beschaving. Over de stad in het tijdperk van de angst”; initiatiefnemer van het BRussells Tribunal tegen ‘the Project for the New American Century’.


For A Justice To Come: An Interview with Jacques Derrida,  supporting the BRussells Tribunal.

 

 

For a justice to come - An interview with Jacques Derrida [English version].



 

Pour une justice à venir -
Un entretien avec Jacques Derrida [French version].



 

Voor een toekomstige gerechtigheid -
Een gesprek met Jacques Derrida [Nederlandse versie].


'World's greatest philosopher' dies

Martin Bright
Sunday October 10, 2004
The Observer


Jacques Derrida, the French thinker once described as the most influential philosopher in the world, has died at the age of 74 in a Paris hospital. The controversial theorist was diagnosed with aggressive pancreatic cancer last year.

 

Derrida, whose death was announced by the office of the French President Jacques Chirac, has been credited with the invention of three philosophical concepts which dominated late 20th century thinking: 'postmodernism', 'poststructuralism' and 'deconstruction', though in later years he showed growing irritation as the words passed into daily use.

 

In a recent interview, he said the word 'deconstruction' had even penetrated a description of a rabbit stew which he had seen in a newspaper. 'Deconstructed rabbit! I saw it in an article in the New York Times !' he said.

 

Derrida grew up in El-Biar, Algeria, moving to France at the age of 19. From 1952 he studied at Paris's Ecole Normale Superieur under two French philosophical greats, Michel Foucault and Louis Althusser.

 


More Viewpoints: Louis Michel

 


Toespraak Minister Michel voor de Belgische pers op 19 januari 2004

2004-01-21 
Irak. Hier voor u heb ik, één jaar geleden, gezegd dat de Irak-kwestie niet terug te brengen was tot de simplistische vraag of we voor dan wel tegen de oorlog zijn. Van meet af aan heb ik gesteld dat er iets schortte met de legitimatie van de voorgenomen militaire actie. De wisselende justificaties van Washington waren daar trouwens een teken van : nu eens ging het erom Saddam Hussein aan de dijk te zetten, dan weer was er sprake over de democratisering van de ganse Midden Oosten-regio, en uiteindelijk zou het om massavernietigingswapens gaan. Goed. Ik wil hier niet het lange en moeilijke Irak-verhaal nog eens overdoen. En evenmin wil ik de onproductieve vraag stellen wie er nu gelijk had en wie niet. Ik wil alleen zeggen - en dat is u niet ontgaan - dat de echte vragen durven stellen in een context van diplomatieke druk, die soms dicht stond bij diplomatieke intimidatie, ultiem toch lonend kan blijken. Op vandaag wordt het Belgische standpunt door velen als eerbaar beschouwd. België heeft getoond dat het geen meeloper is. En in termen van internationaal aanzien zijn we daar goed bij gevaren.

Extrait du discours du Ministre Louis Michel devant la presse belge le 19 janvier 2004

(2004-01-21)
l'Irak. Il y a un an, j'ai dit ici, déjà devant vous, que la question irakienne ne pouvait être réduite à une dichotomie simpliste : « pour ou contre la guerre ». Dès le début, j'ai affirmé qu'il y avait un problème de légitimité de l'action militaire projetée. La valse-hésitation dans les justifications avancées par Washington en était d'ailleurs un signe : une fois, il fallait mettre Saddam Hussein hors-circuit, une autre fois, on parlait de démocratiser toute la région du Moyen-Orient et, en fin de compte, il s'agissait d'armes de destruction massive. Bon, je ne veux pas m'étendre une fois de plus sur la longue saga de l'Irak ni encore moins poser la question, somme toute futile, de savoir qui avait raison ou tort. Je veux uniquement dire - et cela ne vous aura pas échappé - qu'oser poser les véritables questions dans un contexte de pression, voire d'intimidation diplomatique, peut se révéler être, in fine, payant. Aujourd'hui, le point de vue belge est considéré par beaucoup comme honorable. La Belgique a montré qu'elle ne pratiquait pas le suivisme, ce qui a été apprécié par une large frange de la Communauté internationale.



Today the former Foreign Secretary Robin Cook said that Mr Blair must now admit that the Iraq war was a mistake.

Mr Cook said he believed Mr Blair led Britain into the conflict in order to demonstrate to US President George Bush that he was a reliable ally and had been driven by "missionary zeal" and "evangelical certainty".

Mr Cook said on BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "It is becoming really rather undignified for the Prime Minister to continue to insist that he was right all along when everybody can now see he was wrong, when even the head of the Iraq Survey Group has said he was wrong.

"I think it is very important that Tony Blair does concede that there were mistakes made, maybe in all good faith, probably he believed them genuinely, but there were mistakes. Because if we don't face up to the fact that we got it wrong, then we are not going to learn the lessons."

"We have got to drop this very dangerous doctrine under which we went to war of the pre-emptive strike. If there was no threat from Iraq we obviously had no right to carry out a pre-emptive strike to remove that threat. And we better drop that doctrine before somebody else in the world uses it in their own back yard."


Viewpoints: Michael Meacher
 
Published on Saturday, September 6, 2003 by the Guardian/UK

This War on Terrorism is Bogus
The 9/11 attacks gave the US an ideal pretext to use force to secure its global domination

Michael Meacher MP was environment minister from May 1997 to June 2003

 

Massive attention has now been given - and rightly so - to the reasons why Britain went to war against Iraq. But far too little attention has focused on why the US went to war, and that throws light on British motives too. The conventional explanation is that after the Twin Towers were hit, retaliation against al-Qaida bases in Afghanistan was a natural first step in launching a global war against terrorism. Then, because Saddam Hussein was alleged by the US and UK governments to retain weapons of mass destruction, the war could be extended to Iraq as well. However this theory does not fit all the facts. The truth may be a great deal murkier.

We now know that a blueprint for the creation of a global Pax Americana was drawn up for Dick Cheney (now vice-president), Donald Rumsfeld (defense secretary), Paul Wolfowitz (Rumsfeld's deputy), Jeb Bush (George Bush's younger brother) and Lewis Libby (Cheney's chief of staff). The document, entitled Rebuilding America's Defenses, was written in September 2000 by the neoconservative think tank, Project for the New American Century (PNAC).

 

The plan shows Bush's cabinet intended to take military control of the Gulf region whether or not Saddam Hussein was in power. It says "while the unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification, the need for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein."

The PNAC blueprint supports an earlier document attributed to Wolfowitz and Libby which said the US must "discourage advanced industrial nations from challenging our leadership or even aspiring to a larger regional or global role". It refers to key allies such as the UK as "the most effective and efficient means of exercising American global leadership". It describes peacekeeping missions as "demanding American political leadership rather than that of the UN". It says "even should Saddam pass from the scene", US bases in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait will remain permanently... as "Iran may well prove as large a threat to US interests as Iraq has". It spotlights China for "regime change", saying "it is time to increase the presence of American forces in SE Asia".

The document also calls for the creation of "US space forces" to dominate space, and the total control of cyberspace to prevent "enemies" using the internet against the US. It also hints that the US may consider developing biological weapons "that can target specific genotypes [and] may transform biological warfare from the realm of terror to a politically useful tool".

Finally - written a year before 9/11 - it pinpoints North Korea, Syria and Iran as dangerous regimes, and says their existence justifies the creation of a "worldwide command and control system". This is a blueprint for US world domination. But before it is dismissed as an agenda for rightwing fantasists, it is clear it provides a much better explanation of what actually happened before, during and after 9/11 than the global war on terrorism thesis. This can be seen in several ways.

First, it is clear the US authorities did little or nothing to pre-empt the events of 9/11. It is known that at least 11 countries provided advance warning to the US of the 9/11 attacks. Two senior Mossad experts were sent to Washington in August 2001 to alert the CIA and FBI to a cell of 200 terrorists said to be preparing a big operation (Daily Telegraph, September 16 2001). The list they provided included the names of four of the 9/11 hijackers, none of whom was arrested.

It had been known as early as 1996 that there were plans to hit Washington targets with airplanes. Then in 1999 a US national intelligence council report noted that "al-Qaida suicide bombers could crash-land an aircraft packed with high explosives into the Pentagon, the headquarters of the CIA, or the White House".

Fifteen of the 9/11 hijackers obtained their visas in Saudi Arabia. Michael Springman, the former head of the American visa bureau in Jeddah, has stated that since 1987 the CIA had been illicitly issuing visas to unqualified applicants from the Middle East and bringing them to the US for training in terrorism for the Afghan war in collaboration with Bin Laden (BBC, November 6 2001). It seems this operation continued after the Afghan war for other purposes. It is also reported that five of the hijackers received training at secure US military installations in the 1990s (Newsweek, September 15 2001).

Instructive leads prior to 9/11 were not followed up. French Moroccan flight student Zacarias Moussaoui (now thought to be the 20th hijacker) was arrested in August 2001 after an instructor reported he showed a suspicious interest in learning how to steer large airliners. When US agents learned from French intelligence he had radical Islamist ties, they sought a warrant to search his computer, which contained clues to the September 11 mission (Times, November 3 2001). But they were turned down by the FBI. One agent wrote, a month before 9/11, that Moussaoui might be planning to crash into the Twin Towers (Newsweek, May 20 2002).

All of this makes it all the more astonishing - on the war on terrorism perspective - that there was such slow reaction on September 11 itself. The first hijacking was suspected at not later than 8.20am, and the last hijacked aircraft crashed in Pennsylvania at 10.06am. Not a single fighter plane was scrambled to investigate from the US Andrews Air Force base, just 10 miles from Washington DC, until after the third plane had hit the Pentagon at 9.38 am. Why not? There were standard FAA intercept procedures for hijacked aircraft before 9/11. Between September 2000 and June 2001 the US military launched fighter aircraft on 67 occasions to chase suspicious aircraft (AP, August 13 2002). It is a US legal requirement that once an aircraft has moved significantly off its flight plan, fighter planes are sent up to investigate.

Was this inaction simply the result of key people disregarding, or being ignorant of, the evidence? Or could US air security operations have been deliberately stood down on September 11? If so, why, and on whose authority? The former US federal crimes prosecutor, John Loftus, has said: "The information provided by European intelligence services prior to 9/11 was so extensive that it is no longer possible for either the CIA or FBI to assert a defense of incompetence."

Nor is the US response after 9/11 any better. No serious attempt has ever been made to catch Bin Laden. In late September and early October 2001, leaders of Pakistan's two Islamist parties negotiated Bin Laden's extradition to Pakistan to stand trial for 9/11. However, a US official said, significantly, that "casting our objectives too narrowly" risked "a premature collapse of the international effort if by some lucky chance Mr Bin Laden was captured". The US chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, General Myers, went so far as to say that "the goal has never been to get Bin Laden" (AP, April 5 2002). The whistleblowing FBI agent Robert Wright told ABC News (December 19 2002) that FBI headquarters wanted no arrests. And in November 2001 the US air force complained it had had al-Qaida and Taliban leaders in its sights as many as 10 times over the previous six weeks, but had been unable to attack because they did not receive permission quickly enough (Time Magazine, May 13 2002). None of this assembled evidence, all of which comes from sources already in the public domain, is compatible with the idea of a real, determined war on terrorism.

The catalogue of evidence does, however, fall into place when set against the PNAC blueprint. From this it seems that the so-called "war on terrorism" is being used largely as bogus cover for achieving wider US strategic geopolitical objectives. Indeed Tony Blair himself hinted at this when he said to the Commons liaison committee: "To be truthful about it, there was no way we could have got the public consent to have suddenly launched a campaign on Afghanistan but for what happened on September 11" (Times, July 17 2002). Similarly Rumsfeld was so determined to obtain a rationale for an attack on Iraq that on 10 separate occasions he asked the CIA to find evidence linking Iraq to 9/11; the CIA repeatedly came back empty-handed (Time Magazine, May 13 2002).

In fact, 9/11 offered an extremely convenient pretext to put the PNAC plan into action. The evidence again is quite clear that plans for military action against Afghanistan and Iraq were in hand well before 9/11. A report prepared for the US government from the Baker Institute of Public Policy stated in April 2001 that "the US remains a prisoner of its energy dilemma. Iraq remains a destabilizing influence to... the flow of oil to international markets from the Middle East". Submitted to Vice-President Cheney's energy task group, the report recommended that because this was an unacceptable risk to the US, "military intervention" was necessary (Sunday Herald, October 6 2002).

Similar evidence exists in regard to Afghanistan. The BBC reported (September 18 2001) that Niaz Niak, a former Pakistan foreign secretary, was told by senior American officials at a meeting in Berlin in mid-July 2001 that "military action against Afghanistan would go ahead by the middle of October". Until July 2001 the US government saw the Taliban regime as a source of stability in Central Asia that would enable the construction of hydrocarbon pipelines from the oil and gas fields in Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, through Afghanistan and Pakistan, to the Indian Ocean. But, confronted with the Taliban's refusal to accept US conditions, the US representatives told them "either you accept our offer of a carpet of gold, or we bury you under a carpet of bombs" (Inter Press Service, November 15 2001).

Given this background, it is not surprising that some have seen the US failure to avert the 9/11 attacks as creating an invaluable pretext for attacking Afghanistan in a war that had clearly already been well planned in advance. There is a possible precedent for this. The US national archives reveal that President Roosevelt used exactly this approach in relation to Pearl Harbor on December 7 1941. Some advance warning of the attacks was received, but the information never reached the US fleet. The ensuing national outrage persuaded a reluctant US public to join the second world war. Similarly the PNAC blueprint of September 2000 states that the process of transforming the US into "tomorrow's dominant force" is likely to be a long one in the absence of "some catastrophic and catalyzing event - like a new Pearl Harbor". The 9/11 attacks allowed the US to press the "go" button for a strategy in accordance with the PNAC agenda which it would otherwise have been politically impossible to implement.

The overriding motivation for this political smokescreen is that the US and the UK are beginning to run out of secure hydrocarbon energy supplies. By 2010 the Muslim world will control as much as 60% of the world's oil production and, even more importantly, 95% of remaining global oil export capacity. As demand is increasing, so supply is decreasing, continually since the 1960s.

This is leading to increasing dependence on foreign oil supplies for both the US and the UK. The US, which in 1990 produced domestically 57% of its total energy demand, is predicted to produce only 39% of its needs by 2010. A DTI minister has admitted that the UK could be facing "severe" gas shortages by 2005. The UK government has confirmed that 70% of our electricity will come from gas by 2020, and 90% of that will be imported. In that context it should be noted that Iraq has 110 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves in addition to its oil.

A report from the commission on America's national interests in July 2000 noted that the most promising new source of world supplies was the Caspian region, and this would relieve US dependence on Saudi Arabia. To diversify supply routes from the Caspian, one pipeline would run westward via Azerbaijan and Georgia to the Turkish port of Ceyhan. Another would extend eastwards through Afghanistan and Pakistan and terminate near the Indian border. This would rescue Enron's beleaguered power plant at Dabhol on India's west coast, in which Enron had sunk $3bn investment and whose economic survival was dependent on access to cheap gas.

Nor has the UK been disinterested in this scramble for the remaining world supplies of hydrocarbons, and this may partly explain British participation in US military actions. Lord Browne, chief executive of BP, warned Washington not to carve up Iraq for its own oil companies in the aftermath of war (Guardian, October 30 2002). And when a British foreign minister met Gadaffi in his desert tent in August 2002, it was said that "the UK does not want to lose out to other European nations already jostling for advantage when it comes to potentially lucrative oil contracts" with Libya (BBC Online, August 10 2002).

The conclusion of all this analysis must surely be that the "global war on terrorism" has the hallmarks of a political myth propagated to pave the way for a wholly different agenda - the US goal of world hegemony, built around securing by force command over the oil supplies required to drive the whole project. Is collusion in this myth and junior participation in this project really a proper aspiration for British foreign policy? If there was ever need to justify a more objective British stance, driven by our own independent goals, this whole depressing saga surely provides all the evidence needed for a radical change of course.

meacherm@parliament.uk


David Brooks: The neocon cabal and other fantasies
By David Brooks (NYT)
International Herald Tribune, Wednesday, January 7, 2004
 

WASHINGTON: Do you ever get the sense the whole world is becoming unhinged from reality? I started feeling that way awhile ago, when I was still working for The Weekly Standard and all these articles began appearing about how Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Doug Feith, Bill Kristol and a bunch of "neoconservatives" at the magazine had taken over U.S. foreign policy.

Theories about the tightly knit neocon cabal came in waves. One day you read that neocons were pushing plans to finish off Iraq and move into Syria. Web sites appeared detailing neocon conspiracies; my favorite described a neocon outing organized by Vice President Dick Cheney to hunt for humans. The Asian press had the most lurid stories; the European press the most thorough. Every day, it seemed, Le Monde or some deep-thinking German paper would have an expose on the neocon cabal, complete with charts connecting all the conspirators.

The full-mooners fixated on a think tank called the Project for the New American Century, which has a staff of five and issues memos on foreign policy. To hear these people describe it, PNAC is sort of a Yiddish Trilateral Commission, the nexus of the sprawling neocon tentacles.

We'd sit around the magazine guffawing at the ludicrous stories that kept sprouting, but belief in shadowy neocon influence has now hardened into common knowledge. Wesley Clark, among others, cannot go a week without bringing it up.

In truth, the people labeled neocons (con is short for "conservative" and neo is short for "Jewish") travel in widely different circles and don't actually have much contact with one another. The ones outside government have almost no contact with President George W. Bush. There have been hundreds of references, for example, to Richard Perle's insidious power over administration policy, but I've been told by senior administration officials that he has had no significant meetings with Bush or Cheney since they assumed office. If he's shaping their decisions, he must be microwaving his ideas into their fillings.

It's true that both Bush and the people labeled neocons agree that Saddam Hussein represented a unique threat to world peace. But correlation does not mean causation. All evidence suggests that Bush formed his conclusions independently. Besides, if he wanted to follow the neocon line, Bush wouldn't know where to turn because while the neocons agree on Saddam, they disagree vituperatively on just about everything else. (If you ever read a sentence that starts with "Neocons believe," there is a 99.44 percent chance everything else in that sentence will be untrue.)

Still, there are apparently millions of people who cling to the notion that the world is controlled by well-organized and malevolent forces. And for a subset of these people, Jews are a handy explanation for everything.

There's something else going on, too. The proliferation of news media outlets and the segmentation of society have meant that it's much easier for people to hive themselves off into like-minded cliques. Some people live in towns where nobody likes President Bush. Others listen to radio networks where nobody likes former President Bill Clinton.

In these communities, half-truths get circulated and exaggerated. Dark accusations are believed because it is delicious to believe them. Vince Foster was murdered. The Saudis warned the Bush administration before Sept. 11.

You get to choose your own reality. You get to believe what makes you feel good. You can ignore inconvenient facts so rigorously your picture of the world is one big distortion.

And if you can give your foes a collective name - liberals, fundamentalists or neocons - you can rob them of their individual humanity. All inhibitions are removed. You can say anything about them. You get to feed off their villainy and luxuriate in your own contrasting virtue. You will find books, blowhards and candidates playing to your delusions, and you can emigrate to your own version of Planet Chomsky. You can live there unburdened by ambiguity.

Improvements in information technology have not made public debate more realistic. On the contrary, anti-Semitism is resurgent. Conspiracy theories are prevalent. Partisanship has left many people unhinged.

Welcome to election year, 2004.

E-mail: dabrooks@nytimes.com

Read this article on NYT online



Answer of Lieven De Cauter :

Dear Mister Brooks,

having read your piece on "the neocon cabal and other fantasies" where you 'argue' that all the fuss about neocon conspiracies and the influence of PNAC is internet-rubbish, I would like to point out that Lewis I. Libby, Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz are signatories of the PNAC statement of principles and key members of the Bush administration. Or aren't they? So, the material link between the "Project for the New American Century" and the Bush War Cabinet is hereby sufficiently established.

The famous PNAC-report "Rebuilding America's defenses" (2000) was a plea for "American pre-eminence" (read world hegemony) via an exponential growth in defense spending. It was the blue print for 'The National Security Strategy' of the president (2002) and the whole new US policy.

The Report pleads in favour of a militarisation of the planet, for one of the core missions of the American military is: “to fight and decisively win multiple, simultaneous major theatre wars” (p. IV). "Pax Americana", one of their favourite terms, sounds cynical after a quote like that, doesn't it? And by its very own name, PNAC clearly demonstrates its program: establishing a New American Imperial World Order. For the glory of whom, you may ask?

Many of the PNAC-members and administration members have close and well established links to the military industrial complex and/or the oil industry.(Dick Cheney: Halliburton - via Kellog Brown & Root they have a quasi monopoly on all army logistics -; Condoleeza Rice: Chevron; Thomas Donnelly, principle author of the PNAC Report: Lockheed Martin; Barry Watts: Northrop Grumman Corporation; Abram Shulsky: RAND Corporation, James Lasswell: Gama Corporation; Dov Zakheim: System Planning Corporation, etc.)  Would you please refute this? Enlighten us.

In the PNAC-report it is written that: “The United States has for decades sought to play a more permanent role in Gulf regional security. While the unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification, the need for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein.” (p. 14).  Sorry, you can't deny that, it is still on their website. So, Saddam's regime was just an alibi. All the rest is part of the web of lies (and the fantasies about non existant WMD, and non existant uranium from Africa, etc.).

It was equally written in the Report that in order to push through the exponential growth of the defense spending and the new 'unilateral' policy, they needed "some catastrophic and catalyzing event—like a new Pearl Harbor” (p. 51). Unbelievable but true. Does this suggest that 'they' organised 9.11 themselves? By no means. But it does prove that it was a godsend for them; something they were eagerly awaiting in order to unleash their policy. All undeniable facts, mister Brooks. Unfortunately for the Iraqi people and the American people as well, for they now live under martial law (the Patriot Act) and the most unsocial policy since ages. So, where are the fantasies?

Then the (in)famous anti-Semitism argument. Perle and Wolfowitz are openly 'likudniks'. Or aren't they? It was written in IHT by a jewish author that Israel is the only instance having benefited so far from this war. Was he an anti-semite or was it yourself? Noam Chomsky might have his own planet, as you write (good one, I liked that: "Planet Chomsky" - he deserves a star named after him, as far as I'm concerned). But: he is certainly no anti-Semite. You would have to agree on that.

So, we kindly invite you to The BRrussells tribunal, a hearing on PNAC, to prove to us and the world it is all fantasies. With witnesses like Saul Landau, Immanuel Wallerstein, Michael Parenti, William Rivers Pitt, Tom Barry, Scott Ritter and Hans von Sponeck, we are sure we will stay clear from (real) anti-semitism and from anti-Americanism (strange you forgot that one). And with commission members as Denis Halliday and Nawal El Saadawi, to name but a few, we are sure that we have people of high moral authority. Jim Lobe, considered one of the utmost PNAC specialists, proposed to be the "amicus curiae" taking up the defense. But you would do, no doubt, much better.

Lieven De Cauter

(Prof. Dr. Lieven De Cauter is teaching philosophy of culture at the Catholic University of Leuven, wrote several books and is initiator of the BRussells Tribunal on PNAC and the New Imperial World Order. see brusselstribunal.org; contact: info@brusselstribunal.org)

Note:
In his book, "Rogue State: A Guide to the World’s Only Superpower," William Blum warns of how the media will make anything that smacks of "conspiracy theory" an immediate "object of ridicule." This prevents the media from ever having to investigate the many strange interconnections among the ruling class—for example, the relationship between the boards of directors of media giants, and the energy, banking and defense industries. These unmentionable topics are usually treated with what Blum calls "the media’s most effective tool—silence." But in case somebody’s asking questions, all you have to do is say, "conspiracy theory," and any allegation instantly becomes too frivolous to merit serious attention."


Women In Uniform
By Gilad Atzmon© May 30th 2004 
 
 

Now the Iraqis are truly liberated..... Some of them have been lucky enough to practice the most advanced forms of western bondage practice. Those Iraqis could never even dream of the possibility before the blessed American came and opened their minds. This is what liberation is all about. Toppling Saddam was just an excuse. From its very beginning, it was all about introducing the Arab people to the advance and beauty of American female domination and general S&M.

 
As a matter of fact I am pretty confused and not just because of these images. I have seen worse. I do find it pathetic that no one has yet come up publicly, to confront us all with the obvious fact that, at the centre of images of torture of Iraqi detainees, we find young females in uniform. The image of a giggling female soldier pointing at the pines of naked hooded prisoners is, no doubt, a novelty. In our western wars, women in uniform always had kept the most precious position. They were providing the fighting men with care, love, mercy and calmness. In their white nursing uniforms they were often described as an instance of sanity and humanity in the midst of a masculine flesh-mincing machine. Not anymore, under the command of Mr Donald Rumsfeld, Private Lindy England and her comrade, Specialist Sabrina Harman are serving as angels of death. Women in the American army have a new role, they are providing the enemies of America with sexual humiliation. They are providing all of us with the ultimate pornographic image of war.

Let’s face it, Private England didn’t invent the notion of sexual abuse. Abuse has been here since time began. More than one victorious army celebrated its triumphant moment raping the defeated nation. Usually it was women who were the first to pay the price. We all know about Nazi platoons who brutally raped Soviet women all the way to Stalingrad. Soviet soldiers were not different when arriving on German soil. American GIs did it in Nam, Serbs did it in Kosovo. Apparently war is a horny event. The confrontation with death and blood leads the active participants towards a vivid and extreme realisation of the notion of life. More than a few London grannies would enthusiastically share their hot juicy blitz tales. Apparently, the engagement with young fireman in action, as well as young off duty American pilots, turned WW2 Britain into an explosive libidinal setting. War, as it appears, has some positive erotic connotations.

But yet, ‘strategic sexual humiliation’ is very new to us all. Moreover, it seems to be a ‘well orchestrated’ new American doctrine. The Americans have always proved to be innovative in introducing evil strategies and destructive weapons. If they do something they do it big. But yet, it is hard to realise how they got so far this time. Thinking about the subject in military terms leaves me pretty puzzled. The story of 20th century wars does not provide us with any sort of historical background relating to tactical sexual humiliation. I cannot recollect images of naked Soviet soldiers sexually abused, neither by sporadic female SS officers nor by male Panzer platoons. We can neither remember any form of such abuse conducted by any Allied soldiers. True, Jews where stripped of their clothes before they where pushed into gas chambers but again those scenes had nothing sexual, erotic or pornographic in them, just a devastating practice.

No doubt, these new American images are a complete revelation; and yet no one points out that we might be confronting an unprecedented, new image. No one points out that it is a female soldier at its very centre. No one dare say that the notion of femininity might have gone through a serious metamorphosis. We might confront here a newly devastating feminine role and yet hardly anyone stops to reflect about it loudly. This is probably the beauty of political correctness. Willingly, we are becoming slightly blind; imposing on ourselves a form of foolishness. It is a cheerfulness that is coupled with stupidity. This very idiocy is the ultimate condition of the post colonial western democracy. We would politely blame Blair and Bush for dragging us into wars; we will democratically protest in the centres of our big cities; we would raise questions about WMD; but we will turn a blind eye to the evident fact that the women around us, the core of our innermost libidinal desires, might change their spots. Somehow, they appear to be far more cruel than we have ever pretended to acknowledge.

***

It took more than a while for Women's Groups to generate enough pressure to persuade orthodox Generals to allow their young sisters to become combatant soldiers. Those resistant orthodox Generals were always repeating the same laconic silly argument. A female soldier, they used to say, would confront some severe risks of sexual abuse when falling into enemy hands. In fact, they where completely wrong, it is very much the other way around. It is the male POWs who find themselves bare, naked, confronting relentless humiliation in the hands of those young enthusiastic armed ladies who entertain the joy of power beyond any recognised measure.

Using those orthodox General’s arguments, it would make sense to argue that men should be left out of the battlefield just to save them from the chance that they would fall in the hands of devoted female combatants. As it appears, both Private England and Specialist Harman enjoy the colour of war to the very limit. It might be that those Women's Groups were right all the way through. Women are far more qualified for the battlefield. Men tend to complain all the time, some of them prove to be cowards when asked to kill. It is more than likely that we should leave wars for women, for sure the food in the front lines will improve a lot.

***

But the issue is slightly more complicated. Since, one should agree, that the sudden appearance of sexual humiliation in military life is a real novelty, we should ask ourselves what really went wrong?

I can think of two possible answers:

1. That American society is going through a severe process of moral and intellectual regression. Sexual humiliation of Iraqi detainees is just a single symptom.

2. The introduction and presence of the female combatant in the firing zone turned the battlefield into a theatre of erotic domination.

The former is pretty obvious; America is going through a rapid process of moral and intellectual deterioration. The fact that America is the last country on earth to back Israel is enough to prove that something has gone dramatically wrong on the other side of the Atlantic. But again, leaving the Zionists aside, it is clear that the war in Iraq is involved with more than one immoral aspect. Actually, it is pretty impossible to find anything moral about it. For more than a while we are facing an endless stream of pornographic images. To start with real-time images of mass destruction and murder of innocent civilians - and to end with explicit images of brutal sexual abuse. The Internet is flowing with images of Iraqi women being raped by American GIs. Many of those images have now been found to be forged. They were commercially made just to satisfy the thirsty American market demands. The brutal rape of a defeated nation is transformed in Bush’s America into hard-on-cash. This is no doubt a new form of a collective masturbation.

But we do not have to go that far. The genuine photos of abused Iraqi POWs that where shown repeatedly all over the American media say it all. While most American commentators appear to express deep disgust, we have a good reason to suspect their honesty. Dr. Susan Block, the American sex therapist says in an article about the subject that many of her clients “will say something to disgust them at first, only to confess a few sessions later that it really turns them on” (Bush’s POW Porn, Dr. Susan Block , Counterpunch 14.5.04). While Block was referring in her article solely to Bush, I would suggest we attribute her diagnosis to the entire, allegedly devastated American media, and the political world. America is full of contrasts: on the one hand, an extremely conservative society and deeply sexually oppressed, but on the other hand, it has the biggest porn industry and by far the wildest one. In that very sense America, a place conceived on opposites, these images serves as a snap shot of some very devastating reality. I would say, a glimpse into the Lacanian ‘Real’. A gaze at the reality of brutally deteriorating society. An explosive image of volatile sexual domination. This reality is so terrifying and hard to acknowledge, that most of us, both men and women, cannot even articulate it verbally.

The later option is leading towards even further complications. The fact that females, when protected with power, expose a completely new form of sexual domination and abusive practice is rather alerting. First, we have to ask ourselves whether we were mislead all those years, assuming that our beloved women are caring and loving. If this is the case, if women are in fact wild, brutal creatures, we must believe that the female peaceful image we were so used to was just a camouflage, or might even be a conspiracy. If women are brutal and monstrous we must assume that the very attractive image of them, soft and caring, is a direct outcome of the male patriarchal society. Now that women are liberated we can see what they really are. While a confrontation with the odd militant separatist feminist might support such a wild assumption, being surrounded with men-loving women makes it hard to take such an option seriously. As a matter of fact, here I want to declare: women are generally great, we love them all, in every shape and colour. Also, it appears, I am failing to produce an argument. True, but then, after seeing Private England in action I prefer to be on the safe side. The last thing I need is to have the feminist women coming up against me and cutting off my testicles in the middle of the night.

Another way around the loophole raised by Private England et al. is to assume that there is something pretty particular about those strange women who join the armed forces in the first place. I think that many would agree that there is something unique about those women who want to be 'man'. I myself find it bizarre, mainly because ‘man’ is a pretty vague concept. Most men do not have a clue what being man means, they simply can’t be bothered. All we know about ourselves is that we like cars and computers. By the time we know how to entertain women our biology turns against us. From that stage, more or less, we are just running down the slope. We usually enjoy the down-hill journey, mainly because our female counterparts become sexually frustrated. Women are very amusing when defeated by their desires. By the time our women buy their first pair of stockings we are too tired to keep our eyes open after ten o’clock news. It is great fun being in the centre of the desire of the other without being able to do anything about it. Giving our pathetic condition, thinking of all those young women who want to be us, is really ridiculous. I assume that those poor militants, tom boys probably, hold a rigorous, deloused, picture of what man is all about. Mistakenly they endorse an awkward vision of man as a brutal and violent creature while in fact, we are deeply romantic.

As we know, in most cases the impersonated version is far more extreme than the real McCoy. Those kind of tragic amplified misinterpretations can easily lead towards an radical strengthening of evilness. It is typical for marginal political movements to fall into this very trap. Zionism exceeded, far beyond most political movements of its time, in its interpretation of the notion of Nationalism. The result is devastating. A notorious bloodthirsty nationalistic society entirely occupied with daily murder of Palestinian civilians. Militant separatist feminists are no different at all. Like the Zionist they went too far in their demand for rights and equality. Unlike Zionist they are yet to assassinate their opponents. When one is stressing the importance of equality, the image of equality is often replaced with a claim for supremacy and even an appetite for hegemony.

In general most marginal political movements fail on this very particular issue. In the long run those opposing tendencies leads towards a clear intensification of unbearably vulgar behaviour. I assume that Private England fail right there. She tried to be a man, but found herself exercising a brutal amplified version of her original prototype. We must admit that we have never seen a photographic image of a male soldier standing staring at a naked hooded woman, ridiculing the shape of her clitoris. It might be the right time for women to ask whether being man-like is a very clever choice. But yet, we should give some justice to Private England and Specialist Harman. We should mention that they were not acting alone; as a matter of fact they were surrounded by perplexed men, who very much like these two women tried to pretend to be men. Not that hard to understand, since it is almost impossible for one to impersonate oneself. In a social environment, where women are supposed to be "as man", men tend to forget what "man" ought to be.

***

So now the Iraqis are truly liberated. They all know what America stands for. But then who is going to liberate the American people? Who is going to sustain those women who want to be men? Who is going to save the man who wants to be a man?

Private England is probably sorted, we shouldn’t worry about her, for the type of services she gave in Iraq for free she can make a fortune in down town Manhattan. In the end of the day America is all about money.

God save America. Because if it is down to the Americans they don’t have much time left.


The meaning of war: A heterodox perspective
James PetrasRebelión

Introduction

This paper will discuss the social, political, economic, psychological and ideological causes and impacts of war in contemporary history. Obviously we cannot explore all of these dimensions in detail; instead we will focus on what we consider the most important dimensions of these general categories.

The first question that requires clarification is “what wars?” There are at least four kinds of war which have global significance. First and most significant in terms of the present and future configuration of inter-state relations are imperialist wars – such as the US invasion of Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Iraq, leading to the forced imposition of direct or indirect colonial rule, military bases and appropriation of strategic resources and/or water or overland routes.

The second type of war is “separatist-ethnic conflicts” such as the Albanian seizure of Yugoslav Kosovo, or the Kurdish seizure of Northern Iraq. While separatist conflicts are played out within the larger Imperial strategic framework, the local participants bring their own “historical claims” to justify their war on the existing central government.

The third type of war is the “colonial-territorial” wars, best exemplified by the Israel expulsion of Palestinians, the arbitrary appropriation of land and resources, their denial of self-government and the settlement of Jews on Palestinian land seized through armed force.

The fourth type of war is “regional wars”, found mainly in Africa and Asia, where aggressive regimes invade neighboring countries especially adjoining territory – usually containing precious metals. This is the issue in Southern Africa, where Rwanda has occupied a significant swathe of Eastern Zaire.

While each of these wars has its specificities – the question arises as to whether these wars are linked to the empire building projects of the US, European Union (EU) or other emerging imperial powers? The answer is complex and contingent on the level of analysis at which the problem is posed. Many of these conflicts predate current empire building efforts by the US; in many cases, local elites visualize war as a source of class, personal or national enrichment. We can speculate that conflicts of this sort will continue at some (distant) future in a “post-imperial” period, as local satraps attempt to seize ‘fragments’ of a declining world empire.

Nevertheless whatever the ‘historical claims’ and local interests involved, all these contemporary wars are linked in specific ways with the ongoing empire building of the US and the EU. The US has consistently supported separatist ethnic-based movements, like the Kosova Liberation Army or the Chechen terrorists to weaken national-states (Yugoslavia, Russia) which Washington targeted. As a consequence Washington secures a new client regime, major military bases and strategic geopolitical advantages while undermining an enemy to its uni-polar pretensions. The US provides arms and financial aid to Israeli colonial expansion and war against Palestinians and Arab countries. This has both weakened the Arab states opposed to US empire building and provoked greater mass popular resistance. The ideological influence and political and financial power of the pro-Israeli organizations and individuals inside and outside the government have reinforced the most bellicose and militarist wing of the US empire builders, especially in the Middle East, often times at the expense of US multi-national corporations seeking to enter in agreements with local regimes.

US imperialism has a contradictory relationship with the separatists and colonial states: on the one hand they undermine anti-imperialist nationalists and on the other hand, their territorial claims threaten to undermine imperial ties with client regimes (as in the case of Iraqi Kurdistan and the Republic of Turkey). Moreover the imperial strategy of supporting Islamic nationalists against secular leftists (as in the case of Afghanistan and Yugoslavia) has led to new violent confrontations between the empire and former Islamic ‘allies’ as Washington attempted to use and discard them for more docile neo-liberal puppet regimes.

Under conditions in which US and European empire building is driven by a doctrine of permanent wars, there are few if any regional, local or separatist wars which are purely local – in their causes or consequences.

II: Driving Force of War: Inter-Imperial Collaboration and Competition

The key to the accelerated pace of empire building over the past decade is the “open spaces” resulting from the demise of the collectivist states (USSR, Eastern Europe and Asia) and their overseas dependencies and allies in Africa and elsewhere. Both the US and the EU successfully incorporated these ‘ex-collectivist’ countries into their sphere of domination - militarily, economically and culturally. Europe gained control of strategic resources, cheap skilled labor and major industries, incorporating these countries as subordinates within the European Union. The US secured similar economic advantages but also established military bases and recruited mercenary military forces for its imperial invasions (in Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Iraq) and political supporters in the United Nations. Washington backed the illegal seizure of power by Yeltsin and then provided backing for his corrupt, destructive, oligarchic regime that literally destroyed the Russian economy and society. In the course of supporting Yeltsin, the US financial system received hundreds of billions of dollars in illegal transfers by US backed oligarchs. Europe and the US joined in partnership with the oligarchs to plunder Russia’s oil and gas resources. The US secured world military supremacy and proceeded to construct an “arc of encirclement” around the weakened Russian state via its new client states incorporated into NATO. From the Baltic States through Central-Eastern Europe to the Balkans and across the Caucuses to Central and Southern Asia, Washington has established local armies and military bases under US command.

Europe, concentrating on economic dominance, penetrated these same regions, relying on aid and financing of their multi-nationals and the corruption of the new capitalist politicians.

The ‘co-operative’ joint conquest by the US and the EU of Eastern Europe, Balkans and Baltic countries was based on “shared decisions and shared division of the spoils of conquest”. This re-division of the world between the US and the EU however came to an end with the most recent wave of imperial wars, beginning with the US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Washington decided to act unilaterally in order to monopolize decision-making and the colonial occupation of these countries, relegating Europe to a subordinate role under US command and with few claims on the spoils of conquest. The two leading EU powers, France and Germany, conceded US supremacy in Afghanistan but balked over the US monopoly of Iraqi oil wealth. The US-EU conflict over Iraq illustrates inter-imperialist competition in the re-division of the world’s wealth and neo-colonies. The EU imperial states, relying mostly on their economic instruments – banks, multi-national corporations, state-sponsored trade and investment agreements – was challenging US attempts to establish regional and world supremacy and subordination of Europe via a monopoly of energy resources.

In Iran, Iraq, Libya, Russia, the Caucasus and Latin America, EU multi-national oil and gas companies have secured long-term energy supplies via direct investments or state-to-state agreements. The architects of US global power decided to undercut stiff economic competition from the EU by relying on Washington’s “comparative advantage” in military power – to unilaterally launch the Iraq invasion, to monopolize Iraq’s oil wealth and to prepare for future oil wars in the Middle East (Iran and others) and elsewhere (Venezuela).

Washington’s permanent war doctrine was in strategic opposition to the EU’s doctrine of ‘economic imperialism’ and selective and limited military intervention. Despite the significant differences in the Middle East, both the EU and the US still find room to co-operate in imposing spheres of joint influence in several countries and regions, namely in Afghanistan, Haiti and in Africa. Co-operation and conflict between the great imperial powers in re-dividing the world into spheres of colonization, domination and influence are the key to understanding the meaning of war in the late 20th century and into the new millennium.

Erosion and “Reversal of Historical Memory

The re-emergence of colonial wars and colonial rule in the 21st century and the growth of national liberation movements and anti-colonial resistance reflects the erosion of historical memory in the imperial countries, among Western intellectuals as well as sectors of the masses (especially in the US) and the elites.

The “erosion of historical memory” was evident in Europe between the two world wars, as Germany re-armed and prepared to conquer and colonize Europe. Germany’s pacifist, and even revolutionary, anti-military consciousness immediately following World War I lasted at most 15 years, after which the Nazis were able to launch Germany into a new frenzy of re-armament and territorial conquest. In the post-WWII period, US mass anti-war sentiment reflecting the horrors of death and disability have been of short duration: A brief 5-year period after World War II (1945-49) before launching war on the Korean peninsula (1950-53); followed by mass “anti-war” sentiment from 1953-1963; the US invasion of Indo-China and the 12-year war (1963-1975) led to the re-emergence of very extensive mass anti-war sentiment which continued for 15 years till the First Gulf War. During the 1990’s, US anti-war sentiment temporarily re-emerged just prior to the Second Gulf War (January-February 2003) and then virtually disappeared, at least from the streets. “Mass historical memory”, history teaches us, can be a temporarily powerful sentiment in imposing restraint on the militarist side of imperialist expansion, but history also demonstrates that “memory” can be eroded and overcome over time (shorter or longer) by determined imperial decision-makers and propagandists.

“Historical memory” plays a positive role in limiting imperial wars under certain conditions and within a limited time frame. Memory of large scale deaths and casualties among imperial soldiers, deep economic crises resulting from military spending and loss of commercial markets, profound internal political conflicts and instability, demoralization and discontent among soldiers impose serious, but time-bound, constraints on imperial war-making capacity. The mass anti-war syndrome is anathema to imperialist ideologues, policymakers and international corporations. As a consequence, a conscious deliberate process of erosion is set in place. “Historical Memory” is modified by a cumulative set of events, ambiguous ideological pronouncements and small-scale military actions which over time lead to the resurgence of pro-war mass sentiment and the eclipse of historical memory.

“Historical memory” is strongest among those who most closely experienced and lived through the devastating consequences of a ‘losing imperialist war’. The high point of “memory” is the moment immediately following a destructive, costly, imperial war. Subsequently, the memory erodes over time, as a new generation emerges and ideology overcomes experiences and beliefs transmitted between generations.

The US experience following the imperial defeat in the Indo-Chinese war is illustrative of the mechanisms of “memory erosion”.

The first steps toward erosion took place right after the end of the Vietnam War during the presidency of James Carter (1976-80). Carter developed the doctrine of human rights intervention – selectively applying “humanitarian” rhetoric to attempt to re-legitimate US ‘intervention’ at a time in which mass consciousness was deeply opposed to new imperialist wars but responsive to appeals for human rights. Secondly Carter financed and backed a series of surrogate terrorist movements and regimes in Central America (Nicaragua, Southern Africa and Afghanistan) which allowed Washington to continue its quest for empire building. Thirdly Carter provoked a major confrontation with Iran by providing asylum to the deposed and despised Shah – leading to the seizure of the US Embassy. Carter used the incident to reverse the decline in military spending. Fourthly, the Carter Administration, with financial backing from Saudi Arabia and logistical support from Pakistan, recruited and armed tens of thousands of Islamic fundamentalists to join forces with indigenous Afghan landlords, warlords and mullahs in an attack on the secular, reform-minded pro-Soviet Afghan regime. The Carter regime’s purpose was to provoke large-scale Soviet military assistance to the beleaguered Afghan regime, as a pretext for re-launching a “Second Cold War” – and accelerate the re-militarization of the US Empire. Through propaganda moves and indirect military engagement, Carter began the gradual process of gaining adherents for imperial wars and foremost eroding the powerful ‘historical memory’ of opposition to war.

President Reagan extended and deepened this process by accelerating the arms build-up, engaging in a mercenary war against Nicaragua, and deepening the surrogate wars in Afghanistan and Southern Africa. Under Reagan and subsequently Bush (father) the US launched imperial wars against Grenada and Panama – weak, small countries – which Washington succeeded in conquering with a minimum of casualties. Given the ‘low costs’ in US lives lost and the rapid and successful outcomes, mass historical consciousness was ‘modified’—to accept or acquiesce once more in the use of war to establish US power, in specific circumstances. Yet historical memory was still a majoritarian sentiment in the lead up to the first Gulf War: most of the US public was opposed to the Gulf War in 1990 until it began. Once again the overwhelming military triumph and the minimum loss of US lives led to a dramatic shift toward mass support for the war.

President Clinton continued the aerial war against Iraq and the military occupation of Northern Iraq. Historical memory was eroding. Clinton faced no opposition to the aerial war but when he sent US troops to Somalia and nearly two-dozen US soldiers were killed, “memories” re-emerged and Clinton quickly withdrew forces.

One of the greatest blows to ‘historical memory’ and an event which cleared the way for the subsequent imperial wars against Afghanistan and Iraq, was Clinton’s war against Yugoslavia. Clinton, aided by a massive falsification propaganda campaign, declared that the Yugoslav government was practicing genocide against the Bosnian Moslems and the Kosovo Albanians. Hence the imperialist war was transformed into a “humanitarian war”. Cities, hospitals, factories, radio stations and civilian population centers were bombed and the US/NATO alliance broke up Yugoslavia into client mini-states. Once again there was mass public support, as humanitarian” imperialism, the small number of US casualties and an early quick victory eroded the last traces of historical memory. The ideological and political basis for mass-backed imperialist policies were in place – but lacked a “trigger event”.

The events of September 11, 2001 provided the Second Bush Administration, composed of extremists civilian militarists and Zionist fanatics, the pretext to launch the first in a series of wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and to enunciate the totalitarian doctrines of permanent wars, preventive wars and the extraterritoriality of US imperial laws. The best evidence available suggests that the Bush Administration was deeply complicit in the 9/11 events leading up to the final destruction of historical memory.

However unlike other recent imperialist wars, the Iraq War is a prolonged peoples war (there are no quick and easy victories) resulting in large-scale death and casualties of US soldiers and out of control spending with no end in sight. A new “historical memory” may be in the making based on the new realities in Iraq.

IV - War: Political Institutions and Social Movements

Historical consciousness is embodied by activists sustained by political organizations. Based on historical experience, we can say that social movements have great capacity to ‘create’ the memory in the course of dynamic mobilizations and memorable mass meeting, but it is political institutions which will sustain or erode that historical memory.

The principle political institutions (particularly in the United States), including the mass media, have consistently worked to dissolve historical consciousness of the death and destruction caused by imperialist wars. While they claim to “honor the dead soldiers” they do so only in so far as they served the empire, their “heroism” is praised in sacrificing their lives to further the global reach of imperial institutions. The electoral process is not used to advance an anti-militarist agenda but to eliminate independent mass mobilizations which act directly against the instruments of imperial wars.

As anti-war activity moves toward electoral politics, it is absorbed by the established electoral parties and politicians, who opportunistically tip their hat to anti-war sentiment in exchange for diluting anti-war consciousness. The electoral process involves anti-war social movements making deep compromises with the pro-war financiers of campaigns, with politicians articulating ambiguous and inconsistent positions and with political parties having long-time, large-scale allegiances to imperial policies and interests. Such is the experience in the US and elsewhere: Established political institutions bend sufficiently to question an unpopular war in order to attract the mass opposition, and once capturing their allegiance, return to re-building the military capacity for imperial wars. The moment in which the movements dissolve into established political parties, competing in electoral campaigns through “dissident” politicians, “historical consciousness” is severely eroded.

The original impetus for organizing mass anti-war movements came precisely through the recognition that existing political parties and ‘normal political processes’ are deeply immersed and corrupted by their structural ties to imperial interests. By returning to these institutions, with new personalities and slogans, mass consciousness lost sight of its historical insights into the nature of imperial power.

In contrast “historical consciousness” emerged with great power when masses of people moved into direct collective action, taking local initiatives and linking the economic and political institutions directing imperial wars. Action and knowledge grew into collective anti-militarist consciousness which over time evolved from awareness of everyday present-day destruction (“empirical consciousness”) into “historical consciousness”, understanding of the systemic pillage by imperialism over time and space.

Direct action movements bypass the distorting influence of the “political guardians” (conventional politicians, accepted ideologues and media pundits) and directly articulate the anti-war ideas and anti-militarist interests of the mass of the people. Movements acted directly against the militarist policies which negatively impacted on the populations - conscription, forced and extended war duties - and against the policy-makers who sent hundreds of thousands to death and disability.

In this conflict between the anti-war movements and pro-war political institutions, the pre-eminence of the former was most evident in time of imperial defeat, soldier discontent, and political leaders in disgrace for lies and broken promises. These are crucial moments, but they are short-lived. Pro-war political institutions, that outlive and/or overcome the crisis of imperial war, re-group, absorb the ‘best’ of their adversaries in the anti-war opposition and return to pursue the policy of imperial war – until the next crisis -- ultimately asserting a dominant position. Historical consciousness becomes a “footnote” to conventional history of “Great Wars”.

“Historical consciousness” of anti-imperialist wars retains continuity when it leads to a large-scale, long-term transformation of the political institutions. The continued process of struggle links generations, and the transmission of anti-militarist ideas. This continual renewal of historical consciousness depends on, in part, the active role of anti-imperialist intellectuals.

War and Intellectuals

Left intellectuals have been fervent critics of war in general, until they face the reality of their country engaging in war – and then opposition gives way to evasive statements, ambiguous moral temporizing and, among the most “courageous”, a condemnation of the violence of the aggressor and as well as the victim. Even worst, many left and progressive intellectuals have argued for, defended and propagated the doctrine of “humanitarian intervention (imperialism)”. This moral betrayal was evident during the US invasion and destruction of Yugoslavia, and support for the terrorist Kosovo Liberation (sic) Army and the “ethnic cleansing” of hundreds of thousands of Serbs from Kosovo, Croatia and elsewhere. US progressive intellectuals were conspicuously silent. The “progressive intellectuals” repeated their performance: providing tendentious political justifications for the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq -- though in the latter case, up until the start of the war, a minority of intellectuals condemned the war and the victimized regime. Even those progressive intellectuals, who criticized the imperialist wars, refused to support the anti-colonial resistance and many opposed the immediate withdrawal of the colonial armies.

The question of war and peace is a momentous issue. In the events leading up to an imperialist war, all the propaganda machinery is set in motion, the mass media dramatize the righteousness of the imperial cause and the evil of the country which is to be invaded. Repressive legislation (“security measures”) is enacted by large congressional majorities. Publicists, religious notables, demagogues, statesmen, and respectable leaders of civil society find lofty moral purposes to laud “this war”. The latent chauvinist “instincts” of the masses are aroused. The progressive intellectuals become fearful; the repressive legislation may ruin a career and undermine everyday routines – their classes, seminars and completion of their latest article or book. Their professional colleagues eye them with suspicion unless they openly pledge allegiance – “beyond any criticism in other times, in time of our survival, we must join forces” – with the military invaders. It is not merely fear of material losses or disruption of everyday routines which causes our progressive intellectuals to embrace the war or remain silent or (in the case of the most courageous minority) to condemn both sides, but the sense of being left out of national history, of being shunned by neighbors and colleagues, of having to accept the consequences of living in a savage imperial civilization that thrives on war, especially a successful war. The progressive intellectuals respond far more often to the pressures of their milieu than to the suffering of the colonized people.

The commitment of the progressive intellectual is not fixed in stone – they change with the conditions of their milieu and the strength and fortunes of the imperial government. With the colonial occupation, and the graphic visuals of death and destruction of the colonized countries, the progressive intellectuals argue for a humanitarian mission, to correct the excesses of the war. They even raise their voices a few decibels before the abuse and torture of certain prisoners in certain prisons. But rarely do progressive intellectuals dare to transgress the colonial frontiers to publicly support the anti-colonial resistance. They claim that to commit to the resistance would call into question their “moral credentials” with the moderate imperial institutional power wielders.

Since the end of the Vietnam War, Western intellectuals have not expressed solidarity with the popular resistance to any of the imperialist invasions. Grenada, Panama, Somalia, Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine and Lebanon, the imperial wars are numerous, but the list of committed intellectuals is short.

The principle reason that many of the intellectuals oppose prolonged imperialist wars is because of the casualties to US soldiers and the cost to the US treasury. There is a kind of political narcissism in the slogan “Bring our boys home” in which the center of attention is on the invading troops not on the anti-colonial resistance. Even in “opposition” the Western intellectuals derive their politics from an ethno-centric view of the world.

At a deeper level this political narcissism is also a way of making concessions to the chauvinist fever which grips much of their countrymen: “We too share you concern, for our imperialist country – but lets not spend “our boys” lives on this”. Of course if and when the imperial rulers recruit mercenaries, client regimes and local collaborators to murder resistance fighters – nothing will be said of any consequence because “our boys” will be home safe…

The historical shift of intellectuals from opposition to pro-war politics and support of imperial candidates is not simply a “pragmatic choice” of the lesser evil against the greater evil. The transformation is the result of fear, fear of those in power -- even as they face no real threat to their lives, careers or living standards. But intellectuals imagine a threat, and they concoct wild scenarios of “fascist” repression to hide their moral cowardice. This imagined fear is magnified by the possible threat to personal safety, security, and property if the imperial force is defeated and the rulers “take their revenge” against internal critics. Supporting the war or “opposing both sides” as the moral hypocrites prefer it, is insurance for the future. In the black fantasy world of intellectuals, when the imagined state investigation takes place, they can always present as evidence in their favor, their articles and speeches condemning the “moral barbarians” who attacked “our boys”.

But if there is one universal truth about our progressive intellectuals it is that they do no “stand in one place” – they move with the times – they gauge the changing winds of political fortune.

When those suffering the war, the “average people” turn against the war, when the imperial regime is split with elite conflicts, when the soldiers question their orders, their officers, the war, the president and the generals, then our moral intellectuals concoct a new set of moral imperatives, adding their voices to the multitudes who question the war. Once it is safe, once the ravages of a losing imperial war have torn asunder the tissues of official lies, out bold progressive intellectuals step up, seize the center stage and proclaim their opposition to war. Intellectuals never sell-out, they are rented to the strongest party, the rising new political configuration. As opposition to the imperial war grows our progressive intellectuals become bolder.

In the war of words, the ideological warfare in the cultural sphere, our progressive intellectuals take on the neo-conservatives, they expose the lies of the mass media, they become the self-promoted “face of the opposition” to the outside world, even if their claims have little merit.

Even as the intellectuals diagnose the sources of wars, they overlook the specific and concrete configurations of power in favor of focusing on easy targets, ones which offer no threats to their professional careers and intellectual acceptance.

War and Oil

Let us turn to a specific imperialist war, the US invasion and colonial occupation of Iraq to illustrate how the progressive intellectual opposition to the war is profoundly influenced by a unique set of political allegiances.

Conventional wisdom among progressive intellectuals argues that the US invasion of Iraq is driven by US multinational oil companies seeking to control that country’s oil resources. A more sophisticated version of this hypothesis argues that the war is directed by a strategic policy to monopolize oil as a weapon and hence dominate its imperial rivals in Europe and Asia. In both cases, the economic and strategic hypothesis, fail to take account of the political loyalties of the specific policymakers who designed the war, propagandized in favor of the war and became its most fanatical and influential executioners. Few if any of the progressive intellectuals examined the political loyalties of the key militarist policymakers.

The hypothesis that “oil” and the US petroleum multinationals were the main force behind the Iraq war fails every empirical test. If we examine the policy statements of the major oil companies and their public spokespeople in the five years leading up to the war we find no systematic political and propaganda campaign in favor of war. One looks in vain through all the major financial and specialized petroleum journals for evidence of organized pro-war politics. The reason is that the major oil companies were doing quite well with the status quo: profits and prices were reasonably high, investments were relatively secure, anti-imperialist sentiment was extensive but not intense and, most of all, opportunities for important new investments were opening in Saudi Arabia, Iran, Libya and possibly (via third parties) in Iraq.

The US war in Iraq and Afghanistan reversed the picture creating a very hostile environment, increasing dangers of destructive attacks, insecurity of Western personnel, and augmenting the power of OPEC against the major private US companies. Only a very few oil-related companies can be said to have benefited from the war – Haliburton, for example –most of which had direct ties to Vice President Cheney. They are the exception that proves the rule. The oil industry as an investor, producer and seller have not really benefited from the war. Even after the colonial occupation of Iraq, (and even after the illegal privatization of Iraq’s state oil companies) the predominant sentiment among oil companies is at best ambivalent: while future opportunities may have increased so have the present threats to supply and transport.

The war has created greater volatility, favoring speculators over long-term oil investors. Moreover, rising prices prejudice the overall performance of the imperialist economies, adding costs, increasing trade imbalances and making the oil companies conspicuous targets of public ire. Moreover the unconditional support for Israel within the Bush Administration in the context of the Iraq war, has created a difficult climate for high level negotiations between the petroleum CEO’s and the oil-rich Arab leaders.

In summary, there is no empirical evidence that the major oil companies drove US war policy either before or after the colonial occupation.

The second hypothesis argues that the war was part of a strategic policy to monopolize oil supply toward establishing the US as the undisputed world power, and subordinating Europe and Asia to its command. A corollary to this argument is that in the recent past US political and military triumphs, had been accompanied by a policy of sharing the spoils of imperial victories with their European and Japanese allies. The new US military doctrine of unilateral offensive wars (euphemistically referred to as “preventive wars”) was designed to seize strategic advantage and claim exclusive control over the spoils of war: petroleum, military bases and trade routes. Imperialist strategic planners miscalculated, presuming an easy military victory over “the Arabs” and a rapid seizure and privatization of public enterprises and unhindered exploitation of oil wealth.

This hypothesis has a lot of merit in explaining some of the motivations – especially by focusing on the importance of the political decision-makers within the imperial state apparatus. However there are several important weaknesses in this hypothesis. For one, there was and is sharp differences between different power centers in the imperial state apparatus and even within each “center”. For example, many of the top professional military commanders were opposed to the war, as were members of the State Department. CIA analysts did not share the assumptions that the colonized people would welcome the imperial armies. Numerous former high military, CIA officials, and United Nations weapons inspectors challenged the pretext put forth by the pro-war sectors of the US imperial state, that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction and posed a threat to the United States.

If the imperial state itself was divided and some sectors were not convinced of the need to go to war, which group was able to overcome that resistance, by-pass established intelligence channels (and create its own circuit), fabricate its own “intelligence and successfully lead the US to war? If war was not promoted by and in the interests of the US oil companies, and contrary to military doctrine of fighting two wars simultaneously, in whose geo-political interests was the war?

The War and the Israel-Zionist Hypothesis

The hypothesis which most fits the data is the Israel hypothesis – specifically that the principal architects and theoreticians of US world supremacy and the principal promoters of sequential wars, particularly in the Middle East, were influential Zionists in the top echelons of the Pentagon, National Security Council and in well-connected research centers “advising” the government while acting on behalf of the expansionist interests of the State of Israel.

The key author of the strategic doctrine of undisputed US world power was Wolfowitz, back in the first Bush Administration (1991). He joined with other influential Zionists like Richard Perle, Douglas Feith and a host of pro-Israel extremists to prepare a strategy paper for the Israeli state (1996) in which the Palestinians were to be physically driven from all of Palestine and Israel would become the regional power in the Middle East. Both Feith and Wolfowitz, early in their public careers were accused and chastised for turning US government documents over to the Israeli government. For at least twenty years they have been actively collaborating over Israeli policy and, in and out of government, they have worked intimately with Israeli officials in the United States and Israel.

The Zionist influentials, even before securing high positions in the Pentagon and State Department, were strong proponents of US military attacks against Israel’s Middle East adversaries, which included Lebanon, Syria, Iran, Saudi Arabia and, of course, Iraq. Their militarist advocacy was independent of how such wars would affect US oil interests, regional stability, relations with Europe, the Muslim countries or the rest of the world. The Pentagon Zionists were among the first to link Iraq with the events of 9/11 in an attempt to manipulate US public anger against the secular Iraqi state. They were responsible for fabricating the story that Iraq was importing uranium from Niger for the purposes of developing nuclear weapons. Wolfowitz admitted that he promoted the false pretext that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction to create a “consensus” to go to war – and every major Zionist writer and ‘expert’ pushed the same line.

The principal pro-Israeli lobby in the US, AIPEC, worked intensely and closely with the State of Israel, and the key Zionists in the Pentagon and their advisory groups in pushing for the US invasion of Iraq. Major Jewish organizations and influential propagandists in the mass media promoted the war, demonizing Iraq and fabricating stories of imminent threats.

The only major beneficiary of the US war in Iraq is the State of Israel: The war destroyed a major supporter of the Palestinian Intifada and Israel got a free hand in its terror and territorial colonization Palestinian land.

The US, isolated from almost all the major European powers and Islamic countries, because of its pro-Israel agenda, took on the pariah status of the Israeli clerical colonial regime. All the predictions and assumptions of the pro-war, anti-Arab Zionists were proven false. The Iraqi Arabs did not submit to the US occupation – they formed a potent resistance which engages the US in an increasingly prolonged war of attrition. The US intervention did not secure an oil monopoly; it has jeopardized its supply of oil in the Middle East by intensifying instability in Saudi Arabia. The war has soured US oil dealings in the Caucuses and resulted in speculative oil price increases, increasing the US trade deficit. Equally significant while the US is immersed in the Iraq War, China, India and Japan secure strategic oil and gas contracts in Asia and Latin America.

The Zionists were wrong in envisioning that the US would proceed to a series of successful wars with Israel’s other enemies in the Middle East – Iran, Syria, Lebanon and Saudi Arabia. The Iraq invasion has tied down the vast majority of US active ground troops in a losing war with high casualties, thus at least, temporarily limiting its capacity to start new wars on behalf of the Empire or Israel. This has not prevented the Pentagon Zionists and their AIPEC allies from pushing for a new military attack on Iran and Syria.

Apart from England, Israel has been the major supporter and ally in the US conquest of Iraq for good reason: They are the principle beneficiaries.

The Pentagon Zionists and their zealous ideological allies have weakened the US economy by widening the trade deficit (via higher oil prices) and increasing the budget deficit (because of war spending). Israel has not suffered at all -- on the contrary military sales to the US increased as well as revenues from the Pentagon for military advisory and training, missions to Iraq and elsewhere.

The US war in Iraq has several particularities as well as common characteristics with other wars. In the first place it demonstrates how a highly organized, ideologically coherent, financially powerful minority with highly placed co-thinkers in the top policy-making institutions of the imperial state can twist policy to suit the needs of a foreign power over and against established economic interests. Secondly the decisions about imperialist wars, though they usually serve the long-term interests of the dominant sectors of the capitalist class, are “made” by politicians, who have their own agendas, ideological and political loyalties which may or may not benefit (or prejudice) the ruling class.

The war in Iraq is a clear case in which the loyalties of the key architects of the war were distinct from those of the ruling class, who were barely taken into account, let alone consulted. The ruling ideology of the architects of war was ‘Israel First, Last and Always’. To cover the Israel-centered war plans, the Zionists fabricated a series of “threats” to US interests which were made to parallel those faced by Israel: threats of weapons of mass destruction, terrorism and Muslim fundamentalism. Anti-Arab and anti-Muslim hate literature circulated in the mass media, in influential journals and talk shows as an army of Zionists ideologues went into an ideological frenzy – infecting the US body politic – and setting off a secondary wave of vituperative froth from fundamentalist Christians, neo-conservative allies and liberal congress-people.

The generalized attack by the Zionists against Arab states and people was directed toward the strategic goal of extending Israeli domination beyond Palestine (“Greater Israel”) not through direct colonization but via a series of client regimes beholden to the US – a US whose major foreign policy institutions would be subject to Zionist influence. The ideological formulae adopted to promote US-Israel dominance in the Arab world was “A Middle East Common Market” based on a campaign to “democratize the region”. Both formulae served as the ideological basis for permanent war in the Middle East, the installment of dual purpose puppet regimes willing to serve both US energy interests and Israel’s market penetration.

The Zionist ideologues’ manipulation of “free market” and “democratic” rhetoric resonated widely among liberal and conservative imperialists, even as the US imperial state and Israel was denying Iraqi and Palestinians their elementary democratic rights and domestic markets. The tactics of the influential Zionists and their extensive networks in the US were directed at fusing Israeli expansionist interests with US imperialist goals, in order to legitimate their pursuit of Israeli state policies – a position echoed by President-elect Bush.

In the real world however, as the US continued to suffer heavy casualties in Iraq and the war debt grew by billions of dollars a day, and as its ‘coalition partners’ abandoned the war, the Zionist influentials inside and outside of the government intensified their pressure on the US to escalate its troop commitments in Iraq and to engage in new Middle East wars. The acid test of Zionist loyalties to Israeli interests is found in the fact that they pursued the war policy even as it weakened the US strategic global position, heightened discontent in the military and in elite civilian circles and increased the probability of an economic crisis resulting from the war deficits and weakening dollar. The Zionists in power are so embedded in the Israeli matrix, that they are totally impervious to the effects which their policies have on the US Empire, domestic economy or civil society.

In effect the US imperial attack of Iraq can be understood as a surrogate war for a regional power, designed and executed by influential policy-makers whose primary allegiance is to defend the interests of the regional power. The Zionist zealots have incorporated the same pathological style of mass paranoid politics prevalent in Israel to the US: the politics of permanent terrorist threats, of pervasive fear, of a hostile world, of unreliable allies… The Zionist zealots have led the ideological charge poisoning relations with France and other European countries which fail to respond favorable to the bloody repression of occupied peoples. No policy group has done more to weaken the sustainability of the US Empire than the Zionist zealots in government and the massive well-financed pro-Israel networks through the US. The Congress, the Executive branch, state and local governments, and national and local media have all come under the influence of the Jewish “lobby’s” pro-Israel agenda to the point that none or few dare to criticize Israel or its US representatives.

The overweening power of the pro-Israel power configuration has inevitable provoked opposition – mainly from non-elected officials. The FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) is preparing to indict several high official from AIPEC, the most powerful representative of Israel’s interests in the US, for spying on the US for Israel. Almost all the major Jewish organizations are preparing to defend AIPEC and its practice of twisting US policy toward the “Israel First” agenda. By early 2005, it was clear that the Zionist power structure had paralyzed the investigation. Numerous retired military and CIA officials have denounced Zionist power in designing and promoting the interests of Israel over US imperial interests. Meantime the Zionists along with the neo-conservatives successfully purged or “neutralized” independent analysts in the CIA, Defense and State Department who questioned the doctrine of sequential wars against Israel’s adversaries in the Middle East. The Second Bush administration is completely controlled by the neo-conservative-Zionist extremists.

The conventional wisdom which perceives world imperial powers dictating policy to lesser regional powers clearly fails to deal with the US Middle East Wars. The reason why this common sense notion is inadequate is because it fails to deal with a series of unique (at least in modern history) phenomena affecting the policy-making structure of the US Empire – the active role of a privileged and influential minority deeply embedded in the decision-making structure and whose primary loyalty is to another state. It is as if the State of Israel has ‘colonized’ the main spheres of political power in the imperial state. These ‘colons’ however are not exactly transplants or emigrants from their “mother country”. Rather they have mostly grown up and have been educated in the imperial center, they have pursued lucrative careers in the US and have, in most instances, been strong supporters of US imperial expansion and militarism. They have risen to and influenced the highest spheres of political power. They have not been discriminated against, nor have they suffered any economic, social or political exclusion. They have not been marginalized - they are integrated in the centers of power. Yet they have set themselves apart from the rest of the US citizens and conceive of themselves as having a special mission -- of being first Jews who unconditionally support the State of Israel and all of its international projections of power. How can we explain this irrational embrace of a militarist state by a set of individuals who only vicariously share its life and destiny?

War in the 21st Century: Atavistic Behavior

Schumpeter in his book, Imperialism and Social Class, written shortly after the First World War, attempted to square his argument that capitalism is opposed to war by citing the re-emergence of residual “atavistic” traits, embedded in previous feudal warrior societies, as the cause of war. While I do not share Schumpeter’s view of the peaceful evolution of capitalism, particularly in the face of a series of imperialist wars in Asia, Africa, Latin America and Europe, his concept of atavistic behavior is useful in explaining the irrational embrace of Israel by otherwise affluent, educated and highly influential Jews. Their embrace of Israel is certainly not for reasons of monetary remuneration, though Israel financially rewarded American-Jewish spies like Jonathan Pollard. What causes a modern or post-modern elite group to exhibit patterns of fanatical loyalty to a foreign militarist colonial power engaged in ethnic cleansing?

The Jewish-led and financed Zionist movement and its influential and wealthy supporters and leaders are a highly cohesive and disciplined group which exhibits zero tolerance against any Jewish dissidents or other critics of the warrior state or of their supporters anywhere in the world. What accounts for the apparent anomaly of highly educated professors, doctors, lawyers, investment bankers, media moguls and billionaire real estate tycoons giving unconditional support to a state engaged in primitive vindictive acts, of mass torture of prisoners, of collective punishment and guilt (destroying family homes of guerrilla suspects, taking family members hostage), systematically destroying farmland and uprooting hundreds of thousands of farmers, communities for almost six decades? They embrace ancient land claims and the vindictive and gratuitous humiliation of subjugated people based on mythological religious beliefs. The primitive belief in a “superior” or special people used to justify blood crimes harks back to the ritual barbarities of ancient tribal justice. This atavistic behavior is, however, tied to the most modern military technology in the hands of highly trained technical experts. The combination of tribal cohesion, religious mythology, high-tech weaponry and an overweening desire to exercise power on behalf of a military state based on ‘racial-religious’ exclusivity, is a potent concoction for US Zionists to inhale. Yet there are immense psychological satisfactions from being part of a powerful closed in-group, with a vision or fantasy of the revival of a lost ‘kingdom’, a sense of being part of superior people, members of a survivalist culture which has endured a unique suffering, and therefore possesses the righteousness to commit violence and use power to strike down adversaries anywhere and not to be bound by conventional international laws which only serve to limit the prerogatives of a ‘righteous people’.

Tribal loyalties have tight rules of conduct for all who are considered members, whether they are active practitioners of Zionist politics or even critics of the State of Israel – home of the chosen people. Tribal rules are interpreted in different ways by different segments of the Jewish Diaspora. For the Presidents of the Major Jewish Organizations and their functionaries there are Five Commandments: (1) ‘thou shalt not criticize any action by any Israeli leader at any time, no matter how heinous the crime, nor how often it is repeated, irregardless of how vast or intense world opprobrium’, (2) ‘Thou shall not allow any others to criticize or act contrary to Jewish State interests or to organizations which embrace the Zionist ideal,’ (3)‘Every weapon, financial, physical, psychological, ideological and economic can be legitimately wielded to weaken, isolate, discredit or stigmatize critics of the Tribal Homeland or any of the overseas Tribal Organizations,’ (4)‘Thou shall raise funds from all sources (legal or illegal), public, social or private to finance the military machine of the Tribal leaders – tribute secured from lesser “others” must enhance the security and living standards of the chosen people’ and (5)‘Thou shall declare loyalty first and foremost to the tribal identity, then to the powers which support “our tribe” and lastly to “universal values”’.

Despite sharp criticism from a minority of dissident Jews, both in Israel, the US and elsewhere, there are certain unstated codes which are observed even by the most critical commentators. One is to never criticize or identify the power of the Jewish organizations in the US and their influence in the government. Jewish progressives de facto denial of Jewish power in shaping US war policy in the Middle East severely restricts the effectiveness of the anti-war movement by exonerating one of the key ideological props of the imperial war machine. The second unstated code followed by the “observant” progressive Jewish intellectuals is a denial that Israel has an important influence on US Middle East and global policy via its tribal loyalists in the US. Jewish progressives deliberately and systematically exclude any mention of Jewish power and influence in shaping US policy in the Middle East by focusing exclusively on “oil interests” or “neo-conservative ideologues” (who just coincidently are mostly tribespeople and their camp-followers). In deference to or more precisely because they share a deep underlying identity with the tribe – they refuse to include any systematic study of the very obvious and blatant exercise of power in every branch of government, electoral processes and media reports. Likewise with the Middle East, Israel is considered by progressive Jews as an “instrument” of US imperialism even as the instrument cuts both ways – as Israel uses the US to savage its adversaries, to build up its military machine and to manufacture its commercial weapons systems to sell even to US competitors (i.e. China).

The emergence of atavistic behavior and its extension among the Zionist elite is a relatively recent development (over the past two decades) and goes contrary to the universalistic, secular and socialist values and practices as well as the traditional religious and communal practices and beliefs of many Jewish communities during previous centuries. The embrace of imperial power, the turn from religious communitarian values toward the embrace of the militaristic state of Israel, the shift from internationalism and socialism toward an unconditional embrace of a narrow exclusivist ideology has activated the latent atavistic behavior associated with vengeful killing of adversaries and blind singular loyalty to the idea of Israeli supremacy in the Middle East. Translated into the US context, it means virulent pro-war propaganda, advocacy of concentration camps for Islamic believers (as proposed by Daniel Pipes and others) and collaboration with Mossad agents in promoting Israel’s strategic military, economic and political goals; by utilizing all the instruments of power within the US and with its overseas clients (Kurdish regions of Iraq, for example).

Atavistic behavior secures its goals through the shrewd manipulation and artificial inflation of “fears” emanating from Israel’s enemies. The purpose is to create mass support in the US for wars on Israel’s behalf. US Zionist ideologues, drawing heavily on the self-induced political isolation which the Israeli State has brought upon itself through its savage destruction of Arab Palestine, have elaborated and preached a paranoid view of the world, in which all international organizations (the UN, the World Court etc.) and forums, international opinions surveys, Europe, Asia, Latin America and Africa are accused of “anti-Semitism” because they recognize and condemn Israel’s violation of Palestinian political and human rights.

The greater the “justifiable” violence of Israel, the wider the condemnation of its behavior, the more hysterical and strident the vituperation emanating from the major Zionist centers, the greater the concerted efforts to discredit the international bodies and to heighten US support. Just as an imaginary Neanderthal might bellow loudly and grab a heavy club when others protest his trespass of territory, so too do the Zionists reach for the club of US military power to pummel those who challenge Israel’s transgressions.

“Atavistic behavior” is not confined to affluent Zionists, it is found among civilian militarists, Christian Zionists and other religious fundamentalists, who are defenders and practitioners of unrestrained violence and permanent imperial wars. Under the veneer of civilized discourse and moderate tonalities, is the barely restrained lust for unlimited power, total warfare and uncompromising savage torture. Atavistic behavior increasingly threatens to overwhelm the rational basis of economic calculation. The civilian militarist who may have originally been seen by many capitalists as one tool among others for conquering markets and seizing strategic resources have gradually taken a life of their own, subordinating capitalist interests to their raging quest for unlimited power. Atavistic behavior is both the apogee of US imperial power and its ultimate regress to the dark ages.

Contemporary and future wars in the Middle East cannot be explained merely by reciting an inventory of economic resources and matching them with imperial strategic designs. This rationalist-economistic reductionism fails to take account of specific ideological, irrational political determinants which have demonstrated greater explanatory power.

Privatization and War

One of the strategic goals of imperialist policy-makers is the privatization of public resources as an “end” in itself and as a means of securing political, social, economic and cultural control over a country in order to enhance empire-building.

Privatization strategies are pursued by political as well as military means, either through military invasions or via military coups by surrogate military juntas. Privatization is a first step toward de-nationalization and re-colonization of the economy and state.

De-nationalization of the economy usually follows the imposition by imperial lending agencies of a macro-political strategy dubbed structural adjustment policies which include among other measures privatizations of public enterprises – especially strategies sectors such as energy, petroleum, metals, telecommunications, finance and banking. The move toward de-nationalization follows one of two paths – either the direct purchase by foreign companies of national assets or a two-step process, whereby the nationalist capitalists first buy the public enterprise and then re-sell it to foreign capital.

Whether directly or indirectly, privatization means foreign control over essential economic decisions (investment, marketing, transfer of profits etc) in strategic sectors of the economy. Foreign control of strategic industries means the power of decision over local industries and exploitation of natural resources.

Beyond the economic consequences of privatization/de-nationalization (P/D), it is a political instrument of empire-building strategies:

  1. P/D involves the recruitment of ‘national executives’, financial officers, publicists, managers, economists who become an active political base in backing and promoting deeper and more extensive colonization as well as political submission to imperial power.
  2. The chief executive officers of P/D enterprises play a leading role in influencing and directing sectoral organizations (automobile and parts manufacturers, banking associations, mine-owners’ consortiums, etc.), thus “hegemonizing” the national capitalists within the associations and securing their acquiescence in imperial-colonial projects.
  3. P/D firms can work in tandem with the imperial state to pressure a regime to follow imperial policies by decreasing economic production or by dis-investing. For example, in the 1960’s the State Department ordered the US-owned oil refineries to refuse to process Cuban oil imports from Russia in order to overthrow the Castro government.
  4. The US government frequently plants ‘agents’ (CIA and FBI) in US-owned multi-national corporations (MNCs). The MNCs provide a “legal cover” for intelligence agents involved in destabilization campaigns, espionage and recruitment of local business and trade union leaders to serve imperial interests.
  5. P/D firms provide imperialist policy-makers with additional leverage to pressure a regime to submit to IMF policies and to support colonial rule via ALCA.
  6. P/D provide a pretext for imperial intervention and conquest, using the excuse that the invaders are “protecting the property rights of US citizens.
  7. P/D provide a “beach head” for multiplying privatization using local allies and political influence, following the initial takeovers. P/D have a “falling dominoes” effect, leading to cumulative power, from enterprise to enterprise, from sector to sector, from economy to media, from economy and media to political control. P/D has a catalytic effect in strengthening imperial policy-makers and forcing the hand of any recalcitrant regime.

The Dialectics of Privatizations/De-nationalization and War

Wars are motivated by and result in the privatization and de-nationalization of publicly owned properties. Likewise, privatizations lead to war in order to protect and prevent the re-nationalization of strategic industries. Privatizations are frequently accompanied or followed by the granting of military bases, thus strengthening the colonial presence and weakening the sovereignty of Third World countries. At a minimum, privatizations almost always are accompanied by military “co-operative agreements” and “mutual defense agreements” which, in effect, allow for the presence of US military advisers in the Ministries of Defense, the indoctrination and training of military officials and a “legal formula” allowing US military intervention if and when a client regime is threatened. In other words, privatization and de-nationalization weakens the Third World state – deprives the state of economic resources, revenues and levers of power, while severely restricting its sovereignty. Weakened clients often supply mercenary soldiers for future imperial wars and colonial occupation, such as in Iraq, Afghanistan and Haiti.

Colonial Wars in the 21st Century

In the 21st century, imperial wars, especially multiple colonial wars requiring military occupation of a colonized country, can only be sustained by recruiting mercenary soldiers from client regimes. The US imperial armed forces are incapable of sustaining a colonial occupation in the face of a prolonged peoples war without large-scale mercenary support from client regimes. This is very evident today in Iraq (and Afghanistan), where the US colonial officials and their puppet regime are desperately trying to assemble an army of Iraqi and Afghan mercenaries to take the brunt of “security duties” (repression of the colonized people). The US colonial army, particular the Army Reservists, is demoralized and has experienced a sharp decline in re-enlistment.

Given the imperialist involvement in two countries (Iraq and Afghanistan), Washington turned to recruiting military mercenaries from its Latin American client regimes to provide several thousand officers and soldiers to prop up the US puppet regime in Haiti. Since the imperial strategists particularly the neo-conservatives and Zionists have made military conquest the centerpiece of imperial expansion, it is the military which has paradoxically become the “weakest link” in the imperial chain which extends from imperial war to colonial occupation and control, to P/D to economic pillage.

In the past the US imperial state engaged in external and internal wars to P/D strategic industries. The US overthrow of the Arbenz regime in Guatemala (1954), the Mossadegh regime in Iran in 1953, the failed effort to invade Cuba in 1961, the CIA engineered coup in Chile (1973), the US Contra-War in Nicaragua (in the 1980’s) were all directed toward P/D of the economies as well as serving imperial geo-political strategies.

In recent years however, the imperial state has increasingly relied on financing civilian electoral politicians and pressure from the international financial institutions to implement P/D. Only in the Middle East where Zionist-Israeli power is factored in has military invasion become the policy of choice. The reliance on war to privatize and colonize continues to operate where imperial-financed civilian electoral strategies have failed. Two recent cases come to mind.

The US ‘internal’ war in Venezuela, where a US-financed and directed coup briefly (48 hours) overthrew the elected President Chavez is a case in point. In that short period of time, the puppet Carmona regime immediately broke relations with Cuba, withdrew from OPEC and began to draw up plans to privatize the state petroleum company before popular power restored Chavez and rescinded the decrees. The US-sponsored coup and subsequent ‘bosses lock-out’ in the oil industry were part of an internal war strategy designed to circumvent an unfavorable setting for a manipulated electoral outcome.

Likewise in Yugoslavia, the US, in alliance with European imperialism, launched an unprovoked military invasion, using Croatian and Kosovar terrorists to destroy the Yugoslav nation and set up mini-states in which former self-managed enterprises were P/D’d, major military bases were established and mercenary troops were recruited for the Middle East colonial wars.

Privatization and de-nationalization whether it occurs through imperial wars or via subsidized client electoral politicians however entails inter-imperialist competition and conflict over which the imperialist states will seize the most lucrative ex-public firms. The experience in Eastern Europe and Latin America suggests that US political successes resulted in European powers securing most of the privatized firms and most lucrative oil, telecommunication and financial enterprises. Similarly in the Yugoslav break-up, the Europeans secured influence and control over the richest mini-states, Croatia and Slovenia, while the US colonized the poorest, mafia-states – Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro and Bosnia.

The turn to unilateralist imperialist wars reflected this reality of unequal benefits from co-operative US-EU imperial wars. The US unilateral invasion of Iraq was designed to maximize US control of the forthcoming privatization and de-nationalization of Iraqi oil industry and to undercut European benefits from the post-war “reconstruction” as well as to privilege Israeli interests in the Middle East.

If imperialist expansion is linked to P/D, the competition and conflict between US and EU imperialism shapes the forms and methods through which that expansion takes place. The US resort to unilateral (forms) and military (means) is related to its “comparative advantage” in military weaponry and the predominance of militarist civilian decision-makers. The doctrines of “total war”, “offensive wars”, and unipolar world supremacy were all designed and implemented by a special elite of political ideologues, with specific set of political attributes – they lack direct ties to the traditional military hierarchy and have demonstrated contempt for the military and intelligence commands. These civilian militarists conceive of themselves as an elite chosen to carry out the mission of terrorizing real or imagined adversaries overseas and punishing, expelling or silencing traditional military and intelligence rivals within the state. Their extremist militarism is directly related to their distance from the actual “blood and guts” of mass killing of civilians and ground level military casualties and their proximity to the Israeli State.

Their arrogance in exercising power is matched by their abject ignorance of the political and economic conditions and consequences of their decisions. Their blind subservience to serving Israel’s interests led them to “miscalculate” the massive degree of Iraqi opposition to the war and occupation. Their quest for world domination led to unsustainable multiple military invasions, leading to the weakening of the US Empire. Their militarist logic revealed their abysmal ignorance of the enormous destruction of lucrative Iraqi assets and the cost of war of war to the US economy. These policies forced sharp divisions within the imperial state. In response, the extremists in the Pentagon have seized control over intelligence functions and special forces operations, involving clandestine operations. The Second Bush administration is more extreme and even more aggressive than the first. The political conflict within the State is extending into civil society where over half of the population opposes the plans for new wars. Instead of adopting an empire-building strategy mixing economic, political and diplomatic pressures with selective wars, the civilian militarists have, in the Middle East, relied exclusively on military strategies. Even within this one-sided military approach, they have chosen the most extreme measures, unilateral permanent wars, as opposed to coalitions (and joint colonial spoils) and limited wars (in time and place). Military extremism in pursuit of unsustainable colonial war is no virtue.

Israel’s dirty little colonial war, despite its daily civilian assassinations, terror bombings and ritual torture and humiliation of the Palestinians has not succeeded in 60 years of warfare against 3 million Palestinians even with universal conscription and life-time military reservists. The civilian militarists in the imperial state have learned nothing from Israel’s failures: For them Israel can do no wrong, it can never fail, it is their living ideological model of the military will to conquer. Our own civilian militarists, in their exalted hubris believe that 150,000 colonial forces could defeat 200,000 armed resistance fighters backed by over 20 million fellow citizens.

The Mind of the Civilian Militarists

One of the key aspects of the civilian militarists’ rise to power has been their ability to apply organizational principles which further their political programs. Their procedures, while not usually spelled out in a written document, can be deduced from their organizational behavior. For brevity of space, we can spell out their modus operendi:

        1. Precipitate war thus precluding public debate and systematic analysis of who benefits and who loses, and the tactical gains and strategic costs. Given that the civilian militarists came to power with an already fixed doctrine and a disciplined cohort, it was not difficult for them to impose their views over their fragmented and dispersed rivals and opponents within the military and government bureaucracy. Taking advantage of the notion of “civil supremacy” they were able to impose their extreme militarist war doctrines on their critics within the traditional military leadership, whom they attacked as being “too bureaucratic and cautious”. In effect their ultra-voluntarism military doctrines conflicted with the more rational-calculated policies of the established military strategists.
        2. Facilitating an apocalyptic event was an essential element in the ascendancy of the civil militarist in imperial policy-making positions and the seizure of war making powers. Massive documentation and critical analysis drawn from official intelligence sources reveal that the civilian militarists were knowledgeable and actively involved in facilitating the terrorist attack on September 11, 2001. The civilian militarists, on the day of the terrorist event, set in motion their Middle East war agenda and proceeded to propound and implement their extremist “offensive war” agenda. They deliberately induced and magnified a paranoid style of politics which centered on an immediate world-wide terrorist threat to millions of defenseless civilians based on nuclear, biological and chemical warfare (despite that fact that 9/11 terrorist attack was carried out with cheap plastic box-cutters). This unprecedented bizarre ideological “terror campaign” orchestrated by the civilian militarists resonated strongly with the paranoid politics of the Israeli regime which urged a Judeo-Christian Crusade against a worldwide Islamic terrorist threat.
        3. Messianic missions are a constant component of the civilian militarist mentality. These are partly cynical exercises in the manipulation of universal democratic ideals and partly the result of a fervor for US world supremacy. Messianic missionary zeal has the intended consequence of providing a self-justification for gross violations of human rights, international and domestic laws. The civil militarists know that their military invasions willingly destroy democratic rights of self-determination, that their advocacy of military occupation lead to the denial of the rights of democratic self-government, yet they proclaim their goal is to “democratize the Middle East”, a claim which is echoed in the mass media. Cynicism aside, the Messianic mission fuels the vituperative attacks against real or imagined critics which accompanies authoritarian repressive measures aimed at intimidating critics, and inciting arbitrary arrests, indefinite jailing and the use of torture against suspects.
        4. Moralistic military campaigns have the virtue of not having to provide facts to justify violent assaults on peoples and nations. The issue for the civilian militarists is not whether an attack or a military threat really exists. The essential element for them is that there is a self-defined world of “good” and “evil” -- a virtuous world power (US) united with its regional accomplice (Israel) against an evil “other” (Muslim, Third World, independent state) hostile to US empire building and Israeli colonization. Moral crusaders among the civilian militarists believe that the masses need to be deceived by a “Noble Lie”, because the masses are incapable of understanding the “higher truth” of the virtues of permanent war to secure US world supremacy and a “Greater Israeli” regional mini-empire. Many progressive critics have spilled gallons of ink refuting the lies of the civilian militarists regarding Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction, Saddam’s links to Al Queda. This is a worthy enterprise but one which is irrelevant to the civilian militarists, because, for them “truth” is embodied in their (military) actions and not in the pretext (lies) that they expounded. Insofar as the lies “worked”, that is insofar as they were able to launch a war, prepare for other wars, terrorize the population into supporting war, and seize control of the levers of power, a “higher truth” became a reality: the beginning of permanent offensive warfare.
        5. The doctrine of “living space” is intimately related to the civilian militarist practice of permanent war. In their paranoid voluntaristic vision, no place and no time is secure. Threats exist in a series of concentric circles from the Middle East Islamic people (surrounding Israel) outward toward Asia, North Africa, and Western Europe… Security threats are present among “Old European States” and Third World countries which refuse to subordinate themselves to US security forces. In order to achieve “living space” in the US and wherever its business interests, military bases and operation can (or should) have a dominant presence, the issue of “security” becomes a code word for perpetual overt or clandestine military, political and ideological warfare. Ultimately, for the civilian militarists, only a world in which the US exercises absolute supreme sovereign imperial power will result in secure living space.

To enhance their power in the imperial state, the civilian militarists have pursued a number of organizational reforms. For illustrative purposes we can cite at least three types of “reforms” and their stated rationale and real purpose:

              1. Organizational decentralization: Civilian militarists argue that there are too many bureaucratic and political constraints on timely and efficient decisions in a time of imminent threats of terror. In a time of national emergency, established “bureaucracy” becomes part of the threat rather than part of the solution. This is the formal rationale to disguise the real purpose which is to concentrate power in the hands of civilian militarists in the Pentagon elite and among the neo-conservatives in the National Security Council. The “reform” is designed to bypass existing lines of command until they can be purged and replaced by civilian militarist loyalists.
              2. The establishment of non-traditional sources of information (intelligence): Civilian militarists argue that the traditional existing intelligence agencies are ineffective, inaccurate and cumbersome. They argue for “broadening” the basis of intelligence gathering, “diversifying” sources and by-passing cumbersome bureaucracies and securing “direct lines” from the field in order to take decisive action in a timely fashion. The real purpose of the civilian militarists is to create their own parallel “sources” to fabricate intelligence in pursuit of their permanent war doctrine.
              3. Greater ‘cooperation’ with acknowledged friendly states with a long-term, in-depth experience in the area of terrorist warfare: The formal rational for this “reform” advocating “special relations” with overseas experts is that the imperialist state can save time, build on existing expertise, avoid making mistakes through trial and error and duplication by creating new bureaucracies. In addition the civilian militarists, especially the Zionists, look at the Israeli “anti-terrorist” apparatus as a successful model, despite the fact that Israel is the most likely site of terrorist action. The real purpose is to strengthen ties with the State of Israel, to increase biased information and disinformation flows in order to mold US imperial policies around Israel’s Middle East interests. Since the Pentagon Zionists have the best and most intense relations with Israel who is better placed to facilitate joint cooperation than these very same ideologues

Conclusion

War, specifically US imperialist war, doctrine is made up of several sub-tests and key concepts such as a “unipolar world”, offensive, permanent wars and extra-territorial jurisdiction. The doctrine is based on the belief of imperial invincibility – based on mass media imagery of successful US warriors-supermen representing a righteous superpower.

The key to understanding the source and practitioners of these doctrines is found in the ascendancy of a “new class “ of civilian militarists (CM) and their think-tank auxiliaries and civil society supporters who have triggered catastrophic events to facilitate their dominant position in the imperial state. The ascent of the CM has not gone uncontested both from inside the imperial state and from without, especially from former traditional military and intelligence leaders.

In the new millennium a combination of circumstance and timing as well as calculated long-term positioning, has enabled a specific group of civilian militarists to achieve strategic positions in the imperil state – namely Zionist ideologues intimately involved in long-term relations with the state of Israel.

These ideologues and their civilian militarists cohort have pushed to the limit their psychological warfare designed to terrorize the mass of the population to follow their extremist doctrine and make the financial and human sacrifices for on-going wars.

This paper demonstrates that the decisions to launch imperial wars today are not simply the result of the economic interests of US multi-nationals (petroleum or otherwise). In the case of the Middle East, many of the decision-makers did not consult nor were they influenced by oil or other economic interests – most of the multinationals had on-going, lucrative and stable working relations with conservative oil producing Arab elites. At most some oil companies were promised future benefits via privatization of public oil facilities.

Imperial war was designed and driven by a set of policymakers with little interest in or no notion of the economic costs of war. The driving force for the war is found among civilian militarists who facilitated and capitalized on a catastrophic event (9/11) which allowed them to bypass traditional military and intelligence hierarchies. Internal consent for extremist militarism was induced through massive, intense and continuous fear propaganda fomented by the civilian militarists to consolidate their power. The psychological-ideological campaign allowed for vast expenditures of resources and civilian militarist monopoly over imperial policy. War took on a special meaning for the Zionist component of the civilian militarists – serving as a prop for enhancing Israel’s regional power.

While the ideological dominance and psychological control exercised by the civilian militarists over the masses is formidable it is profoundly vulnerable. The constant and irreversible defeats suffered by the US colonial army in Iraq have demonstrated that the US imperial army is not invincible. The incapacity for the US to move on to new ground wars has temporarily challenged the doctrine of permanent offensive wars. The mass discontent within the colonial army has undercut and exposed the irrationality of the civilian militarists. Their proposals for increasing troop levels in Iraq, augmenting the recruitment of soldiers, that is, deepening US involvement in an un-winnable war is leading to greater casualties, deeper discontent at home and greater resistance in Iraq, and severely straining the crisis-ridden US economy. Escalation of war to Iran based on irrational voluntarism will bring the civilian militarists into greater conflict with traditional economic and military power centers. Capitalist rationality, based on cost-benefit calculations, is likely to challenge the atavistic behavior of the civilian warlords, leading to greater internal divisions within the empire and without.

Inter-elite conflicts may serve to activate sectors of the ‘rational’ middle class concerned with the long-term, large-scale interests of empire against the civilian-militarists and their associated power worshipers. “Living space” security doctrines will continue to be played out but in more select locations and within the boundaries of imperial capacity to recruit clients and imperial allies. Wars, which endanger the military status of the imperial state, will be recast in terms of spheres of influence – in which big powers interests will marginalize the exaggerated and inflated role of Israel in world and regional politics. Today the future of the US Empire and particularly the future of its civilian militarists depend on how decisively the empire is defeated in the Middle East. As goes the war in the Middle East, so go the future methods of imperial expansion.

The total military debacle of the civilian militarists and their Zionist core in the Middle East will probably result in a rethinking of the meaning, purposes and goals of imperial wars. Most likely, the economic costs and benefits of imperial wars will return to the center of elite debate, without the bias of third countries interests. These elite debates will attempt to forge a new more limited and ‘rational’ model of world empire.

The issue of turning from empire toward a more ‘republican’ style of politics can only be taken up in another venue, within mass-based anti-imperialist movements which will begin among the colonial subjects of imperial centers but may include the excluded and exploited within the imperial capitals.
 

 January 2005


Media zien Irakese doden, noch chemische wapens
by Ludo De Brabander Tuesday, Mar. 22, 2005

De Amerikaanse journalistenorganisatie Fair trekt aan de alarmbel: de berichtgeving rond Irak is ronduit gemanipuleerd. De nauwkeurigheid waarmee gesneuvelde en gewonde VS-militairen worden geteld contrasteert sterk met de lage media-aandacht en lage schattingen van doden aan Irakese zijde. Het collectieve falen van de media is misdadig duidelijk in Fallujah: begin maart bevestigde een functionaris van het Irakese ministerie van Gezondheid getuigenissen die spreken over de grootschalige inzet van verboden chemische wapens.

Tijdens de eerste dagen van de VS-invasie in Irak, de zogenaamde ‘Shock and Awe’ was er zo goed als geen aandacht voor Irakese slachtoffers. Het ideologisch beeld was dan ook dat de invasie met superieure militaire kracht en doelgericht geschut werd gevoerd. Deze oorlog was er immers ook om de burgerbevolking te bevrijden van hun vreselijke dictator. Teveel aandacht voor Irakese burgerslachtoffers zou in tegenspraak zijn met dit beeld. En hoe dan ook: Irakese slachtoffers wegen minder zwaar. Het is bijna een wet in tijden van oorlog.

Het contrast met de aandacht die slachtoffers aan de kant van de VS krijgen is immens. Enkele dagen na het begin van de invasie verschenen in de VS-dagbladpers koppen als: ‘Eerste belangrijke slachtoffers’ (Daily News, 24 maart 2005) of ‘Oorlog wordt viezer’ (‘The Chronicle, 24 maart 2005) met daaronder beelden of subkoppen die duidelijk maakten dat het over VS-slachtoffers ging. Irakese slachtoffers bleven op dat ogenblik grotendeels uit beeld of moesten het stellen met slechts zijdelingse aandacht in de meeste journaals.

Op het moment dat ik dit schrijf spreken de media met de precisie van een klok over 1.513 gesneuvelde VS-militairen en 11.344 gewonden. De VS-media maar ook de media in het westen berichten trouwens geregeld vrij uitgebreid over deze doden. Dat is helemaal anders als het gaat over de Irakese slachtoffers. Fair, de mediawatchdog in de VS, trekt aan de alarmbel, twee jaar na het begin van de oorlog tegen Irak en illustreert dat met een recent voorbeeld.

In het nieuwsbulletin van 18/03/2005 van het ‘TV-station NBC’ (VS) heet het: “Het is moeilijk om officiële cijfers te krijgen van de Irakese dodentol, maar het aantal burgerslachtoffers ligt ergens tussen 17.000 en 20.000 of meer.” World News Tonight (ABC) baseert zich op cijfers van de onafhankelijke website ‘Iraqi Body Count’, volgens dewelke rond “de 18.000 Irakezen zouden gedood zijn.” De studie van het Britse medische tijdschrift ‘The Lancet’ (29 oktober 2004) waarin sprake is van 100.000 gedode Irakese burgerslachtoffers (volgens een van de onderzoekers een eerder conservatieve schatting) door “geweld als gevolg van de door de VS geleide invasie”, schijnen deze en andere stations niet te kennen. ‘Iraq Body Count’, zelf maant tot voorzichtigheid bij het gebruik van de door haar vrijgegeven cijfers want het gaat over “een compilatie van burgerdoden zoals die zijn gerapporteerd door erkende bronnen…. Het is waarschijnlijk dat vele, zoniet de meeste burgerslachtoffers, de verslaggeving niet halen”.

Uiteraard is het niet gemakkelijk voor journalisten om betrouwbare gegevens te verzamelen. Journalistiek bedrijven in Irak is, zoals we de afgelopen maanden hebben kunnen zien, een gevaarlijke bezigheid. Maar er zit een doelbewust mechanisme achter. Teveel Irakese doden in de media zou een grote smet betekenen op het blazoen van het Amerikaans leger en de hele geloofwaardigheid van het VS-beleid rond Irak op de helling zetten. De gebeurtenissen in Fallujah voeden de stelling dat de media doelbewust de gruwelijkheden waaraan het Amerikaanse leger zich bezondigt, verzwijgen.

Tijdens de zware bombardementen en gevechten in deze Soennitische stad (in april 2004 en in november 2004) viel op hoe de media collectief het Pentagon echoden met hun grote aandacht voor ‘gedode terroristen’. Gauw wordt evenwel duidelijk dat de 250 kilogram zware bommen die op de stad zijn gedropt veel slachtoffers maakten onder de tienduizenden achtergebleven burgers. Het Rode Kruis beschuldigde het bezettingsleger ervan huizen van burgers te bombarderen zonder dat de organisatie de kans kreeg om ze eerst te evacueren.

In een poging om alsnog de aandacht te trekken op hun situatie stuurde het ‘Studiecentrum voor Mensenrechten en Democratie’ van Fallujah eind januari 2005 namens een platform van organisaties, een rapport aan Kofi Annan met een relaas, getuigenissen en foto’s over de gruwelijkheden waaraan ze tijdens de ‘militaire operatie’ (van 7 november tot eind december) zijn blootgesteld (het rapport is te downloaden op www.brusselstribunal.org). Ze vragen daarbij om hun rapport als officieel document te behandelen en aan de leden van de Veiligheidsraad te overhandigen. Het is onduidelijk of dit is gebeurd. Wel duidelijk is dat de media zich collectief in zwijgen hullen.

In het rapport staan nochtans voldoende argumenten voor een officieel internationaal onderzoek naar oorlogsmisdaden. Een kleine greep. Al vanaf de eerste dag bezetten VS-militairen en Irakese troepen het Fallujah-ziekenhuis. Het medisch personeel wordt aan de handen vastgebonden en geslagen. Een deel van de inboedel wordt weggenomen, wat niet te verplaatsen valt vernietigd. Patiënten worden gearresteerd en slecht behandeld. Medische verzorging was niet mogelijk. Kort na de oprichting van een alternatief hospitaal werd het door de VS-jets platgebombardeerd waarbij elke aanwezige werd gedood. Vervolgens plunderden Irakese soldaten met de hulp van hun VS-collega’s het enige privé-ziekenhuis in Fallujah zodat de stad het voortaan zonder medische infrastructuur moest stellen.

Het rapport probeert een schatting te maken van het aantal slachtoffers: “Op 25 en 26 december 2004 verwijderden hulpteams 700 dode lichamen en dat alleen nog maar in 6 residentiële districten – Fallujah bestaat uit 28 districten. Onder hen bevonden zich de lichamen van 504 kinderen en vrouwen. Voor de rest ging het over oudere mannen en mannen van gemiddelde leeftijd”. Het rapport verzekert met grote stelligheid dat er chemische wapens in Fallujah zijn ingezet. Het rapport spreekt verder van de inzet van minstens 25 clusterbommen (fragmentatiebommen) per dag. Van deze bommen is geweten dat ze gemakkelijk veel burgerslachtoffers maken. Er is ook sprake van verschillende executies, waaronder burgers.

Dr Khalid ash-Shaykhli, een vertegenwoordiger van het Irakese ministerie van Gezondheid, bevestigde begin maart het gebruik van chemische wapens. Uit onderzoeken van zijn medische teams bleek dat de VS in Fallujah internationaal verboden substanties hebben gebruikt zoals mosterdgas, zenuwgas en brandbare chemicaliën (zie: al-Jazeera 3 maart 2005). De Irakese dokter die zijn uitspraken deed op een persconferentie in het gebouw van het ministerie van Gezondheid in Bagdad, zegt dat de stad nog altijd lijdt aan de gevolgen van de effecten van chemische en andere types van wapens die ernstige ziektes veroorzaken op lange termijn. Het bericht van Al-Jazeera citeert ook getuigen die spreken over ‘gesmolten lichamen’ wat kan wijzen op de inzet van Napalm bommen. Hoewel de persconferentie ook door media als The Washington Post en de Knight-ridder Service is bijgewoond is er amper iets over bericht. Alleen de website van the Christian Science Monitor maakte er een kort bericht over.

De burgers van Fallujah schreeuwen om aandacht voor hun situatie. Zij waarschuwen alvast: “het stilzwijgen over deze misdaden en zware overtredingen zullen gezien worden als een deelname eraan en ook als het misleiden van de internationale gemeenschap met betrekking tot wat er in Al-Fallujah en in heel Irak is gebeurd.”

Ludo De Brabander
22 maart 2005


De kinderen van Irak…hun leven, hun toekomst

14 april 2005

Inge Van de Merlen, i.s.m. Dirk Adriaensens

 

In alle stilte ging de oorlog in Irak onlangs zijn derde jaargang in. Ik reken hier vanaf de invasie in 2003, maar…wanneer begon de oorlog er eigenlijk? Hebben de kinderen van Irak ooit wat anders dan oorlog gekend? Wat betekenden de jaren van embargo voor hen? Is het nu beter, of net niet? En… hoe ziet hun toekomst eruit?

Wanneer begon de oorlog eigenlijk?

Net voor de invasie in maart 2003 van start ging, klonk over de hele wereld luid protest tegen de oorlogsplannen van de neoconservatieve regering in de VS. Het Iraakse volk leeft echter al veel langer met oorlog, een oorlog die na ‘Operation Desert Storm’ in 1991 nooit echt opgehouden is.

 

Het embargo: verborgen oorlogsvoering

Na een vredesmissie naar Irak in april 2002 deden de deelnemende artsen en specialisten een oproep om het embargo onmiddellijk stop te zetten. ‘Tussen augustus 1990 en februari 2002 stierven 1.659.186 Irakezen, waarvan 688.871 kinderen onder 5 jaar ten gevolge van het embargo’, stellen ze. Deze cijfers werden bevestigd door de Wereldgezondheidsorganisatie . In zijn paper, 'Het VN-embargo tegen Irak: een genocide!', die Jan Buelinckx naar aanleiding van het BRussells Tribunal in april 2004 op Indymedia plaatste, vermeldt de auteur onder andere dat van 1990 tot 1999 de kindersterfte (voor kinderen onder 5 jaar) met 160 % steeg in Irak. Dit cijfer komt uit het jaarlijks UNICEF-rapport. ‘1 op 8 kinderen onder de 5 jaar sterft er, waarvan 70 % door diarree, uitdroging en acute ademhalingsstoornissen’, vervolgt Buelinckx. Eind jaren tachtig was Irak goed op weg naar een levensstandaard die niet moest onderdoen voor de westerse, ontwikkelde landen. Dit gegeven past echter niet binnen de westerse retoriek, die in functie van het internationale spel om macht gevoerd wordt. Een rapport van de Wereldgezondheidsorganisatie toont nochtans aan dat in 1988-89 de alfabetiseringsgraad voor vrouwen er 85 % bedroeg. 93 % van de bevolking had toegang tot de gezondheidszorg en 90 % tot drinkbaar water

 

 

Een ander rapport van de WHO stelt dat tussen 1982 en 1990 de kindersterfte er van 82 naar 25 per 1000 daalde. In de grondwet van het land stond dat gezondheid een recht van elke burger was, en daar werd ook werk van gemaakt. Grote projecten voor de bouw van ziekenhuizen, zowel in stedelijk als landelijk gebied brachten het land op een zeer respectabele plaats met betrekking tot medische faciliteiten. Na de Golfoorlog van 1991 steeg de kindersterfte echter opnieuw, en wel tot 92 per 1000. In 1994, na 4 jaar embargo, stierven reeds 111,7 van de 1000 levendgeborenen. De gevolgen van het embargo voor de kinderen van Irak wordt duidelijk in deze grafiek. Het embargo en de Golfoorlog van 1991 maakten abrupt een einde aan de sociale verworvenheden van de Irakezen.

 

De ellende die sindsdien over het volk van Irak neerdaalde was geen onvermijdelijk neveneffect van maatregelen om de expansiedrang van de Iraakse regering in te dammen. Er lijkt veeleer een niet te ontkennen dosis moedwil vanwege de Verenigde Staten in het spel te zijn. Met resolutie 661 van de Veiligheidsraad, dd. 6 augustus 1990, werd aan alle staten een algemeen verbod om goederen uit Irak te importeren opgelegd. Export naar Irak was eveneens verboden, maar op dit verbod werd een uitzonderingsregel vastgelegd met betrekking tot goederen voor strikt medische doeleinden en, indien de humanitaire omstandigheden het vereisten, eveneens voor voedingsmiddelen. Verder kwam er een algemeen verbod op financiële transacties ten gunste van Irak en van personen en instellingen in Irak, eveneens met uitzondering van betalingen, exclusief voor strikt medische doeleinden of indien vereist voor voedingsmiddelen. Om toe te zien op de naleving van de bepalingen die in de resolutie waren vastgelegd, werd door de Veiligheidsraad een comité van 15 leden opgericht. In resolutie 666, dd. 13 september 1990, werden de procedures met betrekking tot de genoemde uitzonderingsregels gespecificeerd. Enkel en alleen het comité kon beslissen of er al dan niet sprake was van humanitaire omstandigheden die voedselleveringen vereisten. De secretaris-generaal van de VN moest de nodige stappen ondernemen om de behoeften van de Iraakse bevolking te laten onderzoeken en deze informatie ter beschikking van het comité te stellen.

 

Gealarmeerd door de ernstige voedings- en gezondheidssituatie van de Iraakse bevolking, keurde de Veiligheidsraad in april 1995 resolutie 986 goed. Irak zou nu, met een maximum van 1 miljard dollar per 90 dagen olie en olieproducten mogen uitvoeren. De opbrengst zou op een rekening onder het beheer van de Verenigde Naties geplaatst worden om ze onder toezicht van de VN aan te wenden voor medische goederen en voedingsmiddelen. Dit is de essentie van het ‘olie-voor-voedsel’-programma. Ervan afgezien dat 1 miljard dollar per 90 dagen peanuts zijn om er een door oorlog en 5 jaar sancties uitgeteerde bevolking van om en bij de 20 miljoen inwoners weer bovenop te helpen (een gesimplificeerde berekening komt uit op een bedrag van ongeveer 0,55 dollar per persoon per dag) zat er nog wel een addertje onder het gras. De VS heeft namelijk een groot aantal contracten door middel van haar vetorecht tegengehouden. Volgens cijfers van het Bureau voor het Irakprogramma van de VN waren 93 % van de niet-ingewilligde contracten op rekening van de VS te schrijven; 5 % werden door de VS en Groot-Brittannië samen tegengehouden. Dit gebeurde zogezegd omdat de aangevraagde goederen onder de bepaling ‘dubbelgebruik’ zouden vallen. Elias Davidsson stelde in 1997 een lijst op van geweigerde goederen. Deze lijst is relatief omvangrijk en bevat vooral producten waarover de meesten van ons wellicht beschikken om ons dagelijks leven te kunnen organiseren. Een verboden product van niet te onderschatten belang was chloor. In een interview van augustus 2001 stelt Dirk Adriaensens: “De watervoorzieningen en riolering waren stuk gebombardeerd. Afvalwater stond in de straten, maar door het embargo kon Irak geen Chlorine invoeren om het water te zuiveren, waardoor buiktyfus en cholera zich snel onder de bevolking verspreidden.” Volgens een onderzoek van Prof. Thomas J. Nagy van de George Washington universiteit zou de VS zelfs zeer gericht de watervoorziening in Irak vernietigd hebben, goed wetende welke menselijke tol dit zou eisen. In een recent artikel vermeldt Malcolm LaGauche andere feiten die er op duiden dat de VS zeer bewust stappen ondernomen heeft om de burgers van Irak, vooral de kinderen, te doden. Hij stelt dat de VS eind jaren 90 een fabriek in Soedan bombardeerde, waar 100.000 liter vaccin tegen mond- en klauwzeer voor Irak geproduceerd werd. Hierdoor werd de voedselvoorziening rechtstreeks bedreigd.  Toen Irak later 15 levende stieren uit Frankrijk bestelde, blokkeerde de VS dit contract op basis van mogelijk dubbelgebruik. Begrijpe wie het kan!

 

Verarmd uranium: moord met uitstel

(foto: http://www.krysstal.com/democracy_iraq_1991du.html )

Naast de dodelijke gevolgen van het embargo had de Iraakse bevolking na ‘Operation Desert Storm’ ook af te rekenen met de gevolgen van wapens met verarmd uranium die de VS daarbij ingezet had. Een opvallende toename van kankers en ernstig misvormde baby’s werd na de Golfoorlog van 1991 waargenomen. Zo vermeldt een rapport van de ‘Conference on the Effects of the Use of Depleted Uranium Weaponry on human and Environment in Iraq’, dat tussen 1990 en 2000 in Basra het aantal leukemiepatiëntjes onder 5 jaar van 13,3 % tot 56,7 % gestegen is. Een ander rapport spreekt van een verdubbeling in 1999 ten opzichte van 1990. Over die periode zouden in Basra kwaadaardige ziekten bij kinderen met 242 % toegenomen zijn.

 

Op de World Uranium Weapons Conference in Hamburg van 16 tot 19 oktober 2003 werd het gebruik van wapens met verarmd uranium uitgebreid behandeld. Behalve de impact van zulke wapens op mens en milieu en de verhouding van het gebruik ervan tot de rechten van de mens, veroordeelden de deelnemers van de conferentie de wijze waarop het gebruik en de effecten door de VS en Groot-Brittannië versluierd, goedgepraat en geminimaliseerd werden. In een wetenschappelijk ogend document met veel formules die niet voor leken bestemd zijn, tonen Fetter en Von Hippel aan dat uitwendig contact met verarmd uranium nagenoeg niet in een verhoogd risico op kanker resulteert. Inhalering van de radioactieve stofdeeltjes of inname zouden daarentegen wel schadelijk zijn. Daarom raden ze aan voertuigen, die door middel van wapens met verarmd uranium vernietigd werden met beton op te vullen en te begraven; restanten van de wapens moeten ingezameld en als licht-radioactief afval begraven worden. Soldaten die belast zijn met het opruimen van voertuigen die door uraniumwapens vernietigd werden moeten voldoende beschermingsmaatregelen in acht nemen bij de uitvoering van die taak.

 

Of deze waarschuwingen enig nut voor de Iraakse burgers hadden is nog maar de vraag. Tijdens de invasie van 2003 werden ook weer rijkelijk wapens met verarmd uranium gebruikt. Volgens een rapport van dr. Geert Van Moorter, 'Eén jaar na de val van Bagdad: hoe gezond is Irak?', heeft de VS na de invasie niet veel moeite gedaan om de radioactieve wrakken op te ruimen, met als gevolg dat kinderen er naar hartelust in konden spelen, en burgers zonder het te weten radioactieve groenten begonnen te kweken op de besmette grond. Alleen daarom al zal de oorlog voor de Irakezen nog lang blijven duren. Verarmd uranium heeft tenslotte een halveringstijd van 4,5 miljard jaar.

 

Toen ik tijdens de jaarwisseling aanwezig was op een vredesmissie in Amman ontmoette ik er een familie, die afkomstig is van ‘Baghdad-Airport’, één van de locaties waar deze wapens ingezet werden. Hun zoontje lijdt nu aan leukemie. De komende decennia zal statistisch onderzoek wellicht aantonen of de vermoedens betreffende het gebruik van verarmd uranium in Irak gegrond zijn. Met de statistieken van de jaren negentig in gedachten, vrees ik het ergste.

Irak na de ‘bevrijding’

Na 12 jaar embargo zette Bush junior het werk van zijn vader met een niets ontziende ijver voort. ‘Operation Iraqi Freedom’ zou de Iraakse markt voor de internationale bedrijven moeten vrijmaken. Met behulp van haar hi-tech-wapenarsenaal wist het VS-leger met de grootste precisie Bagdads woonbuurten te vernielen en de grondtroepen konden hun schietkunsten op ziekenwagens botvieren. In een videodocumentaire van dr. Geert Van Moorter, opgenomen tijdens de invasie, vertelt een moeder van een leukemiepatiëntje over haar angst. Het was tijdens het embargo reeds onmogelijk om voldoende geneesmiddelen voor haar zoontje te bekomen; nu was de situatie helemaal uitzichtloos.

 

Maar Irak werd bevrijd! De ziekenhuizen, scholen en musea werden vrij toegankelijk voor hen die er geen graten in zagen ze leeg te roven. Voor zover ik me herinner waren de ministeries van economie en van olie hierop een uitzondering. De grenzen van Irak werden eveneens vrijgemaakt om alle mogelijk gespuis met ongezonde intenties het land in te laten. En de Irakezen? Zij werden bevrijd van hun water- en elektriciteitsvoorzieningen, van hun jobs en van hun sociale verworvenheden. De Irakezen werden niet zomaar vrij; zij werden vogelvrij. Ze kunnen zonder enige rechtvaardiging neergeschoten of opgesloten worden. Familieleden wachten vruchteloos, maandenlang, om tot de gevangenis waar hun dierbaren zonder enige vorm van aanklacht of proces opgesloten zitten te bezoeken. Ze kunnen enkel hopen dat deze nog in leven zijn.

 

Op 1 mei 2003 verklaarde Mr. Dubya de oorlog voor beëindigd. ‘Mission accomplished’ stond op het spandoek achter hem te lezen. De missie was inderdaad volbracht. Bedrijven zoals Bechtel, Halliburton en Fluor konden hun contracten in Irak beginnen uitvoeren. Tegen september vaardigde civiel bestuurder Bremer Order 39 uit, een nieuwe wet voor buitenlandse investeringen in Irak, die de vroegere handelswetgeving moest vervangen. Concreet betekent dit dat het buitenlandse investeerders vrij staat de Iraakse markt op te kopen. Van de winsten die ze uit hun investeringen halen, hoeven ze niets in Irak te herinvesteren. Irak kan worden uitverkocht.

 

In de maanden die op de officiële beëindiging van de oorlog volgden, sneuvelden meer soldaten dan tussen maart en mei van dat jaar. Cijfers van Iraakse slachtoffers werden niet door de VS geregistreerd: “We don’t do body counts.”

 

In een interview begin januari vertelde Dahr Jamail, onafhankelijk journalist uit Alaska, dat reeds bij zijn eerste reis naar Irak, in november 2003, de mensen er genoeg van hadden. Ze hadden toen al begrepen dat er van heropbouw onder de bezetting niets in huis zou komen. Een blik in zijn archieven uit die tijd vertelt ons over de willekeurige arrestaties, het intimidatiegedrag van de VS-soldaten, de chaos, de ellenlange files om misschien aan wat benzine te komen in het land met de tweede grootste olievoorraad ter wereld. Ten tijde van het interview stelde Dahr Jamail dat elke Irakees wel een familielid verloren heeft door de oorlog. Tijdens zijn eerste weken in Irak aanhoorde hij reeds getuigenissen over mensen die zonder reden in een kogelregen gedood werden.

 

De vader van dit jongetje en meisje werd door de Amerikaanse soldaten gedood. Wie zal er nu voor zijn familie zorgen? Wie zal er op deze kinderen letten? Wie zal hen nu te eten geven? Wie? Waarom doodden ze mijn broer? Wat was de reden? Niemand kon het me vertellen. Hij was een vrachtwagenchauffeur. Wat heeft hij misdaan? Waarom schoten ze hem neer? Vermoordden ze hem enkel omdat ze een man wilden doden? Is het dat? Is dat de reden? Waarom stond niemand me te woord om me uit te leggen waarom ze mijn broer gedood hebben? Is het doden van mensen nu normaal geworden, een alledaags gebeuren? Is dit onze toekomst? Is dit de toekomst die de Verenigde Staten ons beloofde?(getuigenis uit Samarra)”

 

Hier bleef het niet bij. De schrikwekkende berichten uit Abu Ghraib kwamen aan de oppervlakte. Een tip van de sluier werd gelicht en even mocht de wereldbevolking een blik in de ziel van de bevrijding werpen. Washington noemde het geïsoleerde gevallen, een paar rotte appels; de beschuldigden hadden het over orders van hogerhand. Kort geleden zouden er gelijkaardige foto’s uit Afghanistan opgedoken zijn, maar voor ze het grote nieuws konden bereiken was het bevel om ze te vernietigen reeds uitgevoerd.

 

Abu Ghraib was niet het laatste nieuws uit Irak. Nadat moegetergde Irakezen vier gewapende veiligheidsagenten, die in de westerse media zeer snel als Amerikaanse burgers omschreven werden, om het leven brachten en hun verbrande overblijfselen aan een brug in Fallujah ophingen, moesten de burgers van de stad het ten volle bekopen. Het ongenoegen over de bezetting groeide zowel in Irak als elders.

 

(foto: http://dahrjamailiraq.com/gallery/albums/siege_of_falluja/100_2345.jpg)

 

Na 30 juni 2004 zou echter alles veranderen. Twee dagen eerder dan aangekondigd droeg Paul Bremer, civiel bestuurder voor Irak, de macht over aan een Iraakse interim-regering. Iyad Allawi., een voormalig Iraaks geheim agent met banden bij de Amerikaanse en Britse geheime diensten en wiens organisatie (INA) in 1994-1995 terroristische aanslagen in Bagdad pleegde, werd als premier aangeduid. Voor de Irakezen was dit niets anders dan een marionettenregering, die samenwerkte met de buitenlandse bezetter. De willekeurige arrestaties en nachtelijke razzia’s, waarbij families hun intiemste sfeer geschonden werd bleven voortduren. Het leven van een Irakees was nog altijd even weinig waard als voor de machtsoverdracht.

 

Fallujah II werd een nog grotere massamoord dan de vorige belegering. De nieuwsberichten meldden bijna dagelijks hoe verzetsstrijders gedood werden. Achteraf bleek dat honderden vrouwen, kinderen en ouderen er het leven lieten. Het Studiecentrum voor Mensenrechten en Democratie van Irak tekende de feiten op in twee rapporten, één over de oorlogsmisdaden, die door het leger begaan werden, een ander over de situatie van de vluchtelingen van Fallujah. Met een begeleidende brief werden deze rapporten aan secretaris-generaal van de VN, Kofi Annan, ter behandeling voorgelegd. De ondertekenaars verzochten de secretaris-generaal deze misdrijven officieel te registreren en overeenkomstig zijn autoriteit en verantwoordelijkheden de procedures op te starten, teneinde de slachtoffers hun rechten te beschermen en de opdrachtgevers van deze internationale misdrijven verantwoordelijk te stellen.

 

Op 7 november 2005 werd het enig beschikbare ziekenhuis van Fallujah door zwaar bewapende VS troepen en de Iraakse Nationale Garde bestormd. De dokters werden in de boeien geslagen, tegen de grond gegooid en met de voeten getreden. Ondertussen werd het ziekenhuis leeggeroofd, zwaardere apparaten vernield. Al de patiënten werden gearresteerd, medische behandeling werd hen ontzegd. Een paar dagen later opende het medisch personeel een alternatief ziekenhuis, maar dit werd door VS-vliegtuigen gebombardeerd, waarbij alle zieken en gewonden, artsen en verplegers omkwamen.

 

 

 Op 25 en 26 december 2004 hadden urgentieteams van het Fallujah ziekenhuis 700 lijken uit 6 van de 28 woondistricten weggehaald. 504 van hen waren vrouwen en kinderen. De plaatsen waar de lichamen gevonden werden duiden erop dat deze mensen tijdens hun dagdagelijkse bezigheden gedood werden. Tussen de doden bevond zich een man met zijn twee kinderen en twee jonge meisjes die door schotwonden in het hoofd omkwamen. Op een andere plaats vond men een oude man, zittend in zijn stoel met zijn wandelstok.

 

Ooggetuigen bevestigen dat de VS-troepen chemische wapens gebruikten in het Al Golan- en Al Shuhada’-district. In de al-Askary-woonwijk werden 24 tot as verbrande lichamen teruggevonden. VS-soldaten betraden de buurt later met gasmaskers. Vrijwilligers die de doden kwamen begraven stelden vast dat een aantal van de doden in hun bed gestorven waren en geen enkel teken van verwondingen vertoonden. Er zouden meer dan 25 clusterbommen per dag boven de stad gedropt zijn.

 

Meisje met gesmolten huid en haar (Foto: Dahr Jamail)

 

Een goeie vriend van me is reeds maanden als hulpverlener werkzaam in Fallujah.  Met eigen ogen zag hij hoe in januari de bezettingstroepen met schoonmaakploegen de straten van de Golanbuurt kwamen schoonspuiten.  De watertanks in het district werden lek geschoten.  We vermoeden dat hier bewijsmateriaal voor het gebruik van chemische wapens verwijderd werd.

 

De stem van het volk wordt gesmoord

Het misnoegen bij de bevolking, en daarmee ook het verzet, bleven groeien. Op 30 januari 2005 was het dan eindelijk zover: de Irakezen konden voor het eerst in hun leven aan democratische verkiezingen deelnemen. Deze verkiezingen waren een immens succes - volgens de westerse regeringsleiders en mediakanalen tenminste…

 

Kort daarna werd de berichtgeving uit Irak vrijwel gereduceerd tot zelfmoordaanslagen met liefst veel burgerslachtoffers. Ander nieuws uit het Tweestromenland komt nauwelijks nog aan bod. Het gaat tenslotte goed met de democratie in Irak. Hoe goed het er gaat vertelt ons onder andere Eman:

 

“Wegblokkades zijn een groot probleem. Soldaten kunnen elk moment een weg afsluiten. Er wordt geen signalering geplaatst, en zo weten de mensen niet wanneer welke weg open of gesloten is. Ze moeten zeer voorzichtig zijn. Zo verloren we reeds één van onze fabrieksarbeiders. Hadi Saleh Hantoosh verliet de fabriek en wist niet dat de weg waarlangs hij ’s morgens gekomen was ondertussen geblokkeerd werd. Hij werd door Amerikaanse soldaten doodgeschoten. Een ambulancier werd zo eveneens gedood. Hij had een noodoproep gekregen en wist niet dat de weg zojuist geblokkeerd werd.”

Foto: www.dahrjamailiraq.com

 

Een familie uit Fallujah stuurde foto’s van hun woning voor en na het offensief naar hun zoon in het buitenland. Deze mensen verdienden hun brood met de productie van meubelen.  Alles wat ze ooit bezaten werd vernietigd.  Ze vroegen hun zoon om de wereld te tonen wat er gebeurd is.  

 Hulpkreten uit Irak worden echter bijna niet gehoord. Vorige week stuurde het Studiecentrum voor Mensenrechten en Democratie een nieuw rapport door naar de commissie voor mensenrechten van de VN. Hierin stellen ze dat, gevolg gevend aan de vorige twee rapporten, het bureau voor mensenrechten van UNAMI en het Iraaks bureau van de Wereldgezondheidsorganisatie in twee gevallen een verzoek hadden ingediend om de situatie ter plaatse te onderzoeken. Tot nu toe hebben de autoriteiten van de VS dit verzoek niet ingewilligd onder het voorwendsel dat de veiligheidssituatie dit niet toelaat. Verwonderlijk is dit niet. In de streek zijn voortdurend gevechten aan gang, niet alleen in Fallujah. Eind februari vertelde een vriend uit Irak me tijdens een telefoongesprek dat in Hit, een stadje dat stroomopwaarts langs de Eufraat ligt, twee huizen gebombardeerd werden. De balans waren enkele doden en gewonden. Na wat zoekwerk op het internet bleek dat rond 20 februari ‘Operation River Blitz’ van start was gegaan. Deze operatie richt zich op de steden langs de Eufraat, volgens de officiële gegevens om rebellen uit te schakelen. Aangezien dit ook in Fallujah een reden bleek om de stad, inwoners inbegrepen, met de grond gelijk te maken, vind ik dit eerder zorgwekkend. In tegenstelling tot Fallujah is er in de media amper een woord gerept over deze operatie, die overigens nog steeds aan gang is. Zo blijkt uit een bericht van 27 maart dat ook nu weer de ziekenhuizen niet gespaard worden, hoewel men iets voorzichtiger tewerk schijnt te gaan. Men kan zich afvragen hoe dit alles verder moet, hoe de toekomst er voor de kinderen van Irak uitziet.

Vrede voor de kinderen van Irak…niet meer dan een droom

Welk wereldbeeld heeft een Iraaks kind?  De bombardementen, uiteengereten families, hongersnood, epidemieën, verminkingen, onzekerheid, een land in puin,…De bevrijding heeft hen geen goed gedaan. Volgens een recent rapport van de Mensenrechtencommissie van de Verenigde Naties is de ondervoeding bij kinderen onder de 5 jaar sinds de invasie verdubbeld.

 

Enkele dagen geleden vertelde een vriendin uit Bagdad over de geboorte van haar neefje. Wat een heugelijk nieuws! Is de baby gezond? Hoe heet hij? Voor één keer wilde ik de goede fee uit een sprookje zijn. Ik liet mijn gelukwensen overmaken aan het ouderpaar en sprak de hoop uit, dat het kind ooit vrede mag kennen. Het volgende moment besefte ik hoe utopisch deze hoop wel was. Hoe kunnen de kinderen van Irak ooit vrede kennen? In het derde deel van hun boek 'Irak - Oog in oog met de bezetting' geven Mohamed Hassan en David Pestieau een overzicht van de geschiedenis van Irak. Sinds meer dan tachtig jaar hebben de westerse grootmachten hun zinnen op het land gezet. Irak bezit het felbegeerde zwarte goud en heeft bovendien de pech op een zeer strategische plaats gelegen te zijn. Irak, het volk, ligt op de vuurlinie, is het slachtoffer van de strijd der giganten om de totale wereldmacht. Irak moet buigen of barsten.

 

En de kinderen… hoe moet het nu met de kinderen?


The End Of Warfare

 

ABHAY MEHTA      -      FALLUJAH

http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20041220&fname=fallujah&sid=1

 

Against the most heavily armed opponent in the history of War, Fallujah has still not let itself be "taken" to date. The mightiest military machine in history has met its match. A turning point in military affairs? The end of warfare, as practiced by the Americans - the application of overwhelming force to obtain a victory?

 

Fallujah per se, on the face of it, is not a strategic or a militarily significant target. It however represents the "great challenge" to the US/UK's military occupation of Sovereign Iraq since April 2003.

In the first siege of Fallujah in April 2004, the Iraqi Resistance inflicted a severe defeat on the Americans. In April 2004, while over 1,200 Iraqis were killed, blown up, burnt or shot alive by the Americans -- two thirds of them civilians, mostly women and children -- while 2,000-pound bombs were falling on the the city, AC-130 Spectre gunships were demolishing entire city blocks in less than a minute and of course silence of the plop as Iraqis targeted by marine snipers hit the ground, nonetheless the operative portion remains: the Marines were beaten back in no uncertain terms. This was followed by a "truce".

The truce did not hold for very long.

 

This humiliation of the American military was spun as a "strategic retreat" but the desire to get rid of the "weeping sore that Fallujah was" has been on top of the US agenda since then. Fallujah represented a "stellar act of defiance" one that allowed the resistance to "actually secure and control a city, and to beat off the US military"

 

The second formal large scale assault on Fallujah (Nov./Dec 2004) pitted images of the world's most powerful military force against fighters in tennis shoes, wielding homemade rocket launchers. There were three declared tactical objectives. The first was to either kill or capture the Jordanian born "terrorist" "Abu Musab al-Zarqawi" (if indeed he exists) and to "battle and destroy some 4000 to 5000 suspected fighters". The Americans also vowed to "liberate" the residents of Fallujah from "criminal elements" and to "secure Fallujah" for the January elections. Lastly, it appears an additional declared tactical/political objective of the American Military's task was to engage in a "fight of good versus evil". Additionally it appears (presumably per their intelligence reports) that the mission also was to "destroy" "Satan" since it appears that "he lives in Fallujah"

 

On the face of it, it appears as if none of these tactical/military objectives have been met, including, it appears, the desire to presumably meet Mr Satan, resident of Fallujah.

As for the other very laudable and rationally quantifiable objectives including that of stuffing democracy into a city by simply obliterating it, all of these seem to be a bit astray.

48 hours into the offensive, the official narratives were filled with reports that Zarqawi (if indeed such a entity exists) may have "slipped outside" of their perimeter defenses.

This of course left Mr "Satan" still in residence together with the rest of the unfortunate inhabitants of the "militant stronghold". The city of 300,000 residents had perhaps an estimated 40,000 civilians left per the US military. Since this estimated number included 5000 resident "militants", one can presume that the rest (per the US military) would be civilians.

 

The actual civilian count remaining in the city on the 8th of November is around around 60,000 to as much as 100,000 since males between the ages 16 and 60 were disbarred by the US military from leaving the city.

One can also infer the most vulnerable--the poor, the old, the women, children and the sick--continued to reside in their city in significant numbers -- of the order of 40,000+

With the "target softening" bombing raids that killed a few hundred civilians in the first week of November, the first formal target of the US military armored assault was doctors and the nurses. These were the first to be eliminated as these were "legitimate military target" and since "insurgents" were "forcing the doctors there to release propaganda and false information".

 

The assault has left as many as 10,000 civilian dead--perhaps much much more . The Red Cross/Red Crescent estimate was upwards of 6000 as of November 25th. Till date no formal Red Cross/Red Crescent operation has been allowed in the city.

What the images of Phantom Fury did not convey is that this assault is the largest concentration of heavy armor in one place, since the fall of Berlin. This was the first time since World War II that "an American armored task force" has been turned "loose in a city with no restrictions".

 

More to the point, the force of as much as 20,000 soldiers (12,000 to 17,000 American/coalition soldiers, about 2000 odd Iraqi "National guards" and perhaps 1000 odd peshmergas) were supported by an estimated 1100 to as much as 2000 armored vehicles and tanks. Air support was largely carrier based out of the gulf and B-52's from bases outside of Iraq.

The armor alone represents the heaviest ever concentration of armor since the fall of Berlin (1945) in one place against a single military objective.

Phantom Fury was officially underway on the 8th of November and declared to be a sweeping victory on or about the 15th of November.

Thereafter the military communiqués and the press reports have been limited to occasional deaths in the "Anbar province". That all of Fallujah is under "coalition" control since then i.e on or about November 15th 2004. Since then detailed stories on Fallujah in the official narrative have stopped completely or refer to action/discoveries between the 8th and the 19th of November 04.

There is no evidence of what has transpired save intermittent but very very regular losses attributed to "pockets of resistance" in the "Anbar Province". And, yes, reportage on the brand new movie on Fallujah starring Harrison Ford.

Now for a moment, consider the substantive anomalies in the official discourse. Consider one such example- Satellite Imagery of Fallujah (block by block including "after action") available to the media till the 15th of November and carried in graphic detail day by day from the 8th of Nov. through the 15th stopped abruptly. There are no explanations.There are no satellite pictures of Fallujah available in the public domain after November 15th. Or consider that the Red Cross/Red crescent has not been allowed to enter the city in any substantive manner. Today is the 20th of Dec and it has still not been allowed.

 

Or consider another break in the regular stream of consciousness. No reporter has set foot in the city or after the 22nd of November.

A "Great Victory" like this and no footage?

These anomalies are noteworthy. Therefore it is very unclear whether this is indeed the case or, as a matter of fact, the converse is.

Fallujah has not been taken. Not only has Fallujah not been taken, but the coalition forces have staged several retreats and are now confined largely to the outside of the city.

The Iraqi resistance is currently in control of most of the city and have forced back at least three of the largest armored assaults in recent history.

In fact, one can make a claim that this was the largest series of armored assault ever. The objective is 16 sq km and if one were to normalise over time and term for incremental intensity in firepower that this represents, then these are historically unprecedented. Now if these were not only repulsed, but perhaps defeated, it leads to something that ought to be examined more carefully.

 

Despite being flattened (perhaps about 12,000 to as much as 20,000 homes out of an estimated 50,000 razed) by the application of, as US Army Gen. John Abizaid put it, "more military power per square inch than anybody else on earth".

Curiously, the US general then very very strangely goes on to add: "If you ever even contemplate our nuclear capability, it should give everybody the clear understanding that there is no power that can match the United States militarily."

Oh. Let me contemplate the nuclear capability of the US. Never mind. It is a bore.

So?

The General also said, when talking about generating "more military power per square inch than anybody else on earth".that "every one knows it". Oh. The words of the General--the mightiest general of them all--Commander Centom, do not appear to have been heard. At least, the Iraqi resistance has not heard them.

The mightiest military machine ever in world history with the mightiest firepower the world has ever seen has been mightily trying to capture Fallujah. But no luck so far.

Instead the Americans faced an opposition that broke the back of the assault. Instead of "breaking bone by bone" and crushing "the backbone of the insurgents", it seems to appear that the same has been done unto them as they were planning to do unto the resistance.

At the peak of the assault, the Americans held no more than 35-40% of Fallujah (largely the north on or around the 18th of November) Thereafter, they appear to have been steadily repulsed and in fact the coalition forces currently have been repulsed to where they were on November 13th or thereabouts and to the outskirts of Fallujah.

Now consider the fate of the rest of the occupation. It is in tatters. The mightiest military in the world cannot control an 8 km stretch of road, perhaps the single most important road in all of Iraq – the Airport Road from the center of Baghdad to the airport. The purported troop concentration is 120 soldiers per km of a open road and despite that the Australian defence minister could not even make it to the green zone and simply flew back from the airport.

Unlike Vietnam, where the American were largely in control of the cities for most parts (save Tet, and even there complete control was not lost), the US/UK garrisons are isolated in the middle of a hostile population.

They cannot even traverse a km or two out of the 'green zone". Their supply convoys have come to a standstill over the last month and a salvage operation of re-supplying by air has started over the last 10-12 days. Air supplies are limited and there is no reason to believe that these can be significant (a max of 400 tonnes a day, slated to rise to 1600 tonnes a day against an estimated minimum 20,000 odd tonnes needed daily to keep a force of 160,000+ fed, watered, armored and resupplied).

The 300 mile long supply line is toast. Well, at least any thing dark, metallic, armored or otherwise. (4000 pounds of armor on a humvee that can carry a max load of 5000 pounds) Can it move? And even that is not helpful – in the words of the great military strategist, Rumsfeld, circa Dec 04, even tanks blow up. Why bother at all?

Against the most heavily armed opponent in the history of War, Fallujah has still not let itself be "taken" to date (As of 20th Dec, 2004). Falluah and indeed the rest of Iraq post April 2003, heralds "supersymmetrical" warfare and the end of conventional warfare. This represents a turning point in military affairs – the end of warfare--as practiced by the Americans i.e the application of overwhelming force to obtain a victory.

If this is indeed correct (and there is no reason to consider any other alternative) then the Iraqi Resistance's repulsing the assault and indeed the forcing back of the American positions represents not only a turning point in the American occupation of Sovereign Iraq but in fact a turning point in warfare itself.

In fact, it would certainly be one of the greatest military victories in history.

Over the last 30 years since Vietnam, the normative amount of explosive power and force multipliers available to the Americans and their opponents (compared to say the North Koreans in the 50's, the NVA in the 60s) has normalised and in fact are comparable if one were to factor in the context in which the firepower is used and deployed.

The 'normalisation" of firepower on a level playing field- In this case, Fallujah, or for that matter the rest of Iraq, is noteworthy.

Consider one such example. A RPG 7 can travel up to 300/700/950 meters. At 300 meters, even a basic warhead can penetrate 330 mm of steel armor. Yes, 33 cms, 13 inches--that is a lot of steel. The projectile would cost perhaps $30-40. Conservatively, a squad of 3 armed with RPG-7s have more than a fighting chance against a M1 Abrams. In close urban quarters, the advantage that the tank had (in say open ground in a conventional war) is completely lost.

The cost/personnel advantage is noteworthy. With minimal or no training, just about any one can operate a RPG. A squad of say 3 would cost perhaps no more than $5000 to equip. Against this, the M1 Abrams ("the mightiest tank", 70 odd tonnes of steel, a few million a pop).

Now consider the mightiest Gun in the West against the rookie squad of three. Throw in a street. Add cover (even rubble will do, in fact quite nicely, thank you)

Even odds?

Now consider for a moment. Consider a force of say a few thousand men -- the best in the business and certainly the bravest men on the face of this planet--say no more than 3000, anything more and it would be one sided. 3000 against 12,000 to 20,000 sounds about right.

Now add ingenuity, intelligence and passion and a good reason to be very very angry. Throw in a just cause. In fact, the "most just cause of all".

Now consider that these are equipped with only say RPG 7s as well as say RPG 9s, a few dozen Strellas, a few thousand modified versions of the S5K rocket, basic antiaircraft guns, a few hundred tonnes of say c4/semtex (it is quite cheap), a few thousand fin stabilised rockets (52 mm to 152 mm), basic artillery and mortar (say 60mm, 82mm, and 120mm shells), a few SAMs (say SAM7 and SAM 9), a few thousand grad rockets, faithful ole Kalasnikovs, a few hundred sniper rifles with say .50 mm explosive ammo. It may also be possible that few Samud and Abgail missiles (range of 100 km) are available.These are not very large missiles. Add a few more, nothing fancy again--say, the Tariq and Katyusha, very very basic indeed).

There is more, but you get the idea. Not very state of the art weapons, far from it. But very very functional. Now, consider the sheer amount of counter offensive power these represent.

Add to that pre-prepared defensive positions, not very fancy for sure but very functional and very very functional minefields with a variety of triggers. Throw in, the "most ingenious" booby traps ever.

Add the Iraqi resistance--the bravest of the brave--operating these. Well now, it is state of the art. The State of the Art of Urban Warfare.

Oh yes, And yes, how can I forget toys. Well, one needs to buy those since "remote controls from toys" (Well at least as per the American Military) are a primary trigger in IEDs.

So we add a few 10s of dollars per toy car and remote kit, say from your local K-mart.K-mart?. Turns out that an army cannot be equipped from K-mart, to quote the great military tactician Rumsfeld once again, circa early Dec 0). Also turns out Centcom claims that they cannot jam these (circa Dec 04,)

It does appear that we have a problem here. Toy remotes. Rather sad, would you not say? Coming from the second in command of the Mightiest Super powers' mightiest command. Beam me up, Scotty.

Now pit against them a "superpower" that has already spent 150 billion of declining currency for sure but buys plenty still. Do not forget to add 450 billion recurring every year. (Hey it can buy anything but armor). Add another 100 billion on the cards (Jan 04).

But this does not help.

Short of using a neutron or a nuclear bomb (the Americans did use chemical weapons in Fallujah), despite all efforts, what the Americans have been able to achieve is relatively little, if anything at all, even in the best case estimates of the official narrative.

45 days and going on and on and on and on.

Oh, oh, but, but, but we took Baghdad in 21 days.

45 days for 16 sq kms.....

The opposing American army in this case has not been able to be actually "take" them out. Never mind control or physically occupying 16 sq kms.

 

In fact, even a neutron bomb would not be militarily significant. You need to "take" it and keep it and keep on keeping it and keep on and on and on....

And they have not. They will not. They cannot.

The limits of raw firepower have been reached and no matter what (2000 pound bombs to container cluster bombs to the new "large Abrams" tank. Oh well, if not a RPG7, a RPG9 or two will do the trick, thank you), the American military objective is no longer possible.

Shoulder-held surface to air weapons limit the role of armored copters. In fact there are several 'copter graveyards in and around Fallujah. Big ones. Some of them are quite near the tank killing fields. Yes, several hundred armored vehicles resting, not quite in peace but hey...

Close air support is not feasible on account of the proximity of "friendlies". Savage bombing without limits does not help.

The war in the former Yugoslavia is a case in point. Despite 72 days of non stop bombing, it is now (post facto) a conceded position that the opposing side lost no more than 5-10% of their military hardware. (The loss was political, but that is another story.)

Now consider an entirely different narrative. Of the the land between the two rivers, of your ancestors and my ancestors, of the fountainheads of civilisation, of Sumer, Ur, Mesopotamia, of Lions, of Hummurabi, of Salah al Din Yusuf Ibn Ayyub and much much more.

And yes, a place. Called Fallujah. But, say, about 84 years ago.

And now add to the narrative, parts of the present: a unilaterally disarmed opponent (remember the tizzy circa late march 03 about night vision equipment? Night vision? Never mind state of the art SAMs and Kornets. The sanctions? Oh what were they?

Now add 25 million men, women and children – the richest denizens on this planet (Yes the richest. In every sense. As the very inheritors of civilisation it self. Or in a more mundane sense with 300 billion+ barrels of oil, an average Iraqi's garbage would be reconstructing the streets of Manhattan in a fairer world (the Americans have in contrast 22.5 billion barrels left), and, yes, the bravest. And the most suffering on the face of this planet

Add to that the Story of Fallujah (circa late 2004). Then perhaps you will not be so astonished to hear what appear to be strange words to your ears.

For these are Iraqi words. Yes, Iraqi. Dated 10th of December 2004

"The enemy is on the run.They are in fear of a resistance movement they can not see nor predict.We, now choose when, where, and how to strike. And as our ancestors drew the first sparks of civilization, we will redefine the word 'conquest'. Today we write a new chapter in the arts of urban warfare"

 

The Iraqi resistance has put an end to "the end of history". A new history is being written.Yes indeed it has been written. Not just another chapter but an entirely new book. One may see the the beginning of the great American retreat across the oceans, if they are lucky. Over 50,000 American soldiers have been medically evacuated out of Iraq till Nov. 2004 (interesting number, is it not?).

Yes, there will be a lot lot more lives lost and the endgame's contours are still unclear.

Oh the last line. Yes the last line addressed specifically to one Mr George W. Bush:

"You have asked us to ‘Bring it on’, and so have we. Like never expected. Have you another challenge?"

Yes Indeed, has he another challenge? No, he is a trifle busy, you see. We did try a photo-op on 18th of Dec 2004. We are not fools you see. But no photos.

I wonder why..

Raw unopposed firepower has reached its limits. Never have so few battled against so many in face of overwhelming odds and brought a superpower to its knees. And the nightmare continues.

It is indeed the greatest military victory in history. The self proclaimed mightiest empire that ever was, in fact, turns out to have had the shortest reign ever. This Empire met its match in the land between the two rivers.


THE COMING WARS  
by SEYMOUR M. HERSH
What the Pentagon can now do in secret.
Issue of 2005-01-24 and 31
Posted 2005-01-17   http://www.newyorker.com/printable/?fact/050124fa_fact

George W. Bush’s reëlection was not his only victory last fall. The President and his national-security advisers have consolidated control over the military and intelligence communities’ strategic analyses and covert operations to a degree unmatched since the rise of the post-Second World War national-security state. Bush has an aggressive and ambitious agenda for using that control—against the mullahs in Iran and against targets in the ongoing war on terrorism—during his second term. The C.I.A. will continue to be downgraded, and the agency will increasingly serve, as one government consultant with close ties to the Pentagon put it, as “facilitators” of policy emanating from President Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney. This process is well under way.

Despite the deteriorating security situation in Iraq, the Bush Administration has not reconsidered its basic long-range policy goal in the Middle East: the establishment of democracy throughout the region. Bush’s reëlection is regarded within the Administration as evidence of America’s support for his decision to go to war. It has reaffirmed the position of the neoconservatives in the Pentagon’s civilian leadership who advocated the invasion, including Paul Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary of Defense, and Douglas Feith, the Under-secretary for Policy. According to a former high-level intelligence official, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld met with the Joint Chiefs of Staff shortly after the election and told them, in essence, that the naysayers had been heard and the American people did not accept their message. Rumsfeld added that America was committed to staying in Iraq and that there would be no second-guessing.

“This is a war against terrorism, and Iraq is just one campaign. The Bush Administration is looking at this as a huge war zone,” the former high-level intelligence official told me. “Next, we’re going to have the Iranian campaign. We’ve declared war and the bad guys, wherever they are, are the enemy. This is the last hurrah—we’ve got four years, and want to come out of this saying we won the war on terrorism.”

Bush and Cheney may have set the policy, but it is Rumsfeld who has directed its implementation and has absorbed much of the public criticism when things went wrong—whether it was prisoner abuse in Abu Ghraib or lack of sufficient armor plating for G.I.s’ vehicles in Iraq. Both Democratic and Republican lawmakers have called for Rumsfeld’s dismissal, and he is not widely admired inside the military. Nonetheless, his reappointment as Defense Secretary was never in doubt.

Rumsfeld will become even more important during the second term. In interviews with past and present intelligence and military officials, I was told that the agenda had been determined before the Presidential election, and much of it would be Rumsfeld’s responsibility. The war on terrorism would be expanded, and effectively placed under the Pentagon’s control. The President has signed a series of findings and executive orders authorizing secret commando groups and other Special Forces units to conduct covert operations against suspected terrorist targets in as many as ten nations in the Middle East and South Asia.

The President’s decision enables Rumsfeld to run the operations off the books—free from legal restrictions imposed on the C.I.A. Under current law, all C.I.A. covert activities overseas must be authorized by a Presidential finding and reported to the Senate and House intelligence committees. (The laws were enacted after a series of scandals in the nineteen-seventies involving C.I.A. domestic spying and attempted assassinations of foreign leaders.) “The Pentagon doesn’t feel obligated to report any of this to Congress,” the former high-level intelligence official said. “They don’t even call it ‘covert ops’—it’s too close to the C.I.A. phrase. In their view, it’s ‘black reconnaissance.’ They’re not even going to tell the cincs”—the regional American military commanders-in-chief. (The Defense Department and the White House did not respond to requests for comment on this story.)

In my interviews, I was repeatedly told that the next strategic target was Iran. “Everyone is saying, ‘You can’t be serious about targeting Iran. Look at Iraq,’” the former intelligence official told me. “But they say, ‘We’ve got some lessons learned—not militarily, but how we did it politically. We’re not going to rely on agency pissants.’ No loose ends, and that’s why the C.I.A. is out of there.”

For more than a year, France, Germany, Britain, and other countries in the European Union have seen preventing Iran from getting a nuclear weapon as a race against time—and against the Bush Administration. They have been negotiating with the Iranian leadership to give up its nuclear-weapons ambitions in exchange for economic aid and trade benefits. Iran has agreed to temporarily halt its enrichment programs, which generate fuel for nuclear power plants but also could produce weapons-grade fissile material. (Iran claims that such facilities are legal under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, or N.P.T., to which it is a signator, and that it has no intention of building a bomb.) But the goal of the current round of talks, which began in December in Brussels, is to persuade Tehran to go further, and dismantle its machinery. Iran insists, in return, that it needs to see some concrete benefits from the Europeans—oil-production technology, heavy-industrial equipment, and perhaps even permission to purchase a fleet of Airbuses. (Iran has been denied access to technology and many goods owing to sanctions.)

The Europeans have been urging the Bush Administration to join in these negotiations. The Administration has refused to do so. The civilian leadership in the Pentagon has argued that no diplomatic progress on the Iranian nuclear threat will take place unless there is a credible threat of military action. “The neocons say negotiations are a bad deal,” a senior official of the International Atomic Energy Agency (I.A.E.A.) told me. “And the only thing the Iranians understand is pressure. And that they also need to be whacked.”

The core problem is that Iran has successfully hidden the extent of its nuclear program, and its progress. Many Western intelligence agencies, including those of the United States, believe that Iran is at least three to five years away from a capability to independently produce nuclear warheads—although its work on a missile-delivery system is far more advanced. Iran is also widely believed by Western intelligence agencies and the I.A.E.A. to have serious technical problems with its weapons system, most notably in the production of the hexafluoride gas needed to fabricate nuclear warheads.

A retired senior C.I.A. official, one of many who left the agency recently, told me that he was familiar with the assessments, and confirmed that Iran is known to be having major difficulties in its weapons work. He also acknowledged that the agency’s timetable for a nuclear Iran matches the European estimates—assuming that Iran gets no outside help. “The big wild card for us is that you don’t know who is capable of filling in the missing parts for them,” the recently retired official said. “North Korea? Pakistan? We don’t know what parts are missing.”

One Western diplomat told me that the Europeans believed they were in what he called a “lose-lose position” as long as the United States refuses to get involved. “France, Germany, and the U.K. cannot succeed alone, and everybody knows it,” the diplomat said. “If the U.S. stays outside, we don’t have enough leverage, and our effort will collapse.” The alternative would be to go to the Security Council, but any resolution imposing sanctions would likely be vetoed by China or Russia, and then “the United Nations will be blamed and the Americans will say, ‘The only solution is to bomb.’”

A European Ambassador noted that President Bush is scheduled to visit Europe in February, and that there has been public talk from the White House about improving the President’s relationship with America’s E.U. allies. In that context, the Ambassador told me, “I’m puzzled by the fact that the United States is not helping us in our program. How can Washington maintain its stance without seriously taking into account the weapons issue?”

The Israeli government is, not surprisingly, skeptical of the European approach. Silvan Shalom, the Foreign Minister, said in an interview last week in Jerusalem,with another New Yorker journalist, “I don’t like what’s happening. We were encouraged at first when the Europeans got involved. For a long time, they thought it was just Israel’s problem. But then they saw that the [Iranian] missiles themselves were longer range and could reach all of Europe, and they became very concerned. Their attitude has been to use the carrot and the stick—but all we see so far is the carrot.” He added, “If they can’t comply, Israel cannot live with Iran having a nuclear bomb.”

In a recent essay, Patrick Clawson, an Iran expert who is the deputy director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (and a supporter of the Administration), articulated the view that force, or the threat of it, was a vital bargaining tool with Iran. Clawson wrote that if Europe wanted coöperation with the Bush Administration it “would do well to remind Iran that the military option remains on the table.” He added that the argument that the European negotiations hinged on Washington looked like “a preëmptive excuse for the likely breakdown of the E.U.-Iranian talks.” In a subsequent conversation with me, Clawson suggested that, if some kind of military action was inevitable, “it would be much more in Israel’s interest—and Washington’s—to take covert action. The style of this Administration is to use overwhelming force—‘shock and awe.’ But we get only one bite of the apple.”

There are many military and diplomatic experts who dispute the notion that military action, on whatever scale, is the right approach. Shahram Chubin, an Iranian scholar who is the director of research at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy, told me, “It’s a fantasy to think that there’s a good American or Israeli military option in Iran.” He went on, “The Israeli view is that this is an international problem. ‘You do it,’ they say to the West. ‘Otherwise, our Air Force will take care of it.’” In 1981, the Israeli Air Force destroyed Iraq’s Osirak reactor, setting its nuclear program back several years. But the situation now is both more complex and more dangerous, Chubin said. The Osirak bombing “drove the Iranian nuclear-weapons program underground, to hardened, dispersed sites,” he said. “You can’t be sure after an attack that you’ll get away with it. The U.S. and Israel would not be certain whether all the sites had been hit, or how quickly they’d be rebuilt. Meanwhile, they’d be waiting for an Iranian counter-attack that could be military or terrorist or diplomatic. Iran has long-range missiles and ties to Hezbollah, which has drones—you can’t begin to think of what they’d do in response.”

Chubin added that Iran could also renounce the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. “It’s better to have them cheating within the system,” he said. “Otherwise, as victims, Iran will walk away from the treaty and inspections while the rest of the world watches the N.P.T. unravel before their eyes.”

The Administration has been conducting secret reconnaissance missions inside Iran at least since last summer. Much of the focus is on the accumulation of intelligence and targeting information on Iranian nuclear, chemical, and missile sites, both declared and suspected. The goal is to identify and isolate three dozen, and perhaps more, such targets that could be destroyed by precision strikes and short-term commando raids. “The civilians in the Pentagon want to go into Iran and destroy as much of the military infrastructure as possible,” the government consultant with close ties to the Pentagon told me.

Some of the missions involve extraordinary coöperation. For example, the former high-level intelligence official told me that an American commando task force has been set up in South Asia and is now working closely with a group of Pakistani scientists and technicians who had dealt with Iranian counterparts. (In 2003, the I.A.E.A. disclosed that Iran had been secretly receiving nuclear technology from Pakistan for more than a decade, and had withheld that information from inspectors.) The American task force, aided by the information from Pakistan, has been penetrating eastern Iran from Afghanistan in a hunt for underground installations. The task-force members, or their locally recruited agents, secreted remote detection devices—known as sniffers—capable of sampling the atmosphere for radioactive emissions and other evidence of nuclear-enrichment programs.

Getting such evidence is a pressing concern for the Bush Administration. The former high-level intelligence official told me, “They don’t want to make any W.M.D. intelligence mistakes, as in Iraq. The Republicans can’t have two of those. There’s no education in the second kick of a mule.” The official added that the government of Pervez Musharraf, the Pakistani President, has won a high price for its coöperation—American assurance that Pakistan will not have to hand over A. Q. Khan, known as the father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb, to the I.A.E.A. or to any other international authorities for questioning. For two decades, Khan has been linked to a vast consortium of nuclear-black-market activities. Last year, Musharraf professed to be shocked when Khan, in the face of overwhelming evidence, “confessed” to his activities. A few days later, Musharraf pardoned him, and so far he has refused to allow the I.A.E.A. or American intelligence to interview him. Khan is now said to be living under house arrest in a villa in Islamabad. “It’s a deal—a trade-off,” the former high-level intelligence official explained. “‘Tell us what you know about Iran and we will let your A. Q. Khan guys go.’ It’s the neoconservatives’ version of short-term gain at long-term cost. They want to prove that Bush is the anti-terrorism guy who can handle Iran and the nuclear threat, against the long-term goal of eliminating the black market for nuclear proliferation.”

The agreement comes at a time when Musharraf, according to a former high-level Pakistani diplomat, has authorized the expansion of Pakistan’s nuclear-weapons arsenal. “Pakistan still needs parts and supplies, and needs to buy them in the clandestine market,” the former diplomat said. “The U.S. has done nothing to stop it.”

There has also been close, and largely unacknowledged, coöperation with Israel. The government consultant with ties to the Pentagon said that the Defense Department civilians, under the leadership of Douglas Feith, have been working with Israeli planners and consultants to develop and refine potential nuclear, chemical-weapons, and missile targets inside Iran. (After Osirak, Iran situated many of its nuclear sites in remote areas of the east, in an attempt to keep them out of striking range of other countries, especially Israel. Distance no longer lends such protection, however: Israel has acquired three submarines capable of launching cruise missiles and has equipped some of its aircraft with additional fuel tanks, putting Israeli F-16I fighters within the range of most Iranian targets.)

“They believe that about three-quarters of the potential targets can be destroyed from the air, and a quarter are too close to population centers, or buried too deep, to be targeted,” the consultant said. Inevitably, he added, some suspicious sites need to be checked out by American or Israeli commando teams—in on-the-ground surveillance—before being targeted.

The Pentagon’s contingency plans for a broader invasion of Iran are also being updated. Strategists at the headquarters of the U.S. Central Command, in Tampa, Florida, have been asked to revise the military’s war plan, providing for a maximum ground and air invasion of Iran. Updating the plan makes sense, whether or not the Administration intends to act, because the geopolitics of the region have changed dramatically in the last three years. Previously, an American invasion force would have had to enter Iran by sea, by way of the Persian Gulf or the Gulf of Oman; now troops could move in on the ground, from Afghanistan or Iraq. Commando units and other assets could be introduced through new bases in the Central Asian republics.

It is possible that some of the American officials who talk about the need to eliminate Iran’s nuclear infrastructure are doing so as part of a propaganda campaign aimed at pressuring Iran to give up its weapons planning. If so, the signals are not always clear. President Bush, who after 9/11 famously depicted Iran as a member of the “axis of evil,” is now publicly emphasizing the need for diplomacy to run its course. “We don’t have much leverage with the Iranians right now,” the President said at a news conference late last year. “Diplomacy must be the first choice, and always the first choice of an administration trying to solve an issue of . . . nuclear armament. And we’ll continue to press on diplomacy.”

In my interviews over the past two months, I was given a much harsher view. The hawks in the Administration believe that it will soon become clear that the Europeans’ negotiated approach cannot succeed, and that at that time the Administration will act. “We’re not dealing with a set of National Security Council option papers here,” the former high-level intelligence official told me. “They’ve already passed that wicket. It’s not if we’re going to do anything against Iran. They’re doing it.”

The immediate goals of the attacks would be to destroy, or at least temporarily derail, Iran’s ability to go nuclear. But there are other, equally purposeful, motives at work. The government consultant told me that the hawks in the Pentagon, in private discussions, have been urging a limited attack on Iran because they believe it could lead to a toppling of the religious leadership. “Within the soul of Iran there is a struggle between secular nationalists and reformers, on the one hand, and, on the other hand, the fundamentalist Islamic movement,” the consultant told me. “The minute the aura of invincibility which the mullahs enjoy is shattered, and with it the ability to hoodwink the West, the Iranian regime will collapse”—like the former Communist regimes in Romania, East Germany, and the Soviet Union. Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz share that belief, he said.

“The idea that an American attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities would produce a popular uprising is extremely illinformed,” said Flynt Leverett, a Middle East scholar who worked on the National Security Council in the Bush Administration. “You have to understand that the nuclear ambition in Iran is supported across the political spectrum, and Iranians will perceive attacks on these sites as attacks on their ambitions to be a major regional player and a modern nation that’s technologically sophisticated.” Leverett, who is now a senior fellow at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy, at the Brookings Institution, warned that an American attack, if it takes place, “will produce an Iranian backlash against the United States and a rallying around the regime.”

Rumsfeld planned and lobbied for more than two years before getting Presidential authority, in a series of findings and executive orders, to use military commandos for covert operations. One of his first steps was bureaucratic: to shift control of an undercover unit, known then as the Gray Fox (it has recently been given a new code name), from the Army to the Special Operations Command (socom), in Tampa. Gray Fox was formally assigned to socom in July, 2002, at the instigation of Rumsfeld’s office, which meant that the undercover unit would have a single commander for administration and operational deployment. Then, last fall, Rumsfeld’s ability to deploy the commandos expanded. According to a Pentagon consultant, an Execute Order on the Global War on Terrorism (referred to throughout the government as gwot) was issued at Rumsfeld’s direction. The order specifically authorized the military “to find and finish” terrorist targets, the consultant said. It included a target list that cited Al Qaeda network members, Al Qaeda senior leadership, and other high-value targets. The consultant said that the order had been cleared throughout the national-security bureaucracy in Washington.

In late November, 2004, the Times reported that Bush had set up an interagency group to study whether it “would best serve the nation” to give the Pentagon complete control over the C.I.A.’s own élite paramilitary unit, which has operated covertly in trouble spots around the world for decades. The panel’s conclusions, due in February, are foregone, in the view of many former C.I.A. officers. “It seems like it’s going to happen,” Howard Hart, who was chief of the C.I.A.’s Paramilitary Operations Division before retiring in 1991, told me.

There was other evidence of Pentagon encroachment. Two former C.I.A. clandestine officers, Vince Cannistraro and Philip Giraldi, who publish Intelligence Brief, a newsletter for their business clients, reported last month on the existence of a broad counter-terrorism Presidential finding that permitted the Pentagon “to operate unilaterally in a number of countries where there is a perception of a clear and evident terrorist threat. . . . A number of the countries are friendly to the U.S. and are major trading partners. Most have been cooperating in the war on terrorism.” The two former officers listed some of the countries—Algeria, Sudan, Yemen, Syria, and Malaysia. (I was subsequently told by the former high-level intelligence official that Tunisia is also on the list.)

Giraldi, who served three years in military intelligence before joining the C.I.A., said that he was troubled by the military’s expanded covert assignment. “I don’t think they can handle the cover,” he told me. “They’ve got to have a different mind-set. They’ve got to handle new roles and get into foreign cultures and learn how other people think. If you’re going into a village and shooting people, it doesn’t matter,” Giraldi added. “But if you’re running operations that involve finesse and sensitivity, the military can’t do it. Which is why these kind of operations were always run out of the agency.” I was told that many Special Operations officers also have serious misgivings.

Rumsfeld and two of his key deputies, Stephen Cambone, the Under-secretary of Defense for Intelligence, and Army Lieutenant General William G. (Jerry) Boykin, will be part of the chain of command for the new commando operations. Relevant members of the House and Senate intelligence committees have been briefed on the Defense Department’s expanded role in covert affairs, a Pentagon adviser assured me, but he did not know how extensive the briefings had been.

“I’m conflicted about the idea of operating without congressional oversight,” the Pentagon adviser said. “But I’ve been told that there will be oversight down to the specific operation.” A second Pentagon adviser agreed, with a significant caveat. “There are reporting requirements,” he said. “But to execute the finding we don’t have to go back and say, ‘We’re going here and there.’ No nitty-gritty detail and no micromanagement.”

The legal questions about the Pentagon’s right to conduct covert operations without informing Congress have not been resolved. “It’s a very, very gray area,” said Jeffrey H. Smith, a West Point graduate who served as the C.I.A.’s general counsel in the mid-nineteen-nineties. “Congress believes it voted to include all such covert activities carried out by the armed forces. The military says, ‘No, the things we’re doing are not intelligence actions under the statute but necessary military steps authorized by the President, as Commander-in-Chief, to “prepare the battlefield.”’” Referring to his days at the C.I.A., Smith added, “We were always careful not to use the armed forces in a covert action without a Presidential finding. The Bush Administration has taken a much more aggressive stance.”

In his conversation with me, Smith emphasized that he was unaware of the military’s current plans for expanding covert action. But he said, “Congress has always worried that the Pentagon is going to get us involved in some military misadventure that nobody knows about.”

Under Rumsfeld’s new approach, I was told, U.S. military operatives would be permitted to pose abroad as corrupt foreign businessmen seeking to buy contraband items that could be used in nuclear-weapons systems. In some cases, according to the Pentagon advisers, local citizens could be recruited and asked to join up with guerrillas or terrorists. This could potentially involve organizing and carrying out combat operations, or even terrorist activities. Some operations will likely take place in nations in which there is an American diplomatic mission, with an Ambassador and a C.I.A. station chief, the Pentagon consultant said. The Ambassador and the station chief would not necessarily have a need to know, under the Pentagon’s current interpretation of its reporting requirement.

The new rules will enable the Special Forces community to set up what it calls “action teams” in the target countries overseas which can be used to find and eliminate terrorist organizations. “Do you remember the right-wing execution squads in El Salvador?” the former high-level intelligence official asked me, referring to the military-led gangs that committed atrocities in the early nineteen-eighties. “We founded them and we financed them,” he said. “The objective now is to recruit locals in any area we want. And we aren’t going to tell Congress about it.” A former military officer, who has knowledge of the Pentagon’s commando capabilities, said, “We’re going to be riding with the bad boys.”

One of the rationales for such tactics was spelled out in a series of articles by John Arquilla, a professor of defense analysis at the Naval Postgraduate School, in Monterey, California, and a consultant on terrorism for the rand corporation. “It takes a network to fight a network,” Arquilla wrote in a recent article in the San Francisco Chronicle:

When conventional military operations and bombing failed to defeat the Mau Mau insurgency in Kenya in the 1950s, the British formed teams of friendly Kikuyu tribesmen who went about pretending to be terrorists. These “pseudo gangs,” as they were called, swiftly threw the Mau Mau on the defensive, either by befriending and then ambushing bands of fighters or by guiding bombers to the terrorists’ camps. What worked in Kenya a half-century ago has a wonderful chance of undermining trust and recruitment among today’s terror networks. Forming new pseudo gangs should not be difficult.

“If a confused young man from Marin County can join up with Al Qaeda,” Arquilla wrote, referring to John Walker Lindh, the twenty-year-old Californian who was seized in Afghanistan, “think what professional operatives might do.”

A few pilot covert operations were conducted last year, one Pentagon adviser told me, and a terrorist cell in Algeria was “rolled up” with American help. The adviser was referring, apparently, to the capture of Ammari Saifi, known as Abderrezak le Para, the head of a North African terrorist network affiliated with Al Qaeda. But at the end of the year there was no agreement within the Defense Department about the rules of engagement. “The issue is approval for the final authority,” the former high-level intelligence official said. “Who gets to say ‘Get this’ or ‘Do this’?”

A retired four-star general said, “The basic concept has always been solid, but how do you insure that the people doing it operate within the concept of the law? This is pushing the edge of the envelope.” The general added, “It’s the oversight. And you’re not going to get Warner”—John Warner, of Virginia, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee—“and those guys to exercise oversight. This whole thing goes to the Fourth Deck.” He was referring to the floor in the Pentagon where Rumsfeld and Cambone have their offices.

“It’s a finesse to give power to Rumsfeld—giving him the right to act swiftly, decisively, and lethally,” the first Pentagon adviser told me. “It’s a global free-fire zone.”

The Pentagon has tried to work around the limits on covert activities before. In the early nineteen-eighties, a covert Army unit was set up and authorized to operate overseas with minimal oversight. The results were disastrous. The Special Operations program was initially known as Intelligence Support Activity, or I.S.A., and was administered from a base near Washington (as was, later, Gray Fox). It was established soon after the failed rescue, in April, 1980, of the American hostages in Iran, who were being held by revolutionary students after the Islamic overthrow of the Shah’s regime. At first, the unit was kept secret from many of the senior generals and civilian leaders in the Pentagon, as well as from many members of Congress. It was eventually deployed in the Reagan Administration’s war against the Sandinista government, in Nicaragua. It was heavily committed to supporting the Contras. By the mid-eighties, however, the I.S.A.’s operations had been curtailed, and several of its senior officers were courtmartialled following a series of financial scandals, some involving arms deals. The affair was known as “the Yellow Fruit scandal,” after the code name given to one of the I.S.A.’s cover organizations—and in many ways the group’s procedures laid the groundwork for the Iran-Contra scandal.

Despite the controversy surrounding Yellow Fruit, the I.S.A. was kept intact as an undercover unit by the Army. “But we put so many restrictions on it,” the second Pentagon adviser said. “In I.S.A., if you wanted to travel fifty miles you had to get a special order. And there were certain areas, such as Lebanon, where they could not go.” The adviser acknowledged that the current operations are similar to those two decades earlier, with similar risks—and, as he saw it, similar reasons for taking the risks. “What drove them then, in terms of Yellow Fruit, was that they had no intelligence on Iran,” the adviser told me. “They had no knowledge of Tehran and no people on the ground who could prepare the battle space.”

Rumsfeld’s decision to revive this approach stemmed, once again, from a failure of intelligence in the Middle East, the adviser said. The Administration believed that the C.I.A. was unable, or unwilling, to provide the military with the information it needed to effectively challenge stateless terrorism. “One of the big challenges was that we didn’t have Humint”—human intelligence—“collection capabilities in areas where terrorists existed,” the adviser told me. “Because the C.I.A. claimed to have such a hold on Humint, the way to get around them, rather than take them on, was to claim that the agency didn’t do Humint to support Special Forces operations overseas. The C.I.A. fought it.” Referring to Rumsfeld’s new authority for covert operations, the first Pentagon adviser told me, “It’s not empowering military intelligence. It’s emasculating the C.I.A.”

A former senior C.I.A. officer depicted the agency’s eclipse as predictable. “For years, the agency bent over backward to integrate and coördinate with the Pentagon,” the former officer said. “We just caved and caved and got what we deserved. It is a fact of life today that the Pentagon is a five-hundred-pound gorilla and the C.I.A. director is a chimpanzee.”

There was pressure from the White House, too. A former C.I.A. clandestine-services officer told me that, in the months after the resignation of the agency’s director George Tenet, in June, 2004, the White House began “coming down critically” on analysts in the C.I.A.’s Directorate of Intelligence (D.I.) and demanded “to see more support for the Administration’s political position.” Porter Goss, Tenet’s successor, engaged in what the recently retired C.I.A. official described as a “political purge” in the D.I. Among the targets were a few senior analysts who were known to write dissenting papers that had been forwarded to the White House. The recently retired C.I.A. official said, “The White House carefully reviewed the political analyses of the D.I. so they could sort out the apostates from the true believers.” Some senior analysts in the D.I. have turned in their resignations—quietly, and without revealing the extent of the disarray.

The White House solidified its control over intelligence last month, when it forced last-minute changes in the intelligence-reform bill. The legislation, based substantially on recommendations of the 9/11 Commission, originally gave broad powers, including authority over intelligence spending, to a new national-intelligence director. (The Pentagon controls roughly eighty per cent of the intelligence budget.) A reform bill passed in the Senate by a vote of 96-2. Before the House voted, however, Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld balked. The White House publicly supported the legislation, but House Speaker Dennis Hastert refused to bring a House version of the bill to the floor for a vote—ostensibly in defiance of the President, though it was widely understood in Congress that Hastert had been delegated to stall the bill. After intense White House and Pentagon lobbying, the legislation was rewritten. The bill that Congress approved sharply reduced the new director’s power, in the name of permitting the Secretary of Defense to maintain his “statutory responsibilities.” Fred Kaplan, in the online magazine Slate, described the real issues behind Hastert’s action, quoting a congressional aide who expressed amazement as White House lobbyists bashed the Senate bill and came up “with all sorts of ludicrous reasons why it was unacceptable.”

“Rummy’s plan was to get a compromise in the bill in which the Pentagon keeps its marbles and the C.I.A. loses theirs,” the former high-level intelligence official told me. “Then all the pieces of the puzzle fall in place. He gets authority for covert action that is not attributable, the ability to directly task national-intelligence assets”—including the many intelligence satellites that constantly orbit the world.

“Rumsfeld will no longer have to refer anything through the government’s intelligence wringer,” the former official went on. “The intelligence system was designed to put competing agencies in competition. What’s missing will be the dynamic tension that insures everyone’s priorities—in the C.I.A., the D.O.D., the F.B.I., and even the Department of Homeland Security—are discussed. The most insidious implication of the new system is that Rumsfeld no longer has to tell people what he’s doing so they can ask, ‘Why are you doing this?’ or ‘What are your priorities?’ Now he can keep all of the mattress mice out of it.”


Statement Prof. Jean Bricmont

Quelques remarques sur la violence, la démocratie et l’espoir.[1]

 

 Nous avons tous crié « pas de sang pour le pétrole », mais cela fait longtemps que pétrole et sang coulent ensemble. Depuis la trahison du monde arabe par les Français et les Britanniques lors de la chute de l’empire turc en 1917 jusqu’à la guerre actuelle, en passant par le soutien constant accordé à l’Arabie Saoudite et à Israël, la guerre du Golfe de 1991 et l’embargo imposé à l’Irak, la politique occidentale a été dominée par le pétrole et a fait couler beaucoup de sang. En 1945, le département d’Etat américain qualifiait les réserves de l’Arabie Saoudite de « prodigieuse source de puissance stratégique » et de « plus grande valeur matérielle de l’histoire mondiale »[2]. A l'époque, les Américains  étaient au moins sincères.

 

Aujourd’hui, tout le monde semble se réjouir du remplacement de la dictature de Saddam Hussein par ce qu'ils appellent la démocratie en Irak, comme si adversaires et partisans de la guerre admettaient tous que le Pentagone a, en fin de compte, fait quelque chose de bien. Dorénavant, toute résistance armée face à l'occupant américain sera dénoncée comme étant anti-démocratique.

 

Je voudrais réagir face à cette unanimité, et brièvement aborder trois questions qui préoccupent le mouvement anti-guerre : la question de la violence, celle des élections et de la démocratie et finalement celle de l’espoir dans l’avenir.

 

Premièrement, dans sa lutte d’émancipation, le tiers monde n’a pas produit que des "Saddams" : Ho Chi Minh, Mao Tse Tung et Chou en Lai, Gandhi et Nehru, Martin Luther King et Malcolm X, Lumumba, Arafat, Ben Bella, Ben Barka, Nasser en Egypte, Mossadegh en Iran, Arbenz au Guatémala , Goulart  au Brésil, Juan Bosch en République Dominicaine, Allende au Chili, Fidel Castro à Cuba, Amilcar Cabral  en Guinée, les Sandinistes au Nicaragua, Soekarno en Indonésie, ou Othelo de Carvalho au Portugal, tous, qu’ils soient réformistes ou révolutionnaires, socialistes ou nationalistes, croyants ou athées, qu’ils utilisent ou non la violence, ont été, eux ou leur pays, à un moment ou un autre, comme Saddam Hussein, subvertis, démonisés, envahis, mis en prison ou assassinés par l’Occident[3]. Mandela est aujourd’hui traité en héros, mais il ne faut jamais oublier qu’il a été mis 27 ans en prison avec la complicité de la CIA.

 

Lorsque le tiers monde tente de se libérer par des moyens essentiellement pacifiques et démocratiques, qu'il s'agisse des Palestiniens pendant la période d'Oslo, d'Allende, des Sandinistes, ou aujourd'hui de Chavez au Vénézuéla, on leur vole leurs terres et on les subvertit de mille façons. Quand ils se révoltent de façon violente, qu'il s'agisse de Castro, des kamikazes palestiniens, ou de la résistance irakienne aujourd'hui, la machine à démoniser se met en route et les humanistes occidentaux poussent des cris d'indignation.

 

Il serait fort aimable de la part des oppresseurs de dire une fois pour toute aux opprimés quelles armes ils estiment qu'ils ont le droit d'utiliser pour se défendre.

 

C'est une vieille histoire, celle de la violence révolutionnaire qui répond à la violence contre-révolutionnaire, mais qui ne la précède pas ; c'est aussi toute notre histoire, celle de la Commune de Paris, de la Révolution russe, de la guerre d'Espagne, de la lutte contre le fascisme et de la décolonisation.

 

Venons–en aux élections. L'invocation rituelle de la démocratie et des droits de l'homme  comme justification de la domination impériale est aujourd'hui le véritable opium des intellectuels, opium qui leur permet de s’illusionner sur la réalité du monde. Imaginons par exemple que l'Ukraine soit occupée par des troupes russes et que des élections y soient organisées, sans observateurs indépendants, sans presse libre et avec des candidats approuvés par l'occupant. Imaginons de plus que l'élection soit  vendue à la population par des dirigeants religieux comme un moyen de récupérer leur souveraineté, bien que d'autres opposants à l'occupation recommandent le boycott de ces élections. Je doute fort que, dans de telles circonstances, un taux de participation soi disant élevé, mais incontrôlable[4], serait vu en Occident comme un immense "merci" adressé aux occupants. Or cette expression est exactement celle utilisée par une journaliste américaine[5] à propos des élections en Irak et résume bien le point de vue de ceux qui considèrent ces élections comme une victoire de la démocratie. Autre exemple : qui, parmi ceux qui célèbrent chez nous la liberté de la presse, s’indignera parce que celle-ci, concentrée entre des mains de plus en plus restreintes, est arrivée à convaincre, à la veille de l'élection présidentielle, 50% des Américains que l’Irak était lié à Al Qaida, thèse qui est probablement l’une  des mieux réfutées de toute l'histoire humaine[6]? Finalement, la CIA vient de publier un rapport disant que l'Irak n'avait plus d'armes chimiques depuis 1991[7]. Ce qui revient à admettre, mezzo voce, que l'embargo génocidaire contre le peuple irakien était en fait totalement illégitime. On se souviendra que Madeleine Albright, secrétaire d’Etat sous le démocrate Clinton, déclarait que, même s’il entraînait la mort de 500.000 enfants, cet embargo en valait la peine[8]. On peut douter qu’une quelconque organisation de défense des droits de l'homme ne relève ces faits.

 

Abordons finalement la question de l’espoir. En 1991, avec la chute de l’URSS, son incertain protecteur, le tiers monde semblait être à genoux. On pouvait rêver d’éliminer la résistance palestinienne à travers les accords d’Oslo. Le mécanisme de l’endettement pouvait être mis au service d’un hold-up gigantesque sur leurs matières premières et leurs industries. Néanmoins, l’espoir est en train de changer de camp.  Le New York Times admettait, après les manifestations contre la guerre de février 2003, qu’il existe encore, après tout, deux superpuissances : les États-Unis et l’opinion publique mondiale, qui s’oppose à leur politique[9]. L’arme de la critique refait surface contre la force des armes et nul ne peut prédire où cela nous mènera. En Amérique Latine, les illusions néo-libérales ont fait long feu et le système néo-colonial y fait eau de toute part.  La résistance des Irakiens ébranle depuis deux ans les certitudes de la partie du monde qui se croit civilisé. En immobilisant, même temporairement, l'armée américaine, et en mettant en doute son invincibilité, les Irakiens, comme les Vietnamiens dans le temps, luttent et meurent pour l'humanité entière.

 

Finalement, regardons  l’histoire sur le long terme : au début du 20ème siècle, toute l’Afrique et une partie de l’Asie étaient entre les mains des puissances européennes.  Les empires russes, chinois et ottomans étaient impuissants face aux ingérences occidentales. L’Amérique Latine était envahie encore plus souvent qu’aujourd’hui. A Shanghai, les Anglais contrôlaient un parc dont ils interdisaient l’accès « aux chiens et aux Chinois ». Si tout n’a pas changé, au moins le colonialisme a été jeté, au prix de millions de morts, dans les poubelles de l’histoire (à l’exception de la Palestine). C’est cela qui constitue sans doute le plus grand progrès social de l’humanité au 20ème siècle. Les gens qui veulent faire renaître le système colonial en Irak, même avec ce que Lord Curzon appelait, à l’époque de la  monarchie contrôlée par les Britanniques, une « façade arabe », rêvent tout éveillés. Le 21ème siècle sera celui de la lutte contre le néo-colonialisme, comme le 20ème a été celui de la lutte contre le colonialisme.

 

Dans la mesure où le progrès de la majorité de l’humanité est lié aux défaites européennes dans les conflits coloniaux, un point de vue étroitement eurocentriste nous pousse à voir l’évolution du monde en terme de décadence, ce qui est sans doute une des raisons profondes du pessimisme qui domine chez tant d’intellectuels occidentaux . Mais une autre vision des choses est possible : pendant toute la période coloniale, nous, les Européens, avons pensé que nous pouvions dominer le monde par la terreur et par la force. Le sentiment absurde de notre supériorité et notre volonté d’hégémonie nous ont  amené à nous entretuer, et avec nous une partie du reste du monde, au cours des deux guerres mondiales. Tous ceux qui préfèrent la paix à la puissance et le bonheur à la gloire devraient remercier les peuples colonisés de leur mission civilisatrice : en se libérant de notre joug, ils nous ont rendu, nous les Européens, plus modestes, moins racistes et plus humains. Pourvu que cela continue et que les Américains finissent par être forcés de suivre cette voie.

 

Jean Bricmont


[1] Exposé fait au Beursschouwburg, le 20 février 2005, au cours d'une action organisée par le  BRussells Tribunal contre la visite de Bush en Belgique .

[2] Voir Noam Chomsky: Dominer le monde ou sauver la planète ? L’Amérique en quête d’hégémonie mondiale. Traduit par Paul Chemla. Fayard, Paris, 2004, chapitre 6.

[3] Voir William Blum, L’Etat voyou et, du même auteur, Les guerres scélérates, Parangon, pour une description détaillée des interventions américaines depuis la guerre.

[4] Sur le site Israélien Debka, on peut lire que « DEBKAfile’s Iraq experts reveal that, while the turnout is officially estimated at 60%, the real figure will probably turn out to be quite a bit lower, no more than 40-45% - in itself an exceptional feat… The Shiite turnout was disappointing in other ways too. Long queues and 80% percentage of eligible voters appeared only in the two shrine cities of Najef and Karbala. Further south in the densely populated Diwanya, Mussana, Qadasiya and Amara, the proportion did not go beyond 40%. In Basra, Iraq’s second largest town, the turnout was 32-35%, although Iraqi election officials claimed 90%.  (voir http://www.debka.com/article.php?aid=974)

[5] Betsy Hart, écrivant pour le Scripps Howard News Service ; citée par Naomi Klein, « Sorry George, but Iraq has given you the purple finger », The Guardian , 12 février 2005.

[6] Voir « Americans and Iraq on the Eve of the Presidential Election »,

A  PIPA/KN Study, sur le site http://www.pipa.org/ du Program on International  Policy Attitudes (PIPA). D’après cette étude, 54% des Américains  pensaient, à la veille de l’élection, que l’Irak avait des armes de destruction massive.

[7] Voir, A report, the first of its kind, says Baghdad ended its chemical weapons program in '91, par Greg Miller, Times Staff Writer, February 1, 2005, http://207.44.245.159/article7938.htm

[8] Emission “ Sixty Minutes ” (CBS) du 12 mai 1996.

[9] Patrick Tyler, New York Times, 17 février 2003.


“He called me from Iraq: ‘I have no idea what we’re doing here, mom.’ 

Interview with Nadia McCaffrey, member of the BRussells Tribunal Advisory Committee (Inge Van de Merlen - May 18 2005)

September 12, 2001: Day 1 after the attacks on the WTC towers in the US.  34-year-old Patrick McCaffrey, husband and father of two, was upset enough to join the Californian National Guard.  The National Guard is usually deployed in case of disasters or other emergency situations within the United States.  A few days after 9/11 the Bush administration, without much warning, changed the regulations so that Guard units could be sent to Iraq.  Patrick was killed on June 22, 2004 and in the record is registered as ‘casualty #848’.  “My son never thought he’d find himself in the war zone,” his mother Nadia McCaffrey said.  Since his death she has been traveling around the world to try to convince people of the insanity of the war in Iraq. 

How did Patrick come to be deployed in Iraq? 

Before my son was sent to Iraq, he was a manager of a California based company.  The 9/11 attacks shocked him so much that he decided the next day to join the National Guard, which is meant to operate in case of local disasters and emergencies.  Patrick enlisted as a weekend soldier in a National Guard unit with the principal task of providing engineering support to combat forces and in homeland crises like terrorist attacks or natural disasters. 

He wanted to be able to help people in case a new disaster hit America.  But he never expected to be sent overseas to a war zone.  His unit hadn’t been deployed abroad since the Second World War.  

Only a few days after 9/11, Bush, without much debate, changed the regulation.  So Patrick became the first soldier of the California National Guard’s 579th Engineer Battalion, to die in Iraq.  In the record he’s now registered as “casualty #848”. 

Only a very short time before he left he understood that the possibility of being sent to Iraq was very real.  Before that, he expected to be deployed in Utah to guard a nuclear power plant. 

What was his reaction when he learnt that he was being sent to Iraq? 

He became very somber.  Patrick was always a very happy person, very cheerful – actually, he was smiling all the time.  After he heard the news, his smile was gone.  He told me about his deployment when we were alone.  He said that he didn’t want to go, but he had no choice.  He had made a commitment.  Even though the law had been changed, he felt bound to do his duty.  In the time prior to his departure he expressed the hope that he could at least do something good in Iraq – something to help the people.  I asked him what he would do if, in self defense or to protect someone else, he had to take somebody else’s life.  He could never answer that question. 

Recently, we’ve received more details about the circumstances of how he died.  Although already wounded, Patrick tried to shield another soldier, who was killed with him.  He didn’t have time to return fire like they thought at first.  The sound of an M-16 had been heard, and Patrick carried an M-16, but further investigation has shown that it was a third soldier, who survived the ambush, that fired in the air to call for help. 

How did you react to the news of his deployment? 

I had a very bad feeling within, you know, like a mother can have.  I was speechless.  I really didn’t know what to say.  I didn’t want to hurt him. I wanted to respect him.  But I’ve been a pacifist all my life, and Patrick knew this.  He was standing up for his country, but he never supported the war itself. 

Did the fact that your son would be sent to Iraq change your view on the war? 

No.  All my life I have condemned war, like Vietnam and other wars.  I was born in France shortly after World War II, in 1945.  I lived in the aftermath of it.  During that war my grandparents helped Jews to hide from and to escape the nazis.  I remember an image from the time I was 3 years old.  A woman, who didn’t speak French lived with us and she had no place to go.  She took care of me and helped around the house.  She always baked bread in a large brick oven.  Suddenly, one day she was gone.  Apparently, she was a Jewish refugee from Poland. 

When a war officially ends, it still isn’t over.  After 1945, the war continued for the people who were it’s victims.  Everything had been reduced to rubble, families were torn apart.  After a war you don’t just resume life as if nothing has happened.  In general, Americans today aren’t aware of this.  They haven’t had a war on their own soil since the Civil War in the 19th century, so Americans can’t understand what war really means. 

What did Patrick tell you about the war in Iraq during his deployment?  What were his impressions? 

He was disgusted about it.  It only took one week for him to understand what this war is about.  He called home every day when he was there and he told me: “I have no idea what we’re doing here, mom.  I don’t know why we’re here.  We’re not helping anyone – there’s no rebuilding.  The Iraqis don’t want us here, they want us out of here.”  Patrick understood very soon what the war was about.  He saw things the way they were. 

How did he handle the situation? 

It was very difficult for him.  Patrick wasn’t a military person – that wasn’t his character.  He was always for helping the underdog, the weak and vulnerable.  After he recognized the true nature of the war, he wanted to use his presence there in the best way he could.  So he turned to the Iraqi children and tried to help them.  Patrick always loved children very much.  He regularly asked us to send packages with candies and toys for the children and he collected the extra food and water rations from the soldiers to distribute among the children.  Actually, it was forbidden for the soldiers to offer the children gifts, but Patrick did it anyway. 

And he was a refuge to the other soldiers, kind of a father figure for the younger guys.  When, for example one of them got a bad report, Patrick defended him.  So he was a protector for the other soldiers and for Iraqi children during his time in Iraq.  Everyone who knew him there understood that.  He knew how to deal gently with people, because he loved people.  Patrick knew he could make a difference. 

How did his experiences there influence your view on the war? 

My aversion against the war grew stronger, it intensified.  I wanted very badly for this war to stop. 

Can you describe your feelings the moment that you learned about Patrick’s death? 

When I heard he was killed my life came to a halt.  I stopped everything that I was occupied with before.  I’m the founder of a non-profit organization, ‘Changing the Face of Life’.  For twenty years I have been volunteering to bring a caring presence to the bedside of the terminally ill, and to give comfort and support to their families and friends.  I have trained more than a thousand people in the San Francisco Bay area for this work.  When I heard about Patrick’s death, I immediately became an anti-war activist.  Now I’m doing everything that lies within my power to stop this war.  The bloodshed must stop.  When Patrick’s coffin arrived in Sacramento, I invited the media.  The Bush administration had a ban on media presence at the arrival of fallen soldiers, but I invited them to witness his homecoming.  I became the mother who defied the Bush administration.  America can no longer ignore the war in Iraq and its consequences.  I also had a very strong desire to go to Iraq myself.  I wanted to stand in the place where Patrick died.  I had this very strong feeling to do something. 

In what way has your son’s death influenced your position towards the American government? 

I have never been a Republican.  I’m a Democrat.  But this government, I don’t even recognize it as Republican.  This government represents nothing of America, because America has much higher values.  But today’s America is kept in the dark.  The people aren’t informed, they are isolated and controlled by the means of fear.  This isn’t our constitution that was written by the people and for the people in those days long ago.  The Bush administration doesn’t respect our constitutional rights anymore.  The ‘Patriot Act’, through which people can be detained without any reason and for an indefinite period, is a clear example of that. 

What are your most important motives to be active in the anti-war movement? 

Both Patrick’s death and the war itself drive me to do something.  I have opposed every war, always.  But with this war it became stronger.  I won’t stop anymore, never.  I also believe that the road to end the war goes from people to people, and from mother to mother, not through the government.  For mothers especially there is a very important task in the struggle against the war.  What we need is a worldwide alliance against the war.  We, the people, have to unite our powers.  To me, human rights are the highest priority. 

What concrete actions do you take within the anti-war movement? 

I reach out and I speak endlessly to the public.  I try to touch people.  I tell them about the hellish horror that war brings to their door.  The war needs to have a personal face.  I show people how they can make a difference, how to become a voice.  We, the people, are the government!  Because of my intensive way of speaking I reach a lot of the media.  When Patrick returned home his story was spread around the world.  His life story can be found in two books:  it is his message of peace, love for one another, caring, family values, patriotism, courage, strength and justice for all. 

Do I speak about my son?  You bet I do!…And I will until I drop.  A professor at the University of California, Berkeley is writing a book about Patrick and me.  People tell me sometimes that I deal differently with the death of my son than other parents.  And I’m about to set up an organization to provide aid to women and children who are the victims of war and live under occupation in the Middle East.  I mainly try to deal in a positive, constructive way with my personal tragedy. 

Is there a message you want to address to the European people?  What, in your opinion, is most important in their struggle against the war? 

The protests must grow much stronger and louder.  The American people need the Europeans.  Everyone should understand that our common future is at stake.  It isn’t only about the Iraqis.  The war doesn’t stop in Iraq or in the Middle East.  In the end it will touch all of us.


an answer to "Rise of Extremism, Islamic Law Threaten Iraqi Women"

(Dirk adriaensens, 01/04/2005)

 

Dear editor,

 

I received a reaction from a (well known) Iraqi woman, whose name I can't reveal, to your article:

"What threatens the Iraqi women now is not wearing the scarf or the hijab as much as it is the fear of  being arrested, killed in  blasts, shootings, or on the hands of criminal gangs.

The fear of her husband, her son, brother, father...etc being killed or arrested. There is an army of newly widowed women, with many children to feed or take care of, mothers of handicapped children with no money to provide medical care, women are living in refugees camps, with families and children to take care of.

 

Women are in jails, humiliated, abused, with no future. Women are unemployed. Many are working as house servants. I agree that for a woman to put the scarf against her will is unacceptable, but this is a luxury problem when your life, your chidren , your house, and your existence is threatened. And by way, the majority of Iraqi women put the scarf even before the invasion and the occupation. It is true that they are more now, for safety reasons, or political reasons, but let us not forget the real problem, the real injustice.

 

I think that this is part of blackening the image of Islam, which in turn serves the war against terrorism. Let us look at the real problem, the occupation, and the crimes against the Iraqi people (including women) it is committing, which is much bigger and more dangerous for women than the scarf.

Best.

xxxx"

------------------------

In October, days before the assault on Fallujah, the OWFI released the following statement: 

Communiqué of the Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq on:

Criminal acts committed by Islamists during the month of Ramadan against Women in Iraq and the Rejection and Resistance of Women against Islamic Terrorism.

Terrorist acts against women in Iraq by Islamic groups have increased dramatically in recent months and reached  an unprecedented level under the rubric of  "observing sanctities during Ramadan." A fascist Islamic group called "Mujahideen Shura Group" has warned that it will kill any women who are seen on street unveiled whether by themselves or with a male companion!

In the northern city of Mosul, Christian women are targets of a killing, kidnapping and rape campaign. One such barbaric crime took place in this city where two women were kidnapped and raped by multiple men and then were sold as female slaves to another group of men.  They were again raped repeatedly for four days before they managed to escape!

In the city of Falluja, at the Mujahideen congress held on October 20,2004, the Islamic criminal Abdulla al-Janabi and Falluja's Shura Council gave a fatwa (religious decree) that Mujahideen fighters should rape girls at age 10 before they are raped by Americans!

Scores of university girls have been beaten up, often severely, for wearing jeans or for not wearing hijab (Islamic veil). Women who go to hair dressing salons are frequently attacked by Islamists and their hair is cut in a public display of shaming.

Thousands of leaflets are distributed across the country everyday warning women against going out unveiled, putting on make up, shaking hands or mixing with men. More than 1000 female university students have taken leave of their studies to protect themselves against the terrorism of Islamists.

 They kidnap women in the name of "resistance" and only release them after receiving thousands of dollars in ransom for each woman! They kidnap Iraqi and foreign women alike. Margaret Hassan, a British woman known for her help and service to the Iraqi people for over three decades was taken hostage by an Islamic terrorist groups asking for millions of dollars in ransom, otherwise she will be killed like other foreigners.

 Today, with the absence of any form of state in Iraq, the terrorist Islamists are seeking to implement their medieval laws through fear and horror. They have come to Iraq with slogans and banners holding signs of swords dripping blood. They are striving to Islamicize  Iraqi society through terror. Everyday they are killing Christians, university academics and lecturers, secular personalities, youth, children and any other creature moving on the ground!

This is the benefit of the liberation that the US government has brought to the Iraqi masses.  The only true benefit has come to the Islamic terrorist groups, which are free to attack, and kill women! 

Women in Iraq and the Organization of Women¹s Freedom in Iraq expose these forces, which try to delude people by posing as "resistance" to the US occupiers. The Islamic movement has made it clear that even if the US forces are expelled or withdraw from Iraq , they will declare Jihad against any secular government! They want to establish a Caliphate (Islamic government) where women are will be set back by 1400 years! The Islamic terrorists have come with their bayonets directed at women in Iraq.

We must stand up to the groups of Islamic terrorism in Iraq. There is no other alternative.          
The Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq announces a local and international campaign against Islamic terrorism. OWFI strongly opposes and fights against this terrorism. We call on the masses and all women from north to south to join our campaign and stand up against the barbarism of misogynist Islamists. We calls on all progressives, liberationists and defenders of women¹s rights and human rights, including civil rights and children¹s rights, to support the Organizations of Women¹s Freedom in Iraq in its struggle against political Islam. 

Today the movement for women's rights and a civil society in Iraq stands up to oppose and end Islamic terrorism and the US occupation of Iraq. As long as the occupation continues, Islamic terrorism against the society will flourish and grow.  Support the secular women's movement!
Join our campaign against Islamic terrorism in Iraq!
 
Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq
October 25,2004
Al- Fardawse Square Area ­ Al Za'im Street ­ Next to Al Saadoun Private Hospital
Tel no. 011 964  17 170953- Iraq-
yanar2002@hotmail.com
0044 789 00 65933- nadia64uk@yahoo.com
www.equalityiniraq.com
----------------------------------------

In response to these allegations against the resistance by the 'Organisation of Women's Freedom in Iraq', Tahrir Swift, Arab Madia Watch's director (www.arabmediawatch.com), based in the UK, wrote the following reaction, that was published on the website of IDAO (Iraqi Democrats Against Occupation - www.idao.org

As US occupation forces intesify their attack on the people of Falluja and other areas of Iraq, a pattern is now emerging in Britain to undermine the democratic opposition to the US-led occupation. The main thrust of the campaign is to depict the resistance as being anti-women and terrorist in nature, using for this purpose unelected Iraqi trade union and women umbrella organisations.  IDAO is pleased to publish a response by Ms. Tahrir Swift to such allegations by 'Organisation of Women's Freedom in Iraq (OWFI).
 

(Letter of Tahrir Swift)

Forgive me for this unsolicited email. Someone forwarded your email about Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq to me. First of all, I think it is always sensible to know where a group of women attached to political party are coming from.  The Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq, are part of the Iraqi Worker's Communist Party, which is similar to the one in Iran. I find it ironic that their views are very similar to that of the Iraqi Communist Party (their arch rival) on this issue. I also detect a sense of looking down at one's own identity on the part of OWFI.

I have little doubt that many of the OWFI women are well meaning and do some good work in Iraq. However they are known to reduce women issues to domestic violence and the veil in their speeches that I have heard. I find their sense of timing absolutely appalling as the people of Fallujah are being bombed by the Americans day in day out. And are awaiting a Sharon type war crime in front of the whole silent shameful world.

I probably would not like it in Fallujah, I might not event like the Fallujans! But do they deserve to be slaughtered?  Do their children deserve to be mutilated by the American bombs?
 
Yes, Fallujans are well known to be conservative and more so now when civil society is falling apart and the occupation is failing to live up to its duties under international law. Who am I to take up the moral high grounds and pass Judgment on them?

"Mujahideen Shura Group" in Fallujah, this is a group I have never heard of, could they not be 'one man and his dog' common criminals?  OWFI does not tell us what makes them think that they belong to the resistance!  I find it interesting that OWFI fails to mention that the committee of Islamic Scholars has issued a Fatwa in the wake of the Abu Ghraib scandal that women sexually abused in detention are victims who deserve our care and sympathy. This is unprecedented in Islamic countries.

"Killing/ Kidnapping/ selling into slavery in Mousel":
 Is this new? Has it not been taking place since the invasion and the dissolving of the police force? Why is OWFI attributing this to 'Islamists'? What they cite is consistent with HRW report of June 2003. Indeed, I believe OWFI themselves criticized the occupation for failing to protect women in one of their statements and denounced such criminal acts. 

"Today, with the absence of any form of state in Iraq, the terrorist Islamists are seeking to implement their medieval laws through fear and horror" Whose fault is that?

"They kidnap women in the name of "resistance" and only release them after receiving thousands of dollars in ransom for each woman!"  I have little doubt that there are mafia gangs operating in the name of the resistance, are they the real resistance? Whose fault is it that women and young girls are vulnerable to kidnapping? If the centre of London is to fall into lawlessness, would women be any safer? I was living in Brixton in the summer of 1984, the police lost control of the place for several hours due to the riots, there were rapes, car theft, looting and murder that night and I am pretty sure they were not carried out by Islamists!.

"Everyday they are killing Christians, university academics and lecturers, secular personalities, youth, children and any other creature moving on the ground"!
Wow! What proof has OWFI got that those who are killing academics are Islamists? The reports I have read in British newspapers and websites actually point to professional killing that never seems to miss or botch the assassinations (one bullet is enough). I think OWFI needs to know what is going on in the world before they start pointing fingers as they feel like it. Many of the scientists and academics killed were those pursued by the Americans who demanded that they leave Iraq before the war.

I have met a Syrian who is married to an Iraqi Christian at the ESF (15/17 Oct 2004) he had just left Iraq. He told me that all his in laws believe that the Mossad is behind all the attacks on their churches and all the killings. Remember the Americans attempted to blame Al Sadr supporters for such crimes. But while the borders are porous and the occupiers are failing even to protect their own back side it is not possible to ascertain with certainty who is behind them. Christians are not the only victims, the Shia were slaughtered at Najaf, at Kadumyia and Karabla. The Sunnis have been slaughtered with bombings and their mosques have been desecrated. It is obvious for the people that as the occupation is going from bad to worse, it would suit the Americans if Iraq is to unravel. The Syrian man, also said that there are Christians amongst the Iraqi fighters. I would also like to remind you that the first attack on a holy place in Iraq's modern history took place in 1950, when Mossad attacked the Baghdad Synagogue. 

This is a highly irresponsible claim by the OWFI. 

"In the city of Falluja, at the Mujahideen congress held on October 20,2004, the Islamic criminal Abdulla al-Janabi and Falluja's Shura Council gave a fatwa (religious decree) that Mujahideen fighters should rape girls at age 10 before they are raped by Americans!" If OWFI has incontrovertible evidence that this man did issue this Fatwa, then he should be exposed and reported to the Committee of  Islamic Scholars. Many mosque Imams have been arrested for criticizing the occupation recently, surely Allawi can arrest a man who issuing such an un- Islamic and criminal incitement. 

Women in Iraq and the Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq expose these forces, which try to delude people by posing as "resistance" to the US occupiers.
The Islamic movement has made it clear that even if the US forces are expelled or withdraw from Iraq , they will declare Jihad against any secular government!

Now this is really revealing, OWFI here is trying to find an excuse for not calling for the immediate withdrawal of the American troops (how very ICP!). Who is the 'Islamic movement' exactly? Allawi's allies in the interim government? Allawi and occupation opponents in Iraqi cities up and down the country?

I am puzzled by what seems to be a blatant attempt to smear the resistance by a group who claims to be opposed to the illegal occupation.

I find it very interesting that OWFI makes no mention of women suffering as a result of the occupation and continuous war on Iraqi cities. They make no mention of Iraqi women prisoners/ wives and families of those detained unlawfully.  They make no mention of the plight of women 'servicing' the occupation forces.
More importantly, they make no mention of the current dire health situation as conceded by the health ministry. No mention either of the misuse of women issues by the US and their stooges in order to discredit the resistance and /or bomb them! When and where women cause was advanced by bombs?

This, by no means indicates that I am not worried by fired up individuals enforcing their own rules on women in universities. But, who is allowing them to do so? I sent a message of solidarity to Christian women students protesting about the enforcement of the scarf at the university of Mousel, in which I reminded them that young Muslim women in France are being forced to take off their head scarves before entering their schools in France. I reminded them of the brave pragmatic stand these young women took.  

Tahrir Swift

-------------------

I really hope you can publish this reaction. Because these thoughts reflect another Iraqi point of view. It's important for your audience to know.

 

Best regards.

Dirk Adriaensens

Executive committee of the BRussells Tribunal (www.brusselstribunal.org)


Het verzet van een volk

Inge Van de Merlen
24 oktober 2005

Gisteren in de Telegraph, de Guardian en op de website van Kurt Nimmo Deze ochtend op Uruknet en op de voorpagina van de Metro. Volgens een opiniepeiling in opdracht van het Brits Ministerie van Defensie achten 45 % van de Irakezen de aanslagen tegen Amerikaanse en Britse troepen gerechtvaardigd. Amper 1 % gelooft dat de aanwezigheid van de coalitietroepen bijdraagt tot de veiligheid in het land en maar liefst 82 % is sterk tegen deze aanwezigheid gekant.

Begin januari maakte Dahr Jamail, een Amerikaanse journalist die tijdens de bezetting acht maanden bij de Irakezen was ingebed, een ruwe schatting. "Tachtig procent van de bevolking steunt het verzet," vertelde hij me tijdens een interview voor Solidair.

In Terzake meldt Canvas dat 65 % van de Irakezen - weliswaar met een grote foutenmarge – de aanvallen van het verzet tegen Amerikaanse en Britse troepen steunt. Dit klopt niet helemaal met het oorspronkelijk artikel in de Telegraph, waar men in de provincie Maysan 65 %, maar in Basra slechts 25 % heeft gemeten (wat de grote foutenmarge verklaart); geen cijfers over Al-Anbar, gekend als de meest opstandige provincie tegen de buitenlandse bezetting. Rechtstreekse contacten met hulpverleners ter plaatse tijdens het afgelopen jaar doen echter vermoeden dat voor deze provincie de schatting van Dahr Jamail er niet ver naast zit.

De steun aan het verzet in Al-Anbar wordt door de westerse autoriteiten en media vooral verklaard door de aanwezigheid van een soennitische meerderheid in de provincie. Klopt dit wel? Alvorens ooit enige opmerking te maken over de verdeling van soennieten en sjiieten in Irak, is het aan te raden de volgende uiteenzetting over de verhouding tussen beide sektarische groepen door te nemen.

In een artikel van Molly Bingham in de Boston Globe van 15 december 2004 zegt zij het volgende: "Ik ontmoette sjiieten en soennieten die samen vochten, mannen en vrouwen, jong en oud. Ik ontmoette mensen met verschillende economische en sociale achtergrond en scholingsgraad. De oorspronkelijke drijfkracht voor bijna iedereen die ik hierover gesproken heb is van nationalistische aard."

Aangezien ik in het laatste citaat enige contradictie opmerkte met wat Dahr Jamail me in het interview van januari vertelde, namelijk: "Soennieten en sjiieten vechten niet samen, maar in nood ondersteunen ze elkaar. Tijdens de belegering van Fallujah in april 2004 bevoorraadden sommige sjiitische groepen de soennitische strijders. En toen de bezetters Najaf belegerden, gaven de soennitische strijders wapens en training aan het sjiïetisch verzet.", besloot ik hem even op te bellen om na te vragen wat hij vandaag over de situatie weet. Zijn antwoord luidde als volgt: "Misschien heb ik me daar versproken, of was er een misverstand, maar tijdens de belegering van Fallujah in april 2004 hebben soennitische en sjiitische groepen wel degelijk zij aan zij gevochten. Dit is overigens nu ook het geval, vooral tegen de Badr-milities." De Badr-milities maken deel uit van de veiligheidstroepen die door de bezettingsmachten geïnstalleerd werden, en zijn hoofdzakelijk sjiieten uit Iran, de ‘aartsvijand van Irak’. Deze milities zouden volgens verscheidene Irakese bronnen verantwoordelijk zijn voor een groot deel van de terreuracties tegen Irakese burgers.

Wie maakt dan deel uit van dit verzet? Volgens Bush&co zijn het religieuze fundamentalisten die het Westen haten om de vrijheid en democratie-hi-hi-hi. Anderen weer, beweren dat het aanhangers van het vroegere regime zijn die hun macht willen herstellen. Laat ons even terugkeren naar Fallujah bij het begin van de bezetting. Een week geleden herhaalde Dahr Jamail in Santa Cruz, wat hij me eerder reeds vertelde: "Tijdens de invasie verwelkomde Fallujah de Amerikanen. Maar drie weken later, toen Amerikaanse troepen een basisschool bezetten, protesteerde de bevolking, omdat de volgende dag de lessen moesten aanvangen en ze wilden dat hun kinderen naar school konden gaan. Dit protest werd met geweervuur beantwoord en 17 mensen werden daarbij gedood. Op deze dag werd het verzet in Fallujah geboren, maar de vijandelijkheden groeiden geleidelijk aan toen het leger Amerikaanse aannemers - of beter: huurlingen - naar Fallujah bracht. Deze huurlingen zijn niet gebonden door militaire reglementeringen of verbintenissen. Ze ondernemen geheime operaties en begaan moorden; ze verkrachtten en plunderden - letterlijk."

Het vervolg kennen we. Nadat inwoners van de stad vier van deze huurlingen doodden, verbrandden en hun lijken aan een brug ophingen (en de westerse media uitgebreid over deze schanddaad tegenover ‘westerse burgers’ berichtten) besloot men vanuit Washington dat de stad van terroristen moest worden bevrijd. Daar de eerste belegering van Fallujah niet het gewenste resultaat opleverde werd een tweede grootscheepse aanval op de stad uitgevoerd in november 2004. De westerse media fungeerden als infokanaal van de bezetters naar het publiek toe. Honderden terroristen zouden gedood zijn bij deze aanval. Maar hulpverleners ontdekten later de gruwel die had plaatsgevonden. Drie à vierduizend inwoners van de stad waren omgekomen, onder hen onnoemelijk veel vrouwen, kinderen en ouderlingen. Sommigen afgemaakt tijdens hun slaap, anderen bij het uitvoren van hun huishoudelijke taken, door chemische wapens, ooit een argument om de inval in Iak te rechtvaardigen. Hulpverleners vonden lijken, wier kleren in hun huid waren gebrand, en lichamen die geen wonden vertoonden, maar wel vreemde gekleurde vlekken. Man, vrouw, kind… jong en oud. Terroristen?

En het bleef niet bij Fallujah. Sinds de lente van 2005 liggen ettelijke steden langs de Eufraat onder vuur: Al-Habbaniyah, Ar-Ramadi, Hit, Al-Haqlaniyah, Al-Haditha, Anah, Rawah, Al-Qaim, Tal Afar; duizenden mensen zijn uit hun huizen moeten vluchten. De gelukkigen onder hen konden terecht bij familie of vrienden, anderen vonden een onderkomen in openbare gebouwen en tenten van de rode halve maan, de sukkelaars brengen kille nachten door in de woestijn zonder tent. Deze informatie is niet uit de lucht gegrepen, nee, ze komt uit eerste hand van hulpverleners die sinds maanden de getroffen steden en de vluchtelingen van tenten, dekens en medicijnen voorzien!

Wat zou jij doen, als jongeling die zijn volk in zulke ellende gestort ziet door een buitenlandse legermacht? Wat zou jij doen wanneer je ziet hoe soldaten van de andere kant van de wereld je huizen platbombarderen, talloze mensen, kinderen incluis verminken, de culturele rijkdom van je land vernietigen, je nieuwe wetten opleggen, het hele sociale leven in je land ontwrichten, verarmd uranium over je land uitstrooien, zodat je je familieleden en vrienden ziet wegkankeren? Zou je juichen? Zoveel was tijdens de Tweede Wereldoorlog niet nodig om een verzet tot stand te brengen. Mij verwonderen de resultaten van de opiniepeiling niet in het minst.

Wie de Metro van 24 oktober niet heeft gelezen, kan het artikel over de opiniepeiling hieronder doornemen:

Irakese bevolking is Amerikanen grondig beu

LONDEN Een uiterst zeldzame opiniepeiling in het hart van de oorlog heeft uitgewezen dat de buitenlandse troepenmacht de strijd om de ‘hearts and minds’ van de Irakese bevolking al lang heeft verloren. Bijna de helft van de Irakezen zou intussen vinden dat aanslagen op Amerikanen of Britten gerechtvaardigd zijn en ruim 80% ziet hen liefst meteen vertrekken.

Bij alles wat er de voorbije jaren gezegd en geschreven is over Irak, was er telkens één groot zwart gat: de stem van de bevolking zelf. Nochtans geen onbelangrijk gegeven, want zonder de hulp van de gewone Irakezen zal de Brits-Amerikaanse alliantie de opstandelingen vermoedelijk nooit de baas worden. De Britse krant Sunday Telegraph kon de hand leggen op een peiling die is uitgevoerd door een plaatselijke universiteit, maar die via een tussenpersoon bestemd was voor het Britse leger.

En de resultaten zijn op zijn zachtst gezegd ontstellend te noemen, zelfs als je uitgaat van een vrij grote foutenmarge vanwege de moeilijke omstandigheden op het terrein. Hoe dan ook was het zonder twijfel een onaangename verrassing dat 45% van de Irakezen aanslagen tegen de ‘bezettingstroepen’ niet meer dan normaal vindt en dat 82% sterk tegen hun aanwezigheid gekant is. Sterker nog: minder dan één op de honderd burgers heeft het gevoel dat de coalitietroepen de veiligheid vergroten en 67% gelooft dat het omgekeerde waar is.

Gevraagd naar het profiel van de gemiddelde opstandeling, beschrijven de Irakezen een jonge landgenoot die in een uitzichtloze situatie verkeert en zich daarom aansluit bij de enige partij die hem graag ziet komen. Dat beeld illustreert de behoefte aan een grondige wederopbouw van de infrastructuur en een doorstart van de Irakese economie, twee punten waarop de buitenlandse troepenmacht en haar burgerlijke verlengstuk schromelijk tekort zijn geschoten.

Wederopbouw Irak loopt compleet in het honderd

WASHINGTON Het ambitieuze programma voor de wederopbouw van Irak is allesbehalve een succes, stelt een controle-orgaan van het Amerikaanse parlement. Het beschikbare geld wordt lang niet volledig benut en een groot deel van de uitgaven gaat bovendien naar beveiliging.

De negatieve evaluatie van de Amerikaanse inspanningen om de infrastructuur van Irak te herstellen is vrijwel algemeen. Een recent rapport van de Government Accountability Office (GAO), een instelling van het Amerikaanse parlement die de uitgaven in Irak onder de loep neemt, stelt bijvoorbeeld zegt dat er nog maar 13 miljard is uitgegeven van de 30 miljard dollar die tot augustus 2005 waren uitgetrokken voor de wederopbouw. Dat heeft volgens de opstellers in de eerste plaats te maken met de aanhoudende onveiligheid in Irak, maar het staat buiten kijf dat er niets in huis is gekomen van de beloften van president Bush uit 2003: hij beloofde destijds zuiver drinkwater voor 90% van de Irakezen en een duidelijke toename van de productie van olie en elektriciteit.

Volgens de Democratische volksvertegenwoordiger Henry Waxman geeft de overheid onnodig veel geld uit door contracten zonder openbare aanbesteding te gunnen aan bedrijven als Halliburton. Ook de inzet van privé-firma’s om de veiligheid te verzekeren kost handenvol geld, stelt Waxman.

«Er is voor miljarden belastinggeld uitgegeven, maar de resultaten in Irak zijn bijna onmerkbaar.» De GAO stelt intussen vast dat de zeldzame succesverhalen erg slecht gedocumenteerd zijn en dat geslaagde projecten al te vaak worden tenietgedaan door een gebrek aan onderdelen of geschoold personeel. «Het is onduidelijk wanneer de Irakese veiligheidsdiensten klaar zullen zijn om onafhankelijk te opereren.

Op dezelfde manier is het een raadsel hoe de inspanningen van de VS ertoe bijdragen dat de Irakese bevolking aan schoon water, betrouwbare elektricteit of een adequate gezondheidszorg», klinkt de vernietigende conclusie van rapporteur Joseph Christoff.

Het uitblijven van resultaten speelt in de kaart van het Irakese verzet. «De bevolking raakt gefrustreerd», stelt de Republikeinse volksvertegenwoordiger Christopher Shays.

«Ze vragen zich af hoe het mogelijk is dat de coalitie die hun land in minder dan twee maanden veroverde, er na twee jaar niet in slaagt de lichten aan te houden.»


Humanitarian Imperialism
Interview with Jean Bricmont
By Joaquim Da Fonseca and Michel Collon

09 Jan 2005
 

In his new book, Humanitarian Imperialism, Jean Bricmont denounces the use of the human rights pretext to justify attacks against countries in the South. He is a pacifist and a committed intellectual.

How is it that a professor of theoretical physics has just written a book on imperialism?

J.B. I have always been interested in politics, if only passively. I really became involved in 1999 during the war against Yugoslavia. The humanitarian reasons invoked by the United States left me puzzled. I was also shocked by the lack of opposition from the left, even some of the extreme left, to this aggression.

I was asked to address conferences in all kinds of circles: Protestant churches, Muslim movements, student groups, ATTAC, etc. My humanitarian imperialism book is, among other things, a reaction to the concerns and proposals put forward by individuals and groups encountered during these conferences. The book is also a reaction to the attitude of certain political militants claiming to be of the left. In the name of human rights they legitimize aggression against sovereign countries. Or they moderate their opposition so much that it becomes only symbolic.

Human rights is for the rubbish bin, then?

J.B. I defend the aspirations in the Universal Declaration on Human Rights of 1948. It contains a collection of economic, social, political and individual rights. The problem arises when lack of respect, real or presumed, serves to legitimize war, embargoes and other sanctions against a country and when human rights becomes the pretext for a violent assault on that country. Moreover it often happens that only part of the Declaration is cited. When people talk of human rights, economic and social rights are often considered relatively unimportant compared with individual and political rights. Take, for example, the quality of health care in Cuba. This is a remarkable development of a socio-economic right. But it is totally ignored.

While it is true that Cuba conforms perfectly to the very critical description given it by Reporters without Frontiers, this in no way reduces the importance of the quality of its health care. When speaking of Cuba, if you express reservations about lack of respect for political and individual rights you must at least mention the importance of economic and social rights from which the Cubans benefit. What is more important, the rights of individuals or health care? But no-one reasons like this. The right to housing, food, existence and health: these are usually ignored by the defenders of human rights.

In fact, your book shows that these rights are ignored in the media campaigns against Socialist countries, like Cuba or China. You write that four million lives could have been saved if India had adopted the Chinese path.

J.B. The economists Jean Drèze and Amartya Sen estimate that, departing from a similar base, China and India have followed different development paths and that the difference between the social systems of these two countries results in about 3.9 million extra deaths in India every year. In Latin America 285,000 lives would be saved each year if Cuban health and food policies were applied.

I am not saying that social and economic performance can justify deficiencies in other fields of human rights. But no-one would maintain that the contrary is true: respect for individual and political rights does not justify flouting social and economic rights. Why do the defenders of human rights never say so? Let us come back to Cuba. Can the lack of individual freedoms be justified by effective health care? That can be discussed. If, in Cuba, there was a pro-Western regime, it is certain that health care would not be so effective. This can be deduced from the state of people's health in the "pro-Western" countries of Latin America. Hence, in practical terms there is a choice between the different types of human rights: what are most important, the social and economic ones, or the political and individual ones?

It would of course be best to have both together. The Venezuelan president Chávez, for example, is trying to reconcile them. But the US interventionist policy makes this reconciliation difficult in the Third World. What I would like to emphasize is that it is not for us, in the West, who benefit from the two kinds of rights, to lay down what choice is to be made. We should rather put our energies into enabling the Third World countries to carry out their development independently, in the hope that this will eventually help these rights to emerge.

Is there not a great difference between how human rights and the duty to intervene are perceived according to whether you come from the North or the South of the planet?

J.B. In 2002, not long before the war against Iraq, I went to Damascus in Syria and Beirut in Lebanon. I met quite a few people. To say that they opposed the war against Iraq is putting it mildly. And that was the case even at the American University of Beirut. Anti-Americanism and fierce opposition against Israel was tremendous.

When I returned to Belgium I saw no evidence of this at all. Take the question of the disarmament of Iraq. Certain members of the CNAPD (Belgian anti-war coordinating body) told me that this disarmament had to be imposed, although not of course by military, but through peaceful means. If these proposals were advocated in the Middle East, people would immediately reply: "And Israel, why should it not be disarmed?"

In Latin America, and in the Arab-Muslim world particularly, the perception of international law is totally different from ours here, even among the left and the extreme left. The latter do not appear to be interested to know what the populations immediately concerned think about our interventions.

Why is that? Is it a question of navel-gazing? Or of ethnocentricity?

J.B. During decolonization and the Vietnam War, the left adopted a new attitude. It defended an anti-imperialist policy in economic, military and social affairs. Since then this attitude has been undermined by intervention in the name of human rights. The opposition to neo-colonialism has been replaced by the desire to help the peoples of the South to fight against their dictatorial, inefficient and corrupt governments...Those who support this position are not aware of the chasm that separates them from the peoples of the Third World, who do not generally accept the intervention of the Western governments into their internal affairs.

Of course many of them desire more democratic and more honest governments. But why? Because such rulers would manage their natural resources more rationally, obtain better prices for their primary commodities, protect them from control by the multinationals and even build up powerful armies.

When certain people here speak about more democratic governments, they do not mean any of these things. Truly democratic governments in the South would be more like that of Chávez than that of the current Iraqi government.

Is there not a background of colonial ideology in all this?

J.B. Perhaps, but it is presented in a post-colonial language. Everyone condemns colonialism. Those who defend the current wars insist that humanitarian intervention is "totally different" from colonialism. However, one can only remark the continuity in this change. Intervention was first legitimized by Christianity, then by a civilizing mission - also by anti-Communism. Our claim to superiority has always authorized us to commit a series of monstrous actions.

What is the role of the media in propagating this "humanitarian imperialism"?

J.B. It is fundamental. In the case of the Yugoslav war, the media was used to prepare public opinion for such attacks. As with Iraq, the journalists are constantly repeating "all the same, it is a good thing that Saddam Hussein has been overthrown." But to what extent is it legitimate for the United States to overthrow Saddam Hussein? This question is never posed in the newspapers. Do the Iraqis consider that this intervention benefits them? If this is the case, why do more than 80 per cent of them desire the departure of the United States? The press criticizes the United States, but its criticism is mostly about the methods used during the war and the occupation, not about the very principle of intervention.

Would the United States be less likely to make war under a Democratic president?

J.B. That largely depends on the way in which the occupation of Iraq winds up. There are many voices in the United States that call for the withdrawal of the troops and there is a climate of panic in many sectors of the society. If, as in Vietnam, the Iraq war concludes with a catastrophe, there could be a considerable interlude from such policies for a while. If the retreat goes smoothly, if there is not too much damage, they could then rapidly go off to war again. But it is a widespread illusion that the Democrats are less aggressive and that they do not support military interventions.

Why is the reaction to the war by progressive Europeans so weak?

J.B. The ecologists, the Socialist left, the traditional Communist parties, the Trotskyites and most of the NGOs have opposed the war very feebly. Their positions have been undermined by the ideology of humanitarian intervention and all serious references to socialism in their programme have been abandoned. Part of this left has substituted the struggle for human rights for its initial aims of social improvements or revolution.

As it is difficult for these movements to defend the war of the USA against Yugoslavia and Iraq, they adopt the rather convenient position of "Neither, nor". "Neither Bush nor Saddam": this enables them to avoid any criticism. Of course I can understand why Saddam Hussein is not liked. But the implications of the "Neither, nor" position go well beyond this.

First, it does not recognize the legitimacy of international law. It does not distinguish between the aggressors and the aggressed. Just to make a comparison: it would have been difficult, during the Second World War, to affirm "Neither Hitler, nor Stalin" without being considered a collaborator.

Second, this approach underestimates the extent of the damage caused by the United States since 1945. Since the end of the Second World War, they have been intervening everywhere in the world to support or install conservative and reactionary forces, from Guatemala to the Congo, from Indonesia to Chile. They have been busy killing the hope of the poor for social change everywhere. It is they, and not Saddam Hussein, who want to overthrow Hugo Chávez. The Vietnam War was nothing to do with Saddam Hussein. Even if it is admitted that Milosevic and Saddam Hussein have been demonized, putting them in the same category as the USA at the world level is, for them, totally unjust and false.

Finally, what upsets me most with this "Neither, nor" attitude is the position that we assume, by adopting such slogans, towards our own responsibility.

When we see policies that don't like in the Third World, we must begin by discussing them with the people who live there, and do this with organizations that represent large sections of the population, not with little groups or isolated individuals. We must try to see if their priorities are the same as ours. I hope that the alternative world movement will create channels of communication that promote a better understanding of the viewpoints of the South. For the time being, the Western left tends to stay in its corner, having very little influence in its own home base and indirectly playing the game of imperialism by demonizing the Arabs, the Russians, the Chinese - in the name of democracy and human rights.

What we are mainly responsible for is the imperialism of our own countries. Let us start by tackling that - and effectively!

Thanks to Victoria Bawtree for the translation!

Jean Bricmont. Impéralisme humanitaire. Droits de l'Homme, droit d'ingérence, droit du plus fort?, Ed. Aden, 2005, 253 pages, 18 euros.
Can be ordered from éditions Aden :
http://www.rezolibre.com/librairie/detail.php?article=98

See also (in French) : Biography of Jean Bricmont
http://www.michelcollon.info/bio_invites.php?invite=Jean%20Bricmont

Jean Bricmont - Quelques remarques sur la violence, la démocratie et l'espoir:
http://www.michelcollon.info/articles.php?dateaccess=2005-03-16%2017:32:42&log=invites

Jean Bricmont - Européens, encore un effort si vous voulez vous joindre au genre humain!
http://www.michelcollon.info/articles.php?dateaccess=2003-02-16%2018:24:22&log=invites

Jean Bricmont and Diana Johnstone - Les deux faces de la politique américaine
http://www.michelcollon.info/articles.php?dateaccess=2001-11-07%2018:35:48&log=invites

On the war on Iraq and its causes, see also the new book:
"Bush, le cyclone" :
http://www.michelcollon.info/bush_le_cyclone.php
 


   CLOSING SPEECH BY ARUNDHATI ROY

At the Culminating session of the World Tribunal on Iraq - Istanbul June 27

When I was invited to be on the jury by the W.T.I. -- yesterday, when they were making a film, they asked me, “Why did you agree? You must have had so many invitations; why did you choose this?” And I said, you know, “I feel so hurt that you are asking me this question. Because it's ours. You know, where else would I be? What other invitations would matter to me when we have to attend to this, this huge, enormous bloody thing?” You know, since I'm not a lawyer, nor am I even much of an organizer, nor am I even somebody who has been particularly concerned about my legitimacy or, you know.

I don't think in sort of legal and bureaucratic terms, so you know, I didn't really go down the road of questioning who we are or who we represent, because to me it was a bit like somebody asking me whether I had the legitimacy to write a novel. I mean, we're just a group of human beings, whether we are five or ten or fifteen or ten million. Surely, we have the right to express an opinion, and surely, if that opinion is irrelevant, surely, if that opinion is full of false facts, surely, if that opinion is absurd, it will be treated as such, and if that opinion is, in fact, representative of the opinion of millions of people, it will become very huge.

So we don't need to really worry ourselves too much about defining ourselves. I think we need to worry about being very clear, being very honest, being very precise about what we think and express that fearlessly and in solidarity with the values that all of us have so clearly expressed in so many ways here today. I really think this last three days – I mean, as a -- speaking as a writer, what I seek with complete greed, what I seek almost ruthlessly is understanding. You know, that is all that I ever ask for, an understanding of the debt of this world we live in. And that was a gift that one received, and I will always be grateful for it.

To ask us why we are doing this, you know, why is there a World Tribunal on Iraq, is like asking, you know, someone who stops at the site of an accident where people are dying on the road, why did you stop? Why didn't you keep walking like everybody else?

While I listened to the testimonies yesterday, especially, I must say that I didn't know -- I mean, not that one has to choose, but still, you know, I didn't know what was more chilling, you know, the testimonies of those who came from Iraq with the stories of the blood and the destruction and the brutality and the darkness of what was happening there or the stories of that cold, calculated world where the business contracts are being made, where the laws are be rewritten, where a country occupies another with no idea of how it's going to provide protection to people, but with such a sophisticated idea of how it's going to loot it of its resources. You know, the brutality or the contrast of those two things was so chilling.

There were times when I felt, I wish I wasn't on the jury, because I want to say things. You know? I mean, I think that is the nature of this tribunal, that, in a way, one wants to be everything. You want to be on the jury, you want to be on the other side, you want to say things. And I particularly wanted to talk a lot about -- which I won't do now, so don't worry, but I wanted to talk a lot about my own, you know, now several years of experience with issues of resistance, strategies of resistance, the fact that we actually tend to reach for easy justifications of violence and non-violence, easy and not really very accurate historical examples. These are things we should worry about.

But at the end of it, today we do seem to live in a world where the United States of America has defined an enemy combatant, someone whom they can kidnap from any country, from anyplace in the world and take for trial to America. An enemy combatant seems to be anybody who harbors thoughts of resistance. Well, if this is the definition, then I, for one, am an enemy combatant. Thank you.