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On eve of US war against Iraq: the political challenge of
2003
By the Editorial Board
6 January 2003
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The year 2003 opens against the backdrop of impending war
and deepening economic crisis. Within a matter of weeks the US
will be raining bombs on a defenseless Iraqi population.
The claims that the Bush administration has not yet decided
on war are as false as they are cynical. The White House has already
signed off on a military attack, as is patently clear from the
massive deployment of American forces in the Persian Gulf. Tens
of thousands of troops are being moved into the region, accompanied
by a naval armada bristling with the most advanced and deadly
weapons and buttressed by hundreds of war planes. Military operations
are already well under way, in the form of special operations
activities in the Kurdish enclave in the north of Iraq and escalating
bombing attacks in the so-called no-fly zones.
There is nothing Baghdad could do, including the elimination
of Saddam Hussein, to avert a US invasion. Bushs talk of
Iraqi violations of UN resolutions are transparent pretexts. Washingtons
aim is not the disarming of Iraq or even the removal
of Saddam Hussein, but rather the occupation of the country and
the seizure of its oilfields.
Whatever the immediate military outcome of the war, the Bush
administration is setting into motion processes that will have
the most convulsive impact, affecting not only the Middle East,
but every part of the globe. The war will further inflame international
public opinion, inevitably resulting in violent reprisals not
only against US soldiers, but also against American civilians,
both abroad and at home.
Within Iraq itself, the American onslaught will evoke deep
and implacable opposition. The Iraqi masses will correctly look
on US military forces as colonial-style occupiers and oppressors.
The same rationale that underlies the war against Iraq will
inevitably lead to wars against Iran, Syria and other countries
in the region. The US drive to dominate the worlds oil supplies
will lead to increasingly fierce conflicts with more powerful
nations, including Russia, China and Americas great power
rivals in Europe and Japan. A US conquest of Iraq will initiate
a process whose ultimate outcome will be a third world war.
The disastrous implications of Washingtons war agenda
can already be seen from the results of the US invasion of Afghanistan.
A year after the fall of the Taliban regime, American soldiers
continue to come under attack from an outraged population. The
US intervention in Central Asia has further poisoned relations
between India and Pakistan, both of which have nuclear weapons.
Notwithstanding the efforts of the Pakistani dictatorship to appease
the US, tensions between Washington and Islamabad are growing,
under conditions of intense popular anger and widening protests
directed against both the US and the Musharaf regime. Already
border clashes have occurred between American and Pakistani forces.
The Bush administrations warmongering has produced a
sudden escalation of tensions on the Korean peninsula. Washingtons
inflammatory rhetoric and provocative actions have led Pyongyang
to take countermeasures that raise the danger of nuclear war,
while the South is convulsed by massive anti-American demonstrations.
The US government is preparing to unleash a wave of military
violence around the world not seen since the 1930s and 1940s.
The closest historical parallel to the foreign policy of the Bush
administration, in its unabashed reliance on brute force and aggression,
is that of the Nazis.
What were the hallmarks of the foreign policy of German imperialism
under Hitler? An ever-expanding cycle of military aggression,
targeting first those countries too weak to seriously resist the
Wehrmacht. The occupation of countries, overthrow of governments
and installation of puppet regimes. The fabrication of crude pretexts
to justify preemptive and unprovoked wars. Open contempt for international
law and the flouting of traditional norms of diplomacy. In shorta
policy of seizure and plunder.
On every count, there is no fundamental difference between
the methods employed on the world stage by the fascist regimes
of the 1930s and 1940swhether it be Italys rape of
Ethiopia or Germanys conquest of Polandand those of
the Bush administration.
The world is witnessing a new eruption of imperialism in its
most violent form. The Bush administration is setting out to subjugate
entire regions of the planet in order to satisfy the drive of
the American ruling elite to monopolize vital resources, dominate
world markets and harness new sources of super-exploited, cheap
labor.
The real reasons for war
The escalation of tensions on the Korean peninsula has one
salutary political consequence: it thoroughly exposes the official
pretexts employed to justify war against Iraq. The US government
claims the war is justified because Iraq is building weapons of
mass destruction and defying UN resolutions. It has made the same
claims against North Korea, but, in its public response, drawn
sharply different conclusions.
Saddam Hussein is cooperating with UN inspections and is years
away, even by US estimates, from building an atomic bomb. North
Korea has kicked out UN inspectors and restarted the Yongbyong
nuclear reactor complex, giving it access to enough plutonium
to make a half dozen atomic bombs in six months. But the US response
has been to escalate its war preparations against Iraq, while
downplaying the conflict with North Korea and urging dialogue,
mediated through the United Nations.
Bush administration spokesmen have been unable to provide any
rationale for what one critic has called its schizophrenic
approach to the two countries. That is because the real reasons
for war with Iraq have nothing to due with the propaganda from
the White House and State Department which is echoed uncritically
in the American media.
The administration speaks for those within the American ruling
elite who have seized on the collapse of the Soviet Union as an
opportunity to establish a Pax Americana, in which US corporate
interests, backed by troops and bombs, dominate the globe. The
key to this scheme for world hegemony is unchallenged rule over
the Eurasian continent and control of its strategic resources,
first and foremost, petroleum. On this basis American imperialism
seeks to blackmail and bully the entire world.
The military-diplomatic web site Stratfor.com recently
published a blunt assessment of the real American interests at
stake in a new Persian Gulf war. Stratfor.com has close
ties to forces within the Bush administration and generally articulates
its strategic outlook. The Internet site cited three overriding
goals: seizing control of Iraqi oil, transforming Iraq into a
base for further American military operations in the Middle East
and Central Asia, and carrying out a bloodbath that traumatizes
the Arab population and cements American-Israeli domination of
the region.
Stratfor.com declared:
The decision to attack Iraq grew from psychological and
strategic needs. Psychologically, Washington wants to redefine
how Arabs view the United States; the goal is fear and respect.
Strategically, the United States wants to occupy Iraq in order
to control the pivot of the Middle East: From an occupied Iraq,
it can exert force throughout the region. The assumption has been
that a victory in Iraq would redefine the dynamic in the Arab
world. Some Arab governments, such as that in Kuwait, have welcomed
this evolution while others, such as Saudi Arabia, dread it. All
understand that a US-occupied Iraq would change the region decisively.
The United States would become, unambiguously, the heir to British
and Ottoman power in the Arab world.
Oil would be one lever of that power. If the United States
establishes control over Iraqs oil suppliesthe second
largest in the worldoil prices could take a dramatic dive,
and Arab states would be deprived of the leverage they now employ
within OPEC to shape oil policies. Oil-rich Arab nationsfirst
and foremost, Saudi Arabiaprobably could not keep their
economies afloat. Economic realities might achieve what popular
indignation could notregime change.
Then there is Israel. The defeat of Iraq, one of Israels
most vocal foes, would leave the Jewish state and Washington the
dominant players in the region, forcing Arab governments to live
under the threat of economic and military destruction. Arab leaders
also fear that an Israel emboldened by Iraqs defeat would
push Palestinians farther from the West Bank and Gaza Strip into
neighboring countries. A forced exodus of this type would create
a humanitarian catastrophe of epic proportions, one that Arab
governments would not be able to handle.
The crisis of American capitalism
There is an immense element of recklessness in the foreign
policy of the Bush administration. Bushs doctrine of preemptive
war and its initial application in the Persian Gulf have profoundly
destabilizing implications not only for the Middle East, but for
the entire world. An American invasion and occupation of Iraq
will undermine all of the Arab bourgeois regimes, while enormously
heightening tensions between the US and both Europe and Japan.
Iran, India, Pakistan, China and other nations will conclude that
their only means of warding off a US attack is the most rapid
possible development of nuclear weapons.
Washington is ripping apart the entire structure of international
relations that for more than half a century facilitated a degree
of stability and held in check the contradictions that twice in
the twentieth century led to global conflagrations.
These policies, whose vast implications are barely foreseen
by those in power, are a reflection not of confidence, but rather
a deep sense of crisis. American imperialism is very powerful,
but its contradictions are more powerful. US military might rests
on an increasingly fragile economic base. The recklessness of
the Bush administration is a response to growing anxiety in ruling
circles over the deterioration of the American economy, and the
convulsive domestic implications of the worsening social crisis
in the US.
A major component of Bushs foreign policy is the notion
that by grabbing critical resources around the world, American
capitalism will be able to offset intractable economic difficulties.
It is an attempt to use military power to overcome economic problems
for which the US ruling elite has no solution. Hence the proliferation
of commentaries from Washington and oil industry think tanks on
the beneficial impact on world petroleum prices of a US seizure
of Iraqi oil facilities.
American capitalism faces an increasingly desperate financial
and economic crisis. Unemployment is rising, rates of industrial
investment and output are stagnant or falling, and both corporate
and personal indebtedness are at record levels.
State governments all over the country are bankrupt, and federal
budget deficits are once again mounting. The anxiety in ruling
circles has been exacerbated by the dismal Christmas selling season,
signaling a decline in the one sector of the economy that had
withstood the general recessionary trendconsumer spending.
The current crisis was precipitated by the collapse of the
speculative Wall Street boom of the 1990s. An estimated $2.6 trillion
in stock values was wiped out in the course of 2002, bringing
the total losses to $7 trillion since Wall Street hit its peak
in the summer of 2000.
Last year marked the first time since the Great Depression
that stock prices fell for three consecutive years. After beginning
the year at the 10,000 mark, the Dow Jones average flirted with
7,000 in July and again in October. The decline of 16.8 percent
in the Dow Jones was the worst one-year fall since 1977, while
last months plunge of 6 percent was the worst December showing
since 1931. The broader Standard & Poors index showed
a drop of 23 percent, while the NASDAQ fell nearly 33 percent
and has lost three quarters of its value since 2000.
These colossal losses have an inexorable effect on the overall
economy. Corporate and individual bankruptcies are at record levels.
American corporations defaulted on more bonds in 2001-2002 than
in the previous 20 years combined. Corporate investment has virtually
dried up. And public confidence in American business and the capitalist
system itself is at its lowest point since the Depression, following
a year of corporate scandalsEnron, WorldCom, Global Crossing,
Tyco, etc.linked to the stock market collapse.
The US economy is sliding back into recession despite the Bush
administrations claims of economic recovery. Unemployment
has hit an eight-year high, and consumer confidence plunged in
December. Retail sales during the Christmas season were the worst
in 30 years. Particularly hard-hit were lower-priced retail stores
serving working class consumers.
The conditions of life for working people are rapidly deteriorating.
Nearly every US state is planning major cutbacks in spending on
social services, just as rising unemployment and poverty are increasing
the need. On December 28, the Bush administration cut off unemployment
benefits for 800,000 jobless workers, after congressional Republicans,
with only token opposition from the Democrats, blocked a proposed
extension.
The international position of American capitalism is under
increasing pressure. Foreign investors in American financial markets
see asset values plunging and may begin withdrawing funds, making
it impossible for the US to finance its gargantuan balance of
payments deficit, now on the order of $500 billion a year. This
in turn calls into question the stability of the US dollar, the
basis of the world financial system. The dollar fell 15.2 percent
in 2002 against the euro and 9.8 percent against the yen.
There is growing evidence that, for the first time since the
1930s, the world economy is entering a period of global deflation,
a vicious circle in which prices fall, asset values collapse,
credit dries up, production contracts, trade declines and the
profit system essentially grinds to a halt.
The foreign policies of the Bush administration are no less
driven by domestic political exigencies, rooted in the explosive
social implications of the economic impasse. The US government
is dominated by the need to distract and confuse public opinion
through a never-ending series of provocationsterrorist alerts,
military-diplomatic crises, and wars. Here again the position
of American capitalism bears comparison with that of Nazi Germany
in the 1930s, when the Hitler regime took the road of war as its
only answer to mounting social contradictions at home.
The Bush administration combines methods of international gangsterismviolence
combined with blackmail and lieswith domestic repression.
The enormous concentration of police powers in the hands of the
federal government since September 11, 2001 has nothing to do
with protecting ordinary Americans from the danger of terrorism.
It is aimed at facilitating an ever more open attack on the living
standards and previous social gains of the American working class.
It is no accident that Bush insisted that the bill establishing
his new Department of Homeland Security strip federal government
workers of their union and civil service rights. This attack is
part of a broader pattern, in which national security
and the war on terrorism are used as the pretext for
demanding ever greater sacrifices from workers and depriving them
of any legal means of defending themselves against the encroachments
of the employers. This is the significance of the administrations
decision to force United Airlines into bankruptcy, setting the
stage for corporate giants in the airline industry and beyond
to rip up contracts, impose unprecedented cuts in wages and benefits,
and intensify industrial exploitation through speedup, forced
overtime and the elimination of all health and safety standards.
The struggle against imperialism
The coming war in Iraq will involve massive economic costs.
It will exacerbate all of the internal economic problems of American
capitalism and intensify the social crisis at home. It will necessitate
deeper attacks on the working class, against both its democratic
rights and its social interests. Jobs, health care, pensions,
education, housingall will face further attacks as a result
of the war.
The American ruling elite has embarked on policies that will
inevitably end in catastrophe. The financial oligarchy, obsessed
with increasing its personal wealth, is setting into motion massive
social forces it does not comprehend. History teaches that war
is the most dangerous recourse of state policy. It inevitably
produces consequences that are unforeseen. Washingtons headlong
rush to war will fuel anti-imperialist struggles all over the
world and intensify social protest and resistance within the US.
The onslaught against an impoverished and tortured nation will
evoke revulsion both internationally and within the US itself.
There is no mass constituency in America for the type of barbarism
the US government intends to unleash.
Already a rising tide of anti-imperialist opposition is evident
in Europe and Asia. But those who seek to fight US imperialism
must harbor no illusions in Washingtons imperialist rivals.
Notwithstanding popular anti-war sentiment, and their own fears
of the consequences of war, neither the European nor Japanese
bourgeoisie are able to effectively counter the policies pursued
by Washington. Whether through bribes or threats, all will eventually
fall into line behind the hegemonic imperialist power.
The present-day preponderance of the US among the imperialist
powers is a specific expression of the basic contradictions of
world capitalism. Twice in the twentieth century, these contradictions
erupted into world war. Out of the Second World War, the United
States emerged as the dominant world power, but its sway was limited
by the existence of the Soviet Union, the Chinese Revolution and
the mass struggles that accompanied the collapse of the European
colonial empires. The collapse of the USSR in 1991 has removed
this check on American military action, opening the door to a
new explosion of imperialist violence.
While apologists for capitalism hailed the end of the Cold
War as the end of history, the new eruption of militarism
demonstrates that the post-World War II settlement did not resolve
the crisis of world capitalism. This crisis is rooted in the contradiction
between a highly developed and intensively integrated world economy
and the framework of the nation-state system within which the
profit system developed and to which it is wedded.
The essential contradiction that gave rise to wars and revolutions
in the twentieth century is building toward a new eruption. Americas
attempt to establish global domination signals the approach of
a new revolutionary crisis internationally. The ultimate outcome
will be either a descent into barbarism or mankinds advance
to socialism.
The basic social force for opposing imperialist war is the
working class. The struggle against militarism must be rooted
in the mobilization of this force on an international scale.
The challenge of the coming year is to provide the growing
movement against war with a program upon which the international
working class can be mobilized as an independent political force.
Opposition is already growing within the US to Bushs predatory
policies both abroad and at home. The media claims of Bushs
popularity with the American people are cynical and false. Bushs
supposed mass support is really a distorted and inverted reflection
of the absence of any serious opposition from the Democratic Party
or any other section of the political establishment.
Even opinion polls conducted by the media demonstrate that
public sentiment against war with Iraq has increased, despite
the collapse of any opposition from the Democratic Party. According
to one current poll, even if it is assumed that no American soldiers
are killed, a majority is opposed to a unilateral attack on Iraq.
The US working class has a profound responsibility to oppose
the predatory policies of the Bush administration. It must not
allow the American people to be implicated in war crimes perpetrated
in their name.
American workers who seek an alternative to Bushs program
of war and domestic reaction must draw the political lessons of
the collapse of liberalism and the drastic shift to the right
by the two big business parties. It is necessary to break with
the political straitjacket of the two-party system and build an
independent political movement of working people that advances
a socialist alternative to the capitalist system.
Next month will mark the fifth anniversary of the launching
of the World Socialist Web Site, the political organ of
the International Committee of the Fourth International and the
Socialist Equality Parties around the world. As we approach this
milestone, we pledge to intensify our efforts to make the WSWS
the political focal point for the development of an independent
socialist movement of the international working class against
US militarism and world imperialism.
This movement must openly and frankly oppose the capitalist
system. It must link the fight against imperialist war to a program
for the most far-reaching redistribution of wealth from the ruling
elite to the working people. This means mounting a massive assault
on entrenched wealth and privilege, including the expropriation
of the corporate and financial oligopolies and their conversion
into public enterprises, run on the basis of scientific planning
and under the democratic control of the working class.
The potential for such a movement is already demonstrated in
the growing readership of the World Socialist Web Site.
The WSWS reaches thousands of readers every day, publishes in
a dozen languages, and finds supporters and correspondents in
dozens of countries and on every continent.
We call on our readers and supporters to expand the influence
of the WSWS, distribute its commentaries and statements and contribute
their own articles. We call on them to contact the WSWS, join
our movement and participate in the building of the Socialist
Equality Party in the US and the sections of the International
Committee of the Fourth International around the world.
See Also:
US accelerates preparations for invasion
of Iraq
[4 January 2003]
WSWS holds New York
meeting on the US drive to war
[17 December 2002]
US seizes Iraqi UN
documents to further war drive
[12 December 2002]
The political economy
of American militarism in the 21st century
[1 November 2002]
The war against Iraq
and Americas drive for world domination
[4 October 2002]
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