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WSWS : ICFI
WSWS International Editorial Board meeting
The consequences of the US-led war against Iraq
By James Cogan
3 March 2006
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Published below is a report by James Cogan to an expanded
meeting of the World Socialist Web Site International Editorial
Board (IEB) held in Sydney from January 22 to 27, 2006. Cogan
is a member of the Socialist Equality Party (Australia) central
committee. WSWS IEB chairman David Norths report
was posted on 27 February. SEP (Australia) national secretary
Nick Beams report was posted in three parts:
Part one on February 28, Part two
on March 1 and Part three on March
2.
In speaking on the political situation in Iraq, I propose to
expand on the theme outlined by David North in his opening remarks:
examiningand responding tothe prognosis that is advanced
by the defenders of the existing economic and social order, and
by the Bush administration in particular.
In March 2003, the official prognosis concerning Iraqor,
more accurately, the official propagandawent broadly as
follows:
The US-led invasion was a necessary and justified intervention
to remove a brutal dictator whose regime threatened world peace
and stability by its efforts to acquire weapons of mass destruction
and its support for international terrorism.
Further, the trauma and cost of the US military occupation
would be justified, because it would lay the basis for the emergence
of the first genuine democracy in the Middle East, with unprecedented
constitutional protection of democratic rights. Iraq, the defenders
of the Bush administration claimed, would be a beacon of hope
for the region. Regimes throughout the Middle East would be compelled
to implement similar sweeping democratic reforms.
According to this schema, within several decades the Middle
East would be transformed. The region would have shaken off Islamic
fundamentalism and economic backwardness, and fully embraced the
free market that prevails in the so-called western democracies.
Iraq would be fully recovered from the war and US troops would
have staged a full withdrawalundoubtedly showered with flowers
by the grateful Iraqi people.
I think that is a relatively accurate summary of the statements
made at the time by the Bush administration, US thinktanks, the
Blair government in Britain, the Howard government in Australia,
and the pro-war media, in their efforts to defend the 2003 invasion.
It is now well established that the entire campaign of demonising
the Hussein regime over WMDs and terrorism consisted of crude
lies and distortions.
The official propaganda, however, did contain one element of
the truth. The Iraq war was, indeed, part of a broader agenda
by US imperialism and its allies to transform the political conditions
that prevailed in the Middle East in the decades following World
War II.
The real perspective is not the creation of flourishing democracies,
but pliant client states that bow to US domination of their territory,
labour and, above all, resources.
It is indisputable that one of the primary war aims of US imperialism
was the predatory seizure of the worlds second-largest oil
reserves.
More broadly, the perspective of Cheney, Rumsfeld and the other
principal authors of the illegal invasion of Iraq was that the
overwhelming military supremacy of the US could be used to intimidate
governments and peoples around the globe and subordinate them
to the interests of the American ruling elite.
The view in Washington was that shock and awe tacticsa
method termed blitzkrieg by the Nazi regimewould
shatter all Iraqi resistance. The rapid military devastation of
what the Pentagon knew was an effectively defenseless country
would send a signal to all potential rivals, such as the European
powers and China, of the consequences of challenging US hegemony.
Results of the US-led invasion
Looking back on the first months of the occupation, it is clear
that the invading force, far from seeking to create the foundations
for democracy, consciously sought to bring about the complete
collapse of the Iraqi state and Iraqi civil society.
Developments that substantiate this assessment include:
1) The massacres that accompanied the entry of US troops in
Baghdad. Based on the casualty figures reported at the time, more
Iraqis died during the 64th Armoured Regiments rampage into
the Iraqi capital on April 5, 2003 than were killed during the
brutal 10-day US assault on the city of Fallujah in November 2004.
2) The incitement by US forces of wholesale looting, arson,
murder and general anarchy in Baghdad and other cities, which
claimed hundreds of lives and caused incalculable damage to Iraqs
cultural and historical heritage.
3) The decision to disband the Iraqi armed forcesthe
only really national institution in the countrywhich threw
hundreds of thousands of people out of work.
4) The terror unleashed against the Iraqi people during 2003,
including searches, night raids, mass detentions and the criminal
torture at prisons such as Abu Ghraib, all of which were designed
to humiliate and break the will of the population.
The consequences for the Iraqi masses of the US invasion have
been truly horrifying. There were an estimated 100,000 extra deaths
in the country between March 2003 and September 2004, according
to a study published in the Lancet medical journal. Unknown
thousands have been maimed. Unemployment has hovered between 35
to 50 percent, while every aspect of infrastructure required for
civilised existence is dysfunctionalelectricity generation,
sewerage, health care and the education system.
The wars architects planned that this devastation would
produce a cowed and terrorised population, which would submit
to long-term US rule.
In March 2003, the World Socialist Web Site made its
own prognosis about the consequences of the US-led invasion of
Iraq.
Firstly, we stressed that it was the outcome of the breakdown
of the postwar stability of world capitalism and the increasing
desperation of the American ruling elite in the face of mounting
strategic and economic challenges from an array of rivals.
The statement published by the WSWS at the very beginning of
the war, authored by David North and entitled The
crisis of American capitalism and the war against Iraq,
highlighted the centrality of oil in world economy and the growing
international tensions over access to supplies.
North drew attention to the constituency that existed within
the United States for a program of predatory militarisma
corrupt social element whose wealth was based on the impoverishment
of both the American working class and what he described as the
horrifying destitution of Latin America, Africa, Asia and
the former USSR.
The statement made the following point:
It is impossible to avoid the conclusion that the extremely
militaristic evolution of American foreign policy is, to a significant
extent, an attempt by the ruling elite to deal with the dangers
posed by the ever-increasing levels of social tension within the
United States. Militarism serves two critical functions: first,
conquest and plunder can provide, at least in the short term,
additional resources that can ameliorate economic problems; second,
war provides a means for directing internal social pressures outward.
North went on to conclude that, whatever the outcome of the
initial stages of the conflict, American imperialism had placed
itself on a rendezvous with disaster. He emphasised that US capitalism
would not through the medium of war find a viable solution
to its internal maladies.
The cultivation of sectarian divisions
As the third anniversary of the invasion approaches, the prognosis
of the WSWS stands up extraordinarily well, while nothing in Iraq
has unfolded according to the schemas of the Bush administration.
The brutality of the US military in the initial stages of the
occupation created such hatred and opposition that a resistance
movement quickly developed, and has been able to sustain itself
ever since. This is particularly the case in the predominantly
Sunni Arab areas of the country, which bore the brunt of the shock
and awe tactics.
Within 12 months of the invasion, the US military had largely
lost control over large swathes of the Sunni Trianglethe
central and western provinces of Iraq. By April 2004, the occupation
was also confronted with an uprising of the predominantly Shiite
urban poor in Baghdad and a number of southern cities. The trigger
for the Shiite rebellion was two-fold: the catastrophic social
conditions facing the overwhelming majority and the attempted
US crackdown on the religious and political movement headed by
cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.
The manner in which the US occupation sought to regain control
had major political consequences that, to a considerable extent,
have shaped the situation that exists today.
The interim government of Iyad Allawi, an émigré
who had plotted with the US to invade Iraq since the 1991 Gulf
War, did not have sufficient influence to bring the Shiite uprising
to an end. US officials in Iraq therefore made a discernable shift.
They began relying ever more openly on representatives of the
Shiite clerical establishment, who were collaborating with the
US invasion on the basis that it could help elevate them into
positions of political power.
The leading Shiite cleric Ali al-Sistani and the Iranian-linked
Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) used
their influence to restrain the bulk of the Shiite population
from backing the Sadrist uprising. Sadr himself was convinced
to agree to a ceasefire in September 2004, in exchange for the
occupation forces allowing his movement to conduct open political
activity over the following months.
With the Sadrist rebellion contained, the US military was able
to focus on brutal operations against the Sunni insurgency. In
November 2004, American marines laid waste to the city of Fallujah,
committing blatant war crimes and slaughtering hundreds of people.
The savage assault deepened the alienation among the Sunni
Arab population. Sunni clerics and political parties retaliated
by calling for a boycott of the January 30, 2005 elections. Less
than 10 percent of Sunnis voted for the so-called transitional
government, which was tasked with drafting a new constitution.
The outcome was the formation of a regime controlled by parties
explicitly based on the sectarian interests of the Shiite elite
in the south of Iraq and the Kurdish elite in the north, with
next to no Sunni representation.
The transitional government formed by the Shiite and Kurdish-based
parties in May 2005 proceeded, with US backing, to marginalise
the Sunni establishment that had dominated power and privilege
since Iraqs creation as a nation-state.
The constitution was drafted in consultation with the US ambassador
in Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad. It established the mechanisms for the
de-facto partition of Iraq into three regions: a Kurdish north,
exerting sway over the revenues of the northern oil fields; a
Shiite-dominated south, controlling the revenues of the major
southern oil fields; and a deprived Sunni central region, with
little in the way of natural resources.
In this way, the conditions were consciously created, under
the auspices of US imperialism, for sectarian divisions to dominate
Iraqi politics and society. This state of affairs has intensified
the incidence of violence across the country and created an array
of new problems for the occupation forces.
In the Sunni areas, the guerilla war being conducted against
the US military and the Iraqi government has escalated over the
past yearwith the number of attacks per day increasing from
77 in November 2004, to 90 in November 2005.
The fighting has the character of a civil war. Most of the
Iraqi Army is Shiite, while the Interior Ministry intelligence
agency and police commandosa paramilitary force of over
10,000are effectively controlled by SCIRI. One estimate
is that 95 percent of the police in the Sadr City area of Baghdada
working class and largely Shiite suburb with a population of some
two millionare members or loyalists of the Sadrist movement
of Moqtada al-Sadr.
Death squads, secret prisons and torture are being used by
the Shiite fundamentalists to wipe out their Sunni rivals and
intimidate the broader population into accepting their domination.
Hundreds of Sunnis have been dragged from their homes and murdered
in Baghdad and other cities.
In the Kurdish north, there are continual calls for formal
separation from Iraq. The northern units of the Iraqi Army are,
in reality, Kurdish peshmerga militiamen, whose loyalties
are with the Kurdish Regional Government and who are ardent supporters
of a separate Kurdish state. Any move toward Kurdish independence
would have tremendous implications, as it would call into question
the borders of Turkey, Syria and Iran, all of which have a substantial
Kurdish minority.
Thus, what exists in Iraq is not the subdued and pliant client
state envisaged by the wars planners in 2003. Rather, Washington
confronts an extremely volatile and unstable situation.
A political and military quagmire
The results of the December 15, 2005 election have only aggravated
this state of affairs.
The Bush administrations preferred outcome was large
votes for figures such as Allawi at the expense of the Shiite
fundamentalists. It directed considerable resources into Allawis
campaign, promoting him as a secular strongman who could unite
the country. Instead, the Shiite parties once again emerged as
the major faction in the parliament, with Allawi winning only
a small number of seats.
This is not what Washington wanted. It considers Sadr unreliable,
while SCIRIs links with the Iranian regime have always been
viewed with suspicion.
An article appeared in the Los Angeles Times on January
21 which referred to unnamed US officials making clear that the
Bush administration was not prepared to accept the Shiite parties
taking control of the Iraqi government.
The article began: Disappointed by the election performance
of Iraqi moderate parties, US officials have established a more
modest goal as Iraqi leaders divide power in the new government.
The more modest goal was preventing religious
parties from gaining a stronghold on the army and police.
US officials are now working to have SCIRI stripped of its control
over the Interior Ministry. A US official told the Los Angeles
Times, referring to the Shiite parties: We want them
to end up unhappy, but not so unhappy that they will go out and
start breaking things up. That makes it a very tough thing to
do.
This is taking place within the context of escalating tensions
between the Bush administration and the Iranian regime, with which,
as I have already noted, elements of the Shiite fundamentalists
are closely linked.
The possibility cannot be excluded of an open clash between
the Shiite groups and the US military. This could be provoked
by either a US conflict with Iran or in response to US efforts
to deprive the Shiite parties of control over the government.
There is already rising anger among the Shiite masses toward
the US occupation, due to cutbacks in fuel subsidies dictated
by the International Monetary Funds economic restructuring
program. Petrol prices have been raised by nearly 300 percent
this month and food rations reduced.
While tensions increase in the Shiite areas, there is no letup
in the fighting against the US military in the Sunni areas. A
recent Washington Post article dealt, for example, with
the situation in Baijithe site of Iraqs largest northern
oil refineryand the experiences of a group of soldiers from
a platoon of the 101st Airborne Division.
It noted: In the first month after the US Armys
101st Airborne Division took over security in the vicinity in
late fall, roadside bombs killed or wounded more than a quarter
of the 34-man platoon. One of the soldiers told the Post:
It is definitely more dangerous this time around. I didnt
expect to lose so many of my friends so soon.
The article also provided a sense of the destructive psychological
impact of the war on American troops. One soldier, when asked
how he felt after a roadside bomb killed members of his unit,
told the Post: I felt so angry and violated. We all
wanted to go and tear up the city. Kick down the doors, shoot
the civilians and blow up the mosque.
The combination of a political and a military quagmire has
given rise to increasing recriminations within US ruling circles
over the conduct of the war. While there is no opposition to the
basic war aimthe maintenance of US global hegemonythere
is concern that the invasion of Iraq has created more problems
rather than ameliorating existing ones.
In 2002, Deputy-Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz arrogantly
predicted that just 60,000 US troops would be needed in Iraq within
months of an invasion. At the end of 2005, there were 160,000
American troops there, as well as more than 20,000 private contractors
and thousands of troops from Britain and other countries.
The death toll of American soldiers stands at over 2,200, with
another 16,500 wounded-in-action. A similar number has suffered
non-combat injuries or contracted illnesses in Iraq. War expenditure
is soaring.
Far from the war diverting social tensions within the US, it
has become something of a rallying point for domestic opposition
to the Bush administration. Iraq has radicalised a significant
layer of the American people, with the movement that developed
around Cindy Sheehan being just one example.
Public opposition to the war has also produced a recruitment
crisis for the military, with the army last year falling 6,600
short of its enlistment target. As a measure of this crisis, troops
are being offered as much as $40,000 to re-enlist.
Henry Kissinger, former secretary of state for the Nixon administration,
spelt out some of the concerns in American ruling circles over
the growth of antiwar sentiment in a comment published on December
18, 2005 in the Washington Post.
Headlined How to Exit Iraq, Kissinger opposed any
withdrawal of US troops to placate public opinion
and stressed that what was at stake in Iraq was the global position
of American capitalism.
He wrote: Whatever ones view of the decision to
undertake the Iraq war, the method by which it was entered, or
the strategy by which it was conductedand I supported the
original decisionone must be clear about the consequences
of failure. If, when we go, we leave nothing behind but a failed
state and chaos, the consequences will be disastrous for the region
and for Americas position in the world....
Further on, he continued: Defeat would shrivel US credibility
around the world. Our leadership and the respect accorded to our
views on other regional issues from Palestine to Iran would be
weakened; the confidence of other major countriesChina,
Russia, Europe, Japanin Americas potential contribution
would be diminished. The respite from military efforts would be
brief before even greater crises descended on us.
Spelling out the logic of his arguments, Kissinger concluded:
Americans must accept the reality that their country can
never make a total political withdrawal [from Iraq], though the
size and location of the military presence will vary....
Kissingers comments serve to underscore the fact that
the most fundamental interests of US imperialism are involved.
That is why, in response to the deepening quagmire, there will
inevitably be ever-greater violence perpetrated against the Iraqi
people and ever-greater attacks on the democratic rights of the
American people.
For all those opposed to this criminal war, the essential question
is the development of a socialist perspective. Only such a perspective
can provide the basis for a unified struggle against the war by
the working people of the United States, of Iraq and the Middle
East, and throughout the world.
And we must be clear: the aim of those heading the armed resistance
in Iraq is not liberation. Its leaders are predominantly representatives
of the Sunni Arab elite who are seeking to use the guerilla war
to pressure Washington to make a deal with them. In exchange for
official positions and prestige in a US puppet state, they would
be more than prepared to collaborate with the American military
against their Iraqi rivals and, above all, against the Iraqi people.
The interests of the Iraqi working classof all ethnic
and religious backgroundsare being subordinated to various
bourgeois cliques that have demonstrated, throughout the twentieth
century, their venality and their incapacity to conduct any genuine
struggle against imperialism.
Over the coming year, the World Socialist Web Site must
work to develop its influence among opponents of the war, and
seek to develop a discussion with those intellectuals and workers
in Iraq and the Middle East as a whole who are following our analysis
of the US occupation and who want to take forward a genuine struggle
against neo-colonialism.
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