|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
On Iraq wars fifth anniversary, Bush says US troops
must stay
By Bill Van Auken
20 March 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
President George W. Bush marked the fifth anniversary of the
US war in Iraq on Wednesday by touting the supposed successes
of the surge that sent an additional 30,000 US troops
into the occupied country, while insisting that the expanded troop
levels must be maintained to avoid chaos and carnage.
As with so many such speeches, the White House dragooned an
audience of officers and enlisted men who were compelled to stand
at attention when the president took the stage and applaud on
cue. Had Bush dared to speak before an audience of ordinary Americans
not under military discipline, he would likely have faced catcalls
and boos.
A poll released by the CNN cable news network to coincide with
the fifth anniversary showed Americans opposing the war by a two-to-one
margin, with similar majorities expressing the view that it should
have never been waged in the first place and that the next president
should withdraw US troops from the country within a few months
of taking office.
Significantly, 71 percent of those polled blamed the massive
war spending in Iraqnow estimated at over $12 billion a
monthfor the deepening crisis gripping the US economy.
Yet, with his own popular ratings remaining at near historic
lows for a US president, Bush swaggered onto the stage at the
Pentagon and proclaimed that the United States of America
will continue to fight the enemy wherever it makes a stand
and will stay on the offense.
The central policy thrust of his speech was that the escalation
he ordered in Iraq over a year agowhich saw troop levels
raised to 160,000must be continued, with at least 140,000
soldiers and Marines kept in the country indefinitely.
This is a position which faces substantial opposition within
the militarys own uniformed command, with many senior officers
warning that continuing the present deployment levels will break
the US Army. A recent poll by Foreign Policy magazine of
some 3,400 active and retired US military officers found that
88 percent believed that The war in Iraq has stretched the
US military dangerously thin.
But Bush did not direct his anniversary address to allaying
fears of his military audience. Instead, he used their uniformed
ranks as a prop for political attacks against those opposing the
war or just merely questioning the continuation of the surge.
Much of the speech involved recycling the tired and thoroughly
discredited lies that were used to justify the war at its outset.
Bush began by proclaiming that the shock and awe bombardment
of Baghdad and the subsequent land invasion were launched in March
2003 to liberate the Iraqi people and remove a regime that
threatened free nations.
He provided no details as to the nature of this supposed threat.
Those given at the timealleged stockpiles of Iraqi weapons
of mass destruction and ties between the Saddam Hussein
regime and Al Qaedahave been amply exposed as crude fabrications.
Just days before Bushs speech, the Pentagon quietly released
its findings based on an exhaustive study of some 600,000 Iraqi
government documents captured after the invasion. It concluded
that there existed no operational ties whatsoever between Baghdad
and the Islamist terrorist network, something those with any knowledge
about Iraqs Baathist regime had long known.
This did not stop Bush from using the word terrorist
at least 20 times in his 25-minute speech and inserting 15 references
to Al Qaeda.
As for the claims that the US invasion served to liberate
the Iraqi people and, even more preposterously, that it
has helped create a democracy in the heart of the Middle
East that will serve as an example for othersthe
presidents rhetoric would be merely laughable, if it were
not for the depth of the tragedy it is meant to mask.
Iraq lives under the boot of a foreign occupation that has
cost the lives of well over a million people and driven at least
four million more from their homes, either as refugees abroad
or internal exiles. The countrys economy and basic infrastructure
have been decimated. Under conditions in which more than half
of the working-age population is unemployed and 40 percent barely
survive on $1 or less a day, whatever existed in terms of social
welfare and aid to the poor before the invasion has been dismantled.
Washingtons divide-and-rule tactics have unleashed a
savage sectarian conflict that has split long-mixed communities
into hostile and segregated camps, leaving millions terrorized
and homeless. Men, women and children walking in the street are
subject to summary execution by US troops or private security
contractors without warning. At least 60,000 Iraqi civilians are
being held in detention camps and prisons run by the US military
and Iraqi puppet forces, the vast majority of them without charges,
much less trials. Torture remains rampant.
To speak of such conditions in terms of freedom,
liberation, and democracy is an obscenity.
Incredibly, Bush turned inside out his old argument for invading
Iraqthat Baghdad would supply its non-existent weapons of
mass destruction to Al Qaeda for attacks on Americain order
to defend the countrys continued occupation. Without maintaining
the current military escalation, he warned, Iraq would descend
into chaos producing an emboldened Al Qaeda
with access to Iraqs oil resources, [which] could pursue
its ambitions to acquire weapons of mass destruction to attack
America and other free nations.
This new lie is every bit as grotesque as the one used to justify
the war in the first place. The vast majority of those resisting
US forces in Iraq are not Al Qaeda, but Iraqis who refuse to accept
the foreign occupation and re-colonization of their country. Among
the tens of thousands who have been rounded up by the American
military, barely a handful have been identified as Islamist militants
from other countries. Even the Al Qaeda organization inside Iraqwhich
did not exist before the US carried out its military regime
changehas no operational ties to the organization
led by Osama bin Laden or those blamed for the September 11, 2001
attacks.
Democratic presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama gave
his own speech on the fifth anniversary of the war, choosing Fayetteville,
North Carolina, home of the Armys Fort Bragg, as the venue
for his remarks. He stressed his own commitment to the so-called
war on terror, declaring, What we need is a
pragmatic strategy that focuses on fighting our real enemies,
and once again defended his position that the US should attack
alleged terrorist targets inside Pakistan, with or without that
countrys approval.
He also used the speech to answer his rival for the Democratic
nomination, Senator Hillary Clinton, who had accused him of equivocating
on his commitment to withdraw US troops from Iraq. Obama again
pointed to Clintons 2002 vote in the Senate to authorize
the US war, while acknowledging that their positions on future
troop withdrawals are virtually identical.
In her own remarks earlier in the week, Clinton claimed she
would reduce the US troop presence in Iraq in a responsible
and careful manner. She praised the US wars impact
on the Iraqis, declaring that it had given them the precious
gift of freedom, but cynically declared that Washington
could not win their civil war.
Both Clinton and Obama have advanced platforms that call for
continued US military operations in Iraq for purposes of counter-terrorism,
protecting US facilities and interests and training Iraqi military
forces, meaning that tens of thousands of American troops would
remain in the country indefinitely.
For his part, the Republican Partys presumptive presidential
candidate, Senator John McCain, echoed Bushs praise for
the surge, declaring, America and our allies stand on the
precipice of winning a major victory against radical Islamic extremism.
Bush concluded his own remarks Wednesday with the assertion
that the war in Iraq is noble, it is necessary, and it is
just.
Millions of people all over the world and within the US itself
know that the opposite is the case. This is a criminal war of
aggression waged in pursuit of the interests of Americas
financial elite with the aim of establishing US hegemony over
one of the main oil-producing centers of the world. It has produced
a dirty colonial-style occupation that has inflicted massive suffering
on the Iraqi people. At the same time, it has become a debacle
for US strategic interests and irreparably discredited the US
government in the eyes of the bulk of humanity.
See Also:
Five years after the invasion of Iraq:
A debacle for US imperialism
[19 March 2008]
Iraq: a humanitarian crisis of catastrophic
dimensions
[19 March 2008]
Democratic Party divisions deepen as
Obama parades military support
[14 March 2008]
Iraq: Civilian casualties spike in February
[6 March 2008]
The US war and occupation
of Iraqthe murder of a society
[19 May 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |