The Final Say
by
Eric Margolis
by Eric Margolis
U.S. President
George Bush again reassured Americans last week they were winning
the war in Iraq.
Please, Mr.
President, no more "mission accomplished," no more victories.
Your debacle in Iraq recalls King Phyrrus' famous lament, "One
more such victory and we are ruined."
The Bush administration
invaded Iraq for two key reasons: 1) To seize Iraq's vast oil reserves
and turn Iraq into a base to dominate the Mideast; 2) To destroy
one of Israel's two main enemies (Iran being the other).
Three years
later, the first goal remains elusive while the second was achieved.
Large parts of Iraq once the Arab world's most developed nation
are in ruins, anarchy, or approaching civil war.
Operation
Swarmer
U.S. forces
in Iraq struggle just to defend their bases and vulnerable supply
lines. Their fruitless, Vietnam-style search-and-destroy missions,
like this week's Operation Swarmer, are a sure sign of strategic
failure and senior officers too stupid or arrogant to draw obvious
lessons from recent guerilla wars.
More than 2,300
American soldiers have died; 16,300 wounded. Some 30,000 Iraqi civilians
have died. The U.S. holds 15,000 to 18,000 Iraqi prisoners more
than did Saddam Hussein.
The stalemated
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan cost Washington a staggering $9.8 billion
(all figures US) monthly as the U.S. Treasury borrows billions from
China and Japan just to keep the government running. That figure
excludes hundreds of millions in secret CIA bribes to rent co-operation
from tribal chiefs and politicians, or hire mercenaries called "contractors."
What was to
have been a jolly little war to "liberate" Iraq's oil
has cost over $500 billion so far. That's $50 billion more than
the Vietnam War's total cost in 2006 dollars. Clearly, the U.S.
armed forces are too expensive to send to a war lasting longer than
a few months.
While a debacle
for the U.S. and Iraq, the war has greatly benefited Iran and Israel.
Iran's influence in Iraq grows daily. The recent remarkable public
agreement by Washington to open talks over Iraq with Great Satan
Iran shows even the Bush people see the writing on the wall in Babylon.
Besides, occupying Iraq has left the U.S. too weak to invade Iran.
After getting
Saddam to invade Iran in 1980, and funding the ensuing eight-year
Iran-Iraq war, the U.S. now watches helplessly as Iran slowly ingests
large portions of Iraq. The U.S. invasion of Iraq handed power to
pro-Iranian Shia religious parties. Shia spiritual leader Ali al
Sistani warned followers they would go straight to hell and lose
their wives if they did not vote for Shia religious candidates.
Some democracy.
Israel has
been the second beneficiary of the Iraq war. The long-term strategic
goal of Israel's rightists shattering unstable Arab states
to leave Israel dominant in the region has been half attained
by Iraq's fragmentation into three parts. Syria is destabilized
and faces possible civil war. Any future challenge by Iraq to Israel's
Mideast nuclear monopoly has vanished.
Meanwhile,
Israel has been able to cut defence spending, intensify pressure
on the Palestinians, and is quietly extending its influence into
the semi-independent, oil-rich Kurdish region of northern Iraq.
$10B a month
Ironically,
the third major beneficiary of Bush's war has been his nemesis,
Osama bin Laden. The only way to drive U.S. influence out of the
Muslim world, bin Laden has long maintained, is to tie it down in
a series of small wars that bleed it financially. The nearly $10-billion-a-month
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are doing just that. Iraq, as even
Bush admits, has become an incubator, magnet, and call to arms for
anti-American jihadists across the Muslim world.
Worse,
the United States has lost its honour in this brutal little neo-colonial
war. The neoconservatives' ambition to plunder Iraq's oil has become
a mirage, and the Bush-Cheney diumverate presidency is quickly sinking
into the quick-sands of Iraq.
March
28, 2006
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail], contributing foreign editor for Sun National Media
Canada, is the author of War
at the Top of the World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2006 Eric Margolis
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