Phase
Two of Bush’s War Plan Rumbles Ahead as World Leaders Ignore Anti-War
Outcry
by
Mark Weisbrot
WASHINGTON,
D.C. – UN Secretary General Kofi Annan’s pleading with the United
States to "be patient," and give inspectors a chance do
their work in Iraq before going to war is the latest sign of the
growing gulf between Washington and the rest of the world on this
issue.
Having
succeeded in the first phase of their war plan – using Iraq to win
both houses of Congress by displacing other issues in the election
– the Bush Administration’s strategists are marching forward with
phase two: making war inevitable.
The
UN Security Council’s unanimous 15-0 vote on a resolution authorizing
new weapons inspections was widely seen here as a big victory for
President Bush, but that was mostly because of bad reporting by
the media.
In
truth, the administration got a unanimous vote by compromising on
a key issue: France and Russia, as well as other governments, wanted
an agreement that no military action against Iraq would be authorized
without a second debate and vote in the Security Council.
The
resolution that passed is ambiguous, but it is clear that Washington
assured the others that this resolution did not authorize military
action if the inspections failed.
According
to Newsweek, both Powell and Bush assured France "that
Washington would allow a genuine Security Council debate in the
event that chief U.N. inspector Hans Blix reports Iraqi defiance
or deceit."
The
Russians got the same impression: "In the accepted resolution
it is clearly stated that, in the event of problems, the members
of the security council will gather to look at the situation as
it stands and decide on further action," said Russian deputy
foreign minister Yuri Fedotov.
But
the problem is not just that President Bush could ignore the UN
Security Council and go to war without their approval. A more likely
scenario is that the Security Council will cave to U.S. pressure
in the weeks and months ahead. Americans who have framed their opposition
to the war as against "unilateral action" by the United
States could very well regret that stance.
The
reality is that the Security Council is composed of 15 countries,
with five having a permanent seat and a veto – and not the entire
United Nations. And sadly, most of these 14 governments do not represent
their people any more than the Bush Administration represents Americans.
In
Britain, opposition to the war has run as high as 71 percent, and
38 percent of those polled agreed with the statement that Prime
Minister Tony Blair is "George W. Bush’s poodle." But
Mr. Blair will continue to bark, sit up, and beg at Washington’s
command. And we cannot realistically count on any of the others
to stand up to the world’s only super-power when push comes to shove.
Dick
Cheney has a vision of the future, a decades-long crusade in which
"terrorism" replaces communism as the pretext for using
force and violence to impose Washington’s will on the rest of the
world.
Having
failed to show any link between Iraq and terrorism, the Bush Administration
now prepares for a war that can be expected to kill tens of thousands
of people – mostly civilians, including children and the elderly.
If
the war leaves no stable government in its wake – as in Afghanistan
it can
simply move on to the next confrontation, perhaps with North Korea.
If
the war provokes terrorist attacks against Americans, as it probably
will, this is an added bonus for the Bush Administration, as it
will be used to justify further military spending and adventures.
These
people have nothing to offer the American public – there is a limited
political base for repealing taxes on the rich – and seem to have
concluded that war and security issues offer their best hope to
stay in power through the next election cycle.
Their
main opposition at present comes from the millions of people who
have demonstrated against the war – in such disparate cities as
Florence, Rome, London, Washington, Toronto, Tokyo, San Francisco
and San Juan.
Most
of the world is against this war, and sees through the various pretexts
offered by the Bush administration. But their leaders have failed
them. For now, democracy – such as it exists – is truly in the streets.
November
18, 2002
Mark
Weisbrot [send him mail]
is co-director of the Center for Economic
and Policy Research, a nonpartisan think-tank in the nation’s
capital.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
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