The
buzzwords in Washington concerning Iraq these days are "regime
change," which in a sense is surprisingly honest. It means
the upcoming Gulf War II will not be about protecting Kuwait or
stemming Iraqi aggression. The pretenses have been discarded,
and now we’ve simply decided Saddam must go. We seem to have very
little idea, however, what a post-Saddam Iraq will look like.
We should expect another lesson in nation-building, with American
troops remaining in the country indefinitely while billions of
our tax dollars attempt to prop up a new government.
With this
goal of regime change in mind, the administration recently announced
plans to spend nearly $100 million training an Iraqi militia force
to help overthrow Hussein. A NATO airbase in southern Hungary
will be used for military training. The problem, however, will
be choosing individuals from at least five different factions
vying for power in Iraq, including the fundamentalist Kurds in
the north. Given the religious, ethnic, and social complexities
that make up the Middle East, do we really believe that somehow
we can choose the "good guys" who deserve to rule Iraq?
Of course
any of these groups will be happy to use American military power
to remove Hussein, and will form a short-term alliance with the
Pentagon accordingly. Their opposition to the current government,
however, should not be mistaken for support for America or its
policies. As we’ve seen so many times in the past, the groups
we support in foreign conflicts rarely remain grateful for long.
Saddam Hussein
and Osama bin Laden are perfect examples of our onetime "allies"
who accepted our help yet failed to do our bidding for long. Both
gladly welcomed American money, weapons, and military training
during the 1980s. With bin Laden we sought to frustrate the Soviet
advance into Afghanistan, and many Pentagon hawks undoubtedly
felt vindicated when the Russian army retreated. Yet twenty years
later, bin Laden is a rabid American-hating madman whose operatives
are armed with our own Stinger missiles. Similarly, we supported
the relatively moderate Hussein in the hopes of neutralizing a
radically fundamentalist Iran. Yet this military strengthening
of Iraq led to its invasion of Kuwait and our subsequent military
involvement in the gulf. Today the Hussein regime is belligerently
anti-American, and any biological or chemical weapons he possesses
were supplied by our own government.
We’ve seen
this time and time again. We support a military or political group
based on our short-term objectives, only to have them turn against
us later. Ultimately, our money, weapons, and interventionist
policies never buy us friends for long, and more often we simply
arm our future enemies. The politicians responsible for the mess
are usually long gone when the trouble starts, and voters with
a short attention span don’t connect the foreign policy blunders
of twenty years ago with today’s problems. But wouldn’t our long-term
interests be better served by not creating the problems in the
first place?
The
practical consequences of meddling in the domestic politics of
foreign nations are clearly disastrous. We should remember, however,
that it is also wrong in principle to interfere with the self-determination
rights of foreign peoples. Consider how angry Americans become
when Europeans or Mexicans merely comment on our elections, or
show a decided preference for one candidate. We rightfully feel
that our politics are simply none of the world’s business, yet
we seem blind to the anger created when we use military force
to install governments in places like Iraq. The unspoken question
is this: What gives us the right to decide who governs Iraq or
any other foreign country? Apparently our own loss of national
sovereignty, as we surrender more and more authority to organizations
like the UN and WTO, mirrors our lack of respect for the sovereignty
of foreign nations.
December
17, 2002