Obedience
Is an Option
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
The
scene is Iraq, where the state promises to crush the political opposition,
annihilate the insurgents, spy on the people, limit movement, slaughter
the disobedient, all without the need for law or courts or elections
or even the pretense of what are called political rights or liberties.
This is the maximum state unleashed, ruling by force alone with
the use of all available weaponry from the smallest arms to the
largest weapons of mass destruction, and doing it all openly and
in its own narrow interest.
Of
course, people are desperate to leave. Those who want to do so licitly
line up at the passport office, where they are kicked and beaten
and abused by functionaries of the state. Others leave under cover
and hope they don't end up at Guantanamo. Others decide to stay
and fight.
This
is not Iraq under Saddam, except in the nutty war-myths woven by
the Bush junta, but far from it: this is Iraq under the ostensible
rule of a man named Iyad Allawi, handpicked by the occupying military
power to be the front man for empire, a leader who dares not leave
his bunker or drift even a few feet from his US-paid guards, a man
who everyone knows would be shot dead in a matter of seconds should
he dare to walk the streets, a man who would receive no votes in
a real election.
| |
|
What
the US government has done to Iraq it can do to America
as well.
|
|
| |
|
What
a remarkable contrast with the month before last year's invasion,
when Saddam walked the streets amidst bustling commerce in the formerly
civilized city of Baghdad, where gun ownership was permitted and
common. You can say that he ruled by fear certainly he did and that
this is why no one dared put a bullet in his head, but this might
also be said of any government in the world that does not face unrelenting
revolutionary pressure. And one of the reasons he did not is that
the US made it easy for him to blame outsiders for all domestic
difficulties.
Today
the US and its puppets can only dream of that level of legitimacy.
The US and its collaborators can only crave the control Saddam once
had. Saddam ruled through force like all governments, but he never
attempted to do so through
force alone, but rather through a complex web of payoffs, benefits,
propaganda, protections for minorities, and every manner of carrot
and stick. The US never seemed to understand this. The US model
for Iraq was preposterously simple: the US will take the power that
Saddam once had.
The
death knell for US policy has sounded many times, but rarely as
loudly and as clearly as when the passport office opened in Baghdad,
and thousands risked all to get one. In the past, people from all
over the region wanted to come to Iraq; today those who come are
there for jihad, while the flow otherwise runs in the opposite direction.
Emigration/immigration
is the ultimate lens through which we can measure the quality of
life in a country. And today, under the guidance of the US, the
government of Iraq faces more internal pressure than Ceausescu,
Gorbachev, and Honecker did before they completely lost power. Its
rationales for maintaining power are just as vacuous and transparently
false as those given by the socialist dictators before they were
swept away by history.
Of
the daily and even hourly bombs that hit government checkpoints
and guards, for example, this puppet in Iraq says: "This is a naked
aggression against the Iraqi people," but of course he means that
these attacks are directed against the Iraqi government. That the
favorite targets of the insurgents are government officials and
police bunkers tells us something.
The
state responds because the State, in Iraq and everywhere else, is
primarily interested in its own protection and its own security.
This tendency, or rather universal law, becomes the source of dreadful
tyranny when the State is primarily disposed to protecting itself
from the people it purports to rule. Then it no longer matters what
the sign says outside the Gulag. It can even say "Democracy," as
when Allawi says: "We are determined to bring down all the hurdles
that stand in the way of our democracy."
"Our
Democracy!" It's quite a statement coming from a man who enjoys
power only because a conquering army gave it to him, and who "rules"
behind the most heavily armed and fortified bunker on the planet:
Iraq's Green Zone, which houses the US and British embassy plus
the Iraq government. Meanwhile, Allawi is renowned today only for
personally killing, with a bullet in head, six blindfolded prisoners
(and for being on various foreign payrolls). Truly, any Iraqi who
cheered the US invasion, or imagined that the US might actually
rid the country of a government that ruled despotically, must rue
the day. And any Iraqi who believed all the nonsense about "sovereignty"
must feel himself a fool.
Incredibly,
it still seems that the US is blind to why the Iraqis resist. All
the guns in the world cannot keep a people from overthrowing a government
if enough are willing to pay the price. The US has forced this choice
upon the Iraqi people: obey or dare to destroy the machinery of
the state.
US
citizens are busy trying to convince themselves that the scenes
from Iraq have nothing to do with them. Those crazy Arabs can't
govern themselves, people might think, so it's a good thing that
the US is there. As for torture, death, and suffering, well, perhaps
it's all worth it if it keeps the ragheads in their place. This
is not an entirely unusual attitude in the US, I fear.
But
Americans need to know: what the US government has done to Iraq
it can do to America. Under the right conditions, nothing can prevent
the militarized feds from behaving toward you and yours exactly
as it has behaved toward them and theirs.
July
17, 2004
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
Lew
Rockwell Archives
|