US Financial Collapse Will End Bush/Cheney Iraq War
And it won't be 'a time of our choosing'
by
Mike Whitney
by Mike Whitney
DIGG THIS
"Come
and see our overflowing morgues and find our little ones for us...
You may
find them in this corner or the other, a little hand poking out,
pointing out at you...
Come
and search for them in the rubble of your "surgical"
air raids, you may find a little leg or a little head...pleading
for your attention.
Come
and see them amassed in the garbage dumps, scavenging morsels
of food...
Come
and see, come..."
~
"Flying Kites," Layla Anwar
The US Military
has won every battle it has fought in Iraq, but it has lost the
war. Wars are won politically, not militarily. Bush doesn't understand
this. He still clings to the belief that a political settlement
can be imposed through force. But he is mistaken. The use of overwhelming
force has only spread the violence and added to the political instability.
Now Iraq is ungovernable. Was that the objective? Miles of concrete
blast-walls snake through Baghdad to separate the warring parties;
the country is fragmented into a hundred smaller pieces each ruled
by local militia commanders. These are the signs of failure not
success. That's why the American people no longer support the occupation.
They're just being practical; they know Bush's plan won't work.
As Nir Rosen says, "Iraq has become Somalia."
The administration
still supports Iraqi President Nouri al Maliki, but al-Maliki is
a meaningless figurehead who will have no effect on the country's
future. He has no popular base of support and controls nothing beyond
the walls of the Green Zone. The al-Maliki government is merely
an Arab façade designed to convince the American people that political
progress is being made, but there is no progress. It's a sham. The
future is in the hands of the men with guns; they're the ones who
have divided Iraq into locally-controlled fiefdoms and they are
the one's who will ultimately decide who will rule the state. At
present, the fighting between the factions is being described as
"sectarian warfare," but the term is intentionally misleading.
The fighting is political in nature; the various militias are competing
with each other to see who will fill the vacuum left by the removal
of Saddam. It's a power struggle. The media likes to portray the
conflict as a clash between half-crazed Arabs "dead-enders
and terrorists" who relish the idea killing their countrymen,
but that's just a way of demonizing the enemy. In truth, the violence
is entirely rational; it is the inevitable reaction to the dissolution
of the state and the occupation by foreign troops. Many military
experts predicted that there would be outbreaks of fighting after
the initial invasion, but their warnings were shrugged off by clueless
politicians and the cheerleading media. Now the violence has flared
up again in Basra and Baghdad, and there is no end in sight. Only
one thing seems certain, Iraq's future will not be decided at the
ballot box. Bush has made sure of that.
The US military
does not rule Iraq nor does it have the power to control events
on the ground. It's just one of many militias vying for power in
a state that is ruled by warlords. After the army conducts combat
operations, it is forced to retreat to its camps and bases. This
point needs to be emphasized in order to understand that there is
no real future for the occupation. The US simply does not have the
manpower to hold territory or to establish security. In fact, the
presence of American troops incites violence because they are seen
as forces of occupation, not liberators. Survey's show that the
vast majority of the Iraqi people want US troops to leave. The military
has destroyed too much of the country and slaughtered too many people
to expect that these attitudes will change anytime soon. Iraqi poet
and blogger Layla Anwar sums up the feelings of many of the war's
victims in a recent post on her web site "An
Arab Woman's Blues":
"At
the gates of Babylon the Great, you are still struggling, fighting
away, chasing this or the other, detaining, bombing from above,
filling up morgues, hospitals, graveyards and embassies and borders
with queues for exit-visas.
Not one
Iraqi wishes your presence. Not one Iraqi accepts your occupation.
Got news
for you SOBs, you will never control Iraq, not in six years, not
in ten years, not in 20 years....You have brought upon yourself
the hate and the curse of all Iraqis, Arabs and the rest of the
world...now face your agony." (Layla Anwar; "An Arab
Woman's Blues: Reflections in a sealed bottle")
Is Bush hoping
to change the mind of Layla or the millions of other Iraqis who
have lost loved ones or been forced into exile or seen their country
and culture crushed beneath the boot heel of foreign occupation?
The hearts and minds campaign is lost. The US will never be welcome
in Iraq.
According
to a survey in the British Medical Journal Lancet more than
a million Iraqis have been killed in the war. Another four million
have been either internally displaced or have fled the country.
But the figures tell us nothing about the magnitude of the disaster
that Bush has caused by attacking Iraq. The invasion is the greatest
human catastrophe in the Middle East since the Nakba in 1948. Living
standards have declined precipitously in every area infant
mortality, clean water, food, security, medical supplies, education,
electrical power, employment etc. Even oil production is still below
pre-war levels. The invasion is the most comprehensive policy failure
since Vietnam; everything has gone wrong. The heart of the Arab
world has descended into chaos. The suffering is incalculable.
The main problem
is the occupation; it is the primary catalyst for violence and an
obstacle to political settlement. As long as the occupation persists,
so will the fighting. The claims that the so-called surge has changed
the political landscape are greatly exaggerated. Retired Lt. General
William Odom commented on this point in an interview on the Jim
Lehrer News Hour:
"The
surge has sustained military instability and achieved nothing
in political consolidation.... Things are much worse now. And
I don't see them getting any better. This was foreseeable a year
and a half ago. And to continue to put the cozy veneer of comfortable
half-truths on this is to deceive the American public and to make
them think it is not the charade it is.... When you say that the
Lebanization of Iraq is taking place, yes, but not because of
Iran, but because the U.S. went in and made this kind of fragmentation
possible. And it has occurred over the last five years.... The
al-Maliki government is worse off now... The notion that there's
some kind of progress is absurd. The al-Maliki government uses
its Ministry of Interior like a death squad militia. So to call
Sadr an extremist and Maliki a good guy just overlooks the reality
that there are no good guys." (Jim Lehrer News Hour)
The war in
Iraq was lost before the first shot was fired. The conflict never
had the support of the American people and Iraq never posed a threat
to US national security. The whole pretext for the war was based
on lies; it was a coup orchestrated by elites and the media to carry
out a far-right agenda. Now the mission has failed, but no one wants
to admit their mistakes by withdrawing; so the butchery continues
without pause.
How Will
It End?
The Bush administration
has decided to pursue a strategy that is unprecedented in US history.
It has decided to continue to prosecute a war that has already been
lost morally, strategically, and militarily. But fighting a losing
war has its costs. America is much weaker now than it was when Bush
first took office in 2000; politically, economically and militarily.
US power and prestige around the world will continue to deteriorate
until the troops are withdrawn from Iraq. But that's unlikely to
happen until all other options have been exhausted. Deteriorating
economic conditions in the financial markets are putting enormous
downward pressure on the dollar. The corporate bond and equities
markets are in disarray; the banking system is collapsing, consumer
spending is down, tax revenues are falling, and the country is headed
into a painful and protracted recession. The US will leave Iraq
sooner than many pundits believe, but it will not be at a time of
our choosing. Rather, the conflict will end when the United States
no longer has the capacity to wage war. That time is not far off.
The Iraq War
signals the end of US interventionism for at least a generation;
maybe longer. The ideological foundation for the war (preemption/regime
change) has been exposed as a baseless justification for unprovoked
aggression. Someone will have to be held accountable. There will
have to be international tribunals to determine who is responsible
in the deaths of over one million Iraqis.
April
16, 2008
Mike Whitney
[send him mail] lives
in Washington state.
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