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Deep Blade Archive
Cutting through the machinations and
effects of the U.S. empire
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Issue #1
Posted 02/11/203 and revised 03/12/2003
Archive of 2003 War Resources
Archive of 1991 Gulf War Articles
911 Archive
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Attack Iraq?
Why no—The
not-often-discussed basics
Here are my top five reasons why this war
is wrong and must be stopped:
1. Slaughter.
War will mean death and destruction for hundreds of thousands
of innocents, an outrageous number of poorly-armed Iraqi
forces, and some
2. This U.S. attack on Iraq will be a war
of aggression, with or without U.N. approval. There is no
chance the Iraqi regime is now a threat to anyone outside its
borders. Iraq is a severely weakened country with military
power and weaponry far inferior to the American forces
surrounding it. It is many times weaker than it was when it
invaded Kuwait in 1990 after its population has been assaulted
by more than a decade of brutally drawn economic sanctions. The
super-hyped dangers of hidden Iraqi weapons promulgated by U.S.
President George W. Bush, Secretary of State Colin Powell, and
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld are easy to sell to a
fairly large portion American public because of lingering fear
from the 9/11 attacks. But almost no one outside of heavily
propagandized America has any unusual alarm about weapons
Saddam Hussein may or may not have. Powell, Perle, Wolfowitz,
Rumsfeld, Rice and Cheney themselves seem not really concerned
about Iraqi weapons. If the weapons were of genuine concern to
these administration figures, they would not have participated
in allowing Hussein to get weapons during the 1980s (see chronology). Nor would they now have such confidence in a
quick prosecution of a war.
What these U.S. officials rarely say in
public but do really want is an opportunistic taking of the
country in order to realign the region for American and Israeli
advantage, insure basing and fuel supplies far into the future
for the military itself, and to consolidate and increase U.S.
power in the management the region’s energy riches and
political landscape (see Why War? The role of oil).
No reasonable argument for self defense
against an Iraqi attack on the U.S. exists because there is no
such attack. America will create for itself a source of great
shame if we ignore the fundamental precepts of international
law by failing to recognize that we have no moral and legal
right to invade and occupy another sovereign country. Americans
recognize this and that accounts for enhanced anti-war
sentiment in polls when they are asked if they would support a
war without U.N. approval. But the U.N. cannot legalize the
war. It still will be wrong, even if the U.S. can bribe and
twist arms in order to force a war resolution through the
Security Council.
“It is clear that launching a war
of aggression is a crime that no political or economic
situation can justify,” according U.S. Supreme Court
Justice and Nuremberg prosecutor Robert Jackson. Nazis
convicted at Nuremberg were hung in part for planning,
initiating and waging wars of aggression.
3. U.S. taking
of Iraq will increase, not lessen, the chance of terrorism
against Americans. Even Colin
Powell admits that this war would elevate the threat, though he
says the period of danger would be brief. I disagree. Bush is
in the process of whipping up such strong anti-American
sentiment throughout the world that pathetically weak Iraq is
near the back of the line of potential attackers who will
remain angry for a long, long time. In the run-up to the
attack, the terrorism threat is being played like an accordion
with the flood of alerts and news of bin Laden tapes and
al-Qa'ida connections to Hussein. Listen to the din carefully
and you will hear the dissonance: Powell tells the U.N about
al-Qa'ida in Iraq, but there are disclaimers on the terror
alerts that want to direct us away from thinking there is a
link to the coming war. In reality, there is no proof of direct
connection between al-Qa'ida and Iraq. Colin Powell’s
exposition on the subject is highly suspect (see below and Robert Fisk,
“You Wanted to Believe Him”). Still, the deep reasons for going to war do include a
below-board strategy for throttling Saudi-based
anti-Americanism. Cheney has spoken in public about the
“regional advantages” in combating terrorism from a
war on Iraq. He means that taking Iraq will demonstrate to the
Saudis that they have less oil leverage and that they better
pacify their more out-of-control elements. Unfortunately, the
anger generated by this approach will leave America the target
of terror for years to come.
4. U.S. taking
of Iraq does not appear to be the end of the imperial designs
of U.S. planners. An extended, dangerous period of escalation
of application of U.S. power in an attempt to hold and control
its expanding spoils of war can be expected. Despite their arrogance and hubris, Bush and
his team should not have much confidence that the chaos of
the post-invasion period can be kept benign.There is great
uncertainty about the controllability of forces that could be
unleashed as America commits to new global management
requirements far beyond its present substantial deployments.
Current U.S. planning envisions a three-phase transition of
Iraq from American military administration to some form of
American-style government led by current Iraqi exiles. This
process will be highly problematic and will probably require
considerable force to pacify the disparate populations within
Iraq. Beyond Iraq, the U.S. intends to insure that the behavior
of Saudi Arabia and other countries with strategic resources
align with its hegemonic goals, thus inviting a radical
anti-american response.
5. This war
will perhaps be the worst cynical betrayal of the fighting men
and women in the military in U.S. history. The American people need
to know that it is only the peace movement that truly supports
the troops. The only troop support that means a damn thing is
stopping the war in the first place. This is a strong statement given the experience of
Vietnam and the first Gulf War, but I believe that this is
true. Our troops will be thrown into a battlefield where they
will be exposed to deadly toxins. The deleterious effects on
our troops and the Iraqi population of extensive use of
depleted uranium munitions in the first Gulf War is only now
coming to light. The new war will feature a ten-fold increase
in the release of these toxins. A great deal of information on
the suffering of our own veterans may be found at this website:
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/. The imperialism of Bush and his lieutenants
is a BETRAYAL of the troops and the American people, while they
engender a false image that American troops do not care about
human life. This image of our troops as storm troopers
enforcing imperial policy, like it or not, will take a quantum
leap in currency after an attack on Iraq. We will have lost any
remaining legitimacy we have in using our military might
against actual terrorists (not that I agree this has been the
U.S. aim at any point, but post-9/11 legitimacy in the eyes of
the world will have been squandered totally). None of
this weight do I want our great country, our troops, and all of
our people to have to bear.
Powell’s credibility
collapse leads to diplomatic disaster
Secretary of State Colin Powell traveled
to the UN February 5 to give evidence of Iraq’s refusal
to fully disclose its weapons. His exposition was impressive
and breathtaking. The picture he painted indeed was a scary one:
Iraq has trucked out its weapons ahead of the UNMOVIC
inspectors, lied in its declaration, maintained mobile
bio-weapons labs, sought components necessary for the
construction of nuclear bombs, and consorted with and provided
camps for poison-spreading al-Qa'ida terrorists in an alleged
desire to conduct unspecified attacks. Powell’s bottom
line conveys yet again that the United States cannot take the
chance that some of these scary weapons will be used in or
against America. Could any listener to these formidable
complaints fail to conclude that a major U.S. war against Iraq
is therefore justified?
On February 14, Powell returned to the
Security Council to attempt a belittling of the UNMOVIC weapons
reports given by Hans Blix, the chief weapons inspector, and
Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog. But by
this time, Powell’s credibility had been shattered.
Shortly after Powell’s first presentation, it had been
discovered that a major MI6 intelligence report from the U.K.,
on which part of the presentation was based, was cribbed
directly off of the internet from a decade-old graduate
student’s paper concerning confiscated 1980s Iraqi
documents (that described a period of heavy U.S. support). This
disclosure had an enhancing influence on the massive worldwide
anti-war demonstrations held on February 15.
Discovery of hijinks continued when a
piece by John Barry in Newsweek detailed the debriefing of Saddam's
son-in-law, Gen. Hussein Kamel. He defected in the mid-1990s
with extensive documentation of Saddam's destruction of
biological and chemical weapons.
Kamel has been repeatedly cited as a
credible source by George Bush, Tony Blair and leading
administration officials. He was cited by Powell in his
February 5 presentation to the UN Security Council:
"It took years for Iraq to finally
admit that it had produced four tons of the deadly nerve agent,
VX... The admission only came out after inspectors collected
documentation as a result of the defection of Hussein Kamel,
Saddam Hussein's late son-in-law."
But Kamel, who was killed after returning
to Iraq in 1996, actually told UN inspectors that Iraq had
destroyed its entire stockpile of chemical and biological
weapons and banned missiles, as Iraq has always claimed.
Those disclosures seemingly have had no
effect on weeks of parading administration figures droning on
about how “Saddam must disarm immediately.”
Then on March 7, Hans Blix threw more of Powell’s
case out the window:
”Intelligence authorities have
claimed that weapons of mass destruction are moved around Iraq
by trucks. In particular, that there are mobile production
units for biological weapons. The Iraqi side states that such
activities do not exist. Several inspections have taken place
at declared and undeclared sites in relation to mobile
production facilities. Food testing mobile laboratories and
mobile workshops have been seen, as well as large containers
with seed processing equipment. No evidence of proscribed
activities has so far been found.”
In other words, Colin Powell probably
lied. The only other explanation is that he
misinterpreted the intelligence. But there is a problem
with the latter charitable explanation — if he wanted
real mobile weapons facilities discovered, why was UNMOVIC
never provided with the intelligence in real time?
There really is no charitable explanation
concerning forged documents about Iraqi uranium imports from
Niger. ElBaradei reported on March 7 that his agency had
determined that documents said by the United States and Britain
to support the allegations, and trumpeted during the fall of
2002 by Bush and Blair, were fraudulent.
"Based on thorough analysis, the
IAEA has concluded, with the concurrence of outside experts,
that these documents — which formed the basis for the
reports of these uranium transactions between Iraq and Niger
— are, in fact, not authentic," he said.
Even if the fabrications in
Powell’s exposition are set aside and we assume Powell is
100% correct about all of the deceptions by Iraq, that only
would show Iraq is under extreme scrutiny. Any escalation of
its weapons development or attempt to use the weapons would
presumably not escape U.S. notice. Powell’s faulty case,
even if taken on its own terms, argues against a war if you
believe war is a last resort.
Looking at Iraqi weapons in a different
way, and getting beyond all of the hand-wringing about Iraqi
non-cooperation, it emerges that the U.S. has completely
obstructed Iraqi compliance with the Security Council. The
excellent analyst, Glen Rangwala (who broke the internet
cribbing story), has posted a counter-dossier
and an extensive, up-to-the-minute evaluation of claims concerning Iraqi weapons.
Here, Rangwala provides clear analysis
supporting the case that the United States in fact has deceived
the world with its claims about Iraqi weapons and has failed to
fulfill its own responsibilities under U.N. Security Council
resolutions. The U.N. weapons inspection regime and Iraqi
cooperation with it in reality has gone a long way towards
disarming Saddam Hussein, an interpretation of events that is
the polar opposite of the usual line found in the U.S. media.
Yes, there are officially unresolved issues concerning chemical
and biological agents that could be locally very dangerous. And
full credence should be given to the possibility that Hussein
Kamel correctly reported the destruction of these agents. Above
all, there is no way these issues add up to war in the absence
of a direct threat from Iraq.
Rangwala writes, “Iraq has
repeatedly asked for a clear timetable for the lifting of
economic sanctions to be coupled with the weapons inspections
system. This is not an unreasonable demand: in fact, it was the
agreement made in the ceasefire that ended the Gulf War, and
which the U.S. in particular has done so much since 1991 to
obscure. The ceasefire agreement - Security Council resolution
687 laid out a political settlement: the weapons inspectorate,
an end to the threat of war, a clear timetable to lifting
economic sanctions, and the creation of a weapons of mass
destruction free zone in the Middle East (entailing the need
for the end of Israel's nuclear arsenal).”
In other words, a solution short of war
has always been possible—lifting of sanctions and
permanent in-country inspections coupled with region-wide peace
initiatives. We probably will never know if present day Iraq
can cooperate with the international community and heal itself
from decades of tyrannical rule because the U.S. will not allow
it.
Administration officials are now
well-rehearsed in delivering lines like, “Saddam Hussein
is a practiced liar, there is no doubt about it. We should take
everything he says very skeptically.”
Apparently, the same holds true for Colin
Powell and our own administration. Other countries see this
clearly as their citizens line up at 80%+ rates against the
war. Notwithstanding posturing of the U.S. administration that
failure to vote along lines of U.S. will renders the U.N.
“irrelevant,” the U.S. still faces three likely
vetoes of a war resolution from China, France, and Russia;
teetering of the Blair government in the U.K. as it desperately
seeks cover for war; even withdrawal of support for the U.S.
position in third-world countries like Pakistan and Cameroon.
These are no small measures of how badly Powell’s
diplomatic disaster has turned out. j
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