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An open letter to the anti-war movement

Ben | 14.03.2003 18:01

We've not really been at peace these last twelve years, have we? Routine Western military activity in northern and southern Iraq has continued without pause since the conclusion of the Gulf War - why is this? To "secure Iraqi oil"? No - it's because each region is populated by ethnic minorities that have been persecuted and would be subject again to genocidal state policies if those patrols came to an end.

As if this situation weren't far enough removed from "peace" we have the ghastly reality of life under a murderous and despotic regime; a regime whose grip on power seems only to have been strengthened by a decade of the measures that anti-war voices are now describing as "sufficient" to "contain" the Saddam polity. Queerly enough, these same voices were decrying the sanctions as "genocidal" just a few months back - but now seem happy to go along with them just so long as they delay or preclude the greater evil of war.

No-one can deny that sanctions have had a catastrophic effect on the ordinary people of Iraq - and yet it's equally difficult to discount the prospect that, were he completely unfettered by economic or military embargos, Saddam would rearm rapidly and with relish.

So: is the status quo something we're willing to march for? Evidently so. Of course, no-one intends to prop up a fascistic regime like Saddam's - but when you're so willing to caricature the aims of those arguing for war, how can you exempt yourself from being caricatured in return?

If I was to sum up why it is that I'm in favour of military action, I could do it in a single line. He's a bad bastard, basically. Practically all else flows from that. When you look at world affairs and you're trying to get some sort of grip on what the fuck's going on anywhere, a single ideal will see you through alright: Take the side of the victim - support their cause.

The victims of the ulcerous Iraqi regime are, incontravertibly, the Iraqi people themselves. While the peace movement claims the "Iraqi people about to be bombed" as its moral trump card, it's unsurprisingly reluctant to field or solicit the views of actual Iraqi's who've fled or defied Saddam's regime. The Iraqi opposition groups in exile won't be going along to the march on Saturday; the use of admirable ideals and slogans in effect to stay the execution of the despotic elite that's destroyed their country over the past 30 years must strike them as both bizarre and depressing.

"Not In My Name"?
"Not In Their Name" you surely mean.


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To address the major point made by Pumpernickel Pickle, the last time we debated all this:

I don't believe anyone can seriously argue that this coming war is about liberating the Iraqi people, or overthrowing the tyrant Saddam. It's about securing the huge Iraqi oil reserves for US business interests. Just ask why is the war being promoted now. Is Saddam any greater threat now than he has been over the last ten years? No. What's happening is that sections of the US administration (e.g. Cheney, Perle, Wolfowitz et al) are prosecuting a strategy that they've been promoting since the late 90s; i.e. regime change in Iraq to secure vital US national interests, and they're using the justification of the so-called "War on Terror" to do it.

If oil is the principal motivating factor behind US policy, why aren't the efforts of the military-industrial complex going into securing Venezuelan reserves? Venezuela is much more where the US derives its supplies from than Iraq and it's practically on their doorstep - and surrounded by far weaker players than the wasp's nest that comprises the Middle East.

As for Iraq itself, the major oil interests involved there are France and Russia, who - logic dictates - ought to be well into the driving seat of a coalition to topple Saddam (the better to divvy up the spoils), rather than exerting their current efforts to halt the impending war.

If there's one thing the experience of the past fifty years has taught us, it's that US administrations are far happier to cut deals with despots than fight them; Saddam himself is practically the archetype of the sort of figure that successive American presidents have shaken hands with through most of the past century. If oil really were "the issue" we would have seen a sequence of attempts at detente from 2000 onwards, the influx of "reconstruction" capital from the West and the treading of a far more well-worn path to "accommodation" than the uncertain (both politcally as well as militarily) course currently being pursued.

Oil is an undeniable factor in any strategic consideration of the Middle East and its component parts - but to argue that US "greed for oil" is more of an issue than the destabilising potential of a genocidal, despotic, would-be expansionist regime like that in Iraq would require a good deal more evidence to back it up than the (not terribly surprising) fact that there's a degree of crossover between the upper end of the American political caste and the oil industry - which is actually incredibly nervous about the effect that war will have on global prices.

Of course I have reservations - and I'd feel pretty stupid attempting to introduce them into something as pithy and limiting as a slogan (I'm here! I'm queer! / So subject to a second UN resolution please get rid of Saddam and establish an interim govenment in partnership with the Iraqi oppostion parties along the lines of the current autonomous administration in no-fly-zone northern Iraq pending democratic elections and supported by a massive reconstruction and aid programme / Some time soon this year!) but on balance I'd say the world would be a good deal worse off if the Saddam regime were to continue.

Sure, there are "plenty of others just as bad" - but would you be willing to look an Iraqi in the eye as you made that point?

Ben
- Homepage: http://www.themoononline.com/cgi-bin/UBBforum/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=1&t=000181

Comments

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Response

15.03.2003 09:48

The only moral argument for aggressive (i.e. not in self-defence) war is on humanitarian grounds, where war can be said to be the lesser evil. Many war supporters, such as Ann Clwyd MP make a compelling case on this principle. You rightly point out the fact the are 'others just as bad' is not in itself an argument against war, merely an argument for a fairer and more just foreign policy.

The fundamental problem with this 'just war' argument however is that the war described by yourself, Ann Clwyd et al is not the same war being planned in Washington.

The war that will be fought will have nothing to do with the welfare or liberation of the iraqi people. This is demonstrated by the willingness to use 'Depleted' Uranium, clusterbombs, fuel-air bombs etc... and also the acknowledged strategy of targeting civilian power plants. The military have back-up generators, the vast majority of civilians don't. Therefore this strategy amounts to the deliberate targeting of civilians. Very few of Iraq's water purification/sewage treatment plants have back-up generators, and waterborne diseases are expected to spread rapidly if power plants are hit.

The deliberate targeting of civilians constitutes a war crime.

If this was truly a just war to free an oppressed people, it would likely have my support. We would also need to 'liberate' countries without abundant natural resources to dispel my cynicism. Another problem is that the western concept of liberation puts much greater emphasis on neo-liberal economics and privitisation than on democratic government. We were promised a democracy in Kuwait in 1991, nothing yet.

The US has a long history of subverting democracy where it suits it's interests, Suharto, Pinochet etc... Nicuragua in the 1980s. But this is not just history, those behind the military coup which breifly ousted the elected venezualan president Hugo Chavez last year claimed thay were aided and encouraged by the CIA.

When the shooting starts, dont expect a democracy to emerge, and don't expect the Iraqi people to be much better off. For their sake, I hope i'm wrong.

Peace

Tom

TG


Wake up Ben

15.03.2003 10:45

I will ask the question once again for Bens benefit. Just when did Saddam become such a bad man (and i agree that he is) ? Was he a bad man when a British goverment minister (David Mellor) sat on Saddams white leather sofa talking business on the very day Saddam chemically attacked the Iraqi Kurds in halabja ? Was he still a bad man when British goverment minister Tony Newton followed up Mellors visit three weeks later to sell Saddam millions of £££s of dual use equipment which made the very shells he fired on the Kurds and Marsh Arabs after George Bush senior did the dirty on them and ran away from overthrowing Saddam in the first Gulf war? Was he a bad man when Ronald Reagan loaned him billions of dollars to prop him up
when the Americans encouraged him to attack Iran ? Was he a bad man when British Intelligence turned a blind eye to the supergun we were building for him. The fact is Saddam was torturing far more people when all of this was going on than he is now !! and we still managed to sell him the products to create his WMD. Wake up people pro war this is about global hedgemony by one rather military muscle bound about to be world ruler, the good ole USA. Tony Blair is on board because he knows this and is convinced that he is saving his country. We will in future need the crumbs that fall from the all powerful US dinner table.
Do not get me wrong Ben i am no pacifist. When i was in Bosnia in 92 and a real genocide was happening before my very eyes i felt shame that British and US goverments did nothing to help the Bosnian people. I was so ashamed and horrified at what i saw i left the refugee camp i was working in and joined the rag tag army fighing for its very existence. Who was it at the UN that forced the withdrawl of forces from Rawanda and stopped any effective oppostition or action to stop that horror.Having some experience in that region i can say the Hutu military would have collapsed in a matter of days. Even a small intervention could have stopped the Genocide and would have prevented the further horrors of the Congo and the unimaginable suffering of millions. In the main western nations provoke and engineer these crises and only intervene "on a humanitarian level" of cousre, when it suits their interests. The Iraq war will be no different. To further enlighten yourself Mr Ben try the link provided.

M Lacey
- Homepage: http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2003/10/ma_273_01.html


Don't raze a country to get one man

16.03.2003 12:31

Yes Saddam is a real baddie and everything. What a rotter.

This DOES NOT justify a war that even the US admits will KILL, quite horribly, over 200,000 Iraqi civilians (yes, the very same ones that suffer under that rotter Saddam).

Suggesting razing Iraq to the ground to get Saddam is like burning your house down because there's a rat in your basement.

Please will the pro-war apologists think beyond the Annd Clywd "poor fluffy bunnies" hand wringing and actually realise what this war will entail.

Clue: Death, destruction, pain, misery, disease, displacement, MORE terrorism and MORE instability.

D'yuh get me?

Mad Monk


Human Rights

16.03.2003 15:16

It seems ironic that the UK and UK who for so long have told us that the cost in terms of human life was worth it because, the sanctions 'contained' Saddam, now are saying through their actions, that the sanctions were useless, leaving bombing as the only option. Yet the situation with Saddam has not changed to justify this change of heart. Seems to me then that killing so many people over the past decade is itself a war crime, but whoops, the US won't recognise that because it doesn't do war crimes. Just tortures and beats people to death in Guatemala Bay, buts that’s ok because they aren’t prisoners of war are they? Is this the type of justice and democracy that they are so keen to bomb the people of Iraq into? Wake up Ben. Saddam is a bad bastard, agreed, but the politics of oil has killed more people over the years than Saddam.
And when the bombs have stopped falling on Iraq, guess who gets the lucrative contracts to rebuild the hospitals, schools and roads? The good old US of A. What a way to revitalise your economy.
Finally, ask yourself, who will be facing the horror of ‘Operation Shock and Awe’ as more firepower rains down on Iraq in the first twenty-four hours than in the whole of the Gulf war? Teenage Iraqi conscripts that’s who. Just like those who were incinerated on the Basra Road.
This coming war is not about human rights. It is about the hegemony of American economic and political power in the world, built on human agony.

heather