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Our Life and Times by Kevin A. Barry and Mary Holmes
January/February 2001


The Gulf War and Bush, ten years later

The tenth anniversary of the start of the Gulf War was remembered with anti-sanctions demonstrations in several U.S. and world cities. Coinciding by only days with the presidential inauguration of George W. Bush, the occasion raises a number of issues.

The unified NATO alliance, along with UN backing and support from key Arab countries, put together by the first George Bush to wage war against Saddam Hussein after Iraq invaded Kuwait, has long since fallen apart. Russia, France and China have, in practice, disassociated from the UN Security Council-sponsored sanctions against Iraq, and Britain, the remaining military ally of the U.S., wants to cease the constant bombing patrols.

Saddam observed the anniversary by denouncing the Gulf War allies (except the Arab countries involved) as "the enemies of God, the followers of Satan"; earlier, he reviewed a four-hour military parade which reportedly featured hundreds of tanks and other weapons.

The embargo against Iraq has been broken by everyone-western capitalists, especially oil companies, looking to do business with Iraq again; Arab countries (except Saudi Arabia and Kuwait) showing solidarity with Saddam's anti-Israel stance and his pledge of political and financial support for the Palestinian uprising; and international humanitarian organizations ferrying in medicine and other supplies.

This hardly means improvement in conditions for the Iraqi people. They have endured the full impact of sanctions and Saddam's repressive regime, which has used a good portion of the UN-controlled "oil for food" revenues to repair the military and construct megalomaniacal monuments like the Saddam Grand Mosque. The most disgraceful result of the sanctions is measured by the catastrophic infant mortality rate which has risen to 108 of every 1,000 babies dying before his or her first year from lack of adequate medicine, nutrition and sanitary conditions.

Two engineers of the Gulf War, Vice President Dick Cheney (then secretary of defense) and Secretary of State Colin Powell (then head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff) are now prominent in Bush's administration. In the immediate period Bush will likely continue Clinton's policy, which had mutated into binding the end of sanctions to the end of Saddam. Powell has supported a U.S. stance to "re-energize the sanctions regime," which may mean targeting sanctions to military commodities, while ending the blanket trade embargo.

A hard-right, militarist group, including Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and others, lines up with Cheney, who stated during the campaign the U.S. "might have to take military action to forcibly remove Saddam." This side has lent vociferous support to reviving the Iraqi National Congress, a so-called opposition alliance led by exiles with no support within Iraq, which was totally fabricated by CIA funding under the first Bush administration, and later openly funded by Congress under the Clinton presidency for $97 million.

More crucial, the Iraqi people have not forgotten that the first Bush administration and its armed forces stood aside at the end of the Gulf War, when the genuine opposition to Saddam-the Kurds in the north and Shiite Muslims in the south-rose up in near-revolution and were viciously slaughtered. These indigenous mass revolts are anathema to the U.S. and to regional Arab rulers.

The other volatile factor driving U.S. policy, as it has in the past, revolves around maintaining stable oil supplies, especially with a U.S. recession on the horizon. Iraq did not participate in the recent OPEC agreement (and has not since the Gulf War) to cut oil production in order to raise prices. Currently, Iraq is keeping most of its oil off the world market.

Looming over whatever posture the Bush administration takes towards Iraq-especially with the likely February election of a right-wing Sharon government in Israel-is the question: what lessons have we learned from the ill-fated protests against the Gulf War ten years ago? The military build-up and war took place in the period of the collapse of state-capitalist regimes calling themselves "Communist" in East Europe and Russia. Yet the anti-war protests did not rise up to full stature when the need was to state what we stand for-a new, human society. This allowed some tendencies to fall back so far as to lend support to Saddam in the name of an unexamined anti-U.S. imperialism.




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