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NEWS & LETTERS, APRIL 2003
Lead-Editorial
War on Iraq, resistance, and the shift in global politics
by Peter Hudis George W. Bush's illegal, unwarranted and barbarous war
against Iraq clearly has nothing to do with "liberating" the Iraqi
people and everything to do with extending U.S. global power at the expense of
both the Iraqi AND American populace. The Bush administration's effort to
"decapitate" Saddam Hussein with a massive cruise missile and bombing
attack in the first hours of the war on March 19-20 reflected its intent to
eliminate Hussein while preserving as much of the repressive Iraqi state
apparatus (especially its police and Ba'ath Party officialdom) as possible. In
response to the apparent failure of that initial attack and the emergence of
armed resistance to the U.S. blitzkrieg in various Iraqi cities, Bush's war
machine is unleashing a bloodbath that will be felt in the region for years to
come. The many setbacks that confronted the U.S. in the first
week of the war in cities like Umm Qasr, Basra and Nasiriya indicates that the
battle for Baghdad will be no high-tech "cake walk," as U.S. officials
at first seemed to imagine. A lengthy and bloody war and occupation is now very
likely. THE RUSH TO WAR Bush's insistence on pushing ahead with his war, despite
the risk that it will plunge the U.S. into a colonial quagmire of its own
making, has produced a major shift in world politics. In response to the opposition of France and Germany, as
well as Russia and China, to his war drive, Bush launched his assault without
even asking for a vote at the UN Security Council--a move that is inflaming
resentment around the world at U.S. unilateralism. Turkey's refusal to allow
60,000 U.S. troops to invade Iraq from its borders has led Bush to pour more
arms and soldiers into Iraq from the south, even though this risks greater U.S.
combatant and Iraqi civilian casualties. And the anti-war sentiment that is
growing in every country has led Bush to write off democratic world opinion,
which is leading to increased resentment at the U.S.'s drive for permanent
military intervention overseas. The more this administration tries to negate all limits
to its drive for war, the more it manages to establish other limits which become
real barriers to the exercise of total U.S. dominance. WHAT HAPPENS AFTER? U.S. actions in Iraq thus far show that this war will
not result in the attainment of genuine self-determination or democracy for the
Iraqi people. Bush has made no secret of his plans to install a
U.S.-run military regime for at least several years after a war. The U.S. is
also intent on keeping many officials of Hussein's repressive Ba'ath Party in
power. Worried about a fracturing of Iraq along ethnic and religious lines, the
U.S. sees folding Ba'ath Party officials (many of whom are guilty of human
rights abuses) into its occupation as a way to ensure "stability." In
doing so the U.S. is also responding to pleas from regimes like Saudi Arabia and
the Gulf states, which fear the advent of any real democracy in the region. It is this desire on the part of the Bush administration
to preserve the structure of the repressive Iraqi state, and not any
humanitarian qualms on its part about inflicting massive civilian casualties,
that explains its attentiveness to trying to take down Hussein's regime with
"precision" bombing. While the U.S. claims to be fighting in the name of
Kurds, Shi'ites, and other oppressed groups, it has made sure not to arm
them--unlike its approach to the reactionary Northern Alliance in Afghanistan,
which it flooded with weapons. Though the U.S. has given military training to
1,000 Iraqi exiles at a NATO base in Hungary, it banned any Kurds from
participating. We are seeing a repeat of what happened after the end of
the first Gulf War in 1991, when the U.S. allowed Hussein to remain in power
rather than allow the Kurds, Shi'ites and others to take destiny into their own
hands. Though this time the U.S. is trying to depose Hussein, the Kurds, who
have been betrayed by Western powers before (especially in 1974 and 1991), are
about to be betrayed again. Kanan Makiya of the Iraqi National Congress, a group
funded by the U.S., stated in mid-February that U.S. plans for a post-Hussein
Iraq are "guaranteed to turn the [Iraqi] opposition into an opponent of the
U.S. on the streets of Baghdad the day after liberation....The government of the
United States is about to betray, as it has done so many times in the past,
those core human values of self-determination and individual liberty"
("Our Hopes Betrayed," THE OBSERVER [London], Feb. 16, 2003). Meanwhile, the threat of a massive humanitarian disaster
looms. Over 60% of Iraqis depend on UN aid for food. The World Health
Organization estimates that a decade of U.S.-imposed sanctions and Hussein's
policies have forced the vast majority of Iraqis to live on a semi-starvation
diet for years. These conditions are bound to worsen as the U.S. tries to subdue
all forms of resistance to its invasion and occupation. The livelihood of
millions of Iraqis is now in jeopardy. RIFTS IN THE WESTERN ALLIANCE Despite the Bush administration's fruitless four-month
effort to get the UN Security Council to sanction an invasion of Iraq, Bush long
ago decided to go to war, with or without international approval. Stunned by the
attacks of September 11, 2001, and emboldened by its rapid "victory"
over the Taliban in Afghanistan, the administration sees war against Iraq as a
way to further its drive for permanent military intervention by taking down the
one regime in the critically important Middle East that has expressed open
opposition to U.S. policies. Yet Bush's arrogant over-reach has led to a pulling
apart of the U.S.-led global alliance that SEEMED so unified after September 11,
2001. France and Germany, among the most powerful components
of NATO and the European Union (EU), have repeatedly opposed the U.S. drive for
war against Iraq. However most of the other 15 nations of the EU have expressed
support for the war. So have the 10 nations (mainly from the former Warsaw Pact)
that are expected to join the EU in coming years. More is at issue in this divide within Europe than
widespread anti-war sentiment, crucial as that remains. Public opposition to war
is almost as high in Britain, Spain and Italy--whose rulers support Bush--as in
France and Germany. French President Chirac's decision to veto any UN
Security Council resolution authorizing war against Iraq didn't result from a
sudden disdain on his part for military intervention overseas. He has shown
little reticence to engage in such undertakings when it suits his purposes, as
can be seen from France's many military interventions in Africa. A few months
ago Chirac sent 3,000 French troops to Ivory Coast. Chirac's refusal to support Bush on Iraq has more to do
with France's declining power in Europe due to EU and NATO expansion. The more
the EU expands into Central and East Europe, the more decentralized it becomes
and less subject to French and German control. Chirac sees an independent stance
vis-a-vis the U.S. on Iraq as a way to reassert French power in Europe at a
moment when many newer EU members feel beholden to the U.S. France's position also reflects a contest with the U.S.
over influence in the Third World. On Feb. 20 leaders of 52 African nations
attending a French-African summit in Paris endorsed the French position opposing
war on Iraq. While this is not the first time France has taken a
position that conflicts with the U.S., what is new today is that it has the
support of Germany. With the absence of any external military threat, Germany's
rulers are less willing to go against the massive opposition to war among the
German masses. The positions of Chirac and German Chancellor Schroeder,
however, have so far not had the effect of bolstering French and German
influence in the EU as much as bringing to the surface long-simmering rivalries
within it. The governments of Spain and Italy don't mind seeing their role in
the EU augmented at French and German expense, given the increasing importance
of their economies. They have supported Bush, despite mass opposition to war at
home. Blair's Britain, meanwhile, always wary about Franco-German domination of
the continent, has become Bush's most trusted and energetic ally. The rulers of the 10 nations in Central and East Europe
that were approved for EU membership in December 2002 have also rallied in
support of Bush. They view total support for U.S. dictates as a way to
counterbalance French and German power (France's economy is larger than that of
Spain, Portugal, Poland, Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic combined, and
Germany's is 50% larger than France's). Romania and Bulgaria are a long way from
reaching the EU's conditions for membership; its rulers view total support for
U.S. acts as a way to jump-start their way into "new Europe" via NATO. Bush's actions have brought to the surface the
fault-lines of European enlargement, which long preceded his drive to war
against Iraq. The result is rising tension between the U.S. and France and
Germany on a scale not seen in 50 years. Bush cronies like Richard Perle of the Defense Policy
Board have declared that the U.S. should abandon "romantic, nostalgic
notions of the U.S. and members of the EU as allies working to achieve a common
policy." And Secretary of State Colin Powell stated: "The [Atlantic]
alliance is breaking itself up because it will not meet its
responsibilities." This made it easier for Russia--which has nothing to
gain and much to lose from a U.S. war against Iraq in the way of oil contracts
and a $20 billion debt owed to it by Hussein--to also threaten to veto a war
against Iraq in the UN Security Council. These intra-capitalist rivalries pose a huge challenge
for the anti-war movements, because nothing would do more to channel them into a
reformist, non-revolutionary direction than for the movements to follow the
latest incarnations of neo-Gaullism. The more anti-war movements tailend
existing state powers, be it France, Germany, or any other power in the UN, the
less likely they are to pose any real challenge to world capitalism. IMPACT ON THE MIDDLE EAST Bush's rush to war has also led to increased conflict
with Turkey. The Turkish parliament's March 1 failure to approve positioning
60,000 U.S. troops there for an invasion, even after being offered $30 billion
in economic inducements, was a stunning setback for the administration. U.S. relations with Turkey have been severely strained.
Turkey will not even allow U.S. jets to take off from NATO bases in the country,
permitting only flights over its airspace. Over 95% of its populace opposes war
on Iraq, and the U.S. pressure--it would not be wrong to call it bribery--to get
it to agree to its mandates earned it few friends, even from within Turkey's
political establishment. Murat Mercan, a member of parliament, said of
U.S.-Turkish relations: "The relationship is spoiled. The Americans
dictated to us. It became a business negotiation, not something between friends.
It disgusted me." The U.S. setback on Turkey is especially striking since
the U.S. burned up a lot of political capital to secure its cooperation, as seen
in its promise to allow the Turkish army to occupy northern Iraq to keep the
Kurds in line. The U.S. also promised Turkey that it would make sure that the
Kurds don't get control of the Mosul and Kirkuk oil fields. Kurdish groups were
furious with the U.S. over this. As bad a deal as the Kurds will get from the war, the
Palestinians are destined to make out worse. Today is not like 1991, when the
U.S. had support from many European and Arab regimes in the Gulf War. Because of
this Bush Sr. had to pay at least lip service to Palestinian desires for
self-determination after it was over. The situation is different now, when the U.S. and
Britain are taking on Iraq virtually alone. Bush's entire approach indicates
that he will give a green light to Israel's Sharon to do as he pleases in his
continuous war against the Palestinians. This despite the "road map"
plan, which calls for forming a Palestinian state in three years. This will not
amount to much. First, because the divisions between the U.S. and some of its
allies means that the so-called quartet--the U.S., UN, EU, and Russia--will be
unable to put collective pressure on Israel. Second, because Bush insists that
before any negotiations begin all violent acts against Israel must cease--the
same demand Sharon has been making for two years to prevent any meaningful
discussion from taking place with the Palestinians. The peril facing the Palestinians is further underlined
by Sharon's new government, which includes the National Union Party. It favors
annexation of the West Bank and expulsion of the Palestinians from the occupied
territories. Israel's rulers hope that U.S. war against Iraq will
allow it to reshape the Middle East in its image. Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz
said that after the U.S. takes care of Iraq it should go after Iran, a greater
threat to Israel: "We have great interest in shaping the Middle East the
day after a war." Most ominously of all, members of the Bush
administration have begun to openly talk of the war against Iraq as a
"pilot project" for future U.S. wars of intervention, possibly against
Iran and North Korea. WAR IN EAST ASIA? Sensing that it may be next on Bush's hit-list, North
Korea's decrepit Stalinist regime has upped the ante by restarting its nuclear
reactor at Yongbyon and challenging U.S. spy aircraft. Bush, who refuses to
engage in direct talks with North Korea, responded on March 4 by sending 24 B-52
and B-1 bombers to Guam, in striking distance of North Korea. Though he says the
U.S. doesn't plan to invade North Korea, he has not ruled out a preemptive air
strike on its nuclear sites. These moves are causing consternation in South Korea.
Over 21 million South Koreans live in the "kill box"--the Seoul
metropolitan area, in reach of North Korea's 13,000 artillery pieces. Another
Korean war could kill over a million people--and that's without counting the use
of nuclear weapons. This is creating serious tensions between the U.S. and
South Korea, which wants to form a Common Market with North Korea. South Korea's
President Roh Moo Hyun recently said in a speech to the Korean Federation of
Trade Unions, "Koreans should stand together, although things will get
difficult when the U.S. bosses us around." An advisor to Roh added,
"If the American policy is simply to wait for North Korea to make a huge
mistake, there is no future for the alliance and no future for the American
position in East Asia" (See THE NEW YORK TIMES, Feb. 25). On Feb. 24, China, Australia and South Korea urged the
U.S. to enter into one-to-one talks with North Korea. Bush refuses. Relations
with China are becoming strained. Japan has moved closer to the U.S. position,
worried about China's growing power in East Asia. Whether we look at West Europe
or East Asia, the U.S.'s drive for war threatens to unravel the whole structure
of global politics. A CHANGED WORLD The U.S. war against Iraq is rooted in its drive for
single world mastery. It's been with us since the end of World War II, when the
U.S. contended with Russia for world domination. By 1991 the collapse of the
Soviet Union forced one side to drop out of this drive for world domination. Yet
the U.S. continued its drive, unencumbered by competition from another
superpower. At the time some thought the U.S. would create new
global institutions to deal with this changed world. However, it didn't happen.
Though there was a lot of talk after 1991 that NATO had lost is purpose, the
collapse of the post-World War II world didn't lead U.S. rulers to create any
new imperial architecture. The same institutions that served it during the Cold
War, like NATO, were preserved, only now expanded into Central and East Europe. Today, however, institutions like NATO and the UN are
coming under severe strain. Whereas in 1991 U.S. rulers chose to stick with the
old international institutions despite the new reality, by now those
institutions are crumbling under the weight of the U.S.'s incessant drive for
single world mastery. What underpins such changes is U.S. military power. But
the U.S.'s unprecedented military power does not necessarily translate into
global dominance. As the ongoing war in Iraq shows, the U.S.'s effort to negate
all limits to its drive for war ends up creating other limits which become real
barriers to achieving U.S. global dominance. As Michael Ignatiev has argued, it is a fatal mistake to
confuse global power with global dominance. The U.S.'s global military power
actually tends to undermine U.S. global dominance, as it leads more nations and
peoples to resist U.S. dictates. (See "The Burden," NEW YORK TIMES
MAGAZINE, Jan. 5, 2003.) ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF WAR Few issues have received less discussion than the
economic ramifications of a war. A study by William D. Nordhaus says that the
cost of military action, occupation, and reconstruction in a war with little
Iraqi resistance would be $120 billion, while if things get complicated the cost
could be $1.6 trillion. By the end of the war's first week, Bush was ready to
ask Congress for a $75 billion emergency appropriation to fight the war. All this is occuring just when the economy is facing
serious problems. From 1997 to 2000 (the height of the much-touted
"boom") the rate of profit in the non-financial sector in the U.S.
fell by 20%. Since then profit rates have fallen further. If profit rates are
falling, what keeps the economy afloat? The answer in part is that the Federal
Reserve has pushed interest rates so low that there's been a frenzy of household
borrowing that has so far kept the economy going. However, another key factor is the influx of foreign
capital. In the mid-1990s the U.S. decided to push up the value of the dollar.
To reduce the value of their currencies relative to the dollar, foreign
capitalists bought up U.S. assets in treasury bonds and equities. A flood of
foreign capital poured into the U.S., prompting a rise in the stock market. Even
as profit rates fell, the value of stocks soared. This led to a wave of
financial speculation. Yet when the disconnect between overvalued stocks and
falling profit rates became evident in the past two years (which corporations
tried to cover up through fake accounting) the bubble began to burst. This indicates that U.S. capitalism has still not
extricated itself from the problem which confronted it with the 1974-75 global
recession--a sharp decline in its rate of profit. Profit rates remain at
historic lows; in the past five years the rate of profit in the manufacturing
sector has fallen by 42%. Though that has been papered over in part by an
infusion of monetary capital from overseas, there's no assurance that this will
continue in perpetuity. What is Bush's response? l) Return to massive budget
deficits, á la Reagan, which creates pressure to cut spending on social
programs, and 2) cut the taxes of the rich á la Reagan, like the tax on
corporate dividends. Both are aimed at redirecting social wealth away from
workers so that the rich can invest more funds in the stock market and reinflate
the speculative bubble. Here may lie the basis of Bush's arrogance that he can
do whatever he wants regardless of world opinion. He imagines that if the bubble
is reinflated through tax cuts and budget deficits, and if the value of the
dollar remains strong, foreign capital will have little choice but to continue
to invest in the U.S. no matter what anyone thinks about U.S. policy in Iraq. The U.S.'s unprecedented military might does indeed have
ECONOMIC consequences, as it leads foreign capitalists to view the U.S. as the
safest haven for their investments. The U.S. is now more dependent on foreign
capital than at any time in the past 50 years. Many in the administration
imagine that by projecting total military power the U.S. can forever dominate
the world economy, even though that "dominance" is DEPENDENT on
investments from capitalists overseas. Some have argued that one reason for Europe's decision
to adopt a single currency, the euro, is that it hopes one day that the euro
will replace the dollar as the world's currency, allowing Europe to reap the
economic benefits that now accrue to U.S. capitalists. Is it any accident that
the European country that's been most averse to accepting the euro--Britain--is
most closely allied with the U.S., while those who have pushed hardest for the
euro, France and Germany, are most critical of the U.S.? However, before one
rushes to conclude that world capital is about to break up into contending
continental blocs, keep in mind that euro or no euro, Europe is not a single,
unified entity. Many European countries are willing to follow U.S. dictates at
any price, though they are a far smaller part of Europe's economy than Germany
or France. In a word, there is no NATIONAL capitalist solution to
the U.S. drive for war. The only solution can come from masses of people who
refuse to accept war and the cutbacks in health care, education, social
services, and living conditions that are already accompanying the war in Iraq. Such continuous anti-war resistance has never been more
critical. If the war is drawn out, it will be essential for the movement not to
die off. If the war is brief, it will be no less important for it to continue to
develop since a relatively brief war will embolden Bush to later go after other
regimes with even more disastrous consequences. Never has it become more urgent
to make sure that the voice of the "second America" is heard! Pointing out the second world in each country as the
only true source of resistance to Bush's drive for war is not where our work
ends. It is only where it begins. For history shows that unless such resistance
becomes wedded to a positive vision of a new society to replace capitalism, the
movements will not truly succeed. There is no more important task than
developing a dialogue within the movement so that this can be worked out for
today. --March 25, 2003 |
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