The Iraq War -
Part I
Bill Bonner
The
Daily Reckoning
Oct 15, 2005
The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: There is much controversy surrounding
the war in Iraq... but most who speak out against it, miss the
true geopolitical importance of the war. Bill Bonner explains...
"We have brought torture,
cluster bombs, depleted uranium, innumerable acts of random murder,
misery and degradation to the Iraqi people and call it 'bringing
freedom and democracy to the Middle East,'" said yesterday's
winner of the Nobel Prize for literature.
"But as we all know, we
have not been welcomed with the predicted flowers. What we have
unleashed is a ferocious and unremitting resistance, mayhem and
chaos."
Invading Iraq was a "bandit
act, an act of blatant state terrorism, demonstrating absolute
contempt for the concept for International Law. An arbitrary
military action inspired by a series of lies upon lies and gross
manipulation of the media and therefore of the public. And act
intended to consolidate American military and economic control
of the Middle East masquerading - as a last resort (all other
justifications having failed to justify themselves) - as liberation."
Harold Pinter is a playwright.
That he should fail to see the geopolitical importance of the
war is hardly surprising.
But Zbigniew Brzezinski, a
former U.S. national security advisor, ought not to miss it.
Quoting Arnold Toynbee, he accuses the Bush administration of
"suicidal statecraft... the ultimate cause of imperial collapse."
What neither man seems to realize
is that 'suicidal statecraft' is just what the situation calls
for.
The great Anglo-Saxon empire
has reached its 'sell by' date. Its imperial advantage - its
lead in the Industrial Revolution - has disappeared. It now counts
on the savings of foreigners to keep going. But while its homeland
bound citizens groan under the burden of debt, its military and
political leaders still talk tough. 'You got terrorists with
a grudge against the United States?' asked the Commander-in-Chief.
Well "bring 'em on." He might as well have put a gun
to his head. Now, with the curiosity of a reporter watching a
hanging, we wait to see if he pulls the trigger.
Iraq is full of potential terrorists
with grudges. Had the Anglo-Americans bothered to look before
they leaped they would have seen a country that is a mix of tribes,
clans, families, and religious groups - all of whom loathe each
other and all of whom take it as an inherited obligation to avenge
any wrong done to any of their own group by any member of any
other group back to five generations.
But there is one thing these
people despise more than each other - a foreign invader.
Patrick Cockburn, writing in
the Independent, reminds us of the insights of a British civil
servant, Arnold Wilson. Mr. Wilson wrote this in 1919, two years
after the British took Baghdad from the Turks:
"Wilson... warned that
the creation of a new state out of Iraq was a recipe for disaster.
He said it was impossible to weld together Shia, Sunni and Kurd,
three groups of people who detested each other. Wilson told the
British government that the new state could only be 'the antithesis
of democratic government.' This was because the Shia majority
rejected domination by the Sunni minority, but n 'no form of
government has yet been envisaged which does not involve Sunni
domination.'. The Kurds in the north, whom it was intended to
include in Iraq, 'will never accept Arab rule.'"
All of this was correct. But
what they would accept even less was rule by the British. The
whole country soon rose up against British forces; there were
more than more than 10,000 dead before it was over.
This was the world into which
the Bush administration bumbled. Every great empire - from the
Assyrians to the Mongols to the British had taken Baghdad. America
had to do it too.
"Nobody likes armed missionaries,"
said Robespierre when the French tried to export their democracy,
at the point of a gun, throughout Europe. That too was an insight
missed by the Bush team, but that is why the Bush bunch are so
perfectly suited to the present circumstance. They seem to have
no knowledge or apparent interest in history; they get to relive
every bit of it as if for the very first time.
There is hardly an error chronicled
in any history of imperial wars that American forces have not
committed. They went into Iraq on bad information. Where were
the WMD? Where were the rose petals upon which they expected
to tread? Where were the happy new democrats, ready to shop at
Wal-Mart for backyard barbecues and granite countertops?
Then, of course, they went
in preaching democracy and freedom - about which the Iraqis were
as indifferent as Americans themselves. What Iraqis really wanted
at first was just a chance to steal something; later they would
welcome a chance to kill someone. The desert tribes are looters.
They climb gleefully through the ruins of a tank or a hotel,
looking for something that might be useful.
But their new rulers are little
better. Soldiers have a license to kill. A video aired on American
TV showed a U.S. soldier gunning down a helpless prisoner. "This
one is still alive." Sounds of gunfire. "Now he's dead."
A poll taken days later signaled just how far the public had
gone in its descent into imperial madness - most people said
they thought the killing was justified.
This attitude goes down badly
in a place with 100,000 Iraqi casualties... and where revenge
is such a serious matter. Pretty soon, talk of 'insurgents' and
'foreign fighters' was beside the point. The average Iraqi now
jumped for joy when an American soldier went down... and rushed
to give the man a kick before his compatriots came to his rescue.
More to come...
Bill Bonner
email: DR@dailyreckoning.com
website: The
Daily Reckoning
Bill Bonner
is the founder and editor of The Daily Reckoning.
Bill's book,
Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets: Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance and
Politics, is a must-read.
He is also the
author, with Addison Wiggin, of The Wall Street Journal best seller
Financial
Reckoning Day:
Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st Century (John Wiley
& Sons).
In Bonner and
Wiggin's follow-up book, Empire
of Debt:
The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis, they wield their sardonic
brand of humor to expose the nation for what it really is - an
empire built on delusions.
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