The
Bush Administration’s
Flawed Approach Toward Iraq
Columnist Ahmad Faruqui says that the US is not following mature policy
vis-a-vis Iraq.
The Bush administration has allowed its justifiable anger against the
perpetrators of the terrorist attacks of 9/11 to escalate to irrational
levels. When it began a military campaign against the al-Qaeda terrorist
organization and the Taliban regime that was harbouring its leaders,
people around the world generally regarded the US as being justified
to wage a war of self-defence. A year and a half later, many people around
the world are apprehensive at Washington’s desire to pursue a war
without just cause against Iraq, since it could use the same rational
to pursue a future war against any nation that it declared was a threat
to US national security.
Speaking in December at the Commonwealth Club of California, US Deputy
Defence Secretary Paul Wolfowitz said that “the war on terrorism
is a global war, and must be pursued everywhere. We cannot allow one
of the world’s worst dictators to continue developing the world’s
worst weapons” because they threaten American national security.
Thus, unless Saddam Hussein disarms himself, the US would step in and
disarm him, with or without UN approval.
In his state of the Union speech, President Bush struck a defiant tone
when he stated that the “course of this nation does not depend
on the decision of others. The liberty we prize is not America’s
gift to the world, it is God’s gift to humanity.” In a speech
last year at the US Military Academy at West Point, he had declared with
great certainty that “Moral truth is the same in every culture,
in every time, in every place.” Writing in the Financial Times,
Philip Stephens noted astutely that “you have to go back a while
to find such a stark assertion of moral certitude and strategic power.” Of
late, the president has started to assert that if war is forced upon
the US, it will fight it with the full force of its military and will
win the war.
A group known as the Project for the Next American Century (PNAC) presaged
this militarization of American foreign policy. It issued a document
prior to the 2000 presidential elections that stated bluntly in cowboy
English that America’s armed forces abroad are “the cavalry
on the new American frontier.” This document, written for Dick
Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, went on to lay out a “blueprint for
maintaining global US pre-eminence, precluding the rise of a great power
rival, and shaping the international security order in line with American
principles and interests.”
Paul Wolfowitz is regarded by some as the intellectual guru of the neo-conservatives
in the Bush administration, a group of people that are determined to
impose democracy on other countries in a style reminiscent of imperial
Rome. For this group of neo-imperialists, Iraq is “just the beginning
of a project to turn out the despots and replace them with freedom-loving
democrats.”
The world community has to challenge this doctrine of preventive war
from being carried out by the US, which is being led by people who want
to impose Pax Americana at all cost. If these neo-imperialists are allowed
to have their way, the world will soon descend into chaos. The law of
the jungle will prevail, and might will decide right.
Deconstructing
the logic of war
The Bush administration’s assertion that war against Iraq is justified
is a classic non sequitur. Its case for attacking Iraq rests on three
tiers of premises. It begins with premises on which there is widespread
agreement among the nations of the world; progresses to those on which
there is much debate; and concludes with a few on which there is precious
little agreement.
There are four premises in the first tier on which there is widespread
agreement. Firstly, Iraq is governed by a tyrannical regime that has
committed atrocities against the people of Iraq. Secondly, Iraq has used
biological and chemical weapons against Kurds and Iranians. Thirdly,
Iraq has twice invaded its neighbours. And fourthly, Saddam Hussein is
an irrational man who has a deep-rooted hatred of the US. Virtually no
one disagrees with these premises. However, this agreement cannot be
taken as consent to the conclusions that follow.
Then come the premises in the second tier on which there is much debate.
Firstly, that Iraq possesses biological and chemical weapons in militarily
significant quantities. Secondly, that it has the means for delivering
them over militarily significant distances. These premises continue to
be debated, and may be partially resolved once the work of the UN inspectors
has been completed.
Finally, come the third-tier premises on which there is little agreement.
This is where the US case breaks down. Firstly, the US has consistently
maintained that Iraq possesses nuclear weapons, but the UN inspectors
have conclusively rejected this contention. Secondly, the US has argued
that present-day Iraq poses a clear and present danger to its neighbours.
If that were the case, one would expect that all of its neighbours would
be supporting this war, but none of them are supporting it. They view
Iraq as a lesser threat than a US-led invasion of the region. This situation
contrasts sharply with the consensus that existed after Iraq invaded
Kuwait in 1990. Thirdly, the US has argued that Iraq poses an immediate
threat to the US. Hardly any nation is convinced of Iraq’s ability
to hit its sworn enemy, Israel, with ballistic missiles. Unlike North
Korea, Iraq’s ability to hit the US with its ballistic missiles
is non-existent. One cannot rule out the possibility that Iraq may provide
its weapons to terrorist organizations that would smuggle them into the
US, but then so could any other nation. This is too weak an argument
to justify attacking a sovereign nation.
Fourthly, that Iraq has ties with al-Qaeda and may have been involved
with the attacks of 9/11. The Bush administration has presented no evidence
that the Iraqi regime had any connection with the attacks of 9/11. Earlier
on, it had tried to establish such a link by repeatedly referring to
a meeting that the lead 9/11 hijacker had with some Iraqi officials in
Prague. But it has not mentioned that visit in a long time. Nor has the
administration demonstrated convincingly that the regime is harbouring
al-Qaeda terrorists. The evidence that Washington has provided on this
topic is very sketchy, and would not hold up in any court of law.
Fifthly, attacking Iraq will not involve civilian casualties, because
precision munitions will be used. All one needs to do is recall the several
instances in which bombs went awry or faulty intelligence kicked in killing
large numbers of civilians during the 1991 Gulf War, the war in Kosovo
and the ongoing war in Afghanistan.
Sixthly, attacking Iraq will lead to democracy and stability in the Middle
East. After the Gulf War, an ebullient US Secretary of State James Baker
wrote, “Look, we’ve done everybody in the region a favour,
including Israel.” Even Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak said the
American victory represented “a new chapter in the history of the
Arab nation.”
Today, there is no Arab coalition or consensus against Saddam, because
the US has ignored the centrality of the Palestinian question in its
Middle East policy. Moreover, the Arabs are well aware of the casualties
imposed on Iraqi civilians by the Gulf War. It was supposed to have been
fought with precision weapons. Yet, within a year of the war, more than
200,000 Iraqis had perished, of whom three-quarters were civilians. Then
came the economic sanctions. Over the past 12 years, the Economist magazine
estimates they have killed 320,000 children under the age of five.
What is not mentioned
In all discussions of the evil character of Saddam Hussein’s regime,
the Bush administration never mentions the role it played in supporting
that very same regime during the eight-year war with Iraq. During that
time, Donald Rumsfeld is known to have visited with Saddam Hussein on
behalf of then US president Ronald Reagan. The US provided agricultural
and biological aid to Iraq that many regard has been used by the Iraqis
to produce biological weapons. It also used chemical weapons against
its Kurd minority during that time, with the knowledge of the US administration.
When such double standards are raised with Washington, the response is
that Iraq was an ally at the time. Retired Colonel Oliver North, who
became infamous during the Iran-Contra affair and now hosts a right-wing
talk show, says that whatever happened prior to 1990 is irrelevant.
Washington has been working hard to minimize the threat posed by North
Korea. It has openly admitted to be working on the production of nuclear
weapons and has a variety of ballistic missiles in its inventory. It
could cause significant harm to the civilian population of Seoul and
Tokyo with these weapons of mass destruction. Some have argued that parts
of the western US are already within the range of its ballistic missiles.
A recent British survey indicates that a majority of Britons regard North
Korea as a bigger threat to world peace than Iraq. Nevertheless, the
Bush administration continues to say that the situation in North Korea
does not constitute a crisis, and is simply a big problem. Comments Ivo
Daalder of the Brookings Institution: “The notion that this is
not a crisis either makes the word meaningless or it means this administration
is self-delusional.”
Given these inconsistencies in its foreign policy, Washington has failed
to persuade the rest of the world to support its case for going to war
against Iraq. While the Prime Minister of Britain is willing to risk
his political career supporting this war, more than 75% of Britons are
opposed to the war. Almost the same situation exists in Spain. In France
and Germany, whose leaders are opposed to the war, more than 80% of the
people are opposed. The US Defence Secretary is so miffed at France and
Germany for opposing the war that he has called them “Old Europe.” At
the gathering of NATO defence ministers, the German foreign minister
Joschka Fischer expressed his frustration with Donald Rumsfeld’s
articulation of the well-known US position by saying that, “Why
this policy now? Saddam Hussein is a terrible dictator but we have known
that for years.” In India, the visiting French prime minister responded
to President Bush’s assertion that “the game is over” by
saying: “It is not a game. It is not over.”
The US Secretary of State, General Colin Powell, who was the Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the Gulf War, and was thought to
be the moderate in a hawkish administration, has called a proposal by
France and Germany to extend the inspections for another four months “a
diversion, not a solution.” Since giving his speech at the Security
Council, he has now made it his mission to lay the groundwork for a second
resolution that would authorize the use of military force to depose the
Saddam Hussein regime.
Faced with a rising anti-war movement, in which millions have come out
on the streets to stop the war, the White House is seeking to create
an impression that only the countries of old Europe are opposing the
war. However, Russia has joined the French and German proposal. Russian
president Vladimir Putin noted recently, “the positions of Russia,
France and Germany are by and large in line.” In Washington’s
backyard, both Canada and Mexico have expressed their opposition to the
war. All of the Latin American countries remain opposed to the war as
well. China, concerned that one day the logic of preventive war may be
used to disarm it as well, has reiterated its wish to seek a peaceful
resolution of the conflict in Iraq. If the matter comes to a vote in
the Security Council, it is expected to abstain from exercising its veto
out of respect for its economic ties with the US. There is little support
for the war in Japan or South Korea, traditional American allies.
Not surprisingly, with the exception of some small Kingdoms along the
Gulf, the entire Muslim and Arab world is opposed to the war. Long-standing
US ally Saudi Arabia has been particularly outspoken in this regard.
Editorial writers are concerned that the war would involve the use of
untested weapons such as microwave bombs, and precipitate further terrorist
attacks against American and other Western targets. The Arab News ran
a story provocatively entitled, “Washington planning to nuke Iraq,” based
on an article in the Los Angeles Times. Arab opinion leaders cannot figure
out how President Bush could accuse Iraq of being in “utter contempt
for the opinion of the world” when he is himself ignoring world
opinion. They ridiculed Bush’s assertion that Iraq posed the “gravest
danger facing America and the world” because it “possess
nuclear, chemical and biological weapons...that could be used for blackmail,
terror and mass murder.” New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristoff
mirrored Arab skepticism when he asked whether an invasion of Iraq would
make America safer. Kristoff noted, “While none of us know the
answer, there is clearly a significant risk that it will do just the
opposite.”
After meeting the French president Jacques Chirac in Paris, Saudi foreign
minister Prince Saud bin Faisal said that a US attack on Iraq would result
in “a calamity of immense proportions.” Elsewhere, the prince
said, “Saudi Arabia will not join the conflict and will not [allow
its territory] to be used to attack Iraq.”
Amr Moussa, the secretary general of the Arab League, is reported to
have met with German foreign minister Joschka Fischer in Berlin, and
said that a war with Iraq would “fuel popular resentment and anti-American
unrest.” A few months earlier, Moussa had warned that such a war
would “open the gates of hell.”
Contrary to how they are being portrayed in the US media, religious scholars
in Saudi Arabia used the opportunity provided by the gathering of two
million pilgrims to remind Muslims everywhere that Islam means submission
to the Will of God. This means obeying all His injunctions, one of which
holds that all human life is sacred. The Imams of the two Holy Mosques
cited Quranic verses and instances from the life of the Prophet Muhammad
to assert that Muslims should not harm any non-Muslim civilians, even
during times of war.
At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir
Mohamad admonished the US, “out-terrorizing the terrorists will
not work.” He forecast a long period of war driven by hatred, revenge
and greed, unless the US changed its tactics. Witnessing the rising tide
of anti-Americanism across the globe, Eric Alterman wrote in the American
magazine, The Nation, “There is a pro-American world out there,
in Europe in particular but elsewhere as well. It is just waiting for
an America it can respect as well as admire.”
On the day of the State of the Union speech, forty American Noble Laureates
called on President Bush to stop his plans to fight a preventive war
in Iraq, because even a victory in such a war would “undermine,
not protect, US. security and standing in the world.” One hopes
that the call has not come in too late. According to the Financial Times,
General Tommy Franks has already informed the Kuwaitis that the US has
made a decision to go ahead with the war.
Douglas Hurd, Britain’s foreign secretary during the Gulf War,
writes in the RUSI Journal, “We might win the war in six days and
then lose it in six months.” He says the Bush administration has
made a serious mistake by swallowing “whole Mr. Sharon’s
argument that Israel is a straightforward ally against terrorism. We
run the risk of being viewed not as liberators but as protectors of an
oppressor.” Lord Hurd says a war against Iraq has the risk of turning “the
Middle East into a region of sullen humiliation, a fertile and almost
inexhaustible recruiting ground for further terrorists.”
One can assume that his words will have as much impact on the White House
as the protest march of 10 million people in 600 cities on February 15.
Mr. Bush dismissed the protests as “a focus group” that cannot
be used to influence his thinking about America’s security. He
is convinced of his moral rectitude. Any one he labels as evil has to
be taken out. Comments Stanley Hauerwas of Duke University’s Divinity
School, “Bush’s use of the word evil comes close to being
evil-to the extent that it gives this war a religious justification.” In
a similar vein, Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, has observed
that any attempt to sustain truthful speech was lost once the attacks
of 9/11 were labelled a war. He says that what happened that day was
not war; it was murder. Oxford historian Michael Howard has made the
same point in several of his articles.
History teaches us that leadership that begins to believe its own propaganda
has been overcome by hubris. Faced with widespread opposition to his
war plans, both inside and outside the US, President Bush faces the biggest
challenge to his presidency. He needs to step back from the brink, and
realize that real leadership consists in listening to all voices, not
just the ones that echo his voice.
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