Washingtonâs Wars and Occupations: BIG MUDDY THERE, FANTASY & DENIAL HERE
gary hicks
gooberthink06 at yahoo.com
Thu Feb 14 14:26:45 EST 2008
Month in Review #33 â January 29, 2008 / 1
Washingtonâs Wars and Occupations
Month in Review #33
by Max Elbaum, War Times/Tiempo de Guerras
January 29, 2008
BIG MUDDY THERE, FANTASY & DENIAL HERE
Across the Middle East Bushâs âwar on terrorâ has led to a rolling catastrophe.
The administration is settling in to permanent occupation of Iraq while one-third of Iraqis
need humanitarian aid and four million have been forced to flee their homes. Washington
sends 3,000 more troops to Afghanistan as civilian deaths from U.S. bombs turn Afghans
against the West. Top officials of the U.S.-backed dictatorship in Pakistan admit that their
secret service has âlost controlâ of insurgents it trained and financed. In response to
Israelâs âcollective punishmentâ residents of Gaza blew up and surged across the
Gaza/Egypt border wall in the largest prison break in world history. Arab newspapers â
including mouthpieces of pro-U.S. regimes â call Bushâs warmongering against Iran âsad
and depressingâ while Arab governments normalize relations with Tehran.
Itâs a reprise of Pete Seegerâs anthem from Vietnam days: Washington is knee-deep in
the big muddy, and the big fool says to push on.
But almost none of this registers in mainstream U.S. politics. Occasionally a symptom of
these disasters gets newspaper coverage or is mentioned in a TV spot before Britney
Spearsâs latest scandal. But for the most part, the U.S. media operate as if âthe surge is a
successâ or whatâs happening in Israel-Palestine is a âpeace process.â
On the electoral front, Republican presidential hopefuls prattle on about âvictoryâ (and
Mike Huckabee threatens to stick a pole up the butt of anyone who wants to take down a
Confederate flag). The main Democratic hopefuls tone down their criticism of the Iraq
disaster for fear of being seen as âweak on national defense.â The latest example of this
fantasyland dance comes from this weekâs Republican frontrunner, John McCain. McCain
(who wants to stay in Iraq for 1,000 years) proclaimed (Jan. 24) that Hillary Clinton (who
wants to stay in Iraq at least through 2012) âhas called for surrender and waving the
white flag.â
Itâs not new for there to be a disconnect between whatâs really happening in most of the
world and the illusions, denial and elite-driven misinformation that prevails inside this
country. But rarely has that gap been as wide â or as dangerous â as it is today.
The challenge before the antiwar movement in 2008 is to narrow that gap.
Month in Review #33 â January 29, 2008 / 2
THE SURGE: âPURE FANTASYâ
Veteran military officer Andrew Bacevich (whose son was killed in Iraq) exploded the myth
of the surgeâs âsuccessâ in the Washington Post Jan. 20:
âAs the violence in Baghdad and Anbar province abates, the political and economic
dysfunction enveloping Iraq has become all the more apparent⦠A nation-building
project launched in the confident expectation that the U.S. would repeat in Iraq the
successes it had achieved in Germany and Japan after 1945 instead compares
unfavorably with the response to Hurricane Katrina. Baghdad households receive
power an average of six hours fewer a day than under Saddam Hussein. Oil
production still has not returned to pre-invasion levels. Reports of widespread
fraud, waste and sheer ineptitude in the administration of U.S. aid have become so
commonplace that they barely last a news cycle.â¦
âThe U.S. is tacitly abandoning its efforts to create a truly functional government in
Baghdad. By offering arms and bribes to Sunni insurgents â an initiative that has
been far more important to the temporary reduction in the level of violence than
the influx of troops â U.S. forces have affirmed the irrelevance of the political
apparatus bunkered inside the Green Zoneâ¦. First Sgt. Richard Meiers of the
Armyâs 3rd Infantry Division got it exactly right: âWeâre paying them not to blow us
up. It looks good right now, but what happens when the money stops?â
âThe surge has done nothing.⦠To say that any amount of âkicking assâ will make
Iraq whole once again is pure fantasy. The U.S. dilemma remains unchanged:
continue to pour lives and money into Iraq with no end in sight, or cut our losses
and deal with the consequences of failure.â
Bush is clearly in the no-end-in sight camp. His latest move is to try an end-run around
the Senate by calling a proposed treaty for permanent military presence in Iraq a âstatus
of forcesâ agreement. (The New York Times broke the story Jan. 25). A treaty would
require the approval of two-thirds of the Senate â which would not be forthcoming â but
the administration can negotiate an âagreementâ without Senate oversight.
GAZA RESIDENTS SHATTER THE CHARADE
Bush touted last fallâs Annapolis conference as promising an Israeli-Palestinian peace
agreement before the end of his presidency. Failure was apparent within 12 hours of the
gatheringâs end. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announced that Israel would not be
bound by its deadlines nor would it end construction of settlements in the occupied West
Bank.
Bush backed the Israeli right winger to the hilt. Israeli peace activist Uri Avneryâs wrote:
âBush told Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas that the innumerable Israeli roadblocks
in the West Bank, which turn the life of the Palestinians into hell, are necessary for the
protection of Israel and must remain where they are.â
With Washingtonâs support, Israel continued to kill Palestinians as if Annapolis never
happened. The squeeze was hardest on Gaza. Forty Palestinians were killed by Israeli
attacks in one week alone. The cut-off of food and fuel supplies was leading U.N. officials
to predict an imminent humanitarian catastrophe. But Gaza residents found a way to
Month in Review #33 â January 29, 2008 / 3
resist. On January 24 Hamas militants blew up the Rafah Wall separating Gaza and Egypt
and thousands of Palestinians poured across the border to buy supplies. The New York
Times admitted that âthe destruction of the fence was an act of defiance by Hamas
against Israel, which wants Gaza isolated, and against Egypt, which sealed the border to
keep Palestinians out.â The Times added: âThe prospect of an open border with Egypt was
widely accepted as a victory for Hamas and another embarrassment for the Palestinian
president, Mahmoud Abbas, who is seen as a partner with Israel and the U.S. and
complicit in the closing of Gaza.â
On the ground, Bushâs âpeace processâ does not exist. Middle East expert Joel Beinin, now
in Cairo, wrote (Jan. 24):
âPalestine, Israel, and Egypt after the fall of the Gaza wall are more unstable than
before. It is desirable, but alas unlikely, that this instability will bring the
leaderships to their senses.⦠But it is more likely that Olmert, Abbas, and Mubarak
â all weak and discredited leaders â will seek to hold onto power by clinging to the
U.Sâ¦.. The people of the Gaza Strip have taken their survival into their own hands
and have shown that the power of ordinary people is more likely to shape the
future than polished diplomatic formulas.â
AFGHANISTAN, PAKISTAN, IRAN
In Afghanistan, Washingtonâs war is being lost and NATO is divided about what to do.
Syed Saleem Shahzad, Pakistan Bureau Chief of Asia Times Online, explained:
âNATO is divided on the strategic question in Afghanistan. The British⦠think that
the last five, six yearsâ policies, which were essentially run by the U.S., were a
failure. They want to revamp the whole strategy. They want to play a game of
carrot-and-stick with the Taliban. But the Americans are not agreeing with this
whole idea, they believe that it would fall flat on their faceâ¦. Afghans, like all folks
in the world, want prosperity. And development works. And if they would feel that
Americans or the foreign forces mean it, they would certainly support it. At present
they donât feel it; they just view them as foreign occupation forces which did not
deliver anything⦠these are the same people who actually booted out the Taliban.â
As for Pakistan, Washington is so worried about the rising influence of anti-U.S. militants
that it has floated the idea of conducting operations inside the country with U.S. troops.
The trial balloon has so outraged Pakistani society that even Washingtonâs client/military
dictator Pervaz Musharraf had to declare that U.S. troops âwould be regarded as invadersâ
if they did so! Bushâs entire strategy in this large, strategic and nuclear-armed state has
come apart: Plan A (backing Musharraf) is in terminal crisis. Plan B (brokering a deal
between Musharraf and Benazir Bhutto) ended with Bhuttoâs assassination. Plan C is
simply the same recipe that is failing everywhere: send U.S. troops.
To salvage all this wreckage, Bush is counting on drumming up war-fever against Iran.
Itâs blowing back right in his face.
First Washington tried to manufacture an âIranian-naval-boats-threaten-U.S.-shipsâ
incident to build up war hysteria. The White House version of the Jan. 10 events was
discredited within days, with evidence that Washington altered the tapes that supposedly
âprovedâ Iranian aggression. Itâs noteworthy that many U.S. military officers on the spot
Month in Review #33 â January 29, 2008 / 4
gave interviews which â without explicitly saying so â essentially undermined Bushâs
claims.
Then, in an even bigger embarrassment, Bushâs trip to the Middle East â basically an anti-
Iran junket â fell flat. Longtime analyst Aijaz Ahmad explains:
âBush wanted to bring together all the Arab states, or virtually all of them⦠to build
some kind of coalition against Iran. The Arab states are not at all convinced that
there is a very serious Iranian problem, which needs to be addressed in military
terms. So they started building bridges towards Iran. A number of states â Qatar,
Saudi Arabia, and now even Egypt â are normalizing relations with Iran. Essentially,
Bush is a lame duck president, and in fact the initiative is with Iran.â
And here at home the General Accounting Office blew a raspberry in Bushâs face. It issued
a new report adding to the embarrassment of last yearâs National Intelligence Report
saying Iran had no nuclear weapons program. The report said that the international effort
to pressure Iran is faltering and questioned whether the last 20 years of U.S. economic
sanctions has had any impact!
ECONOMIC CRISIS AND GLOBAL WARMING
The severity of all these problems is barely hinted at most U.S. media. Newspapers,
television and magazines have done somewhat better lately highlighting two other rolling
catastrophes: the economic crisis and global warming. But there are huge gaps here too,
not least the near-total silence regarding the many connections â via militarism, oil, and
spending priorities â between both of these crises and Washingtonâs policies in the Middle
East.
These gaps can be closed. Much of the public is ready to hear ideas about alternative
foreign policy directions if these are presented in language and style that they can take in.
The latest polls show 75% of the population think the country is âon the wrong track.â
Despite all the âsurge-is-succeedingâ hype nearly 60% think the war in Iraq is going badly
and the same percentage think it was a mistake for the U.S. to invade in the first place.
âChangeâ is the mantra of the campaign season.
But who will define what âchangeâ means and what kind of âchangesâ will work? Only if
this country turns from the path of wars and occupations to negotiation, international
cooperation and respect for self-determination can the catastrophe in the Middle East â as
well as other global and domestic problems â be tackled effectively. We in the antiwar
movement have to strain every nerve to catapult that message into the center of
nationwide debate.
War Times/Tiempo de Guerras is a fiscally sponsored project of the Center for Third
World Organizing. Donations to War Times are tax-deductible; you can donate on-line at
www.war-times.org or send a check to War Times/Tiempo de Guerras, c/o P.O. Box
99096, Emeryville, CA 94662.
---------------------------------
Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your homepage.
More information about the NeedToKnow
mailing list