interesting article...

http://www.co-intelligence.org/polarizationDynamics.html
Exploring the Dynamics of Polarization


http://snipurl.com/7wie
900th GI Dies Since War Began in Iraq

-------------

http://snipurl.com/7wh6

THE "COALITION" UNRAVELS, "SADDAM HUSSEIN LITE" TAKES COMMAND
19 July 2004

by Phyllis Bennis and Michael Sochynsky,
Institute for Policy Studies

While U.S. media attention has decreased significantly in the weeks since
the June 28 so-called "hand-over of sovereignty," the U.S. occupation
remains very much in place, and the level of violence in Iraq has remained
constant. Although U.S. casualties remain high (36 GIs dead as of July 17,
compared to 42 for all of June) resistance forces have shifted much of
their attacks to Iraqi military and police institutions. Assassinations
are on the rise, with Iraqi "interim government" ministers and police
officials the primary targets of shootings and car-bombs. However,
particularly with car-bombs, indiscriminate casualties are escalating,
with increased deaths and injuries to many Iraqi civilians, including
children, with no connection to the interim Iraqi government or to the
U.S. occupation.

The election-driven U.S. goal of "Iraqization" of the casualties is well
underway, helping to divert public opinion from the continuing crisis on
the ground in Iraq, the huge numbers of Iraqi casualties, and the
diminishing levels of international support. The "coalition," always more
symbolically than militarily significant, is largely unraveling. The
impact is felt more at the political than military level, with the Bush
administration's claim that it is "leading an international coalition" in
Iraq increasingly indefensible.

The unraveling began with the withdrawal of Spain's 1300 troops after the
defeat of the Bush-backing Aznar government. Spain's pull-out led Honduras
and the Dominican Republic to recall their small contingents soon after.
The latest premature withdrawal, that of the entire Philippines contingent
to prevent the execution of a captured Filipino contract worker, is only
the most visible. Hostage-taking and execution of nationals of countries
with military troops in Iraq has continued, with the seizures of citizens
of Japan, Poland, Bulgaria, South Korea, the Philippines and the U.S. The
effect has been to increase political pressure on governments to end their
military's unpopular deployments. Earlier this month Norway pulled out 140
of its 155 troops. New Zealand and Thailand have both announced plans to
pull out their troops by September. The Netherlands and Poland will
reportedly leave before the middle of next year. While eastern European
and former Soviet countries remain the most committed to the U.S. war,
even Estonia has announced pull-out plans. Other countries have reduced
their already tiny contingents; Singapore left only 33 soldiers in Iraq
out of 191, and Moldova, already the smallest group with 42 soldiers, is
now down to 12.

For the first time, a majority of Americans believe the war was wrong,
that the U.S. should have stayed out - now 51%, up from 46% in June. In a
new New York Times/CBS poll, public anger is rising with the continuing
casualties among U.S. soldiers in Iraq, with 62% saying they believed the
war was not worth the loss of American lives.

Striking another blow against the Bush administration's only remaining
claim of justification for the war, interim Iraqi prime minister Allawi
has made clear as he consolidates his claim on partial authority, that
democracy is not on his agenda. Whether he will go down in history as
"Saddam Hussein lite" remains uncertain, but what is clear is that his
rule is already characterized by the ruling style of the Ba'athist regime
in which he got his start as an intelligence official, combining widescale
repression with selective co-optation. Allawi's own familiarity with
brutal rule emerged on July 17th, when an article in the Sydney Morning
Herald documented Allawi having shot dead six hand-cuffed and bound
suspected insurgents in cold blood in the courtyard of a Baghdad police
station, just days before the U.S. occupation "handed over sovereignty" to
him. Thus Allawi's July 7th announcement of emergency powers, authorizing
his government to carry out most of the unpopular moves of the official
U.S. occupation including curfews, closures, random searches, and more,
gives a better indication of his intentions than does all the obeisance to
democracy of the double Pauls [Bremer and Wolfowitz].

And, like its hands-off position regarding the repressive practices of the
earlier Ba'athist regime under Saddam Hussein, the U.S. appears to think
it's fine that repression and co-optation are the hallmarks of occupied
"sovereign Iraq" today. (The announcement by Iraq's human rights minister
that he will "investigate" the Allawi murders must be viewed with
significant skepticism.)

The co-optation side is seen in the effort to divide the resistance
between the largely foreign Islamist forces and the indigenous Iraqi
opposition (including both secular nationalist and Islamist sectors). It
takes such forms as the reopening Moqtada al-Sadr's newspaper, al-Hawza,
closed by the U.S. occupation authorities, as well as offering amnesty to
some resistance fighters. But the limits of the co-optation strategy are
also visible in situations such as Fallujah, where the U.S. had allowed
the local Fallujah Brigade to take control of the city, but at the same
time Allawi is reported to have approved the recent continuation of U.S.
military assaults that are killing numerous Fallujah civilians.

In both the U.S. and the UK, official reports were released condemning the
false, flawed and exaggerated intelligence that both the Bush and Blair
administrations used to justify their invasion of Iraq. The Senate
Intelligence Committee, under Republican pressure, refused to examine the
role of the administration in hyping pre-war intelligence, focusing
instead on the CIA's failures. These included a widespread "group think" -
defined as the unfounded "collective presumption that Iraq had an active
and growing weapons of mass destruction program." only after the 2004
elections will phase two of the investigation of pre-war intelligence
begin, and even then it remains uncertain whether they will examine the
role of the administration. In the UK, in the meantime, Tony Blair
admitted that his constant claim that "400,000 bodies had been found in
Iraqi mass graves" was untrue, and that only about 5,000 had been found.
While 5,000 murdered Iraqis is certainly sufficient evidence of a serious
crime against humanity, Tony Blair's manipulation of the numbers provides
useful insight into his cavalier attitude towards the truth.

Beyond the insufficiently critical media accounts of the Senate
Intelligence Report, there is a growing media focus on a single aspect of
the forthcoming 9/11 Commission report. That is the claim that because
some of the hijackers apparently traveled through Iran en route to the
U.S., that there must be Iranian complicity in the attacks. Of course by
this logic, Germany must be deemed a key ally of al-Qaeda for harboring
the terrorists before 9/11, and for that matter so must Florida. Perhaps
trying to bolster his agency's "group-think" image, acting CIA Director
John McLaughlin recently admitted that, "We have no evidence that there is
some sort of official sanction by the government of Iran for this
activity. We have no evidence that there is some sort of official
connection between Iran and 9/11."

Reply via email to