----- Original Message ----- 
From: Erooth Mohamed 
Sent: Tuesday, October 31, 2006 12:20 AM

A recipe for the Greater War: 

The U.S. fear of losing power which it doesn't have

By abid ullah jan

Published October 29

, 2006 
http://www.icssa.org/u.s._failure.html



Many analysts believe that the United State has failed in Iraq. In fact, it has 
not.  

Analysts, who measure the American success by the yard stick of Bush and 
Blair's rhetoric for democracy and liberation, and the noble causes for 
invasion promoted by the "mainstream" media, are right in their conclusion. But 
the problem is that achieving those noble causes was never the objective of war 
on Iraq and Afghanistan. 

If we keep medium and long-term consequences aside, the Bush administration has 
been fully successful in what it wanted to achieve in Iraq. The country is 
occupied. Oil resources are under full control. The military threat that Iraq 
could pose has been fully neutralized. The country is divided. Iraqis are 
pitted against each other. The civil war is on and the co-opted media still 
limits its description to "fear of a looming civil war."  

The objective of occupation is evident from the suggestions of the U.S. 
administration's favorite advisors. Daniel Pipes writes in his October 24 
column in the New York Sun: 

"I suggest pulling coalition forces out of the inhabited areas of Iraq and 
redeploying them to the desert. This way, the troops remain indefinitely in 
Iraq, but remote from the urban carnage. It permits the American-led troops to 
carry out essential tasks (protecting borders, keeping the oil and gas flowing, 
ensuring that no Saddam-like monster takes power) while ending their 
non-essential work (maintaining street-level order, guarding their own 
barracks)." 

Being in the position of power and authority is no guarantee from mental 
sickness. The sickness of this proposal is clearly reflected in the Bush-Blair 
policies in Iraq. Pipes recounts benefits of this "change the course" proposal, 
ignoring that the U.S. policy is already revolving around the same sick 
principles, such as:   

·          Giving Iraqis the impression that they are responsible for their 
country despite controlling their borders and resources and deploying troops 
outside their urban centers "indefinitely." This is not "letting the Iraqis run 
Iraq" as Pipes is sickeningly suggesting to his sick bosses. This is letting 
them legitimizing and sustaining the U.S. illegal invasion and occupation.

·          Seeing problems in Iraq as Iraqi problems. The sickness of warlords 
become more evident when Pipes argue that violence in Iraq is "verging on civil 
war." It is "a humanitarian tragedy but not a strategic one, an Iraqi problem, 
not a coalition one." This is what the United States is doing already. It does 
not consider the bloodletting in Iraq as the result of its war of aggression 
and war crimes. The coalition should realize it has no more responsibility for 
keeping the peace between Iraqis than it does among Liberians or Somalis. 

·          Giving up on the unattainable goal of a democratic, free, and 
prosperous Iraq. This is what was not on the U.S. wish list from day one of 
this war. Iraq as a beacon to the region and a model of democracy were the 
invention of warlords in the garb of "liberal," "neutral" reporters such as 
Thomas L. Friedman of the New York Times, who left no stone unturned in 
justifying the war and making a case of sending more and more troops. 

So, it is not the U.S. administration that has failed. It is those who 
presented the war as a noble project and sold it to public as such have failed. 

The question is, where does the U.S. go from here? Will it fail? Will it 
withdraw from Iraq? Should the Western governments go into sobering 
reassessments and launch contingency plans for the consequences of a possible 
American failure in Iraq? 

The simple answer to these questions is that the United States is going 
nowhere. Despite the much publicized time tables for withdrawal, the U.S. will 
never leave Iraq. It will never admit defeat until it is removed from its 
imperial pedestal. So, will the Iraq war leave the United States in a position 
in which former Soviet Union found itself after its war in Afghanistan? The 
answer is no. Iraq is not capable of doing so, but the United States is. It can 
undermine itself. That will happen as a result of the next wars on the U.S. 
agenda. 

America's inability to learn from history is unlikely to be remedied by the 
humiliation of failure in Iraq, which is not considered as a failure in the 
myopic circles which are busy planning next wars. But if one simple lesson is 
too hard for Washington to grasp, perhaps the rest of the world can hold the 
following idea in mind and use it to restrain the United States from any future 
efforts to impose its ignorance on others. 

In a contest between foreign power and native resistance, foreign power — 
however much material and military strength it can wield — will always lose 
regardless of staying in the Urban center or outside in the deserts and 
mountains. Even in an era when a sense of racial superiority and colonial 
entitlement led Western nations to have few qualms about subjugating others, 
eventually native power based on native knowledge and determined resistance 
would reassert itself. Nowadays the reclamation of power asserts itself much 
more quickly but it always rises out of the same awareness: this is our land, 
not yours; it is our life and we must live our way of life.

The tragedy is that American leadership, both democrat and republican, does not 
seem to be in a position to understand and recognize that vis-à-vis the world 
suffering under its de facto colonization, the United States does not now 
possess the power that it fears losing. This denial of the reality will keep 
pushing it into more wars regardless of who is in power in Washington. That 
will ensure the actual failure of the United States and total destruction in 
the rest of the world it is trying to conquer completely. 

Abid Ullah Jan's latest book "The Ultimate Tragedy: Colonialists rushing to 
Globar war to save the crumbling empire ," co-authored with Rory Winter, will 
be released in December 2006.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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