Info about subscribing or unsubscribing from this list is at the bottom of this 
message.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

http://www.inthesetimes.com/site/main/article/2103/

How to End the War
By Naomi Klein May 5, 2005


EDITORS' NOTE: The following essay is adapted from remarks made at the
National Teach-in on Iraq sponsored by the Institute for Policy Studies in
Washington, D.C. The teach-in was held on March 24, the 40th anniversary
of the first teach-in on the Vietnam War, which was held at the University
of Michigan, Ann Arbor.


The central question we need to answer is this: What were the real reasons
for the Bush administration�s invasion and occupation of Iraq?

When we identify why we really went to war�not the cover reasons or the
rebranded reasons, freedom and democracy, but the real reasons�then we can
become more effective anti-war activists. The most effective and strategic
way to stop this occupation and prevent future wars is to deny the people
who wage these wars their spoils�to make war unprofitable. And we can�t do
that unless we effectively identify the goals of war.

When I was in Iraq a year ago trying to answer that question, one of the
most effective ways I found to do that was to follow the bulldozers and
construction machinery. I was in Iraq to research the so-called
reconstruction. And what struck me most was the absence of reconstruction
machinery, of cranes and bulldozers, in downtown Baghdad. I expected to
see reconstruction all over the place.

I saw bulldozers in military bases. I saw bulldozers in the Green Zone,
where a huge amount of construction was going on, building up Bechtel�s
headquarters and getting the new U.S. embassy ready. There was also a ton
of construction going on at all of the U.S. military bases. But, on the
streets of Baghdad, the former ministry buildings are absolutely
untouched. They hadn�t even cleared away the rubble, let alone started the
reconstruction process.

The one crane I saw in the streets of Baghdad was hoisting an advertising
billboard. One of the surreal things about Baghdad is that the old city
lies in ruins, yet there are these shiny new billboards advertising the
glories of the global economy. And the message is: �Everything you were
before isn�t worth rebuilding.� We�re going to import a brand-new country.
It is the Iraq version of the �Extreme Makeover.�

It�s not a coincidence that Americans were at home watching this explosion
of extreme reality television shows where people�s bodies were being
surgically remade and their homes were being bulldozed and reconstituted.
The message of these shows is: Everything you are now, everything you own,
everything you do sucks. We�re going to completely erase it and rebuild it
with a team of experts. You just go limp and let the experts take over.
That is exactly what �Extreme Makover: Iraq� is.

There was no role for Iraqis in this process. It was all foreign companies
modernizing the country. Iraqis with engineering Ph.D.s who built their
electricity system and who built their telephone system had no place in
the reconstruction process.

If we want to know what the goals of the war are, we have to look at what
Paul Bremer did when he first arrived in Iraq. He laid off 500,000 people,
400,000 of whom were soldiers. And he shredded Iraq�s constitution and
wrote a series of economic laws that the The Economist described as �the
wish list of foreign investors.�

Basically, Iraq has been turned into a laboratory for the radical
free-market policies that the American Enterprise Institute and the Cato
Institute dream about in Washington, D.C., but are only able to impose in
relative slow motion here at home.

So we just have to examine the Bush administration�s policies and actions.
We don�t have to wield secret documents or massive conspiracy theories. We
have to look at the fact that they built enduring military bases and
didn�t rebuild the country. Their very first act was to protect the oil
ministry leaving the the rest of the country to burn�to which Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld responded: �Stuff happens.� Theirs was an almost
apocalyptic glee in allowing Iraq to burn. They let the country be erased,
leaving a blank slate that they could rebuild in their image This was the
goal of the war.


The big lie

The administration says the war was about fighting for democracy. That was
the big lie they resorted to when they were caught in the other lies. But
it�s a different kind of a lie in the sense that it�s a useful lie. The
lie that the United States invaded Iraq to bring freedom and democracy not
just to Iraq but, as it turns out, to the whole world, is tremendously
useful�because we can first expose it as a lie and then we can join with
Iraqis to try to make it true. So it disturbs me that a lot of
progressives are afraid to use the language of democracy now that George
W. Bush is using it. We are somehow giving up on the most powerful
emancipatory ideas ever created, of self-determination, liberation and
democracy.

And it�s absolutely crucial not to let Bush get away with stealing and
defaming these ideas�they are too important.

In looking at democracy in Iraq, we first need to make the distinction
between elections and democracy. The reality is the Bush administration
has fought democracy in Iraq at every turn.

Why? Because if genuine democracy ever came to Iraq, the real goals of the
war�control over oil, support for Israel, the construction of enduring
military bases, the privatization of the entire economy�would all be lost.
Why? Because Iraqis don�t want them and they don�t agree with them. They
have said it over and over again�first in opinion polls, which is why the
Bush administration broke its original promise to have elections within
months of the invasion. I believe Paul Wolfowitz genuinely thought that
Iraqis would respond like the contestants on a reality TV show and say:
�Oh my God. Thank you for my brand-new shiny country.� They didn�t. They
protested that 500,000 people had lost their jobs. They protested the fact
that they were being shut out of the reconstruction of their own country,
and they made it clear they didn�t want permanent U.S. bases.

That�s when the administration broke its promise and appointed a CIA agent
as the interim prime minister. In that period they locked in�basically
shackled�Iraq�s future governments to an International Monetary Fund
program until 2008. This will make the humanitarian crisis in Iraq much,
much deeper. Here�s just one example: The IMF and the World Bank are
demanding the elimination of Iraq�s food ration program, upon which 60
percent of the population depends for nutrition, as a condition for debt
relief and for the new loans that have been made in deals with an
unelected government.

In these elections, Iraqis voted for the United Iraqi Alliance. In
addition to demanding a timetable for the withdrawal of troops, this
coalition party has promised that they would create 100 percent full
employment in the public sector�i.e., a total rebuke of the neocons�
privatization agenda. But now they can�t do any of this because their
democracy has been shackled. In other words, they have the vote, but no
real power to govern.


A pro-democracy movement

The future of the anti-war movement requires that it become a
pro-democracy movement. Our marching orders have been given to us by the
people of Iraq. It�s important to understand that the most powerful
movement against this war and this occupation is within Iraq itself. Our
anti-war movement must not just be in verbal solidarity but in active and
tangible solidarity with the overwhelming majority of Iraqis fighting to
end the occupation of their country. We need to take our direction from
them.

Iraqis are resisting in many ways�not just with armed resistance. They are
organizing independent trade unions. They are opening critical newspapers,
and then having those newspapers shut down. They are fighting
privatization in state factories. They are forming new political
coalitions in an attempt to force an end to the occupation.

So what is our role here? We need to support the people of Iraq and their
clear demands for an end to both military and corporate occupation. That
means being the resistance ourselves in our country, demanding that the
troops come home, that U.S. corporations come home, that Iraqis be free of
Saddam�s debt and the IMF and World Bank agreements signed under
occupation. It doesn�t mean blindly cheerleading for �the resistance.�
Because there isn�t just one resistance in Iraq. Some elements of the
armed resistance are targeting Iraqi civilians as they pray in Shia
mosques�barbaric acts that serve the interests of the Bush administration
by feeding the perception that the country is on the brink of civil war
and therefore U.S. forces must remain in Iraq. Not everyone fighting the
U.S. occupation is fighting for the freedom of all Iraqis; some are
fighting for their own elite power. That�s why we need to stay focused on
supporting the demands for self-determination, not cheering any setback
for U.S. empire.

And we can�t cede the language, the territory of democracy. Anybody who
says Iraqis don�t want democracy should be deeply ashamed of themselves.
Iraqis are clamoring for democracy and had risked their lives for it long
before this invasion�in the 1991 uprising against Saddam, for example,
when they were left to be slaughtered. The elections in January took place
only because of tremendous pressure from Iraqi Shia communities that
insisted on getting the freedom they were promised.


�The courage to be serious�

Many of us opposed this war because it was an imperial project. Now Iraqis
are struggling for the tools that will make self-determination meaningful,
not just for show elections or marketing opportunities for the Bush
administration. That means it�s time, as Susan Sontag said, to have �the
courage to be serious.� The reason why the 58 percent of Americans against
the war has not translated into the same millions of people on the streets
that we saw before the war is because we haven�t come forward with a
serious policy agenda. We should not be afraid to be serious.

Part of that seriousness is to echo the policy demands made by voters and
demonstrators in the streets of Baghdad and Basra and bring those demands
to Washington, where the decisions are being made.

But the core fight is over respect for international law, and whether
there is any respect for it at all in the United States. Unless we�re
fighting a core battle against this administration�s total disdain for the
very idea of international law, then the specifics really don�t matter.

We saw this very clearly in the U.S. presidential campaign, as John Kerry
let Bush completely set the terms for the debate. Recall the ridicule of
Kerry�s mention of a �global test,� and the charge that it was cowardly
and weak to allow for any international scrutiny of U.S. actions. Why
didn�t Kerry ever challenge this assumption? I blame the Kerry campaign as
much as I blame the Bush administration. During the elections, he never
said �Abu Ghraib.� He never said �Guantanamo Bay.� He accepted the premise
that to submit to some kind of �global test� was to be weak. Once they had
done that, the Democrats couldn�t expect to win a battle against Alberto
Gonzales being appointed attorney general, when they had never talked
about torture during the campaign.

And part of the war has to be a media war in this country. The problem is
not that the anti-war voices aren�t there�it�s that the voices aren�t
amplified. We need a strategy to target the media in this country, making
it a site of protest itself. We must demand that the media let us hear the
voices of anti-war critics, of enraged mothers who have lost their sons
for a lie, of betrayed soldiers who fought in a war they didn�t believe
in. And we need to keep deepening the definition of democracy�to say that
these show elections are not democracy, and that we don�t have a democracy
in this country either.

Sadly, the Bush administration has done a better job of using the language
of responsibility than we in the anti-war movement. The message that�s
getting across is that we are saying �just leave,� while they are saying,
�we can�t just leave, we have to stay and fix the problem we started.�

We can have a very detailed, responsible agenda and we shouldn�t be afraid
of it. We should be saying, �Let�s pull the troops out but let�s leave
some hope behind.� We can�t be afraid to talk about reparations, to demand
freedom from debt for Iraq, a total abandonment of Bremer�s illegal
economic laws, full Iraqi control over the reconstruction budget�there are
many more examples of concrete policy demands that we can and must put
forth. When we articulate a more genuine definition of democracy than we
are hearing from the Bush administration, we will bring some hope to Iraq.
And we will bring closer to us many of the 58 percent who are opposed to
the war but aren�t marching with us yet because they are afraid of cutting
and running.


Naomi Klein is a columnist for In These Times, the British Guardian and
The Globe and Mail, Canada�s national newspaper and the author of No Logo:
Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies.

_____________________________

Note: This message comes from the peace-justice-news e-mail mailing list of 
articles and commentaries about peace and social justice issues, activism, etc. 
 If you do not regularly receive mailings from this list or have received this 
message as a forward from someone else and would like to be added to the list, 
send a blank e-mail with the subject "subscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
or you can visit:
http://lists.enabled.com/mailman/listinfo/peace-justice-news  Go to that same 
web address to view the list's archives or to unsubscribe.

E-mail accounts that become full, inactive or out of order for more than a few 
days will be deleted from this list.

FAIR USE NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the 
information in this e-mail is distributed without profit to those who have 
expressed a prior interest in receiving it for research and educational 
purposes.  I am making such material available in an effort to advance 
understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, 
scientific, and social justice issues, etc. I believe this constitutes a 'fair 
use' of copyrighted material as provided for in the US Copyright Law.

Reply via email to