-Caveat Lector-

The Iraq War, Part II
by Bill Bonner

"There is hardly an error chronicled in any history of imperial wars that
American forces have not committed in Iraq." - Bill Bonner

"I am still Iraq's president," says Mr. Hussein. What he does not seem to
realize is that the American conquistadors are running the show. They've
accused the former president of various crimes. But even after years in
jail, Saddam refuses to squirm. Instead, he threatens to the put the
empire itself in the dock.

What gives this court the authority to try me, he asks? Good question,
only the force of U.S. arms...that is to say, only the brute power of an
invading army. I am the only lawful president of Iraq, he continues, not a
puppet put in by the Americans. Again, he has a point. He stole the job
fair and square. How dare you pass judgment on me, he goes on. And here we
have an answer: it is merely the latest in a long chain of blunders.

One of the pleasures and benefits of being the world's super-power is that
you get to cut off the heads of your enemies, and you never have to say
you're sorry. Tamerlane was a master of it. He cut off so many heads, his
men spent days piling them up into huge pyramids...thousands of them.
Caesar, Ghenghis Khan, Adolf Hitler, Stalin...all great conquerors make a
point of punishing those who stood against them. But the trial of Saddam
Hussein is a first. It is the first time the leader of a conquered nation
has gone on television...so that he may rally his people against the
invader!

Once again, history's most incompetent empire is a victim of its own
humbug.

We quote ourselves, above, not out of vanity, but only to make a
correction. We would like to explain that U.S. actions in Iraq are not an
"error" from an historical perspective. They are a necessity. Every great
empire must extinguish itself somehow. Otherwise, we would be ruled by
Assyrians or Mongols. What Anglo-American forces are doing is merely a
form of "suicidal statecraft," suggests Zbigniew Brzezinski; that it, it
is a way of cutting our own heads off.

Readers have not asked for our opinion on the subject, but we give it
anyway: like almost all great public spectacles, the war against Iraq was
commenced on a fraud, played out as a farce, and now threatens to end in
abject tragedy. Just as it should.

This is in no way a partisan remark; no, it is merely an observation.

Empires can rarely resist the temptation to fight a war...if they think
they can get away with something. George W. Bush saw an increase in his
poll ratings coming. People love a "war" president, at least until they've
lived through a real war. He could hardly wait for an opportunity to put
on a flight suit and land on a real U.S. Navy aircraft carrier, ostensibly
to rally the troops, but more importantly to rally the lumpenpublic.

But once Saddam's sorry troops were routed, neither the president nor his
military men knew what to do next. They had guns and tanks and the most
expensive weaponry money could buy. They had no clue what to do with them.
When American forces took Naples in 1943, General Mark Clark appointed New
York Mafioso Lucky Luciano as his senior civilian advisor. While Clark
dined on fish looted from the city aquarium, Luciano knew what to do with
anyone who got out of line. But Paul Bremer and the rest of the bumblers
appointed by the Bush administration were only good at pleasing their
masters in Washington, not ruling their subjects. They quickly made a mess
of it. And now, by putting Saddam on the stand, they offer the old man a
chance to make his case. Yes, the nation was a hellhole when he ran the
place, but at least it was a hellhole for the Iraqi people, by the Iraqi
people, and of the Iraqi people.

The noose is too good for Saddam. U.S. soldiers might have done better to
treat him as Genghis treated one of his enemies: pouring molten silver in
his ear. Then at least he would not be on television pointing out the
obvious to his compatriots; he is only on trial because the country was
over-run by foreign troops.

The best way to win a war, said Sun Tzu, is to let your enemy defeat
himself. That is roughly what U.S. forces are doing in Iraq. They are
helping to destroy the great Anglo-Saxon commercial empire. And they are
doing it in the predictable way. U.S. military power is now stretched out
all over the globe. The flower of America's high-tech puissance - the
finest attack machine ever created - is now put to work guarding gas
stations and ballot boxes. Meanwhile, the expense of maintaining global
hegemony has risen so high the only way America can afford it is by
borrowing money from communist China. Eighty to ninety percent of the U.S.
federal deficit is now financed from outside the country...notably the
East.

Among the charges against Saddam is that he killed more than 140 men and
teenaged boys in Dujail. His defense will be that the people of Dujail
tried to kill him, which of course they did. He might mention that every
brutish leader does the same. The Nazis razed whole downs in Poland when
German soldiers were killed by partisans. Genghis put all the males of
several towns to the sword, after they took his emissaries hostage and
killed them. Stalin starved, murdered and deported whole nations of people
whom he only suspected of disloyalty. And on the very day in which Saddam
appeared in court, a news item in the International Herald Tribune
reported that American planes had destroyed a village in Iraq, after two
U.S. soldiers were killed in it. The village harbored insurgents, said the
United States More than half the 70 people killed, said eyewitnesses, were
innocent bystanders.

The real problem for America is the problem of empire itself. It turns the
imperial people into a race of "hollow dummies," to use Orwell's phrase.
Soon, they come to believe what isn't true and try to do what can't be
done. "Nation building" in Baghdad by an occupying army? You might as well
try to get rich by borrowing money and increasing your spending.

The reason for these "errors" can be traced not to a lack of judgment, but
to an excess of vanity. And here, we turn to one of the world's hollowest
dummies, Tom Friedman, for illustration. The New York Times columnist has
been a big supporter of the imperial war. Unwittingly, for that is the
only way possible with Friedman, he has taken the role of cheerleader for
the "mission civilisatrice"...the white man's burden of bringing the
wonders of modern American civilization to the heathen tribes.

"We are doing nation-creating," he says. "It is hugely important." How do
you create a nation in Iraq without a man like Saddam at its head? And why
does the great Anglo-Saxon Empire have to get involved? The reason is
simple; the wogs are incompetent.

"Let me explain," Friedman begins. "While visiting the Iraqi port of Umm
Qasr last week, I spent a morning watching the commanders of the Iraqi
navy hold a staff meeting, while their British and U.S. advisors looked
on. On the one hand, you felt as if they were doing a pretty good
imitation of a British command briefing. On the other hand, the slightly
ragged quality left you feeling that if you pulled the British and U.S.
advisers out tomorrow, the whole Iraqi navy would collapse. The human
capital and institutional foundation are simply not there..."

What is our real challenge in Iraq? Friedman asks. To "rebuild Iraq's
human capital?" That is, to help them do better imitations of their U.S.
and British masters.

Friedman looks in the mirror and sees so many wonderful things: democracy!
Freedom! Neg Am mortgages! Oh, why can't the Iraqis be more like us?

Meanwhile, on the ground between the Tigris and the Euphrates, as the
imperial dummies plant, so do they reap.

"Many Iraqis welcomed the fall of Saddam Hussein because he ruined their
lives," writes Patrick Cockburn in the Independent. "He had started two
disastrous wars, against Iran in 1980 and Kuwait in 1990. Hundreds of
thousand of Iraqis were killed and wounded. The country's great oil wealth
was spent on weapons. In the 1990s, U.N. sanctions wholly impoverished the
country. Iraqis believed they should have been living like the Saudis and
instead, they had the standard of living of Sudan. As U.S. tanks rolled in
Baghdad, they hoped their lives would now get better. Instead they got
worse.

"The billions supposedly spent by the U.S. - much of it Iraqi oil money -
produced almost no benefits. The country became a feeding trough for
politically well-connected U.S. companies and individuals...Even Iraqis
were shocked to find that almost the entire $1.3 billion procurement
budget of the defense ministry had disappeared...Much of the Iraqi
government exists only on paper. It is more of a racket than an
administration. Its officials turn up only on payday. Elaborate
bureaucratic procedures exist simply so a bribe has be paid to avoid
them.

"U.S. generals seemed to price themselves on their ignorance of local
customs," Cockburn, who has spent the last three years on location,
continues. During that period, imperial overlords have nearly accomplished
what seemed impossible when the war began; they have made Saddam's rule
seem to many Iraqis like the "good old days." In some parts of Baghdad,
property prices have fallen by 50% in the last six months, thanks to
lawlessness and lack of services.

"Ordinary U.S. soldiers can shoot any Iraqi by whom they feel threatened
without fear of the consequences. With suicide bombers on the loose the
soldiers feel threatened all the time and most Iraqis feel threatened by
them. The Iraqi police general in charge of the serious crimes squad was
shot through the head by an American soldier who mistook him for a suicide
bomber. Early one morning a surgeon called Basil Abbas Hassan decided to
leave his house in al-Kudat for his hospital in the center of Baghdad at
7:15am in order to beat the morning rush hour. Because so many streets are
blocked by concrete walls protecting military or police outposts Baghdad
traffic is always on the verge of gridlock. Dr. Hassan, a specialist in
heart surgery, was the kind of man who should have been one of the
building blocks of the new Iraq." Instead, he was shot dead by a U.S.
soldier who thought he might be a suicide bomber.

The benefits the empire brought to Iraq were just too wonderful, we
conclude. Things have gotten so bad in Baghdad that the prostitutes have
left, says Cockburn. Soon it will be the rats.

Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning 

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