Out with the old, in with the new

The Iraqi elections were designed not to preserve the unity of Iraq but
to
re-establish the unity of the west

Tariq Ali
Monday February 7, 2005
The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1407404,00.html

The US, unlike the empires of old Europe, has always preferred to
exercise
its hegemony indirectly. It has relied on local relays - uniformed
despots,
corrupt oligarchs, pliant politicians, obedient monarchs - rather than
lengthy occupations. It was only when rebellions from below threatened to
disrupt this order that the marines were dispatched and wars fought.

During the cold war, money was supplied indiscriminately to all
anti-communist forces (including the current leadership of al-Qaida); the
21st-century recipients are more carefully targeted. The aim is slowly to
replace the traditional elites in the old satrapies with a new breed of
neo-liberal politicians who have been trained and educated in the US.
This
is the primary function of the US money allocated to "democracy
promotion".
Loyalty can be purchased from politicians, parties and trades unions. And
the result, it is hoped, is to create a new layer of janissary
politicians
who serve Washington.

This most recent variant of "democracy promotion" has now been applied in
Afghanistan and Iraq, and it will hit Haiti (another occupied country) in
November. Create a new elite, give it funds and weaponry to build a new
army
and let them make the country safe for the corporations.

The 2004 Afghan elections, even according to some pro-US commentators,
were
a farce, and the much vaunted 73% turnout was a fraud. In Iraq, the
western
media were celebrating a 60% turnout within minutes of the polls closing,
despite the fact that Iraq lacks a complete register of voters, let alone
a
network of computerised polling stations. The official figure, when it
comes, is likely to be revised downwards (according to Debka, a pro-US
Israeli website, turnout was closer to 40%).

The "high" turnout was widely interpreted as a rejection of the Iraqi
resistance. But was it? Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani's many followers
voted to please him, but if he is unable to deliver peace and an end to
the
occupation, they too might defect.

The only force in Iraq the occupiers can rely on are the Kurdish tribes.
The
Kurdish 36th command battalion fought alongside the US in Falluja, but
the
tribal chiefs want some form of independence, and some oil. If Turkey,
loyal
Nato ally and EU aspirant, vetoes any such possibility, then the Kurds
too
might accept money from elsewhere. The battle for Iraq is far from over.
It
has merely entered a new stage.

Despite strong disagreements on boycotting the elections, the majority of
Iraqis will not willingly hand over their oil or their country to the
west.
Politicians who try to force this through will lose all support and
become
totally dependent on the foreign armies in their country.

The popular resistance will continue. Many in the west find it
increasingly
difficult to support this resistance. The arguments for and against it
are
old ones. In 1885, the English socialist William Morris celebrated the
defeat of General Gordon by the Mahdi: "Khartoum fallen - into the hands
of
the people it belongs to". Morris argued that the duty of English
internationalists was to support all those being oppressed by the British
empire despite disagreements with nationalism or fanaticism.

The triumphalist chorus of the western media reflects a single fact: the
Iraqi elections were designed not so much to preserve the unity of Iraq
but
to re-establish the unity of the west. After Bush's re-election the
French
and Germans were looking for a bridge back to Washington. Will their
citizens accept the propaganda that sees the illegitimate election (the
Carter Centre, which monitors elections worldwide, refused to send
observers) as justifying the occupation?

The occupation involved a military and economic invasion as envisaged by
Hayek, the father of neo-liberalism, who pioneered the notion of
lightning
air strikes against Iran in 1979 and Argentina in 1982. The
re-colonisation
of Iraq would have greatly pleased him. Politicians masking their true
aims
with weasel words about "humanity" would have irritated him.

What of the media, the propaganda pillar of the new order? In Control
Room,
a Canadian documentary on al-Jazeera, one of the more disgusting images
is
that of embedded western journalists whooping with joy at the capture of
Baghdad. The coverage of "elections" in Afghanistan and Iraq has been
little
more than empty spin. This symbiosis of neo-liberal politics and a
neo-liberal media helps reinforce the collective memory loss from which
the
west suffers today.

Carl Schmitt, a theorist of the Third Reich, developed the view that
politics is encompassed by the essential categories of "friend" and
"enemy".
After the second world war, Schmitt's writings were adapted to the needs
of
the US and are now the bedrock of neocon thinking. The message is
straightforward: if your country does not serve our needs it is an enemy
state. It will be occupied, its leaders removed and pliant satraps placed
on
the throne.

But when troops withdraw, satrapies often crumble. Occupation, rebellion,
withdrawal, occupation, self-emancipation is a pattern in world history.

At the Nuremberg trials, Ribbentrop, the German foreign minister, was
charged for providing the justification for Hitler's pre-emptive strike
against Norway. Colin Powell, Condoleezza Rice, Jack Straw in a dock of
the
future? Unlikely, but desirable.

_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
Marxism-Thaxis@lists.econ.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to