Michael Albert co-founded South End Press and Z Magazine. He currently staffs Znet and is author of numerous books, including Looking Forward, Moving Forward, and most recently Parecon: Life After Capitalism.
[This article is reprinted with permission of Micheal Albert and Z Magazine. – Ed.]
[Rahul Mahajan serves on the National Board of Peace Action and is a founding member of the Nowar collective. He is the author of The New Crusade: America’s War on Terrorism and Full Spectrum Dominance: U.S. Power in Iraq and Beyond. I interviewed him in mid-April via the Internet about what we can expect from U.S. policy makers in the coming months.]
Why did the U.S. invade Iraq?
The reasons that have been put forward by the Administration are as follows: some putative link with al-Qaeda, Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction, the need to uphold international law, and the liberation of Iraq. The first three at this point are almost laughable.
British intelligence recently concluded there was no link between Iraq and al-Qaeda and that attempts at communication “collapsed because of mistrust and incompatible ideologies.” Even when bin Laden made a call to the Muslim world to oppose the war on Iraq he couldn’t keep from calling the Iraqi government a nest of “socialists” and “infidels” who “lost their legitimacy a long time ago.”
No Iraqi WMD capacity has yet come to light. Even if Iraq had any, intrusive inspections were ongoing, capacities for monitoring were still being increased, and both Hans Blix and Mohammed el-Baradei, the two chief inspectors, were confident that they could finish the job. The fact is, whenever disarmament looked likely, the United States tried to derail the process. So as soon as Blix ordered Iraq to dismantle its al-Samoud 2 missiles, Bush immediately said that the war was coming anyway.
Violating the UN Charter and undermining the entire United Nations in order to save international law is, to say the least, odd behavior. Iraq’s violations of Security Council resolutions since the Gulf War, though numerous, in no way compare with the waging of aggressive war outside the auspices of the UN.
So what are the reasons?
Any war the United States has waged in the postwar era has bee in part about the need for force projection in order to maintain an imperial policy. What has emerged more recently, however, is something very specific. The neoconservatives currently running the U.S. foreign policy have a very clear vision of an empire based more and more on overt military domination as opposed to the combination of economic control and sometimes open, sometimes subtle military coercion that characterized the Clinton era. The theorists of the Project for the New American Century state, “In the post-Cold War era, America and its allies...have become the primary objects of deterrence” (“Rebuilding America’s Defences”). This empire will be based on the following central principles:
Military transformation to increase the already massive technological superiority of the United States.
An expanding network of military bases. The U.S. military is in well over 100 countries, maybe as many as 140. In over 70 of these, it has permanent bases, many of them built since 9/11.
Regime change in our favor. The installation of semi- colonial governments that obey U.S. dictates directly, as in Afghanistan now 9and as the Bush administration attempted in Venezuela). This direct control is viewed as far preferable to control through multilateral economic strings.
Control of oil, conspicuously absent from the neoconservatives’ talk, but very present in other documents, such as the Cheney energy policy. This includes some level of military control not only over sources and potential sources, but also control of transport.
Thus a new U.S. military presence in Central Asia, where Kazakhstan at least has substantial oil reserves and natural gas is abundant; an increased counterinsurgency in Colombia that is directly linked to oil; an attempted coup in Venezuela; increased attempts to cultivate non-OPEC West African oil sources; and a dramatically increased military presence in the Middle East and on the other side of the Red Sea in Djibouti and potentially Somalia. Also, U.S. naval patrolling the Straits of Malacca through which most of China and Japan’s oil comes.
Iraq combines all of the considerations, but of control of oil is at the heart of it. Iraq has the second largest reserves in the world and there are at least indications that it may have far more than its posted reserves. Iraq also has the least developed reserves in the Middle East, with the greatest potential for increased production capacity.
That said, the war is not quite a simpleminded oil grab. Although in the long run, major U.S. oil corporations will make money off Iraq that they could not have made without a war, this is far from the primary reason for the war. The primary reason for the war is that the United States will now have a regime in Iraq totally beholden to it and will have control over Iraq’s oil policy to an even greater degree than they have exercised over Saudi Arabia. It’s about (figuratively) putting the United States into OPEC and Iraq into NATO.
There was some cheering in the streets of Iraqi cities. Does that retrospectively undercut antiwar opposition?
The cheering is genuine and I felt real happiness for the Iraqi people as I saw them go about dismantling the symbols of this hated dictatorship. It is also undoubtedly true that much of the cheering is because people can see an end to the sanctions, kept on Iraq at the behest of the U.S., that have crippled the country for a dozen years.
The joy because of Hussein’s downfall hardly undercuts principled antiwar opposition. Such opposition is not based on the structure of Iraqi society, but on an understanding of the role of the United States in the world. The primary reason we know this is not a war of liberation is that the United States does not act and has not acted as a liberatory force. There have been times, as after World War II, when the United States installed in place a regime that was substantially better than the one that preceded it; even then, it made sure not the allow genuine popular forces and movements in countries like France, Italy, Germany, and Japan to realize their own political goals. Subsequently, from 1950 to 1990, roughly, the United States consistently intervened against democracy and against popular movements, from the counterinsurgency in Korea to the coup in Iran in 1953 to its involvement in the ouster of Aristide in Haiti in 1991.
U.S. intervention today means structural adjustment, water privatization, user fees on primary education, a crusade to deep poor countries like sough Africa from manufacturing cheaper drugs (this is one on which the United States is losing, but still fighting), taking away from the poorest people in the world some of the few things they have left. This economic agenda and the military agenda fit together, more or less coherently, into a larger pattern that is the U.S. role in the world. Ken Livingstone, the mayor of London, was not exaggerating when he said that the IMF and World Bank have killed more people than Hitler.
The Iraqis will be better off in some ways now, partly because of Hussein’s reign of terror is over and partly because the U.S. –imposed economic strangulation will cease. Simultaneously, however, poorer citizens may well become worse off as they have become entirely dependent on the government distributed food ration. It is entirely likely that we’ll see the cutting of safety nets around the world by reducing the ration, increasing is price, and gradually eliminating it, without giving the poor sufficient alternative opportunities. Additionally, the war on Iraq dramatically increases U.S. imperial power and reach and this means a truly liberatory alternative becomes harder to achieve. It’s not foolish to say that more Africans than Iraqis will dies as a result of this war.
There have been no WMD found. Does this retrospectively undercut Bush’s rationales for war?
If WMD are found, that will strengthen the antiwar arguments. Even against an illegal war of aggression whose end was the annihilation of the regime, the Iraqis didn’t use WMD. How then could anyone argue that there was a threat that is would use WMD if it wasn’t invaded? Once can also say that a nuclear bomb wouldn’t have changed the balance of forces against any possible enemy. Both Israel and the United States have far larger arsenals and far greater delivery capacity.
Will there be democracy in Iraq as a result of this invasion?
Not likely. The U.S. will undoubtedly engineer a process to create a veneer of democratic legitimacy. It will, however, be a process designed to create a government that will serve U.S. “strategic” interests, not those of the Iraqi people, and one that is tied by extremely tight strings to Washington.
What message has been received by governments around the world, with what likely broad implications?
Bush’s twin ultimata of March 16, one to Iraq and one to the United Nations, made the situation clear: the target of this war is the current world order and Iraq is a means to an end. Nearly everyone outside the United States understands that this is an explicit attempt to replace a U.S.-dominated multilateral framework in which the U.S. was “First among equals” (but in practice held most of the power) with an explicit new imperium. In the short term, France and Germany have been sent a clear message and are unwilling or unable to cross the United States, so are trying to find some face-saving way to return to the fold. In the long term, they will be looking to options other than remaining sub-ordinate allies.
For the Arab world, this marks the emergence of an explicit feeling that the U.S. is a colonial power just like the nations of old Europe were. The Arab regimes are politically bankrupt and will follow along expecting to see yet another replay of the charade over a settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian issue in which the Arab states pretend that the United States is attempting to broker a reasonable deal. The pressures being built up in their societies will find some outlet; with luck, it will mean ‘destabilization’ of the regimes by popular movements and without luck, it will mean significant increases in religious extremism and terrorism.
We reached anew height in absurdity when John Bolton, Under-secretary of State for Arms Control, said in Rome recently, “With respect to the issue of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction in the post-conflict period, we are hopeful that a number of regimes will draw the appropriate lesson from Iraq that the pursuit of weapons of mass destruction is no in their national interest.” Instead, the obvious lesson from the war has already been articulated by North Korea: “The Iraqi war shows that to allow disarming through inspection does not help avert a war but rather sparks it.”
This was has now put an end to non-proliferation, arms control, disarmament, any idea of any mutual international agreements to limit weapons of mass destruction. Iraq was attacked while it was disarming and it was attacked because it couldn’t defend itself; no one outside this country has missed that fact. One lesson we should draw from this is that peace work against WMD should concentrate on the United States; the argument that even if the U.S. keeps its arsenals this is to make others disarm, must be abandoned for the hypocrisy and lunacy it is.
What was the role of the U.S. media establishment in paving the way for this war and then narrowing the terms of discussion, etc.?
The U.S. media always has an underlying acceptance of the mythology of American exceptionalism, that the U.S., in everything it does, is the last, best hope of humanity. All media are more or less patriotic, but the U.S. idea of patriotism involves constantly making war on other countries far from our borders; this is what makes the patriotism of the American media particularly pernicious.
More than any media outside of countries like Iraq or North Korea, the American media are characterized by subservience to power. Top-level “journalists’ like, say TV network anchors, never need to be censored because they have gotten where they are by never or almost never asking tough questions or dissenting from the official line.
All of that is always true, in every U.S. war. This one was different for a while, especially in the print media, because there was a significant elite difference of opinion about the war and even more about the approach to the war based on unilaterialism and pre-emption. When there is an elite split, one can have a public debate and one was carried on in the media for six months leading up to the war. The debate was constrained; it was almost always on the basis of pragmatic considerations like how many Americans will die and “can Saddam be contained” and very rarely about the depravity of the sanctions or the nefariousness of Bush administration intentions for the world. It did, however, lead to far more reporting of relevant facts and far more openness to dissenting opinion than I have ever seen. The contrast with say, the media coverage of the Sandinistas in the 1980’s, is really blatant.
After the bombs started falling, however, the media returned to business as usual. The broadcast media in particular performed as shamefully here as they did in the Gulf War or the Afghanistan war. U.S. government claims constantly repeated as facts, without acknowledgement later on that they were incorrect; jingoistic language and presumption of the American moral superiority; little coverage of civilian casualties, but lots of stirring photo montages of U.S. troops handing out candy, etc.
What is next on the agenda, broadly, for Bush and Co.?
The most immediate thing is presumably securing Bush’s re-election and thus ensuring there is enough time to finish transforming the world. The completion of the war with minimal American losses and scenes of cheering Iraqis will be wielded as a very effective club to silence domestic opposition and in particular to shut up the Democrats. It will also lead the Democrats to continue in their time-honored losing strategy of running as Republicans. The agenda of domestic repression will be continued and expanded, likely along with the destruction of the country’s economic base.
Internationally, Syria, Iran, and North Korea are all on the target list. Perhaps the only organized force in the region that might pose a real challenge to the military occupation of Iraq is Hezbollah. Al-Qaeda is small and scattered and Palestinian organisations have very limited access to resources. Both Syria and Iran are involved with Hezbollah, and so that will be one stick to beat them with and the other will be weapons of mass destruction. A significant Hezbollah attack on the U.S. military might be the perfect pretext for the next stage of the war. Of the two targets, Syria seems far more vulnerable because Iran’s government has a much wider popular base. North Korea, while a critical part of the long-term anti-China strategy that drives the neocons, will likely be a tough nut to crack.
What obstacles now stand in the way of Bush and Co.?
There are two major obstacles. First, a still relatively diffuse global public opinion that opposes the Bush policies, but has very few avenues to project politically power against them. In the place where that opposition matters most, the United States, the organization is weakest. Still, organized opposition in the United States is far bigger than it has been since the Vietnam era (with the exception of single-issue campaigns like the nuclear freeze.)
Second, a split with Europe. France and Germany. They did not oppose this war out of the goodness of their hearts nor did they do so simply because the European culture is bound up in multilateral institutions. Part of the reason for the opposition is that Europe and the United States are on rough par economically, but the U.S. has virtually all the global political power. This is an unsustainable state of affairs without constant new American conquests, increasing attempts to keep Europe down, and more and more deliberate state intervention to privilege U.S. corporations over the European ones. Even now, as France and Germany try to return to the American camp, those differences cannot simply disappear. Other obstacles that are likely to arise include mass opposition in the Arab world and increasing disaffection from the Global South.
What has been your impression of the antiwar opposition?
The phenomenal growth of antiwar opposition has been a remarkable and heartening development. It was driven heavily by two things: the more open media (and larger political) climate I mentioned earlier, and very effective mass Internet activism. The success of opposition far outstripped the educational and organization capacity of the existing activist infrastructure and we’re all scrambling to deal with the fallout from that.
First, we need to educate the movement and figure out what it stands for. Much of it opposed the war for the wrong reasons, i.e., that this is the first time America has committed aggression, that the war will be a ‘quagmire’, and that there will be huge American casualties. As integrated understanding of U.S. imperialism, of its military and economic aspects and the scope of its current depredations, is essential to building a broach anti-imperialist movement.
Second, we need to integrate the movement. In part, this means closer ties made with the issues of domestic repression and the new racist formulations involved in the ‘war on terrorism”; mostly it means sustained dialogue at all organizational levels between whites and people of color, especially African-Americans, who are the most antiwar major ethnic group in the country.
Their, we need to get out of the twin traps of a proliferating national umbrella organisation cut off from the grassroots and a lack of effective organizational structures at the local level. This will require building larger democratic organisations that have three crucial aspects: internal dialogue and political evolution, structures of accountability, and efficiency in translating activist energy into meaningful action.
What do you think is the relationship between the invasion of Iraq and corporate globalization, and between the anti-corporate globalization movement and the peace movement?
War, structural adjustment, and free tr4ade agreements must now be seen as simply different instruments for the projection of the same U.S. imperial power. The U.S. used multilateral institutions like the UN or the WTO when they can serve its purposes and ignores them otherwise. Witness the Helms-Burton amendment, the farm bill and the steel tariff. This Administration favors the more unilateral and aggressive instruments; other administrations have a different balance. These are not separate; they are one issue – U.S. imperialism. Issues like weapons of mass destruction and dictatorial regimes, though important, are excuses for the projection obscure these larger connections.
Since they’re in a larger sense, the same issue, the movement should be the same movement. This doesn’t mean that we abandon specialization or that we never prioritize specific reforms. It does mean that we must strategize together, share resources, and eventually organize together.