Untitled Document
The American ruling elite is inextricably committed to military victory
in Iraq. That is the only conclusion to be drawn from the response of the major
media to Bush’s November 30 war speech.
The most prominent editorial voices of corporate America, from the
ultra-right Wall Street Journal to the New York Times, the leading voice of
upper-class liberalism, despite disputes over tactics and methods, agree that
there is no alternative to using whatever level of violence is required for
the United States to remain in control of the oil-rich Mideast country.
The December 1 editorial in the Wall Street Journal was typically unrestrained
in its celebration of the war, hailing Bush’s speech as a rededication
of the administration to “complete victory” and a repudiation of
the growing public disaffection with the war. “Our reading of history
is that the American people will accept casualties in a war, even heavy casualties,
as long as they think their leaders have a strategy to win,” the Journal
declared, thus announcing its approval in advance of the increased bloodletting
which continued occupation will produce.
The tragic human implications of the Journal’s glib endorsement of “heavy
casualties” to secure US control over the region’s oil resources
were driven home on Friday, when the government announced that at least 10 Marines
had been killed by a single explosion in Fallujah. Meanwhile, the US military
is preparing to slaughter hundreds more Iraqis in a new offensive in Ramadi.
The Journal praised the performance of Iraqi troops in Tal Afar, when mainly
Shiite forces rampaged through the predominately Sunni city near the Syrian
border. It called for strengthening the interior ministry, although that agency
is now believed responsible for some of the worst atrocities, including the
underground torture chamber in Baghdad uncovered last week when it was raided
by US troops.
The newspaper essentially declared any debate over the origins of the war to
be irrelevant, observing, “as military analyst Andrew Krepinevich put
it to us yesterday, whether Iraq was a ‘war of choice’ or a ‘war
of necessity’ at the beginning, it certainly is the latter now. Our adversaries
the world over—from North Korea to Syria’s Bashar Assad to Iran’s
mullahs—are watching to see if America has the will to win in Iraq.”
While denouncing congressional and media criticism of the Bush administration’s
conduct of the war, the newspaper made one suggestion for change: “One
area that could still use improvement is procurement policy.” The Journal
observed that Iraqi military forces had been equipped with outdated Soviet-bloc
weaponry, much of it from former Warsaw Pact countries now enrolled in NATO,
such as Poland and Romania. “Iraq should have top-of-the-line US equipment
whenever possible,” the newspaper complained. In other words, the US arms
industry should be allowed to join in the orgy of plunder and profit in Iraq,
along with Halliburton, Bechtel and Big Oil!
The newspaper made a point, as did Bush, of paying tribute to Senator Joe Lieberman,
the Democratic Party’s vice presidential candidate in 2000, pointing to
a column by Lieberman published by the Journal on the eve of Bush’s speech,
which was headlined “Our Troops Must Stay.”
The New York Times editorial on Bush’s speech, headlined, “Plan:
We Win,” was critical of Bush’s evident isolation and indifference
to public opinion, comparing him to Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon during
the Vietnam War. Commenting on the “Plan for Victory” issued by
the White House, the Times declared: “The document, and Mr. Bush’s
speech, were almost entirely a rehash of the same tired argument that everything’s
going just fine. Mr. Bush also offered the usual false choice between sticking
to his policy and beating a hasty and cowardly retreat.”
In its search for a “middle way” between Bush’s policy and
withdrawal from Iraq, however, the Times called upon the same military expert
cited approvingly by the Wall Street Journal. “What Americans wanted to
hear was a genuine counterinsurgency plan,” the Times claimed, “perhaps
like one proposed by Andrew F. Krepinevich Jr., a leading writer on military
strategy: find the most secure areas with capable Iraqi forces. Embed American
trainers with those forces and make the region safe enough to spend money on
reconstruction, thus making friends and draining the insurgency. Then slowly
expand those zones and withdraw American forces.”
This paints an utterly false picture of average Americans, in office cubicles,
shop floors or supermarket checkout lines, clamoring for “a genuine counterinsurgency
plan.” What they want is an end to the slaughter. The Times echoes a line
in Bush’s speech, in which he claimed, “Most Americans want two
things in Iraq: They want to see our troops win, and they want to see our troops
come home as soon as possible.”
The Times, which generally articulates the position of the Democratic Party,
does not advocate an “antiwar” position; it rather seeks a more
effective tactic for winning the war. The military expert it cites, Andrew Krepinevich,
published a much-cited article in the current issue of Foreign Affairs, rejecting
both “stay the course” and immediate withdrawal, calling instead
for “a real strategy built around the principles of counterinsurgency
warfare,” and citing the lessons of the guerrilla wars in Vietnam, Malaya
and the Philippines in the 1950s and 1960s.
Krepinevich calls for refocusing the military effort from “search and
destroy” operations aimed at locating and killing insurgents, to the creation
of secure zones completely denied to the insurgents. In Vietnam, such efforts
by successive foreign occupiers involved the creation of what the French called
“agrovilles” and the Americans “strategic hamlets.”
Both were essentially concentration camps into which the local population was
herded and kept at gunpoint to prevent them from giving material support to
the insurgency.
Somewhat provocatively, Krepinevich calls this plan for Iraq the “oil-spot
strategy,” using the “o-word” that has been virtually banned
in discussions of the Iraq war in the major US media, precisely because it suggests
the real motivation for the US invasion and occupation. He wrote in Foreign
Affairs that his strategy “would require a protracted commitment of US
resources, a willingness to risk more casualties in the short term, and an enduring
US presence in Iraq...” He added: “Even if successful, this strategy
will require at least a decade of commitment and hundreds of billions of dollars
and will result in longer US casualty rolls.”
This is what the “critical,” pro-Democratic New York Times proposes
for the American and Iraqi people. The New York Times is calling for—along
with virtually the entire leadership of the Democratic Party—a reorientation
of the military effort in Iraq that could well produce an even greater bloodbath.
(Krepinevich also suggests dispensing with Bush’s rhetoric about democratizing
Iraq, arguing that local elections in contested areas like Baghdad and Anbar
province should not be held until “the population sees the benefits of
security and reconstruction—and not until then.”)
The Washington Post occupies a middle position in the right-wing political
spectrum of the American ruling elite—advocating what today passes for
moderate to liberal positions on domestic policy, while firmly supporting the
war in Iraq. Its position corresponds most closely to that of Democratic senators
like Lieberman and Hillary Clinton, who flatly reject all calls for withdrawal
from Iraq and declare that the United States must prevail militarily.
The Post editorial on Bush’s speech began with an accurate observation:
“Though you wouldn’t know it from the partisan rhetoric, there is
substantial agreement in Washington on the strategy for Iraq outlined yesterday
by President Bush.”
The newspaper dismissed the rhetorical differences, saying: “The president
denounced those who would ‘cut and run’ from the country and in
turn was lambasted by Democrats for inflexibly staying the course. In fact,
many Democrats in Congress agree with the principal elements of Mr. Bush’s
‘strategy for victory’...”
The Post cited the 79-19 vote in the US Senate two weeks ago endorsing the
broad outlines of the Bush administration policy in Iraq, and the opposition
by leading Senate Democrats, including Clinton and Joseph Biden, to an immediate
pullout.
“The agreement flows not from converging views over a war that has polarized
the country but from a simple absence of choices. To abandon Iraq while the
country’s emerging leaders are still trying to hammer together a workable
political system would be a disaster for US interests around the world. At the
same time, the US military cannot maintain its present force levels in Iraq
much longer without unpalatable measures, such as sending units for fourth and
fifth tours or mobilizing more of the National Guard.”
As the Post explains, both parties proceed from the same starting point: “US
interests around the world”—i.e., the economic and strategic interests
of American capitalism—and both parties recognize that the Iraq war has
produced enormous strains on the US military, the principal instrument for securing
imperialist interests.
The newspaper continues: “Real question about Mr. Bush’s strategy,
which few in Congress dare to ask, is whether the means meet the ends. Every
plan the administration has prepared, starting with the original invasion, has
been based on overly optimistic assumptions and insufficient resources.”
The Post’s concern is that military victory in Iraq, which the entire
ruling elite considers indispensable, may require more rather than fewer troops.
Democratic criticism of Bush’s conduct of the war, insofar as it encourages
and legitimizes popular demands for troop withdrawals, may make such a military
escalation politically unviable.
Against all these spokesmen for imperialism, the Socialist Equality Party and
the World Socialist Web Site state that “victory” for the American
ruling elite is not in the interests of the working people of this country or
of the world. Such a victory means concretely an escalation of death and destruction
in Iraq—by means of bombs, death squads, concentration camps, torture—that
will further devastate that country, and consume the lives of untold numbers
of American soldiers. The resulting regime would be a dictatorship no less brutal
than that which preceded it, only entirely subservient to American oil companies
and the US government. The American ruling elite has no problem inflicting such
carnage, so long as it continues to believe it can produce unchallenged US control
over the oil wealth and the vast profits and strategic advantages that go with
it.
An American military success in Iraq would only embolden the war criminals
in the White House and Pentagon to engage in new wars of aggression in Syria,
Iran or elsewhere, just as the initial military success in Afghanistan encouraged
the attack on Iraq.
The goal of working people must be to put an end to this unprovoked, illegal
and aggressive war. This means the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of
all American troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, an end to the squandering of
human lives and waste of billions of dollars, the mobilization instead of massive
resources and manpower to meet critical social needs, and holding the war conspirators
in the White House, the Pentagon, the State Department and the CIA legally accountable
for their war crimes.
This struggle can be waged only by breaking completely with the Democratic
Party and the entire two-party system, and building the Socialist Equality Party
as the mass independent party of the working class.