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Title: The Empire Exits Iraq Author: Walker Lane Date: Spring, 2012 Language: en Topics: Empire, Fifth Estate, Fifth Estate #386, Iraq, US foreign interventions Source: FIFTH ESTATE #386, Spring, 2012, Vol. 47, No. 1, page 12
When President Barack Obama announced on October 21 that the nine year
U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq was ending, it didnât even make
first spot on many news reports. Another imperial slaughter had ground
to an end, with many liberal publications, such as The Nation, declaring
it an âignominious end to a shameful debacle.â
To be sure, there were no victory celebrations, no teary-eyed citizens
at confetti-speckled parades waving little American flags as soldiers
marched smartly past. No one has even thought of revering the last
33,000 battle troops coming out of Iraq as part of another Depression
era WWII-type âGreatest Generation.â
Thereâs a temptation to invoke T.S. Eliotâs over-used but apt phrase,
âNot with a bang but a whimper,â to describe the final hours of another
conflict in the Westâs thousand-year war against the East. Although the
end came without much ado in the U.S. media, the bang has been felt in
Iraq for the preceding 20 years.
The total of what the U.S. architects of death have wrought in their
wars is never accurately tabulated. Hundreds of thousands of civilians
incinerated in Tokyo, Hiroshima and Nagasaki; perhaps 2.5 million during
the Korean War; upwards of 3 million in Indochina.
These are all estimates. No one in the West counts the Asian dead, yet
we are informed in exquisite detail how many perished among those who
inflicted the mass death: 58,151 U.S. military deaths in Vietnam; 4,484
in Iraq. Each of the fallen is considered worthy of an engraving on a
wall or a burial with honors. Those they killed wind up in mass graves,
unnamed.
War is the health of the state
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are easily and accurately portrayed as
wars for oil and for the larger purpose of fueling the
military/industrial complex, the engine of the U.S. economy. At the
economic level, it doesnât matter whether the U.S. continues to lose
wars as it did in Vietnam, fight to somewhat of a draw in Iraq, or win
minor ones such as the attacks on Grenada and Panama, if anyone
remembers the latter two. (The citizens of Panama City, however, recall
well the 1989 invasion to arrest the countryâs formerly U.S.-backed
dictator, Manuel Noriega, which left 4,000 civilians dead in the slum
surrounding the presidential palace).
Radical writer Randolph Bourne famously and accurately wrote in 1914
that, âWar is the health of the state.â Since the first quarter of 1942,
war has also been the health of the economy; military Keynesianism now
pumps a trillion taxpayer dollars a year through a massive wealth
transfer from private hands through the government to what they called
munitions makers in Bourneâs time.
It is certainly a cause for outrage that almost every war in American
history has been based on either contrived rationales (quickly: why did
the U.S. enter World War I?), or outright lies (Spanish-American War,
Vietnam, Iraq), World War II being the one time a war was fought by the
U.S. against a country worse than itself or for reasons less malign.
But, there is another overarching socio/historical explanation besides
economic ones that is rooted in the mass psychology of a pathogenic
culture stemming from its European origins and gives the U.S. a primary
definition as a permanent war state.
In the 15^(th) and 16^(th) centuries, Europe, primarily through Spain,
Portugal, England, Holland, and France, extended an economic system
based on exploitation and conquest and a culture of cruelty, religious
fanaticism, and environmental destruction to what they designated as the
New World. Actually, it was an Old World the mad European navigators
stumbled upon that suffered their invasion, occupation, looting, and
genocide.
It was an ancient world encompassing the Old Ways that had sustained
people for millennia and was broken by the armored invaders, although
mega-states in the Americas, the Aztecs and the Incas, for instance,
exhibited the same characteristics as the nations across the waters.
Europe had destroyed its land, impoverishing not only the common people,
but the rulers as well. It was a continent wracked with endless warfare
(the latter often celebrated in Western literature). Their solution was
fortuitously finding another continent to wreck by exporting a moribund
system with every disastrous facet intact even though the original
explorers and conquistadors met a face of humanity that could have
solved their problems differently by adapting their ways.
Instead, âThey will make excellent servants,â wrote Columbus in his
diary the first night after being discovered by Arawak people on
Hispaniola. The rest is a well known terrible history. Europe survived
through a scourge of mass death and looting. Its economy and culture
became the world-dominant system.
By the late nineteenth century, the descendants of those first
adventurers had done damage to the North American continent identical to
that which Europe had suffered. Although conquest and purchase had
already greatly expanded U.S. national territory, the countryâs internal
contradictions were bringing it close to collapse with deeper economic
depressions, mass labor unrest, great environmental despoliation, and
wide-spread poverty and misery among the population:
Men such as Indiana U.S. Senator Albert J. Beveridge, who said, in the
late 1890s, âWe must have markets abroad or revolution at home,â knew it
was time for a nation on an isolated continent to move beyond its
geography as had his forebears. This, by the way, was one of the reasons
for the U.S. entry into World War I, although the Spanish-American war,
and incursions into Latin America preceded the Great War. Presaging Cold
War liberals, Sen. Beveridge was a supporter of all of the Progressive
Era reforms.
When we hear U.S. Presidents or Secretaries of State talk of âAmerican
interestsâ in a region far from its own metropole, it comes from an
understanding that U.S. wealth, shared to differing degrees by sectors
of the domestic population, depends on access to world-wide markets and
trade, particularly oil. The socially pathological culture of militarism
and delusional sense of âAmerican Exceptionalismâ are necessary to
create a mass acceptance of its horrific dead end.
Horrific since battle totals and the grotesque phrase, collateral
damage, need a rationalization for such slaughter. All the wars
mentioned above were based on lies, many now blithely recognized as such
but ones which possessed overwhelming social and political power at the
time of the conflict.
Almost without exception, people now know there were no weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq, that Bush lied, as did Cheney (who delights that
heâs called Darth Vader by his detractors), as did Rumsfeld, Condoleezza
Rice, and the pathetic Colin Powell, butcher of the first Gulf War.
Everyone also knows that if there were a modicum of justice extracted
from the powerful (there isnât and there wonât be under present power
relationships), all of those who lied us into the Iraq war would be in
the docket of the International Criminal Court along with the likes of
Slobodan Milosevic and the perpetrators of the Rwandan genocide.
Instead, Bush and his gang of war criminals write self-serving memoirs
where they brazenly admit to suborning torture, become even more
enriched, and are touted as elder statesmen doing book tours and the
lecture circuit for $50,000 a pop.
Henry Kissinger, a man who has so many pending international warrants
for his arrests because of crimes against Vietnam and Chile that he
rarely travels outside of the U.S., and has his writing featured on the
front page of The New York Times book review section.
The 20-year war against Saddam Hussein, first, by Bush Sr.âs invasion,
the Clinton era sanctions, and finally, Juniorâs Shock and Awe, has been
catastrophic. Massive amounts of Iraqi blood was spilled; much of it
directly by the huge U.S. war machine, with additional amounts due to
the internecine clashes set off by the destruction and collapse of that
society. The Iraqi civilian casualty toll is staggering;
iraqbodycount.org, which lists only documented deaths, pegs the figures
at 113,127. The British medical journal, The Lancet, gives a much larger
figure of 654,965, counting only through 2006, calculating from
household surveys and extrapolating âexcess deaths.â
As always, battle deaths and injuries of the American troops who caused
the Iraqi casualties are only a fraction of what they inflicted. Much is
made of returning U.S. troops suffering PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder). This is a serious and predictable consequence of war, and
given what it has wreaked on American troops, one can only imagine what
Iraqis must be suffering as the result of the war inflicted upon them.
The Iraqi Red Crescent Organization has estimated that since Bushâs
âsurgeâ in 2007, the number of people who have fled their homes and
become refugees topped 1.1 million.
The U.S. has spent $800 billion dollars directly on the Iraq war, with
long-range costs spiraling the figure upwards to $23 trillion. Billions
were siphoned off to war contractors like Cheneyâs Halliburton firm,
with billions more simply unaccounted for through blatant and widespread
corruption. At times, skids filled with $20 bills were unloaded from
C-17 transport planes and passed out like leaflets by U.S. troops
attempting to buy off local resistance.
Hundreds of U.S. bases in Iraq now lie deserted, but what isnât going
home is the U.S. embassy compound in Baghdad, the largest in the world,
occupying one and a half square miles in area, and costing three
quarters of a billion dollars to build. Although U.S. troops have left,
American security personnel will swell to 16,000, not exactly a complete
withdrawal.
Just as the Tehran embassy functioned prior to the overthrow of Iranâs
Shah in 1979, the Iraq embassy will be a forward base for U.S. military
and commercial ventures. Similarly, as the Islamic Revolutionaries in
Iran designated the seized American embassy in their capital, it will
act as a ânest of spiesâ looking eastward to Russia and China, something
not lost on either nation.
Where next for the Death Star? Apparently off to Uganda, and to
Australia, where President Obama announced in November that a couple of
thousand U.S. Marines will be stationed there indefinitely as a hedge
against Chinese influence in the region. The fact that Beijing sees this
as a threatening provocation apparently matters little to those manning
the Empireâs central command at the Pentagon.
It is imperial interest added to cultural psychosis that drives the U.S.
relentlessly towards war, but this time itâs messing with the big boys.
Steadily advancing into the sphere of influence of a nuclear armed
super-power is reminiscent of the Cold War and fraught with the same
chances of annihilation that existed a generation ago.
David Swansonâs excellent web site, warisacrime.org, reported on the
anniversary of the Japanese attack in Hawaii 70 years ago on a similar
military/political situation:
âWhen President Franklin Roosevelt visited Pearl Harbor on July 28,
1934, seven years before the Japanese attack, the Japanese military
expressed apprehension. General Kunishiga Tanaka wrote in the Japan
Advertiser, objecting to the build-up of the American fleet and the
creation of additional bases in Alaska and the Aleutian Islands: âSuch
insolent behavior makes us most suspicious. It makes us think a major
disturbance is purposely being encouraged in the Pacific. This is
greatly regretted.ââ
Such madness is afoot once again. Their preparation for total war
necessitates our total opposition.