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Iraqis will not be pawns in
Bush and Blairs war game
An American attack on my country would bring
disaster, not liberation
By Kamil Mahdi
Having failed to convince the British people that war is justified, Tony
Blair is now invoking the suffering of the Iraqi people to justify bombing
them. He tells us there will be innocent civilian casualties, but that
more will die if he and Bush do not go to war. Which dossier is he reading
from?
The present Iraqi regimes repressive practices have long been known,
and its worst excesses took place 12 years ago, under the gaze of General
Colin Powells troops; 15 years ago, when Saddam was an Anglo-American
ally; and almost 30 years ago, when Henry Kissinger cynically used Kurdish
nationalism to further US power in the region at the expense of both Kurdish
and Iraqi democratic aspirations.
Killing and torture in Iraq is not random, but has long been directly
linked to politics - and international politics at that. Some of the gravest
political repression was in 1978-80, at the time of the Iranian revolution
and Soviet intervention in Afghanistan. But the Iraqi peoples greatest
suffering has been during periods of war and under the sanctions of the
1990s. There are political issues that require political solutions and
a war under any pretext is not what Iraqis need or want.
In government comment about Iraq, the Iraqi people are treated as a collection
of hapless victims without hope or dignity. At best, Iraqis are said to
have parochial allegiances that render them incapable of political action
without tutelage. This is utterly at variance with the history and reality
of Iraq. Iraqis are proud of their diversity, the intricacies of their
society and its deeply rooted urban culture.
Their turbulent recent history is not something that simply happened to
Iraqis, but one in which they have been actors. Iraqis have a rich modern
political tradition borne out of their struggle for independence from
Britain and for political and social emancipation. A major explanation
for the violence of recent Iraqi political history lies in the determination
of people to challenge tyranny and bring about political change. Iraqis
have not gone like lambs to the slaughter, but have fought political battles
in which they suffered grievously. To assert that an American invasion
is the only way to bring about political change in Iraq might suit Blairs
propaganda fight-back, but it is ignorant and disingenuous.
It is now the vogue to talk down Iraqi politics under Saddam Hussein as
nothing but the whim of a dictator. The fact is that leaders cannot kill
politics in the minds of people, nor can they crush their aspirations.
The massacres of leftists when the Baathists first came to power
in 1963 did not prevent the emergence of a new mass movement in the mid-1960s.
The second Baath regime attempted to buy time from the Kurdish movement
in 1970 only to trigger a united mobilization of Kurdish nationalism.
Saddam co-opted the Communist party in the early 1970s only to see that
partys organization grow under a very narrow margin of legality
before he moved against it. In the 1970s, the regime tried to control
private economic activity by extending the state to every corner of the
economy, only to face an explosion of small business activity.
The regimes strict secularism produced a clerical opposition with
a mass following. When the regime pressurized Iraqis to join the Baath
party, independent opinion emerged within that party and Saddam found
it necessary to crush it and destroy the party in the process. In the
1980s, the army was beginning to emerge as a threat, and the 1991 uprising
showed the extent of discontent. In the 1990s, Saddam fostered the religious
leadership of Ayatollah Muhammad Sadiq al-Sadr, only to see the latter
emerge as a focal point for opposition. Even within Saddams family
and close circle, there has been opposition.
Of course Saddam Hussein crushed all these challenges, but in every case
the regional and international environment has supported the dictator
against the people of Iraq. It is cynical and deceitful of Tony Blair
to pretend that he understands Iraqi politics and has a meaningful program
for the country. Iraqs history is one of popular struggle and also
of imperial greed, superpower rivalries and regional conflict. To reduce
the whole of Iraqi politics and social life to the whims of Saddam Hussein
is banal and insulting.
Over the past 12 years of vicious economic blockade, the US and Britain
have ignored the political situation inside Iraq and concentrated on weapons
as a justification for their policy of containment. UN resolution 688
of April 1991, calling for an end to repression and an open dialogue to
ensure Iraqi human and political rights, was set aside or used only for
propaganda and to justify the no-fly zones.
Instead of generating a real political dynamic backed by international
strength and moral authority, Iraqis were prevented from reconstructing
their devastated country. Generations of Iraqis will continue to pay the
price of the policy of sanctions and containment, designed for an oil
glut period in the international market.
Now that the US has a new policy, it intends to implement it rapidly and
with all its military might. Despite what Blair claims, this has nothing
to do with the interests and rights of the Iraqi people. The regime in
Iraq is not invincible, but the objective of the US is to have regime
change without the people of Iraq. The use of Iraqi auxiliaries is designed
to minimize US and British casualties, and the result may be higher Iraqi
casualties and prolonged conflict with predictably disastrous humanitarian
consequences.
The Bush administration has enlisted a number of Iraqi exiles to provide
an excuse for invasion and a political cover for the control of Iraq.
People like Ahmad Chalabi and Kanan Makiya have little credibility among
Iraqis and they have a career interest in a US invasion. At the same time,
the main forces of Kurdish nationalism, by disengaging from Iraqi politics
and engaging in internecine conflict, have become highly dependent upon
US protection and are not in a position to object to a US military onslaught.
The US may enlist domestic and regional partners with varying degrees
of pressure.
This in no way bestows legitimacy on its objectives and methods, and its
policies are rejected by most Iraqis and others in the region. Indeed,
the main historical opposition to the Baath regime - including various
strands of the left, the Arab nationalist parties, the Communist party,
the Islamic Dawa party, the Islamic party (the Muslim Brotherhood)
and others - has rejected war and US patronage over Iraqi politics. The
prevalent Iraqi opinion is that a US attack on Iraq would be a disaster,
not a liberation, and Blairs belated concern for Iraqis is unwelcome.
Kamil Mahdi is an Iraqi political exile and lecturer in Middle East economics
at the University of Exeter.
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