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Arab News
LONDON, 26 June 2003 — Having scored a palpable hit by dragging
Alastair Campbell, Prime Minister Tony Blair’s chief of
communications, before it, the Foreign Affairs Select Committee
should take care not to lose the plot. The issues it is supposed to
be investigating are rather more important even than Campbell —
hard as it is for some people in the Westminster village to wrap
their heads round the idea that such an issue can exist.
But the committee would do well to ensure that its understandable
fascination with dossier-making doesn’t eclipse the actual object
of its enquiry: The decision to go to war in Iraq.
It would do well to heed the advice of Robin Cook, its most
interesting hostile witness to date, who told the committee that he
found the “dodgy dossier” of February an “immense red
herring”, except in so far as it produced nothing to show that
Saddam Hussein could deliver an unconventional weapons capability.
Indeed, as Cook also pointed out, even the September dossier when
read with a “skeptical eye... does not actually produce evidence
that there is a weaponized capability for a WMD capable of
long-range delivery”.
Certainly, the evidence was overcooked at times. But equally
important was the fact that, even by its own lights, that evidence
didn’t itself and alone justify the view that war was, in Cook’s
words, a “dire necessity”. And that leads to an inescapable, if
familiar, conclusion — that it was neither the best, nor the true,
reason for taking part in a war that had already been broadly agreed
with George Bush. (Except in the negative sense that Tony Blair had
extracted some form of commitment from the president that if Saddam
suddenly climbed down and offered 100 percent, unequivocal
cooperation to the UN’s weapons inspectors, war would not happen.)
There has been a similarly growing debate in the US, of course,
where the administration was franker than the UK about the objective
of regime change and more cavalier still about the nature of the
threat — for example in making the spurious link between Al-Qaeda
and Saddam. In a recent New York Times column, Tom Friedman
suggested there was a real reason for the war — showing who was
boss after Sept. 11; a right reason — regime change; a moral
reason, dealing with the heinous crimes inflicted by Saddam on his
own people; and a wrong reason — dealing with the so-called threat
from weapons of mass destruction. As in the US, so in Britain. Part
of the trouble lay in the belief that only the last reason could
justify the war in law and public opinion.
Unless the committee can tease some of this out, it will be
ignoring what matters for the future as well as for the past.
There’s an irony here. For the consequence is that by taking the
government on its own terms, the success of the war will be judged
on whether weapons of mass destruction are found, when that isn’t
so at all. Whether evidence of weapons of mass destruction is found,
it won’t, by a very, very long chalk, be the end of the story.
It’s an irony that the only palpably lethal mass destruction
material to have emerged since the war has been uranium derivatives
that, until the fall of the regime, had been closely guarded by
Iraqi guards cooperating with the International Atomic Energy
Agency. These were subsequently looted from the Tuwaitha nuclear
complex, and reports Monday suggested they had caused acute and
possibly widespread health problems.
The Americans say they secured the site on April 7. Yet the
looting was still going on in the former nuclear storage site
outside the main complex a month later, to the certain knowledge of
the sparse detachment of US troops in the area.
This is only worth mentioning because it’s just one paradigm of
the problems of postwar Iraq. Another, perhaps is the killing of
British soldiers Tuesday in Amara, a reminder that the war is not
yet fully over even in the southeastern sector of the country under
UK control, widely regarded as the most secure in the country. But
above all, the success of the war needs to be judged on the extent
to which security, democracy and prosperity can be brought, as
promised, to the country in the wake of Saddam’s fall.
The real question, to which the British body politic needs
shortly to turn its attention, is why the allies didn’t have a
better plan for what happened after what was, after all, a signal
military victory. Why they didn’t even think they would have to
pay hundreds of thousands of public servants in the first few weeks
to keep the country running; why President Bush didn’t think
security would be a problem; and why Tony Blair was either unwilling
or unable to persuade him that a more effective UN presence was
needed, not to run the country but to lend some credibility to the
developing political and humanitarian process.
The US administration appears to have thought that once the
regime was “decapitated”, the country would run smoothly despite
its dire impoverishment, imposed by Saddam and compounded by the
war, and despite being awash with weapons of a rather more
conventional kind than those under discussion at the Foreign Affairs
Select Committee.
Most Iraqis are heartily glad to see the back of Saddam, and even
grateful that the US got rid of him. Most Iraqis have been baffled,
frustrated and angry that the “most powerful force on earth”
didn’t know how to run the peace and press home the huge regional
advantage its military victory had given it. Or produce more
tangible steps toward the real democracy that it promised. Those
problems may yet be solved.
But whether they are will matter in the end more, even, than
whether weapons of mass destruction are discovered.
The select committee is right to hold its inquiry. But it needs
to produce a report that touches on the real, as well as the
ostensible, reasons for the war. And to ask when the best of them,
as well as the worst, are going to be fulfilled.
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