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Fighting for Their
Independence LONDON, 28 March 2003 — The Anglo-American war now being fought in
the Middle East is without question the most flagrant act of aggression
carried out by a British government in modern times. The assault on Iraq
which began a week ago, in the teeth of global and national opinion, was
launched without even the flimsiest Iraqi provocation or threat to Britain
or the US, in breach of the UN Charter and international law, and in
defiance of the majority of states represented on the UN Security Council. It is necessary to descend deep into the mire of the colonial era to
find some sort of precedent or parallel for this piratical onslaught.
However wrong or unnecessary, every previous British war for the past 80
years or more has been fought in response to some invasion, rebellion,
civil war or emergency. Even in the most crudely rapacious case of Suez,
there was at least a challenge in the form of the nationalization of the
canal. Not so with Iraq, where the regime was actually destroying missiles
with which it might have hoped to defend itself only a couple of days
before the start of the US-led attack. But there is little reflection of this reality, or of Anglo-American
isolation in the world over the war, in either the bulk of the British
media coverage or the response from most politicians and public figures.
Little is now heard of the original pretext for war, Iraq’s much-vaunted
weapons of mass destruction, and regime change — that lodestar of the US
hawks which Tony Blair struggled to dissociate himself from for so long
— is now the uncontested mission of the campaign. Having lost the public
debate on the war, Blair has demanded that a divided nation rally round
British troops carrying out his policy of aggression in the Gulf. And
under a barrage of war propaganda, the soft center of public opinion has
dutifully shifted ground — in the wake of those MPs who put their
careers before constituents and conscience once Blair had failed to secure
UN authorization. Many balk at criticizing the war when British soldiers are in action,
but it’s hardly a position that can be defended as moral or principled
when the action they are taking part in arguably constitutes a war crime.
And whether public support holds up under the pressure of events in Iraq
— such as Wednesday’s civilian carnage in a Baghdad market — remains
to be seen. Events have, of course, signally failed to follow their expected
course. The pre-invasion spin couldn’t have been clearer. The Iraqis
would not fight, we were told, but would welcome US and British invaders
with open arms. The bulk of the regular army would capitulate as soon as
soon as they saw the glint on the columns of American armor. The war might
even only last six days, Donald Rumsfeld suggested, in a contemptuous
evocation of the Arabs’ humiliation in the Six Day war of 1967. His hard
right Republican allies insisted it would be a “cakewalk”. British
ministers, as ever, took their cue from across the Atlantic, while the
intelligence agencies and US-financed Iraqi opposition groups reinforced
their arrogant assumptions. But Rumsfeld’s six days have gone and resistance to the most powerful
military machine in history continues to be fierce across Iraq — in and
around the very Shiite-dominated towns and cities, such as Najaf and
Nassiriya, that the US and Britain expected to be least willing to fight.
Nor has the Iraqi Army yet collapsed or surrendered in large numbers,
while regular units are harrying US and British forces along with loyalist
militias. One senior US commander told the New York Times on Wednesday,
“We did not put enough credence in their abilities,” while another
conceded that “we did not expect them to attack”. The International
Herald Tribune recorded dolefully that “the people greeting American
troops have been much cooler than many had hoped”. There was little public preparation for the resistance that is now
taking place. Third World peoples have after all been allocated a largely
passive role in the security arrangements of the new world order — the
best they can hope for is to be “liberated” and be grateful for it.
There has been little understanding that, however much many Iraqis want to
see the back of Saddam Hussein, they also — like any other people —
don’t want their country occupied by foreign powers. No doubt Baathist
militias are playing a coercive role in stiffening resistance. There are
also those who cannot expect to survive the fall of the dictatorship and
therefore have nothing to lose. But the scale and commitment of the resistance — along with reports
of hundreds of Iraqis struggling to return from Syria and Jordan to fight
— suggests that it is driven far more by national and religious pride.
Most of these people are not fighting for Saddam Hussein, but for the
independence of their homeland. To fail to recognize this now obvious reality is not only
condescending, but stupid. But then we have been subjected to such a
blizzard of disinformation in recent days — from the reported deaths of
Tareq Aziz and Saddam Hussein to the non-existent chemical weapons plant
and Tuesday’s uprising in Basra — that it should come as no surprise
to hear everyone from British and US defense ministers to BBC television
presenters refer to Iraqis defending their own country as
“terrorists”. Of course, the US has the military might to break Iraqi conventional
resistance and impose a puppet administration in Baghdad in order to
change the regional balance of power, oversee the privatization of
Iraq’s oil and parcel out reconstruction contracts to itself and its
friends. But the course of this war will also have a huge political
impact, in Iraq and throughout the world. This is after all a
demonstration war, designed to cow and discipline both the enemies and
allies of the US. The tougher the Iraqi resistance, the more difficult it will be for the
US to impose its will in the country, and move on to the next target in
the never-ending war on terror. The longer Iraqis are able and choose to
resist, the more the pressure will also build against the war in the rest
of the world. Almost 86 years ago to the day, the British commander Lt. Gen. Stanley
Maude issued a proclamation to the people of Baghdad, whose city his
forces had just occupied. “Our armies,” he declared, “do not come
into your cities and lands as conquerors, but as liberators.” Within
three years, 10,000 had died in a national Iraqi uprising against the
British rulers, who gassed and bombed the insurgents. On the eve of last
week’s invasion Lt. Col. Tim Collins echoed Maude in a speech to British
troops. “We go to liberate, not to conquer”, he told them. All the
signs from the past few days are that a new colonial occupation of Iraq
— however it is dressed up — will face determined guerrilla resistance
long after Saddam Hussein has gone; and that the occupiers will once again
be driven out.
Opinions expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah's.
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