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Bush Has Already Lost the
Proposed Peace The propaganda war has now spread from the war to the diplomacy of
postwar. To listen to British briefers you would think that prime Minister
Tony Blair had been leading a fully mechanized brigade over to the US to
force Washington to admit the United Nations to the task of reconstructing
Iraq, and to reverse its pro-Israeli stance. It’s largely flim-flam, of course. Just as the Pentagon had prepared
its war plans for nearly a year before this invasion, so it has prepared
its peace plans for almost as long. In the same way that US president
George Bush was prepared to go to the UN in the run-up to war so long as
it backed his plans, so he is prepared to see the UN participate in relief
and fundraising for reconstruction so long as it in no way dilutes US
control. “He who holds the stick, owns the buffalo,” as the old Indian
saying has it. If Bush has been prepared to be rather more positive (although still
not committed to a date) about publishing the “road-map” to Middle
East peace, it is not so much because of Blair but more in answer to the
demands of the Arab states providing facilities in this war that the US do
something to appear more even-handed (if only to help them to pacify their
populations). Whether Bush is actually prepared to face down Ariel Sharon
depends partly on the course of war. If it ends in dramatic victory, the
administration may be emboldened to push for real progress; if it
doesn’t go so well, Bush won’t risk antagonizing the domestic Jewish
vote. Yet in a real sense it no longer matters just what Washington thinks or
plans for postwar Iraq. Just as it struggles to win the war, and still
seems certain to do so, so it is losing the peace, and is probably too
late to save it. America, and with it Britain, may try to project the war
as one of “liberation” for the Iraqis, but the rest of the world has
largely made up its mind to the contrary. This, in their eyes, is an
American invasion fought for American reasons. In the allies’ Central Command HQ in Doha, they produce images to
show the precision of Western bombing and the rapidity of the US push on
Iraq. Walk down the road and the studios of Al-Jazeera are pumping out
images of a Third World country trying vainly to fight back against a
hyperpower of infinite technological superiority. There is no doubt which
version most of the world believes. Even in India, where anti-Muslim
feelings lie close to the surface, you don’t meet a single person who
thinks this is anything other than an American enterprise fought for
selfish reasons. “Why,” they ask you in genuinely concerned terms,
“is Blair going along with it?” It’s difficult to know what would shift this view. An early victory
would only confirm the image of humiliating Western technological
superiority. Saddam Hussein’s use of chemical weapons might raise a
counterreaction, although even here many in the Third World would regard
this as understandable given the technical disparity. But an outpouring of
Iraqi delight at being freed from Saddam won’t change opinion, as it
would be taken as a byproduct of American actions, not its main intention. Donald Rumsfeld’s suggestion that victory will bring a thousand
friends misses the point. Of course small countries, and even quite large
ones, must accommodate America’s position as the world’s only
superpower. But to boast, as President Bush did in Thursday’s press
conference, that this “is a larger coalition than in the last Gulf
War” is self-deluding nonsense. The 1991 war was fought with the active
participation of half-a-dozen Arab armies (including Syria) and the
support of almost every country in the UN aside from Russia and China (who
both accepted it at the end). This war is being fought by the Americans
and British, with a few thousand Australians and a couple of special
forces companies from Poland — an entirely Western enterprise. Other countries have acceded to American requests for facilities, but
if they have wanted to keep their help discreet, it is for good reason.
Public opinion is clear and unambiguous and the war is only making the
streets angrier at their governments’ sell-out. It is not for nothing
that the ruler of Qatar acts as host to the allied headquarters and Al-Jazeera
at the same time, or that Turkey finally failed to give the US more than
rights of overflight. Democracy in the Middle East should not be
understood to presuppose pro-Americanism. Just the opposite. If that is what Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz and Dick Cheney believe
then they are fooling themselves, never mind anyone else. When this war is
over, Washington will be faced by a single demand throughout the Middle
East, including many in Iraq itself, at least among the Shiites. And that
is to get out of the region as quickly as possible. And they mean weeks,
not months never mind the years that the Pentagon is talking about.
Whatever it may seem to Iraqis, a continuing military presence by the
Americans will be seen by its neighbors as a US occupation, with all the
instability and invitation to terrorism that it this will invite. Yet a
prolonged occupation is seen as necessary by Washington as the only means
of ensuring order in Iraq and keeping it as a unitary state. That is America’s dilemma. Tony Blair’s is that he knows it and
there is nothing he can do except make the right noises of passionate
concern.
Opinions expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah's.
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