“Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it.” Mark Twain
In good faith, and in perplexed naivety, Iraqis (who have been under years of brutal dictatorship) may have thought at first that the Americans were indeed coming to rescue them from the brutality of Saddam and instill democracy and freedom[iii]. This argument has a number of challenges to consider:
Ten years of sanctions by the US were seen by the Iraqis as a most spiteful and inhumane crime towards them, and given that, they would not have believed that the intentions of the US in Iraq were as noble as the US government had claimed. Though to give the benefit of the doubt, this may have been seen as caused by the presence of Saddam, so in effect the Iraqi people were being punished twice. First by Saddam, then by the American government and the international community for having Saddam as their leader. Indeed a very unfavorable position to be in. Though maybe with Saddam gone, some thought that things would get better.
Iraqis in particular and Arabs in general having experienced an extremely unjust and biased US policy in the middle east with regards to the Palestinian/Israeli conflict and therefore from past experience would have been equally cynical of the US interests in Iraq.
Iraq’s valuable oil reserves would be the obvious de facto motivator, even to the most naïf, of US interests in Iraq, and that is the perception in the Arab world, in Iraq, and in the rest of the world in general. US government administrators are often cited as mentioning in open ended statements their need to protect their “national interests” in Iraq. Most Arabs recognize the tight relationship between the US government and the Saudi’s– a very corrupt and suppressive regime one should add - extending way back in the past, and at its crux is the oil. The one “crime” that Saddam committed which mattered to the US had been to nationalize the oil of Iraq. This was definitely not in the geopolitical interest of the US government.
Americas handling of the war, the descent into anarchy of Iraq’s civil society. The lack of concern for rebuilding the roads, providing sanitation and clean water, electricity and the reestablishment of the infrastructure that the US had so eloquently destroyed in the “shock and awe” operation. The death of civilians, the displacement of hundreds of thousands from their homes, but most notoriously the torture and humiliation and inhumane treatment of prisoners and the rape incidents by American military personnel.
There is further lack of credibility if not simply outright hypocrisy in the fact that the while the US claims that it wants to rid the world of a brutal dictator and spread democracy and freedom in the Middle East, it goes on the other hand and supports some of the most brutal suppressive dictatorship regimes in the world just around the corner:
The US supports Saudi Arabia, a most brutal suppressive dictatorship regime where women cannot even drive or seek employment or walk the streets without being covered in veil, where the vast majority of the population suffers extreme poverty while the ruling family enjoys most exuberant wealth.
Supports Egypt’s regime (the second biggest recipient of US foreign aid after Israel) which is also notoriously suppressive and kills any chance of freedom of speech or expression or democracy
Staunchly supports Israel, an apartheid state and a violator of international law and UN resolutions, an illegal occupier of Palestinian territories – the longest occupation in modern history, and engages in ethnic cleansing of Palestinians
Supported Turkey, also on the human rights watch list for suppressing the Kurdish population
Friends with Pakistan and supports Musharaf, a military dictator who seized power in a military coup. Upon a recent visit, Condalesa Rice called Pakistan “a model country for the middle east”.
In the past helped install and then supported Pinochet in Chile and the Contras in Nicaragua – both condemned by the International community and the International Court of Justice for terrorizing their populations.
Heavily condemned and cut all aid to the government of Hamas, regardless of its stance, nevertheless a democratically elected government with elections conducted under international observers including Jimmy Carter
The intent of the US government has nothing to do with the spread of democracy. The reality of the matter is that if democratically elected governments were allowed in the Middle East, for the most part their positions will be against the US government, and that would be a problem for American “national” interests in the region.
Given all the above factors, for an average Iraqi, the US war in Iraq is an act of aggression, an invasion and occupation that has, at its core, nothing to do with the improvement of the condition of the Iraqi people but completely the opposite.
For Every Action There is a Reaction
Let us take that simple concept which applies not only in physics – forces - but also psychology (example abuse and trauma during childhood – action - causing neurosis or psychosis later in life - reaction), sociology (repression leads to unrest and revolution), geography (earth quakes due to movement of plates in one area – action - may trigger a volcano in another area) and other disciplines. Consider an individual’s psychological action-reaction state, and then extrapolate that to a group of people, to a community, to a country. Naturally the extrapolation in such a case from individual to group psychology is not a linear, straight forward, predicable relation since the nature of emotion is anything but.
If a person is wronged or harmed – action – he will feel the injustice and the physical or psychological pain, and could react in various ways. If we would follow a logical progression of events, first he would want to put an end to the harmful action inflicted upon him – to stop it (unless the person was a true masochist). Further, he could take it upon himself to put a corrective action so that the harmful action and the injustice not be repeated nor inflicted on some other party. He or she may go further, and depending upon the depth and severity of the psychological damage, to attempt to settle the score, to get even, to retaliate, or to use other words, to take revenge (provoked attack). This is part of the natural condition of being human. Studies have shown that humans are first emotional then rational. Other psychological tests have shown that when faced with a situation where people in an experiment were knowingly being cheated, and given a choice of different available actions to select from, each action with a given consequence, people tended to choose the action that would get them most even with the cheater, even when it meant that the consequence of the action knowingly left them in a worse condition than would have other actions[15].
“An abnormal reaction to an abnormal situation is normal behavior”.
Statistics and numbers give us on a macro level a measure of the degree of damage or atrocities in a war. Whereby they remain objective and scientific and hence valuable, they are very limited when it comes to getting an actual sense of what it feels like to be tortured. What it is like to lose a child during war, a sister or a mother, let alone a pregnant sister (as reported in a recent story in Iraq). To see one’s own home destroyed. The fear of being next in a line of a house to house search in the dead of night and seeing your husband taken away never to be seen again. To be dispossessed and be left as a refugee. To feel humiliated. To live in fear, in anarchy.
Life’s meaning and significance is very much dependent on one’s relationships with others and especially in the Middle East where family ties and bonds are quite strong, and where emotions run high. When one loses that which is most dear to him/her, there is little left to life, especially in an impoverished, desperate country.
The psychiatrist and holocaust survivor Viktor Henkel asserts in his book In Search of Meaning after observing and analyzing severely abused people, that “an abnormal reaction to an abnormal situation is normal behavior”. He characterized such survivors after being released from the death camps as being apathetic with lack of sympathy or empathy towards other persons and in some cases lacking in emotion as well ruthless.
Is it religion? Is it Us versus Them? Or is it possible that if we were faced with a similar circumstance, that we could behave as “Them”? Faced with an extreme situation endured for such a long time, it can be expected of Iraqis to go extreme.
Spreading Democracy in Iraq and Middle East
"The only thing we need to kill is the thought of killing" -BUDDHA ...
Democracy should not be confused with morality: In theory a democratic system by design is intended to implement decisions to a binding group of people or to a whole country based on a majority vote by the members of the group so that collectively, members of that democratic group would achieve the biggest benefit from such a process along the principles of equality and fairness regarding the members of the group. The problem is that this can be self-centric and the benefit gained by the democratic group might be at the expense of another group. Say we are a group of ten people sitting at a table in a restaurant. We all regard each other as equal. We decide on a democratic vote to take food from the group sitting at the table next to us and share it equally amongst ourselves thus we each end up with more food. A majority vote supports the plan and it gets executed. That would have been a democratic process. Furthermore, we have enough leverage to bypass the restaurant’s rules.
Similarly, one can make the case that whereas capitalism as a system can prove itself economically advantageous, at heart it is amoral. It fosters competition which arguably pushes people and communities to do their best. It admires and rewards winners, overachievers, those who can play the game better, the rich, the affluent but often with little or no regard to the underlying value system of the entities involved.
Especially with regards to foreign policy, democracy without respect for international law, sovereignty of other nations, and universal human rights is not guaranteed to take a moral disposition.
So many of the discussions in the mainstream media around the war in Iraq were around how much the war would cost, how many casualties the US might incur, the different strategies and tactics that could be employed, the capability of the enemy (an enemy who in reality never attacked the US, incidentally.) Very rarely did we hear discussions about how many Iraqi civilians would be killed by a war of our making, what it would mean for a people to have their infrastructure and country destroyed. Even talk about Iraqi civilian casualties is significant to the extent of its negative effect on US public image. The arguments are very much self centered on the US. The notion of “Do unto others as you would have others do unto you” is completely missing. The public debates revolving around the Iraq war have been morally bankrupt and shameless.
“Now that we found love what are we gonna do?”
(So you don’t support our troops, huh…)
The mutually exclusive technique is a very effective and manipulative method to shift the attention away from the people in the driver seat that made the decision and took the country to war in the first place. It relieves the Bush Administration of any responsibility or accountability for the decision to go to war. The table below shows how the media, with underlying arguments brought out in very subtle ways, takes care of any position that opposes the Administration’s:
Context
If your position was: Before the invasion: Against the war in Iraq
Media flip over
-->That means that you support Saddam
-->That means that you do not support the war on terror. Have we already forgotten about 9/11?
-->That means that you are unpatriotic and do not stand behind our leadership at a time when we cannot be divided
-->That means that you are pro dictatorship and anti democracy
If your position was: After the invasion: Against the war in Iraq
Media flip over
-->That means that you don’t support the troops, our service men and women in uniform risking their lives and serving our country.
Before one has time to give their argument against the war, they are flooded and muted by the above arguments. With the support of overwhelming evidence, one is not given the chance to say “I am against the Iraq war because”:
- Iraq does not pose a threat to the US. Iraq does not have any WMDs as confirmed by the experts on the matter
- There is no link between Iraq and Al-Qaeda. Iraq has never attacked the US or conducted terrorist threats on the US, so it is misleading to say that our war on Iraq is part of our war on terror
- We are not doing the Iraqi people a favor by destroying their infrastructure and enforcing a regime change externally. An internal grass roots dissident group(s) existed (still exists?) and we should have supported those in overthrowing Saddam so as to more effectively form a replacement government without the risk of political vacuum (as is currently the case) which leads to chaos and sectarian violence.
- The war in Iraq is antagonizing Arabs and Muslims and increasing the support and the flow of new recruits to Al-Qaeda and other would-be terrorist organizations. A fact also confirmed by Pentagon reports. Thus in the long run, the war is not improving the safety of Americans but doing the exact opposite.
- The war in Iraq is engaging/depleting resources that would have otherwise been used to address vulnerabilities outlined in the 9/11 Commission report (such as nuclear plants, subways and trains, etc…)
- The cost of the war in Iraq increases national debt and constitutes money that could have been used to improve the soft infrastructure in the US (health and education)
- The war in Iraq has tarnished the image of the US in the world, especially with some of our European allies.
- If the reason for the invasion is to secure energy sources, the money wasted on the war would have been money well spent on research and development on alternate sources of energy. The depletion of this non-renewable source of energy is a reality that is incumbent upon us. In the long term (post oil era), economies that are less dependent on oil will be better prepared and more immune.
- A major source of the frustration, anger and fury in the Middle East, the Arab and Islamic world in general (arguably often used as an excuse for shortfalls due to other reasons) is the Palestinian/Israeli conflict, and this has not only been more neglected than ever under the current administration, but allowed to deteriorate and sink deeper into the abyss.
It is sadly ironic that while the government commission investigating the terrorist attacks against the US on 9/11 asserts that lack of scrutiny by journalists and watch dog organizations led to oversight in the realization and disruption of 9/11, that the congress itself blindly supported Bush’s war with complete oversight of the invalidity of the reasons given, ignoring various reports and calls by credible groups against the war;
“Secrecy, while necessary, can also harm oversight. The overall budget of the intelligence community is classified, as are most of its activities. Thus, the intelligence committees cannot take advantage of democracy’s best oversight mechanism: public disclosure. This makes them significantly different from other congressional oversight committees, which are often spurred into action by the work of investigative journalists and watchdog organizations… In addition, denial and deception became more effective as targets learned from public sources what our intelligence agencies were doing… That said, Congress still took too little action to address institutional weaknesses.” [16]
Isn’t this exactly what the Bush Administration did in its war with Iraq – deception of the American public? And isn’t it laughable that Clinton received much more scrutiny for his Lewinsky affair than an Administration that lied to a whole country and sent more than 2500 Americans to their deaths for no valid reason (let alone destroying another country and killing over 100,000 of its people “collateral damage”?). While this is not intended in the slightest to be insensitive to the families of the deceased, it should be a wake up call for the American public to hold the Administration accountable for its actions.
The Iraq war is a stark example of the failure of democracy in America as congress and the mainstream media blindly acquiesce to the administration’s scheme. It is also a failure in the upholding of any principle of morality.
And now for the most alarming of all. When Americans were asked in a Harris Poll published in July 21, 2006 the question: “Did Saddam Hussein’s government have weapons of mass destruction in 2003?”
Half of the United States answered yes (up from 36 percent last year).
“Experts see a raft of reasons: a drumbeat of voices from talk radio to die-hard bloggers to the Oval Office, occasional surprise headlines, a rallying around a partisan flag and a growing need for people, in their own minds, to justify the war in Iraq.
People tend to become “independent of reality” in these circumstances, opinion analyst Steven Kull says.
The reality in this case is that after a 16-month, $900 million plus investigation, the U.S. weapons hunters known as the Iraq Survey Group declared that Iraq had dismantled its chemical, biological and nuclear arms programs in 1991 under UN oversight. That finding in 2004 reaffirmed the work of UN inspectors who in 2002-03 found no trace of banned arsenals in Iraq.”[17]
The propaganda machine has penetrated so deep in its brain washing of Americans. When it comes to the Middle East, the majority of Americans does not seem to engage in any critical, independent thinking and readily digests without questioning the news, analysis and portrayal of the world by the mainstream media as god given facts. Such news is de-contextualized. Repeated lies have become truths. To think for oneself requires some effort. An average American spends four hours per day on TV. It is convenient to accept what is being said than to question and go against the stream. This blind complacency will only end up hurting more innocent people on all sides. As Socrates said about 500 BC, ignorance of ignorance is much more dangerous than ignorance of knowledge. Awareness and the spread of awareness is a most necessary pre-requisite in the fight for justice for all. A big part of the blame rests with the Arab communities who have exerted little effort in explaining their side of the story.
"If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, it expects what never was and never will be . . . The People cannot be safe without information. When the press is free, and every man is able to read, all is safe." Thomas Jefferson
[i] “In November 2002 the United States Congress and President George W. Bush established by law the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, also known as the 9/11 Commission. This independent, bipartisan panel was directed to examine the facts and circumstances surrounding the September 11 attacks, identify lessons learned, and provide recommendations to safeguard against future acts of terrorism.”
[ii] The lancet medical journal published a report in August 2004, putting the Iraqi civilian death toll because of the conflict at 100,000. Since then, the bloodshed and casualties have considerably increased making the death toll of civilians as we stand today (August 2006) easily over 200,000. http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/10/29/iraq.deaths/
[iii] Indeed, many of my Iraqi friends in the US, mainly Christian, refused to join the demonstrations that were taking place in the US against the war. They remained hopeful that despite what ulterior motives the US government may have had in Iraq, that whatever will come to replace Saddam will be at least better.
[1] Curl, J. (Sept 27, 2002). Agency Disavows Report on Iraq Arms. Washington Times. http://www.commondreams.org/headlines02/0927-08.htm
[2] Calabresi, M. (Sept 14, 2002). Exclusive: Scott Ritter in His Own Words. Time magazine. http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,351165,00.html
[3] Kaiser, R. (June 3, 2004). “Instant Analysis: Tenet Resigns”. Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A12440-2004Jun3.html
[4] Chomsky, N. (2006). Failed States. 25
[5] Connelly, J. (Sept. 29, 2004). In the Northwest: Bush-Cheney flip-flops cost America in blood. Seattle Post-Intellgiencer. http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/connelly/192828_joel29.html
[6] Kean, T., Hamilton, L., Ben-Veniste, R., Kerrey, B., Fielding, F., Lehman, J., Gorelick, J., Roemer, T., & Gorton, S., Thompson, J. The 9/11 Commission Report. First (Authorized) Edition. 61
[7] Kean, T., Hamilton, L., Ben-Veniste, R., Kerrey, B., Fielding, F., Lehman, J., Gorelick, J., Roemer, T., & Gorton, S., Thompson, J. (2003). The 9/11 Commission Report. First (Authorized) Edition. 66
[8] Von Sponeck, H. (July 22, 2002). The Guardian
[9] Clarke, R. (Sept 14, 2004). Against all enemies. 31
[10] Battle, J. (February 25, 2003). From National Security Archive Electronic Briefing. Book No. 82.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB82/
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB82/iraq24.pdf
[11] Singer, M. (February 1 2000). Jerusalem Letter / Viewpoints. Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, No. 423 25 Shevat 5760.
[12] Mylroie, L. (April 2001). “The United States and the Iraqi National Congress”. Middle East Intelligence Bulletin, , Vol3, No 4 http://www.meib.org/articles/0104_ir1.htm
[13] Harper’s Editor Lewis Lapham in the magazine’s November issue
[14] Pope, C. (Sept 29, 2004). “Cheney changed his view on Iraq”. Seattle Post Intelligencer.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/192908_cheney29.html
[15] Winston, R. (October 1, 2002). Human Instinct
[16] Kean, T., Hamilton, L., Ben-Veniste, R., Kerrey, B., Fielding, F., Lehman, J., Gorelick, J., Roemer, T., & Gorton, S., Thompson, J. (2003). The 9/11 Commission Report. First (Authorized) Edition. 103
[17] “Half of Americans believe in WMD”, The Gazette, Montreal, Monday , August 17, 2006, page A2
