by Robert Jensen and Rahul Mahajan
The question dominating the news: When will we go to war against Iraq?
The answer: We are already at war with Iraq.
The debate over the Bush administration's call for war is usually described
as hawks v. doves -- those for the war pitted against those opposing war.
In fact, the debate in mainstream news is hawks v. hawks; the question
isn't whether or not to wage war, but what form that war should take.
Bush and the ultra-hawks want a full-scale war as soon as feasible, to
secure control over Iraq and its oil. The hawks at the moderate extreme
argue for continuing "containment," a euphemism for devastating economic
sanctions and regular bombing in the so-called "no-fly zones."
Sanctions, imposed after Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait, are administered
through the United Nations but in place only because the United States
insists; most of the rest of the world has condemned them. The embargo has
helped cause the deaths of more than 500,000 children under the age of 5,
according to a UNICEF study. That's why two former U.N. humanitarian
coordinators in Iraq -- Denis Halliday and Hans von Sponeck -- have
resigned in protest, calling the sanctions immoral and even genocidal.
Though the sanctions have strengthened Saddam Hussein's control over Iraq
while punishing ordinary people, the United States insists they remain.
Starting with a complete ban on oil sales and frequent restrictions even on
basic medicines, the sanctions have gone through stages. Currently, there
is no limit on total oil sales and most medicines are allowed in, but there
are still major problems with funding projects to repair critical
infrastructure and foster economic development.
Combined with the almost complete (and quite deliberate) destruction of
Iraq's civilian infrastructure, particularly water- and sewage-treatment
plants, by U.S. forces during the Gulf War, the sanctions have meant
increased malnutrition, disease and death -- not for Saddam but for the
Iraqi people.
U.S. official blithely claim that the so-called "smart sanctions" approved
by the Security Council in July would solve these problems. But instead of
feeding Iraqis, the changes mostly helped confuse the public -- which,
according to some U.S. officials, was the original intent of smart sanctions.
Now, as worldwide attention to the effects of sanctions has decreased, the
humanitarian situation has worsened. Even as cumbersome bureaucratic
procedures for approving imports were supposedly streamlined, the monetary
value of "holds" (contracts held up by some nation on the Sanctions
Committee, almost always the United States) is at $4.7 billion, higher than
before smart sanctions were proposed. Worse, because of a retroactive
oil-pricing scheme recently implemented by the United States (oil companies
don't know what price they'll pay for Iraqi crude until after it is
loaded), Iraqi oil exports are way down; in August, exports averaged
800,000 barrels per day, compared with more than 2 million at earlier
points. This funding shortfall means Iraq is unable to pay even for some
approved humanitarian imports.
U.S. officials blame all this on Saddam, and certainly the Iraqi government
has made some questionable allocations of resources. But Tun Myat, the
current U.N. humanitarian coordinator in Iraq, has described Iraq's food
distribution as "second to none," echoing evaluations by other UN officials.
While the sanctions kill slowly, the United States continues to patrol the
no-fly zones in the northern and southern parts of Iraq, bombing at will
and killing civilians -- at least 27 attacks by U.S. planes in 2002. The
most recent, on Sunday (Aug. 25), killed eight, according to Iraq.
When challenged, U.S. officials robotically repeat that they bomb only when
threatened by Iraqi air defenses. However, despite U.S. claims, there is no
U.N. Security Council authorization for this violation of Iraqi
sovereignty. U.S. journalists rarely mention the obvious point -- that if
the United States ceased its illegal patrols, Iraqi radar would not "light
up" U.S. planes, making U.S. attacks unnecessary.
While not militarily significant, these attacks serve to terrorize the
Iraqi people and remind everyone that the United States exempts itself from
international law. Combined with the sanctions, they constitute a war on
the people of Iraq.
While the fanatical hawks argue with the moderate hawks about the way in
which a war against Iraq should proceed, virtually all the world opposes a
full-scale war. It's time for us to realize that most of the rest of the
world also wants to stop the containment war, end the suffering of the
Iraqi people and begin the diplomatic process necessary for regional peace.
Robert Jensen is a professor of journalism at the University of Texas
and
author of "Writing Dissent: Taking Radical Analysis from the Margins to
the Mainstream"
/
His pamphlet "Citizens of the Empire: Thoughts on Patriotism, Dissent,
and
Hope" can be downloaded for free at
http://www.nowarcollective.com/citizensoftheempire.pdf
Rahul
Mahajan is a doctoral candidate
in physics. Both are members of the coordinating committee of the
National Network to End the War Against Iraq.
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