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Anti-war talk![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Belfast 11.02.03 Below is a talk delivered by a member of the Anarchist Federation at an anti-war meeting in Belfast on 11.02.03 Why Iraq? Why Now?
I have been asked tonight to provide a talk on the imminent war with Iraq. A lot of the information you are about to hear is no doubt already known to most of you, and normally the problem faced by people in the movement is to get across such information to wider circles. Consent is manufactured on a daily basis by the government lackeys in the media and to such an extent that information leaks out in dribs and drabs, never approaching the kind of levels required to initiate or sustain real and effective change amongst greater numbers of people across the country. With Iraq, however, hundreds of thousands of demonstrators have already taken to the streets of London and cities elsewhere to protest against a war that has yet to happen, which itself is part of another war –the so-called war against terrorism. So, in effect, the U.S. and their lapdogs in Britain and Ireland are facing a groundswell of reaction against governments that have taken people down the garden path perhaps one too many times. Of course, the war against Iraq is not going to break out suddenly in the next few weeks. It is merely going to escalate the aerial bombardment of a country that has been ongoing since the so-called end of the last Gulf War in 1991 -this bombardment being the most consistent bombardment of any country since the end of World War II. So what is the escalation of hostilities about? · Is it about the removal of Saddam Hussein, our latter-day Hitler-in-disguise, who must not be appeased and who strangely enough wasn’t removed last time round? In answering these questions tonight, we also need to consider our strategy for creating more awareness about the issues involved, the significance of the recent direct actions at Shannon, and the building up of a support network for those people who will ultimately fall foul of our so-called laws. We need to bear in mind that by the time I finish this talk another 170 children will have died of starvation in a world where a 1000m people “suffer from chronic hunger and 600m people are overweight”(1) – a world where Ecuador and El Salvador have already adopted the U.S. dollar as their national currencies, and where in Argentina, a popular T.V. show has for it’s top prize –a job!
So Saddam Hussein is the modern equivalent of Adolf Hitler, Tony Blair is Winston Churchill, Vera Lynn is back at the top of the hit parade and Jim Davidson will no doubt be cracking the same jokes he did in the Falklands in 1982 (!). Rockwell Schnabel –the US ambassador to the European Union is quoted as saying in the last few weeks… “You had Hitler in Europe and no one really did anything about him. We knew he could be dangerous but nothing was done. The same type of person (is in Baghdad) and it’s there that our concerns lie.” This from a citizen of a country that enjoyed a profitable period of neutrality in 1939 and 1940 and against a tyrant whose Secretary of Defence, Donald Rumsfield, only a few weeks ago offered “a suitcase full of cash” to get out of Baghdad (2). This also against a man who invaded Iran in September 1980 in an attempt to muster support from the U.S., the imperial powerhouse in the region and who received by the Reagon administration enough… “… for (the) development of biological weapons and the basic ingredients for the chemical agents he used” (3) It’s well known that Saddam remained a close ally of Washington’s right up to his invasion of Kuwait in 1990 (Kuwait itself was legitimately a part of Iraq until 1920). His reason for doing so was… “…to punish Kuwait for its refusal to write-off debts incurred in a war that had arguably protected that nation’s oil fields from Iranian conquest”. (4) But Saddam is not mad. Well, at least not mad enough to risk angering his patrons in Washington. After all, he had been given the green light by the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Glaspie, that the U.S. ‘had no opinion in Arab-Arab conflicts’ (5). So this is the man who must not be appeased. Unlike Hitler who was appeased until it was too late. Well, maybe not. And why not? Maybe because it doesn’t quite explain how U.S. investment by such companies as General Motors, General Electric, Standard Oil, Texaco and I.B.M. continued investment in Germany even after the outbreak of the Second World War. (Standard Oil, being the most famous example since it maintained its contracts with I.G. Farben –the German chemical cartel that manufactured Zyklon-B. -the poison gas the Nazis used in the gas chambers up until 1942.) In fact, pilots were given instructions not to hit factories in Germany owned by U.S. firms. “Thus Cologne was almost levelled by allied bombing but its Ford plant, providing military equipment for the Nazi party, was untouched...” (6) Maybe this is one of the reasons why the anti-Semite Henry Ford, on his 75th birthday, received the Grand Cross of the German Order (the highest honour for a non-German) from Hitler himself. So we can expect similar non-attacks on the properties of Hewlett Packard, Dupont, International Computer Systems and the other twenty or so U.S. companies based in Iraq this time round. So we’re not ‘appeasing’ Saddam. Britain, the U.S. and others collaborate with Iraq and this collaboration is based on economic greed. When the West becomes too greedy, then the troops set sail. What about democracy? Well, if the war is not about ‘appeasement’, it must then be about ‘democracy’ and ‘human rights’. In any case, even if the West got rid of Saddam this time round, it is not in their strategic or economic interests to set up a ‘unified, democratic state’ (7). The fact that brutal Afghan warlords are currently running that part of Afghanistan that remains after being pulverized by high altitude bombing militates against such kind of thinking. If the U.S. were really interested in democracy, it would not have set up military garrisons in Gulf States like Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman etc… If it believed in democratic protocol, it would not conduct daily bombing raids into illegal No Fly Zones in northern and southern Iraq. So quite obviously, the war is not about democracy and human rights. Weapons of Mass Destruction and the war against terror But then you have the WMD? “…evidence, historical and otherwise, about the relationship of the al-Qaeda network to what happened on September 11”. No details have been forthcoming. Years before in 1997, when the Republicans were out of office, a number of them organised themselves as the ‘Project for the new American Century’ (PNAC) and began the process of lobbying for regime change in Iraq. One of their members was, guess who, Donald Rumsfield who in the words of a PNAC document ‘Rebuilding America’s Defences’ were waiting for a ‘catastrophic and catalysing event like a new Pearl Harbour’ that would mobilise public opinion and put theories into practice. On September 11th they got what they needed. The argument today is that Saddam has in his possession WMD. This would seem to suggest, even if it were true, a need to disarm Iraq as opposed to a war to bring down Saddam. UN inspector Scott Ritter has said: “ I bear personal witness through seven years as a chief weapon’s inspector in Iraq for the UN to both the scope of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction programmes and the effectiveness of UN weapons inspectors in ultimately eliminating them.” (9) The irony, of course, is that during the 80’s Saddam’s biological weapons programme provided him with American strains of anthrax, West Nile virus and botulinal toxin. On October 7, 2002, President Bush contributed what was probably one the most extreme rationales for a war with Iraq. In a speech in Cincinnati, he first noted that "Saddam Hussein is a homicidal dictator who is addicted to weapons of mass destruction" and then warned that… "Iraq has a growing fleet of manned and unmanned aerial vehicles that could be used to disperse chemical and biological weapons across broad areas. We're concerned that Iraq is exploring ways of using these [unmanned aerial vehicles] for missions targeting the United States." Presumably Bush was here referring to the Czech L-29 jet training aircraft, 169 of which Iraq bought in the 1960s and 1980s. The L-29 is a single-engine, dual-seat airplane meant to be a basic flight trainer for novices. It has a range of about 840 miles and a top speed of around 145 miles per hour. Bush did not explain how these slow-moving aircraft might reach Maine, the nearest point on the U.S. mainland, some 5,500 miles from Iraq, or why they would not be shot down the moment they crossed Iraq's borders. The only case for Saddam’s sponsorship of anti-US terrorism was his alleged attempt to have George Bush Snr. assassinated during a tour of Kuwait in April 1993. However, it is more likely that this had more to do with covering up the discovery of a smuggling ring on the Iraqi-Kuwait border. So if the war is not about WMD, then what is it about? Oil The U.S. Department of Energy announced at the beginning of this month that by 2025, U.S. oil imports will account for perhaps 70% of total US domestic demand (10). U.S. oil deposits are becoming progressively depleted and many other non-OPEC fields are beginning to run dry. ‘This really means that the bulk of future supplies will have to come from the Gulf region’ (11). Since Iraq has the second largest reserves of oil in the world after Saudi Arabia, it seems sensible to seize them particularly now that Bush and Cheney are in the Whitehouse –both are former oil company executives while Bush Snr. was founder, in 1954, of the Zapata Offshore Oil Company. Cheney, when president of the Halliburton Company of Houston, sold Saddam $23 billion dollars of oil field equipment. “In last April's New Yorker, the investigative reporter Nicholas Lemann wrote that Bush's most senior adviser, Condoleezza Rice, told him she had called together senior members of the National Security Council and asked them "to think about 'how do you capitalise on these opportunities'", which she compared with those of "1945 to 1947": the start of the cold war.” (John Pilger) Diversion Tactics But it is not just about oil. The outbreak of war in Iraq will help to deflect real problems for the Bush camp at home. For example, their close ties to the corrupt Enron Corporation, the huge and growing budget deficit, tax cuts that massively favour the rich, a severe loss of civil liberties under Attorney-General Ashcroft, and Bush’s dismantling of ballistic missile and global warming treaties. In the long-term the war is about preserving and enhancing the economic interests of US capital; it is dictated by imperialist and militarist demands just as was the case in the Balkans and Afghanistan, and has been the case for most of the last hundred years. The question is: what can we do about it? From the Autumn of 2001 to now, there have been massive demonstrations in London, truly massive, there will be another this Saturday, we have to seriously consider what impact this strategy large demonstrations in city centres alone, exclusive of all other tactics, is having. Can we say that this strategy has impacted on British government policy. Can we when the British state is again about to go to war in Iraq.? Nor will public opinion alone stop the war machine – when even in the U.S. a large slice of the population is deeply suspicious of Washington’s war, and when across Europe polls show massive oppositions, yet still the war machine plunders on. For an alternative, let’s take the example of Shannon airport as a case study…… In the middle of October 700 people gathered to demonstrate there, and over one hundred took part in a mass trespass. There was another demonstration on December the Eight, followed by the establishment of a peace camp on January 4th. January saw two demonstrations, one of several thousand, and one of around 800, at the first a roof top was occupied and an attempt made to enter the hangers. By this time World Airways – a charter company which carries U.S. troops through Shannon began to pull out, the damage inflicted on one single U.S. transport plane in two different actions within a space of a few days was World Airway’s death knell and now they have pulled out. Nor has direct action scared people away – as some doubters say, on the contrary the movement has grown larger as people see that it is prepared to act. However, we don’t just need a movement of direct actionists…many people have commitments, which prevent them from travelling to Shannon let alone participating in direct action. We need also to fight a battle of ideas, to ceaselessly counter the war propaganda put out by the government and it’s lap dogs in the media. Furthermore the anti-war movement cannot just rely on trips to Shannon, we must broaden the base of the struggle in an inclusive fashion and localise resistance. However Shannon is where we can win and are winning, so we would argue that the focus should remain on Shannon, and we should have local actions against commercial interests connected to military re-fuelling in Shannon, such as Top Oil. This does not mean we advocate an insular approach of sticking on our own little island and forgetting about the rest of the world, the significance of Shannon is this – it is one part of the logistics supply that the war machine in the Middle East is dependant upon, it’s the weakest link in those line of supply which run across Europe, if we decommission it, the rest of Europe will take heart and be given an example to follow, not one of pleading with the governments, but one of taking the battle direct to the enemy. Of late the mailed fist of repression and the smear campaigns of the media have been thrown at the peace movement. This shows that we are getting effective. We would urge everybody here tonight to support the defendants and prisoners of the anti-war movement in any way, shape or form they can. Finally while we would unreservedly defend the actions of the Ploughshares 5 and Mary Kelly, especially in the face of the condemnation their bravery has received, unfortunately a condemnation also issuing from some segments of the anti-war movement. It is all to easy for a situation to arise where direct action becomes the preserve of an elite and the rest of us are left to the category of spectators, this is why we advocate mass direct action, in which the maximum number of people can participate in, on an equal and democratic basis. (1)The USA is at War -Eduardo Galeano. Jan 14/03
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Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4 5As interesting as this is, do we have to havbe the whole paper reproduced in this format? Why can you not just provide a link to another site?
If you have something to say about the content of a post - Well OK then, say it.
But if your only comment is that you didn't want to read it here - and according to You the poster should have linked it - instead of posting it all - that is merely an attempt to impose your posting-form biases on others. If you didn't want to read it, scroll it away. What's it take 10 seconds?
I enjoyed the anarchist address about Iraq immensely.
Or to put it another way - if all you wish to do is to instruct others on how you think they should post on here ....Well.... if you have nothing to say, then keep it to yourself. :)
To counter the preceding negativity, it's a great piece. I particularly like the piece on "oil", which goes to the heart of the issue rather than the common glib "It's all about oil" comments others favour.
D.
To counter the preceding negativity, it's a great piece. I particularly like the piece on "oil", which goes to the heart of the issue rather than the common glib "It's all about oil" comments others favour.
D.
Its all about the oil.