MoveOn Peace
Bulletin, International Edition
Wednesday, November 27, 2002
Susan V. Thompson, Editor
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INTRODUCTION:
STILL ON THE BRINK
Will there be a war on Iraq in the next few months? The UN has passed the US/UK
resolution on Iraq. Some argue that this has blocked the possibility of war for
the time being. Weapons inspectors have arrived in Baghdad, and the optimistic
view is that Iraqi compliance with these inspections could yet stave off
conflict.
Yet
while the rest of the world continues to stress the importance of the
inspections, the US remains intent on war. The Bush administration has made it
clear that the inspections are little more than a delay before the inevitable
full-blown attack. For example, the US very recently characterized Iraqi
anti-aircraft fire as a "material breach" of the UN resolution,
questioned the competence of Chief Inspector Hans Blix, and flat-out stated that
even if the weapons inspectors find nothing, the US will still assume that Iraq
has weapons of mass destruction. Nor have current preparations indicated any
withdrawal of aggression. Intimidating numbers of US troops and equipment are
now within striking distance of the Iraqi border. US and British planes have
been flying missions over the Iraqi no-fly zones that are knocking out more
important targets with more frequency. Diplomatic preparations for the war,
which include negotiating participation in a US-led coalition, are b! eing made
in earnest. And US plans for a post-Hussein regime are apparently in the final
stages of discussion.
Meanwhile,
Dec. 8th is fast approaching. It is the deadline for the government of Iraq to
release a complete report detailing its weapons capabilities. If the report is
incomplete, late, or otherwise unsatisfactory, it is likely that Iraq will be
declared to be in "material breach" of the UNSC resolution. The US may
then draft a new resolution authorizing war to be presented to the UN, probably
largely due to international pressure to once again ensure international
consensus before acting. Or the US may argue that a new resolution is not needed,
and launch a war on Iraq without UN approval. Some British reports have already
pinpointed the official start date of a new Iraq war as Dec. 16.
So
there are many indications that we remain on the brink of Gulf War II. As the
gap between threat and action continues to close, a much clearer picture of the
strategies, tactics, and potential consequences of the war is emerging. Based on
current reporting and the statements of US officials, it is even possible to
begin to piece together a general idea of what the war could look like, from
start to finish. For example, it seems clear now that 200,000 to 260,000 US
troops will be involved, including reserve troops; that plans for a post-Hussein
regime all seem to include an immediate period of rule by a US military regime,
headed by a US general; and that a new Gulf War could potentially kill 500,000
civilians, according to conservative estimates.
We
are loath to accept the idea that an Iraq war is already a foregone conclusion
and this bulletin is not meant as an argument for despair. Rather, now that we
are ostensibly in the crucial last days before the war, we believe it is time to
examine the war plans being laid in order to stop them.
Now
more than ever, it's time to work for peace.
ONE LINK: GOALS OF THE WAR
What does the US hope to gain from Gulf War II? According to the Bush
administration, the goal is to disarm Iraq, thereby making the world a safer
place, and helping win the "war on terrorism." Yet not everyone
believes that this is an accurate statement of the goals of the war. "[A]t
first sight, the longer-term gains for the US look pretty limited, whereas the
consequences of failure would be catastrophic. A general Middle Eastern
conflagration and the collapse of more pro-Western Arab states would lose us the
war against terrorism, doom untold thousands of Western civilians to death in
coming decades, and plunge the world economy into depression,” writes Anatol
Lieven, senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. So
why is the current administration still risking it? In this thoughtful article
from the London Review of Books, Lievens proposes several reasons:
- to
scare the countries in the region into capitulating to US and Israeli
interests
- to
secure access to oil
- to
counter the threat of competition from China by surrounding it
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v24/n19/liev01_.html
UNSC RESOLUTIONS: STOPPING WAR, OR JUSTIFYING IT?
The UN Security Council (UNSC) unanimously passed the US/UK resolution regarding
Iraq on Nov. 8. It requires Iraq to accept weapons inspections, and to provide a
detailed report on their weapons capabilities by Dec. 8. The full official text
of the UNSC resolution can be found at:
http://daccess-ods.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N02/682/26/PDF/N0268226.pdf?OpenElement
The
question now is whether the US will seek a new UN resolution before actually
launching an attack on Iraq, or if it will launch an attack on its own and
justify it based on the language of the current resolution. Unfortunately, there
are still gray areas in the resolution that the US could cite as permission to
attack Iraq.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,834986,00.html
Yet
while the Bush administration insists that "[i]f the Security Council fails
to act decisively in the event of further Iraqi violations, this resolution does
not constrain any member state from acting to defend itself against the threat
posed by Iraq or to enforce relevant United Nations resolutions," Stephen
Zunes, an associate professor of politics and chair of the Peace and Justice
Studies Program at the University of San Francisco, argues that the resolution
does NOT authorize the US to use force against Iraq. Some key pieces of
diplomatic language make it clear that the US is to seek a new UN resolution
first.
http://www.commondreams.org/views02/1114-03.htm
Iraqi
officials are "staggered" by the extent of access that the weapons
inspection team is demanding, and are concerned that they may have difficulty
meeting the Dec. 8 deadline for the submission of their detailed report on
Iraq's weapons capabilities. Any tardiness in submitting the report could be
seen as a "material breach" of the UN resolution and could be used to
justify war.
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/story.jsp?story=353927
Weapons
inspectors have arrived in Iraq, but Hans Blix, the chief inspector, is accusing
Washington of being behind a smear campaign that appears designed to discredit
him. According to the Guardian, "The US whispering campaign against Mr
Blix, a former Swedish diplomat, may be designed to undercut any report that is
favourable to Iraq," and thus help justify war.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,842944,00.html
Columnist
Charley Reese comments that "Saddam will have a greater problem if he
doesn't have any weapons of mass destruction. If he has some, he can turn them
in; if he doesn't, he's stuck with trying to prove a negative, which is
impossible. How can anyone prove he does not have something to a person who
won't take his word for it? No matter how much searching the arms inspectors do,
if there is nothing to find, the Bush administration will likely claim it's
still hidden somewhere."
http://reese.king-online.com/Reese_20021120/index.php
What
if no weapons of mass destruction are found by U.N. weapons inspectors inside
Iraq? According to US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, "What it would
prove would be that the inspection process had been successfully defeated by the
Iraqis. There's no question but that the Iraqi regime is clever, they've spent a
lot of time hiding things, dispersing things, tunneling underground." In
other words, war will go ahead either way. Rumsfeld has also been promising that
a war on Iraq won't last more than five months.
http://www.cnn.com/2002/US/11/15/rumsfeld.iraq/index.html
Richard
Perle has also stated that the success of the weapons inspections will not stop
US war plans. Perle told British M.P.'s "I cannot see how Hans Blix can
state more than he can know. All he can know is the results of his own
investigations. And that does not prove Saddam does not have weapons of mass
destruction."
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/allnews/page.cfm?objectid=12377231&method=full&siteid=5014
The
US has appeared impatient about waiting for the "failure" of the
weapons inspections. The US government recently claimed that Iraqi fire at US
warplanes over the "no-fly" zones is a contravention of the security
council resolution. The UN's secretary general has been quick to disagree with
this interpretation of the resolution in the midst of concerns that the US could
use this an an "automatic trigger for war."
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines02/1119-01.htm
POTENTIAL COALITION MEMBERS
Who is likely to support an attack on Iraq? If the US doesn't seek a new UN
resolution, it will probably be difficult for the US to find support.
The
US is not seeking a broad coalition, but is focusing on building a coalition
that includes Britain, Turkey, and possibly Australia.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/1120/p01s01-usmi.html
Canada
has also been asked to commit troops.
http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2002/11/14/powell_021114
Arab
states such as Jordan and Egypt fear that if they support the US war, they will
"face an eruption of domestic anger" that could threaten their own
regimes. In contrast, Israeli leader Ariel Sharon has vowed to attack back if
Hussein attacks Israel, raising the specter of another Arab-Israeli war.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/world/middle_east/2239277.stm
CURRENT PREPARATIONS
The foundation for war with Iraq is being carefully laid, both diplomatically
and militarily . This is an excellent overview of the Bush administration's
current efforts to build international support for a war on Iraq, with an eye
towards creating a coalition as well as gaining support for a possible new UN
resolution authorizing the use of force. Some information on troops and
equipment is also provided.
http://www.truthout.org/docs_02/11.20E.up.lay.iraq.htm
In
fact, a secret "war before the war" is currently taking place, with
the goal of either toppling Hussein's regime without a full-blown attack or just
paving the way for a full-blown attack.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101021202-393574-2,00.html
The
US is already amassing troops near Iraq as part of "training exercises",
and is bombing the "no-fly" zones frequently, which, according to this
article, is to help cripple Iraq's air defense systems in preparation for a US
attack.
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/nov2002/iraq-n06.shtml
The
following is an excellent guide that shows the buildup of US troops using a
clickable map.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/flash/0,5860,791671,00.html
(flash animation)
US STRATEGY AND TROOPS
November through February is the optimal window for an Iraq campaign, given
seasonal considerations of daylight, temperature, and climate, military experts
say.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0913/p01s02-usmi.html
It
appears that a war on Iraq could be a "Christmas Blitz" starting on
Dec. 16.
http://www.newsoftheworld.co.uk/news/news5.html
In
April, General Tommy Franks told senior Pentagon officers that a new war against
Iraq would likely take five divisions and 200,000 troops. At the time, other
officials said it was more likely that a second Gulf War would rely on fewer
ground troops than suggested by Gen. Franks, and be "more air-centric."
http://www.washtimes.com/national/20020426-41274916.htm
The
most recent reports indicate that the plan to use 200,000 troops still stands,
but it will be part of a strategy of swift surgical strikes aimed at ending the
conflict as quickly as possible. Air and ground operations will occur almost
simultaneously.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/1112/p01s01-usmi.html
The
Guardian offers an excellent guide which explains the five main phases of a
possible US war on Iraq. A short overview of possible casualties is also offered
for each phase. Apparently there is the chance that Hussein may use nerve gas
against US troops. If nuclear war erupts (which could happen if Iraq attacks
Israel and Israel retaliates) some 4 million Iraqis could be killed.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/flash/0,5860,650132,00.html
(flash animation)
IRAQI STRATEGY, AND THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCCESS
Would it be easy to win a war against Iraq? That seems to be the general
assumption, especially in light of the recent "success" in
Afghanistan.
Donald
Rumsfeld has predicted that a war on Iraq will be short. On Nov. 14, he said,
"I can't say if the use of force would last five days or five weeks or five
months, but it certainly isn't going to last any longer than that." However,
this prediction may be strategically ill-informed. Dr. Tony Dodge, an expert on
Iraq, contends that war on Iraq this time will be much different than in the
first Gulf War, and could be long and bloody.
http://commondreams.org/headlines02/1116-04.htm
Foreign
Policy in Focus (FPIF) provides seven reasons to oppose the Iraq war, the
seventh of which is that defeating Iraq would be militarily difficult. According
to FPIF, it is a mistake to compare a new Gulf War to the first Gulf War, or
even the war on Afghanistan, because:
- Iraq’s
offensive capabilities have been weakened but its defensive military
capabilities remain strong.
- In
the first Gulf War, only two of the eight divisions of the elite Iraqi
Republican Guard were ever in Kuwait, and they pulled back before the war
began in mid-January. Meanwhile, Iraq’s strongest forces were withdrawn to
areas around Baghdad to fight for the survival of the regime itself, where
they remain.
- Iraq
has a far more sophisticated infrastructure than the largely rural and
tribal Afghanistan that could be mobilized in the event of a foreign
invasion.
- The
lack of support from regional allies could result in an absence of a land
base from which to launch US aerial attacks.
- US
soldiers could be faced with bitter, house-to-house fighting (including in
Baghdad, a city of 5 million people).
- There
is no Iraqi equivalent to Afghanistan’s Northern Alliance to fight the war
for the US. The Kurds have been abandoned twice by the US and the armed
Shiite opposition has largely been eliminated.
- There
is the possibility of ongoing guerrilla action by Saddam Hussein’s
supporters.
- Without
Saddam Hussein's regime, it is likely that Iraq could erupt into civil war,
leaving the US faced with fighting to maintain peace in the midst of
competing armed factions.
http://www.fpif.org/papers/iraq2.html
Iraqi
defectors disagree about how hard Iraqi troops would fight to repel a US attack.
They point out that the Iraqi military has been split into the regular army and
the Iraqi Republican Guard and special forces, the latter being charged with
protecting the Hussein regime.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20021115/wl_nm/iraq_military_dc_2
While
some Iraqi troops may defect, others may fight hard, especially since they will
be defending their homeland rather than a new acquisition (as in the case of
Kuwait). Hussein may also use his weapons of mass destruction in defense of his
regime, assuming he has them. The conclusion this paper draws is that
"...an American military victory against Iraq is imminently achievable. The
only question remains: at what cost?"
http://www.cdi.org/terrorism/primer-iraq.cfm
It
appears that Iraq may be planning on concentrating its 400,000 troops in cities,
forcing the US to fight a ground battle in major centers rather than a desert
battle, which would give the US a better chance to use air strikes. This "street-level"
combat would result in higher numbers of Iraqi civilian casualties, and higher
numbers of US casualties as well--probably much higher than in other recent wars.
However, experts disagree about whether or not US soldiers would get "bogged
down" as a result of the strategy.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/bush/story/0,7369,771600,00.html
Retired
Marine General Anthony Zinni, former head of Central Command for U.S. forces in
the Middle East, spoke at the Middle East Institute's annual conference, and
offered his own predictions and reservations about war with Iraq. According to
Zinni, success in Iraq can't be measured purely by military outcomes, but rather
in political terms, i.e., whether the political goals of the war are
accomplished.
http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=14317
Rep.
Ron Paul lists some of the unintended consequences that he thinks could come
from a war on Iraq. Highly recommended.
http://www.antiwar.com/paul/paul55.html
COSTS
William Nordhaus, Sterling professor of economics at Yale University, has stated
that "One way or another, Americans will pay for the war." Based on
recent studies, Professor Nordhaus estimates that in a best-case scenario, the
war will cost about $50 billion US dollars, with reconstruction efforts costing
anywhere from $20 billion to $500 billion. If the war becomes protracted, costs
could easily climb higher. This is bearing in mind that the US only paid about
$2 billion for the first Gulf War, because Saudi Arabia picked up the tab for
the rest; in a new Gulf War, the US will be solely responsible for the costs.
http://www.arabnews.com/Article.asp?ID=20419
Economists
agree that a war is likely to have a negative impact on the economy and might
tip the US into recession.
http://www.rferl.org/nca/features/2002/09/18092002152759.asp
Higher
oil prices are also a given.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/791713.asp?0dm=H17NB&cp1=1
CASUALTIES AND HUMANITARIAN CONSEQUENCES
The International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War have released a
new report which predicts that a US-led attack on Iraq could kill between 48,000
and 260,000 civilians and combatants in just the first three months of conflict.
According to the report, post-war health effects could take an additional
200,000 lives.
http://www.ippnw.org/CollateralDamage.html
The
humanitarian crisis that would ensue as the result of a new war would include
the creation of 1.5 million refugees. Yet unlike Afghanistan, there is currently
no infrastructure for dealing with such a crisis.
http://www.refugeesinternational.org/cgi-bin/ri/oped.html?oc=00071
REGIME CHANGE
This article asks, "Is the Bush administration's promise to create a
democratic paradise in a post-Saddam Iraq for real -- or just more salesmanship
for war?" Based on the poor results of reconstruction in the former
Yugoslavia, the answer is that the US can't be counted on to follow through on
its promises.
http://www.tompaine.com/feature.cfm/ID/6750
The
Bush administration has revealed that they plan to install an American military
regime in Iraq, to remain in place for several years. It would closely resemble
the post-war occupation of Japan, and would likely be run by a US general, such
as General Tommy Franks. The occupation would require 75,000 troops, and would
probably cost about $16 billion dollars.
http://www.edinburghnews.com/index.cfm?id=1132572002
Recent
reports suggest that a US military regime is just the first part of a
three-stage plan for governing a post-war Iraq. The following two stages would
include a vaguely defined "international civilian administration," and
finally "a representative, multiethnic Iraqi government after some sort of
constitutional convention." The plan was created by an interagency task
force named the Executive Steering Group.
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N2359238
The
Sunday Herald lists the top contenders for Saddam Hussein's job, all of whom are
described as "thugs."
http://www.sundayherald.com/27877
Interestingly,
one of current top prospects to fight Saddam Hussein's regime, the Iraqi
National Congress (INC) was completely engineered by the Rendon Group, a public
relations firm with links to the US administration. The leader of the INC, who
could be picked to replace Saddam Hussein, has very little support among the
Iraqi people, meaning that he may not gain their support. This excellent article
also very cogently summarizes the past exploits of public relations firms in the
build-up to US wars, and especially the first Gulf War.
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/DK13Ak01.html
Any
post-Saddam regime will face the challenge of building consensus between the
numerous Iraqi anti-Saddam factions.
http://www.tdn.com/articles/2002/11/07/nation_world/news02.txt
A
private US firm, under contract with the State Department, is "training
Iraqi exiles in economics, accountancy and finance in preparation for
restructuring the country's state-controlled system into a Western,
market-driven economy." This training is part of the "Future of Iraq
Project."
http://www.truthout.org/docs_02/11.17D.train.iraqis.htm
Will
a regime change lead to more stability in the Middle East? This is a very
interesting article which examines the aims of a new Gulf War in light of the
history of the Middle East, and compares the planned US-led regime change in
Iraq to the regime change carried out there by the British in the 30's. Both
regime changes, according to the author, are explicitly related to the Israeli/Palestinian
conflict, and unless that conflict is solved, it is unlikely that a new regime
change will be successful in stabilizing the region. Note that this article
refers to comments by involved parties that indicate that the goal of a
post-Gulf War II regime is to create "a non-Arab Iraq."
http://www.yellowtimes.org/article.php?sid=843
LONG-TERM GEOPOLITICAL CONSEQUENCES
Even a successful war effort in Iraq could have long-term consequences that we
aren't currently able to imagine. This excellent article overviews the results
of interviews with a diverse group of experts, and in the process, debunks some
of the common assumptions about a war on Iraq, including the idea that it could
be quick in-and-out war, and the idea that installing a democratic regime is
possible. However, the ultimate point of the article is that we need to look
beyond the short-term consequence of war on Iraq.
"Wars change history in ways no one can foresee. The Egyptians who planned
to attack Israel in 1967 could not imagine how profoundly what became the Six
Day War would change the map and politics of the Middle East. After its
lightning victory Israel seized neighboring territory, especially on the West
Bank of the Jordan River, that is still at the heart of disputes with the
Palestinians. Fifty years before, no one who had accurately foreseen what World
War I would bring could have rationally decided to let combat begin. The war
meant the collapse of three empires, the Ottoman, the Austro-Hungarian, and the
Russian; the cresting of another, the British; the eventual rise of Hitler in
Germany and Mussolini in Italy; and the drawing of strange new borders from the
eastern Mediterranean to the Persian Gulf, which now define the battlegrounds of
the Middle East. Probably not even the United States would have found the war an
attractive bargain, even though the U.S. rise to d! ominance began with the
wounds Britain suffered in those years."
http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2002/11/fallows.htm
EFFECTS ON VETERANS
Soldiers in a new Gulf War would be facing the possibility of exposing
themselves to the same environmental factors which are currently being blamed
for a constellation of illnesses referred to by the general name of "Gulf
War Syndrome." For one thing, any ground troops would be exposed to
depleted uranium, or DU, left over from the first Gulf War, which may be to
blame for high rates of cancer and birth defects both among Iraqi civilians and
veterans of 1990 Gulf War.
Probably
one of the best guides on Gulf War Syndrome is this one, provided by the
National Gulf War Resource Center. If you have the time, you may want to read
through the entire thing, which explains the possible relation of veterans'
illnesses to chemicals, weapons, pollutants, and diseases which were present in
the Gulf War environment. According to the guide, 110,000 American Gulf War
veterans have reported health problems since their service.
http://www.ngwrc.org/shg/page2.html
Some
3 out of 4 servicemen and women may have come into contact with DU during the
Gulf War.
http://www.miltoxproj.org/DU/dupd.htm
For
information on training techniques, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, and other
issues affecting veterans in general, please see MoveOn's previous bulletin,
"Learning to Kill" at:
http://www.peace.moveon.org/bulletin41.php3
NEXT?
Iran, which President Bush has listed as part of the "axis of evil,"
is a likely future target. If the US successfully attacks Iraq, it would be in
the ideal position to attack Iran, or possibly Syria or Lebanon. According to
this article, Israel regards Iran as a major competitor, and much more of a
nuclear threat than Iraq; thus Israel is advocating that Iran be next.
http://www.foreigncorrespondent.com/archive/next_target.html
Perhaps
out of awareness of the fact that it could be next, Iran appears to be making
some preliminary moves towards aiding the US with a new Gulf War.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/usatoday/20021115/ts_usatoday/4626467
FREE BOOKLET OFFER
Does
Saddam Hussein's regime pose a "mortal threat" to the US and Iraq's
neighbors? How have sanctions imposed after Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait
affected ordinary Iraqis? How has the Iraqi regime stayed in power despite its
defeat in the Gulf war and a decade of sanctions? Has the US attempted to end
the 12-year confrontation between Iraq and the UN through peaceful diplomacy?
What drives the Bush administration's policy of "regime change"?
In
a concise backgrounder (15 page booklet) published by the Middle East Research
and Information Project (MERIP), Sarah Graham-Brown, author of Sanctioning
Saddam (1999), and Chris Toensing, editor of Middle East Report, offer answers
to the major questions swirling around the Iraq crisis of 2002. The backgrounder
is ideal for all settings -- classrooms, church meetings, union hall discussion,
teach-ins, student groups, peace vigils, ect. While supplies last, order
whatever number your group can realistically distribute. There is no charge
whatsoever.
To
order copies or for further information, contact MERIP at ctoensing@merip.org.
MERIP can ship to US addresses only.
If
you want to peruse the backgrounder first, it is available online at:
http://www.merip.org
An
updated second edition of MERIP's Iraq backgrounder will soon be available in
print at no charge, while supplies last. If you are interested, contact MERIP at
ctoensing@merip.org.
MERIP can ship to US addresses only.
CREDITS
Research team:
Dean Bellerby, Joanne Comito, Anna Gavula, Wendy Hamblet, Keiko Hatch, Russ
Juskalian, Mary Kim, Maha Mikhail, Vicki Nikolaidis, Ben Spencer, Ora Szekely,
and Sharon Winn.
Proofreading
team:
David Taub Bancroft, Madlyn Bynum, Carol Brewster, Melinda Coyle, Nancy Evans,
Anne Haehl, Mary Kim, Dagmara Meijers-Troller, Leslie Strudwick and Alfred K.
Weber.
GET INVOLVED
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