Tomgram: Anthony Arnove on the Anniversary from Hell
Four
years ago, the United States invaded Iraq. It's the anniversary few
want to remember; and yet, for all the disillusionment in this country,
getting out of Iraq doesn't exactly seem to be on the agenda either.
Not really. Here's a little tip, when you want to assess the
"withdrawal" proposals being offered by members of Congress. If what's
being called for is a withdrawal of American
"combat troops" or
brigades, or forces, then watch out. "Combat troops" turns out to be a
technical term, covering
less than half of the American military
personnel actually in Iraq.
Here's a simple argument for
withdrawal from Iraq (suggested recently in a reader's email to this
site) -- and not just of those "combat troops" either. The military
newspaper
Stars and Stripes reports that, in January 2007, attacks on
American troops surged to 180 a day, the highest rate since Baghdad
fell in 2003, and double the previous year's numbers. Let's take that
as our baseline figure.
Now, get out your calculator: There
are 288 days left in 2007. Multiply those by 180 attacks a day --
remembering that the insurgents in Iraq are growing increasingly
skilled and using ever more sophisticated weaponry -- and you get
51,840 more attacks on American troops this year. Add in another 65,700
for next year -- remembering that if, for instance, Shiite militias get
more involved in fighting American troops at some point, the figures
could go far higher -- and you know at least one grim thing likely to
be in store for Americans if a withdrawal doesn't happen. (I first
wrote a piece at Tomdispatch, "
The Time of Withdrawal" back in October
2003, laying out the full reasons why I thought withdrawal was
imperative and, unfortunately, it remains grimly relevant three and a
half years later.)
Today, Anthony Arnove considers what that
fourth anniversary means in Iraq, offering a few figures and
comparisons of his own. Arnove is the author of
Iraq: The Logic of
Withdrawal, a small paperback modeled on a famous volume
Howard Zinn
wrote way back in 1967, arguing for a U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam. If
you want to make the case -- and it's a compelling one -- to friends,
neighbors, workmates, those who disagree with you, your Congressional
representatives, or anyone else, this is probably the book you should
have in your hands. Tom
As you read this, we're four years from the moment the Bush
administration launched its shock-and-awe assault on Iraq, beginning 48
months of remarkable, non-stop destruction of that country … and still
counting. It's an important moment for taking stock of Operation Iraqi
Freedom.
Here is a short rundown of some of what George Bush's war and occupation has wrought:
Nowhere
on Earth is there a worse
refugee crisis than in Iraq today.
According
to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, some two million
Iraqis have fled their country and are now scattered from Jordan,
Syria, Turkey, and Iran to London and Paris. (Almost none have made it
to the United States, which has done nothing to address the refugee
crisis it created.) Another 1.9 million are estimated to be internally
displaced persons, driven from their homes and neighborhoods by the
U.S. occupation and the vicious civil war it has sparked. Add those
figures up – and they're getting worse by the day – and you have close
to 16% of the Iraqi population uprooted. Add the dead to the displaced,
and that figure rises to nearly one in five Iraqis. Let that sink in
for a moment.
Basic foods and necessities, which even Saddam
Hussein's brutal regime managed to provide, are now increasingly beyond
the reach of ordinary Iraqis, thanks to soaring inflation unleashed by
the occupation's destruction of the already shaky Iraqi economy, cuts
to state subsidies encouraged by the International Monetary Fund and
the Coalition Provisional Authority, and the disruption of the oil
industry.
Prices of vegetables, eggs, tea, cooking and heating oil,
gasoline, and electricity have skyrocketed. Unemployment is regularly
estimated at somewhere between 50-70%. One measure of the impact of all
this has been a significant rise in
child malnutrition, registered by
the
United Nations and other organizations. Not surprisingly, access to
safe water and regular electricity remain well below pre-invasion
levels, which were already disastrous after more than a decade of
comprehensive sanctions against, and periodic bombing of, a country
staggered by a catastrophic war with Iran in the 1980s and the First
Gulf War.
In an ongoing crisis, in which hundred of thousands
of Iraqis have already died, the last few months have proved some of
the bloodiest on record. In October alone, more than six thousand
civilians were killed in Iraq, most in Baghdad, where thousands of
additional U.S. troops had been sent in August (in the first official
Bush administration "surge") with the claim that they would restore
order and stability in the city. In the end, they only fueled more
violence. These figures -- and they are generally considered
undercounts -- are more than double the 2005 rate. Other things have
more or less doubled in the last years, including, to name just two,
the number of daily attacks on U.S. troops and the overall number of
U.S. soldiers killed and wounded. United Nations special investigator
Manfred Nowak also notes that torture "is totally out of hand" in Iraq.
"The situation is so bad many people say it is worse than it has been
in the times of Saddam Hussein."
Given the disaster that Iraq
is today, you could keep listing terrible numbers until your mind was
numb. But here's another way of putting the last four years in context.
In that same period, there have, in fact, been a large number of deaths
in a distant land on the minds of many people in the United States:
Darfur. Since 2003, according to
UN estimates, some 200,000 have been
killed in the Darfur region of Sudan in a brutal ethnic-cleansing
campaign and another 2 million have been turned into refugees.
How
would you know this? Well, if you lived in New York City, at least, you
could hardly take a subway ride without seeing an ad that reads:
"400,000 dead. Millions uniting to save Darfur." The New York Times has
also regularly featured full-page ads describing the "genocide" in
Darfur and calling for intervention there under "a chain of command
allowing necessary and timely military action without approval from
distant political or civilian personnel."
In those same years,
according to the best estimate available, the British medical journal
The Lancet's door-to-door study of Iraqi deaths, approximately
655,000
Iraqis had died in war, occupation, and civil strife between March 2003
and June 2006. (The study offers a low-end possible figure on deaths of
392,000 and a high-end figure of 943,000.) But you could travel coast
to coast without seeing the equivalents of the billboards, subway
placards, full-page newspaper ads, or the like for the Iraqi dead. And
you certainly won't see, as in the case of Darfur, celebrities on Good
Morning America talking about their commitment to stopping "genocide"
in Iraq.
Why is it that we are counting and thinking about the
Sudanese dead as part of a high-profile, celebrity-driven campaign to
"Save Darfur," yet Iraqi deaths still go effectively uncounted, and
rarely seem to provoke moral outrage, let alone public campaigns to end
the killing? And why are the numbers of killed in Darfur cited without
any question, while the numbers of Iraqi dead, unless pitifully
low-ball figures, are instantly challenged -- or dismissed?
In
our world, it seems, there are the
worthy victims and the unworthy
ones. To get at the difference, consider the posture of the United
States toward the Sudan and Iraq. According to the Bush administration,
Sudan is a "rogue state"; it is on the State Department's list of
"state sponsors of terrorism." It stands
accused of attacking the
United States through its role in the suicide-boat bombing of the USS
Cole in 2000. And then, of course -- as
Mahmood Mamdani pointed out in
the London Review of Books recently -- Darfur fits neatly into a
narrative of "Muslim-on-Muslim violence," of a "genocide perpetrated by
Arabs," a line of argument that appeals heavily to those who would like
to change the subject from what the United States has done -- and is
doing -- in Iraq. Talking about U.S. accountability for the deaths of
the Iraqis we supposedly liberated is a far less comfortable matter.
It's
okay to discuss U.S. "complicity" in human rights abuses, but only as
long as you remain focused on sins of omission, not commission. We are
failing the people of Darfur by not militarily intervening. If only we
had used our military more aggressively. When, however, we do
intervene, and wreak havoc in the process, it's another matter.
If
anything, the focus on Darfur serves to legitimize the idea of U.S.
intervention, of being more of an empire, not less of one, at the very
moment when the carnage that such intervention causes is all too
visible and is being widely repudiated around the globe. This has also
contributed to a situation in which the violence for which the United
States is the most responsible, Iraq, is that for which it is held the
least accountable at home.
If anyone erred in Iraq, we now
hear establishment critics of the invasion and occupation suggest, the
real problem was administration incompetence or George Bush's overly
optimistic belief that he could bring democracy to Arab or Muslim
people, who, we are told, "have no tradition of democracy," who are
from a "sick" and "broken society" – and, in brutalizing one another in
a civil war, are now showing their true nature.
There is a
general agreement across much of the political spectrum that we can
blame Iraqis for the problems they face. In a
much-lauded speech to the
Chicago Council on Global Affairs, Sen. Barack Obama couched his
criticism of Bush administration policy in a call for "no more
coddling" of the Iraqi government: The United States, he insisted, "is
not going to hold together this country indefinitely." Richard Perle,
one of the neoconservative architects of the invasion of Iraq, now says
he
"underestimated the depravity" of the Iraqis. Sen. Hillary Clinton,
Democratic frontrunner in the 2008 presidential election,
recently
asked, "How much are we willing to sacrifice [for the Iraqis]?" As if
the Iraqis asked us to invade their country and make their world a
living hell and are now letting us down.
This is what happens when the imperial burden gets too heavy. The natives come in for a lashing.