The Indian Ocean tsunami
of 2004, with its 225,000 or more deaths in 11 countries, shocked the world;
so, in recent weeks, has the devastation wrought by a powerful cyclone (and
tidal surge) that hit the Irrawaddy Delta of Myanmar. It resulted in at
least 78,000 deaths (with another 56,000 reported missing) and a display
of recalcitrance on the part of a military junta focused on its own security
while its people perish. Similarly, a devastating earthquake in China's Sichuan
Province that hit 7.9 on the Richter scale and whose tremors were felt 1,000
miles away has swept into the news. Its casualty count has already reached 51,000
with unknown numbers of Chinese still buried in rubble or cut off in rural areas
and so, as yet, untallied, and an estimated
five million people homeless.
These are staggering natural disasters, hard even to take in, and yet it's
a reasonable question whether, in terms of damage, any of them measure up to
the ongoing human-made (or rather Bush administration-made) disaster in Iraq.
Worse yet, unlike a natural disaster, the Iraqi catastrophe seems to be without
end. No one can even guess when it might be said of that country that an era
of reconstruction or rebuilding is about to begin. Instead, the damage only
grows week by miserable week and yet, as has often been true in the last year,
Iraq continues to have trouble even
cracking the top ten stories in U.S. news coverage.
Just this week, Iraqi troops moved into the vast, battered Shiite
suburb of Sadr City in east Baghdad after weeks of fierce fighting.
The first descriptions of the damage U.S. air power was regularly
called in over the last months in this heavily populated slum area
are devastating: "As I moved into the neighborhood," writes
Raheem Salman of the Los Angeles Times online, "the destruction
from weeks of fighting was horrible. Most of the shops and kiosks have
been damaged. Doors are knocked off their hinges. Windows are shattered.
The walls are riddled with bullet holes. Some buildings are blown apart
by missile fire."
But then Iraq itself is a devastation zone. From the first shock-and-awe
attacks on Baghdad as the Bush administration's invasion began in March
2003 which killed only
civilians and the early bombing, missiling, shelling, and even
cluster bombing of urban areas as the invading U.S. military barreled
north, death, chaos, and destruction have been the Bush administration's
tidal surge in Iraq. By now, an estimated 4.7
million Iraqis are either refugees abroad or internally displaced
and, depending upon which study or whose numbers you use, hundreds of
thousands to a million or more Iraqis have died in the last five years.
There is, of course, simply no way to measure the mental stress and
anguish that those same years have inflicted on Iraqis.
The New York Times recently profiled
a psychiatrist working with hopelessly antiquated equipment amid a tide
of desperate, wounded humanity at Ibn Rushid, a psychiatric hospital
in Baghdad. It's now a run-down hulk from which seven of its 11 staff
psychiatrists have fled either for Kurdish areas to the north or
abroad fearing kidnapping or assassination. In some hospitals and
universities in Baghdad, staff has reportedly been reduced by 80%. The
economy is in tatters; governmental authority hardly exists; disease
is rampant; the medical system in ruins; significant parts of the middle
class gone; militias in control; and still, amid this rolling, roiling
catastrophe, the Bush administration adamantly persists
in its course.
Much scorn has rightly been poured on the junta in Myanmar recently,
but, when it comes to recalcitrance and putting self-interest ahead
of the well-being of masses of desperate souls, the American President,
Vice President, and their top officials have proven themselves a planetary
junta of the first order. When it comes to Iraq, to this very day, they
remain obdurate and well-defended from the results of the human version
of the 7.9 quake they let loose on that country.
Back in January 2005, considering the Indian Ocean tsunami, Rebecca Solnit
wrote
at this site: "You can say in some ways that what has happened in Iraq is a
tsunami that swept ten thousand miles from the epicenter of an earthquake in
Washington DC, an earthquake in policy and principle that has devastated countless
lives and environments and cities far away." But this has not exactly been a
popular image in the American mainstream media; and so, in recent weeks, no
one has even thought to connect our ongoing Iraqi disaster to the natural disasters
in Asia, or the acts of the Burmese junta to those of our own leaders in relation
to Iraq. After all, we are largely inured to, and generally oblivious to, the
ongoing harm for which we are responsible.
And yet, as Michael Schwartz points out, Iraqi resistance to Bush's
desires and designs predictably continues. This sort of resistance has
been with us at least since the Catholic peasants of Spain the Sunni
fundamentalists of their day resisted, and finally defeated, Napoleon's
army, the finest in Europe at the time. And to judge by Francisco Goya's
famous series of aquatints, The
Disasters of War, you would no more have wanted to meet those peasants
in a back alley than you would many of the resisters in Iraq today.
Schwartz, whose original and canny analyses of Iraq have long been part of
Tomdispatch, has now built on that work to create a striking new book, War
Without End, which will soon be published. This piece on how a nation
of 26 million managed to resist the planet's "sole superpower" and the price
it paid is adapted from that book's conclusion. Tom
River of Resistance
How the American Imperial Dream Foundered in Iraq
By Michael Schwartz
On February 15, 2003, ordinary citizens around
the world poured into the streets to protest George W. Bush's onrushing invasion
of Iraq. Demonstrations took place in large cities and small towns globally,
including a small but spirited protest at the McMurdo
Station in Antarctica. Up to 30 million people, who sensed impending catastrophe,
participated in what Rebecca Solnit, that apostle
of popular hope, has called "the biggest and most widespread collective
protest the world has ever seen."
The first glancing assessment of history branded this remarkable
planetary protest a record-breaking failure, since the Bush administration,
less than one month later, ordered U.S. troops across the Kuwaiti
border and on to Baghdad.
And it has since largely been forgotten, or perhaps better put,
obliterated from official and media memory. Yet popular protest is
more like a river than a storm; it keeps flowing into new areas, carrying
pieces of its earlier life into other realms. We rarely know its consequences
until many years afterward, when, if we're lucky, we finally sort
out its meandering path. Speaking for the protesters back in May 2003,
only a month after U.S. troops entered the Iraqi capital, Solnit offered
the
following:
"We will likely never know, but it seems that the Bush administration decided
against the 'Shock and Awe' saturation bombing of Baghdad because we made it
clear that the cost in world opinion and civil unrest would be too high. We
millions may have saved a few thousand or a few tens of thousand of lives. The
global debate about the war delayed it for months, months that perhaps gave
many Iraqis time to lay in stores, evacuate, brace for the onslaught."
Whatever history ultimately concludes about that unexpected moment
of protest, once the war began, other forms of resistance arose
mainly in Iraq itself that were equally unexpected. And their effects
on the larger goals of Bush administration planners can be more easily
traced. Think of it this way: In a land the size of California with
but 26 million people, a ragtag collection of Baathists, fundamentalists,
former military men, union organizers, democratic secularists, local
tribal leaders, and politically active clerics often at each others
throats (quite literally) nonetheless managed to thwart the plans
of the self-proclaimed New Rome, the "hyperpower" and "global sheriff"
of Planet Earth. And that, even in the first glancing assessment of
history, may indeed prove historic.
The New American Century Goes Missing in Action
It's hard now even to recall the original vision George W. Bush
and his top officials had of how the conquest of Iraq would unfold
as an episode in the President's Global War on Terror. In their minds,
the invasion was sure to yield a quick victory, to be followed by
the creation of a client state that would house crucial "enduring"
U.S. military bases from which Washington would project power throughout
what they liked to term "the Greater Middle East."
In addition, Iraq was quickly going to become a free-market paradise,
replete with privatized oil flowing at record rates onto the world
market. Like falling dominos, Syria and Iran, cowed by such a demonstration
of American might, would follow suit, either from additional military
thrusts or because their regimes and those of up
to 60 countries worldwide would appreciate the futility
of resisting Washington's demands. Eventually, the "unipolar moment"
of U.S. global hegemony that the collapse of the Soviet Union had
initiated would be extended into a "New
American Century" (along with a generational Pax Republicana
at home).
This vision is now, of course, long gone, largely thanks to unexpected
and tenacious resistance of every sort within Iraq. This resistance
consisted of far more than the initial Sunni insurgency that tied
down what Donald
Rumsfeld pridefully labeled "the greatest military force on the
face of the earth." It is already none too rash a statement to suggest
that, at all levels of society, usually at great sacrifice, the Iraqi
people frustrated the imperial designs of a superpower.
Consider, for example, the myriad ways in which the Iraqi Sunnis
resisted the occupation of their country from almost the moment the
Bush administration's intention to fully dismantle Saddam Hussein's
Baathist regime became clear. The largely Sunni city of Falluja, like
most other communities around the country, spontaneously formed a
new government based on local clerical and tribal structures. Like
many of these cities, it avoided the worst of the post-invasion looting
by encouraging the formation of local militias to police the community.
Ironically, the orgy of looting that took place in Baghdad was, at
least in part, a consequence of the U.S. military presence, which
delayed the creation of such militias there. Eventually, however,
sectarian militias brought a modicum of order even to Baghdad.
In Falluja and elsewhere, these same militias soon became effective
instruments for reducing, and for a time eliminating, the presence
of the U.S. military. For the better part of a year, faced with IEDs
and ambushes from insurgents, the U.S. military declared Falluja a
"no go" zone, withdrew to bases outside the city, and discontinued
violent incursions into hostile neighborhoods. This retreat was matched
in many other cities and towns. The absence of patrols by occupation
forces saved tens of thousands of "suspected insurgents" from the
often deadly violence of home invasions, and their relatives from
wrecked homes and detained family members.
Even the most successful of U.S. military adventures in that period,
the second battle of Falluja in November 2004, could also be seen,
from quite a different perspective, as a successful act of resistance.
Because the United States was required to mass a significant proportion
of its combat brigades for the offensive (even transferring British
troops from the south to perform logistical duties), most other cities
were left alone. Many of these cities used this respite from the U.S.
military to establish, or consolidate, autonomous governments or quasi-governments
and defensive militias, making it all the more difficult for the occupation
to control them.
Falluja itself was, of course, destroyed,
with 70% of its buildings turned to rubble, and tens of thousands
of its residents permanently displaced an extreme sacrifice that
had the unexpected effect of taking pressure off other Iraqi cities
for a while. In fact, the ferocity of the resistance in the predominantly
Sunni areas of Iraq forced the American military to wait almost four
years before renewing their initial 2004 efforts to pacify the well-organized
Sadrist-led resistance in the predominantly Shia areas of the country.
The Rebellion of the Oil Workers
In another arena entirely, consider the Bush administration's dreams
of harnessing
Iraqi oil production to its foreign policy ambitions. The immediate
goals, as American planners saw it, were to double prewar output and
begin the process of transferring control of production from state
ownership to foreign companies. Three major energy initiatives designed
to accomplish these goals have so far been frustrated by resistance
from virtually every segment of Iraqi society. Iraq's well-organized
oil workers played a key role in this by using their ability to bring
production to a virtual stand-still in order to abort the transfer
only a few months after the U.S. toppled Saddam Hussein's regime
of the operation of the southern oil port of Basra to the management
of then-Halliburton subsidiary KBR.
This and other early acts of labor defiance turned back the initial
assault on the Iraqi government-controlled system of oil production.
Such acts also laid a foundation for successful efforts to prevent
the passage of oil policies shaped in Washington that were designed
to transfer control of energy exploration and production to foreign
companies. In these efforts, the oil workers were joined by both Sunni
and Shia resistance groups, local governments, and finally the new
national parliament.
This same sort of resistance extended to the whole roster of neoliberal
reforms sponsored by the U.S.-controlled Coalition Provisional Authority
(CPA). From the beginning of the occupation, for instance, there were
protests against mass unemployment caused by the dismantling of the
Baathist state and the shuttering of state-owned factories. Much of
the armed resistance was a response to the occupation's early violent
suppression of these protests.
Even more significant were local efforts to replace the government
services discontinued by the CPA. The same local quasi-governments
that had nurtured the militias sought to sustain or replace Baathist
social programs, often by siphoning off oil destined for export onto
the black-market to pay for local services, and hoarding local resources
such as electrical generation. The result would be the creation of
virtual city-states wherever U.S. troops were not present, leading
to the inability of the occupation to "pacify" any substantial portion
of the country.
The Sadrist movement and the Mahdi Army militia of cleric Muqtada
al-Sadr was probably the most successful and most anti-occupation
of the Shia political parties-cum-militias that systematically
sought to develop quasi-government organizations. They tried to meet,
however minimally, some of the basic needs of their communities, supplying
food baskets, housing services, and serving a host of other functions
previously promised by the Baathist government, but forsworn by the
U.S. occupation and the Iraqi government that the United States installed
when "handing
over" sovereignty in June 2004.
The American occupationaires expected that their plans for the rapid
privatization and transformation of the state-driven economy would
indeed generate resistance, but they were convinced that this would
subside quickly once the new economy kicked into gear. Instead, as
the occupation wore on, demands for relief grew more strident and
insistent, while the country itself, in chaos and near collapse, became
visible evidence of the failure of the Bush administration's "free
market" policies.
An Iraqi Agenda for Withdrawal
Occupation officials faced the same dilemma in the political realm.
The original goal of the Bush administration was a stable, pro-Washington
government, stripped of its economic and political dominance over
Iraqi society, but a bastion of resistance to Iranian regional power.
This vision, like its military and economic cousins, has long since
disappeared under the weight of Iraqi resistance.
Take, for example, the two high profile Iraqi elections, celebrated
in the mainstream American media as a unique Bush administration accomplishment
in the otherwise relentlessly autocratic Middle East. Inside Iraq,
however, they had quite a different look. It is important to remember
that the United States initially planned to sustain its direct rule
the Coalition Provisional Authority until the country was fully
pacified and its economic reforms completed. When the CPA became a
hated symbol of an unwanted occupation, planning shifted to the idea
of installing an appointed Iraqi government, based on community meetings
that only supporters of the occupation could attend. Full-scale elections
would be postponed until winners fully supportive of the Bush agenda
were assured. An outpouring of protest from the predominantly Shia
areas of the country, led by Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, forced
CPA administrators to move on to an election-based strategy.
The first election in January 2005 delivered a sizeable parliamentary
majority voted in on platforms calling for strict timetables for a
full U.S. military withdrawal from the country. American representatives
then forcefully pressured the newly installed cabinet to abandon this
position.
The second parliamentary election in December 2005 followed a similar
pattern. This time, the backroom bargaining was only partially effective.
The newly installed prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, reneged on his
campaign promises by publicly supporting an ongoing American military
presence, which caused deep fissures in the ruling coalition. After
a year of unproductive negotiations, the 30 Sadrists in parliament,
originally a key part of Maliki's ruling coalition, withdrew from
both that coalition and the cabinet in protest over the prime minister's
refusal to set a date for the end of the occupation. Subsequent parliamentary
demands for a date certain for withdrawal were ignored by both the
government and U.S. officials. While Maliki continued in office without
a parliamentary majority, the controversy contributed to the soaring
popularity of the Sadrists and waning support for the other Shiite
governing parties.
By early 2008, with provincial elections looming in November, there
was little doubt that the Sadrists would sweep to power in many predominantly
Shia provinces, most critically Basra, Iraq's second largest city
and southern oil hub. To prevent this debacle, Iraqi government troops,
supported and advised by the U.S. military, sought to expel
the Sadrists from key areas of Basra.
This use of military force to prevent electoral defeat was only
one of many indications that the Iraqi government was feeling the
pressure of public opinion. Another was the reluctance of Prime Minister
Maliki to maintain an antagonistic stance toward Iran. Despite fervent
Bush administration efforts, his government has promoted social, religious,
and economic relationships between Iraqis and Iranians. These included
facilitating visits to the holy cities of Karbala and Najaf by hundreds
of thousands of Iranian Shia pilgrims, as well as supporting extensive
oil transactions between Basra and Iranian firms, including distribution
and refining services that promised to integrate the two energy economies.
A formal military relationship between the two countries was vetoed
by U.S. authorities, but this did not reverse the tide of cooperation.
The River of Resistance
As the occupation wore on, the Bush administration found itself
swimming against a tide of resistance of a previously unimaginable
sort, and ever further from its goals. Today, cities and towns around
the country are largely under the sway of Shia or Sunni militias which,
even when trained or paid by the occupation, remain militantly opposed
to the U.S. presence. Moreover, though the prostrate Iraqi economy
has been formally privatized, these local militias and the political
leaders they worked with continue to raise demands for vast government-funded
reconstruction and economic development programs.
The formal political leadership of Iraq, locked inside the heavily
fortified, U.S.-controlled Green Zone in Baghdad, remains publicly
compliant when it comes to Bush administration plans to transform
Iraq into a Middle Eastern outpost including the continued presence
of American troops on a series
of mega-bases in the heart of the country. The rest of the government
bureaucracy and the bulk of Iraq's grass roots are increasingly insistent
on an early American departure date and a full-scale reversal of the
economic policies first introduced by the occupation.
In Washington, for Democratic as well as Republican politicians,
the outpost idea remains at the heart of the policy agenda for Iraq
in this election year, along with a neoliberal economy featuring a
modernized oil sector in which multinational firms are to use state-of-the-art
technology to maximize the country's lagging oil production.
Iraqi resistance of every kind and on every level has, however,
prevented this vision from becoming reality. Because of the Iraqis,
the glorious sounding Global War on Terror has been transformed into
an endless, hopeless actual war.
But the Iraqis have paid a terrible price for resisting. The invasion
and the social and economic policies that accompanied it have destroyed
Iraq, leaving its people essentially destitute. In the first five
years of this endless war, Iraqis have suffered more for resisting
than if they had accepted and endured American military and economic
dominance. Whether consciously or not, they have sacrificed themselves
to halt Washington's projected military and economic march through
the oil-rich Middle East on the path to a new American Century that
now will never be.
It is past time for the rest of the world to shoulder at least a
small share of the burden of resistance. Just as the worldwide protests
before the war were among the upstream sources of the Iraqi resistance-to-come,
so now others, especially Americans, should resist the very idea that
Iraq could ever become the headquarters for a permanent United States
presence that would, in the words
of Bush speechwriter David Frum, "put America more wholly in charge
of the region than any power since the Ottomans, or maybe even the
Romans." Unlike the Iraqis, after all, the citizens of the United
States are uniquely positioned to bury this imperial dream for all
time.
Michael Schwartz, Professor of Sociology at Stony Brook University
has written extensively on popular protest and insurgency. His analyses
of America's Iraq have appeared regularly at Tomdispatch.com, as well
as Asia Times, Mother Jones, and Contexts. His forthcoming Tomdispatch
book, War
Without End: The Iraq Debacle in Context (Haymarket, June 2008)
explores how the militarized geopolitics of oil led the U.S. to dismantle
the Iraqi state and economy while fueling a sectarian civil war. His
email address is Ms42@optonline.net.
Copyright 2008 Michael Schwartz