'Surge' doomed to failure
Only workers' unity and a
struggle for socialism offers a way out
Jenny Brooks, Socialist Party, London
Newspaper reports this week reveal that US
General Tommy Franks met with his top officers in August 2002 to review their
invasion plan for Iraq. They discussed the post-invasion phases, and reckoned that four years later, they would only need 5,000 troops in Iraq! Instead there are 132,000 and another 21,500
presently being mobilised. The International Herald Tribune commented:
"four years after the invasion, the 'stable democratic Iraqi government'
the United
States
once hoped for seems to exist only in the command's old planning slides"
(16.2.07).
The situation in Iraq was already a debacle for US imperialism and the new 'troop surge' is compounding
the situation further. Over just four years, the most colossal imperialist
power on the planet has gone from a posture of invincibility to facing defeat
in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is now suffering complete exposure of the limits
of the military power it wanted to portray as unstoppable. It is also facing
the opposite of what it set out to achieve regarding the Iranian and Syrian
regimes; far from reducing their influence and possibly securing their removal,
their position in the Middle
East has been strengthened.
This disaster for US imperialism has resulted in Bush being increasingly
isolated and at odds with the US ruling class and top military commanders, who in the
main supported the conclusions of the US Baker-Hamilton 'Iraq Study Group'
report. This report, which concluded that most US combat troops should be removed from Iraq by early 2008, was an indictment of the failed policy
of the neo-conservatives around Bush.
The desperation of Bush & Co reflects the
fact that US direct domination in the Middle East is
coming to an end, hastened by their own actions. Over
150,000 coalition troops have been deployed in Iraq, yet there is no stability or significant
reconstruction, or even restoration of pre-war levels of electricity production
and oil.
Despite this, Bush is asking the US congress for extra military funding for Iraq and Afghanistan which will bring the overall US cost of the two wars
to a staggering $745 billion. The planned US military budget for 2008 will be an expenditure of
almost $20,000 for every second of that year!
Altogether, around 3,500 Iraqi people are
dying each week now in the sectarian bloodbath. Not surprisingly, an escalating
number of people are fleeing the violence. Over two million have fled the
country, mainly to Syria and Jordan, and 1.8 million are living as refugees within Iraq. This amounts to the displacement of 15% of Iraq's population, the biggest population movement in the
region since hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were forced out of Palestine in 1948.
US Democrats
Ordinary Americans have turned massively
against the Iraq occupation, with around 75% opposing the sending of
extra troops. The voting in of the Democratic Party to the US congress and senate in last November's mid-term
elections was mainly a vote against Bush's wars. So with its majorities in the
two houses of parliament, will the Democrats now withdraw funding for the Iraq war as was done in the latter stages of the Vietnam war? They are trying hard not to do this, as they themselves
mostly supported the invasion and occupation of Iraq and have never offered any alternative.
However, leading Democrats and some
Republicans are being pushed more and more into opposition to the war, not through
their own courage, but as a result of the huge pressure from the American
population. Both the congress and senate have now passed motions opposing the
troop surge, but they are non-binding. Democrat leaders have also promised to
restrict new military deployment to Iraq – but this in a situation where the US military is already so over-stretched that further
deployment is not possible in any case.
Troop surge
This present 'surge' is the third attempt by
US forces to end the Sunni-Shia violence that escalated after the sacred Shia
shrine in Samarra was bombed a year ago. The previous two did not 'stabilise' Iraq and nor will this one. It is aimed mainly against
Shia militias, particularly that of the Mahdi army
linked to the party of Moqtada al-Sadr. When US forces tried to smash this army in 2004, it only led
to its strengthening, now having an estimated 100,000
fighters.
The sending of just an extra 21,500 US
troops, 18,500 of them to Baghdad, cannot succeed in destroying al-Sadr's
forces and taking control of that city of six million people. And the new
offensive is already worsening the situation in some respects. There are
reports that some Mahdi and other militias are feeling compelled to pull out of
their positions temporarily, so altering the balance of military forces on the
ground and leaving some sections of the population exposed to even greater
violence.
If there does happen to be an overall
reduction in the sectarian bloodshed as a result of the troop surge (as the US
regime is claiming), it will not last for long, as the various Iraqi militias
will just take the opportunity to regroup and train for further fighting when
the surge subsides.
Unfortunately for US war aims, Al-Sadr's party is part of the US stooge Shia-dominated 'government' headed by Nouri
al-Maliki, and is partly propping up that government. US attacks on the Sadrist
militias will only push the millions of Sadr supporters further against the
occupation, and will further weaken the already impotent Maliki government.
On top of the anti-Sadr offensive, US forces
are also still battling with Sunni militias in many areas, especially at
present in the mixed Diyala province. The surge will only serve to intensify
the Sunni insurgency in these areas.
For US imperialism, neither escalating the war nor
progressively or suddenly withdrawing troops will stabilise the US-controlled
Iraqi government. Either way, the sectarian civil war is likely to intensify.
The Committee for a Workers' International – which the Socialist Party is part
of - was the only international left organisation to warn that the US-led
invasion of Iraq would foster sectarian division among the Iraqi
people and unfortunately we are being proved right.
A break-up of Iraq?
If Iraq breaks up into three entities – Kurdish, Shia and
Sunni - it will have huge repercussions. Half of the Iraqi population lives in
just four large cities: Basra, Mosul, Kirkuk
and Baghdad. The latter three have very mixed populations, so a
fracturing of the country along ethnic and religious lines would create an even
worse nightmare than the present situation. It would also impact massively on
the surrounding countries, including on Iran where around half the population consists of various
minorities.
The Sunni Arab elites in the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia, feel threatened by the rise of the Shias to power in
Iraq and in the event of a spiralling of the Iraq conflict would feel under pressure to enter the fray
to bolster the position of the Iraqi Sunnis, so contributing to a new wider war.
Other countries could also intervene, such as
Turkey, Syria and Jordan. The Washington-based Brookings Institution has
already warned that "foreign intervention at the covert level is
proceeding apace in Iraq". A break-up of Iraq would lead to an even worse scenario than was seen in
the brutal Balkan wars, with the prospect of millions of refugees, more akin to
the 1948 division of the Indian subcontinent.
Threats to Iran
Such is Bush's desperation at the plight of
his Iraq policy, he is considering an
air assault on Iran's nuclear installations and also on non-nuclear military bases and
command centres, with even the alarming possibility of use of nuclear missiles.
Both the US and Israeli regimes have been reported as carrying
out practice air force exercises.
Bush has accused Iran of supplying bombs to militias in Iraq, while turning a blind eye to the Baker-Hamilton
report's conclusion that the Sunni insurgency – which is the main killer of US
troops - is funded by rich Saudi and other Sunni Gulf Arabs. The accusations
appear to be partly aimed at preparing the way for an air assault.
Severe though the repercussions would be, the
desperation and ideology of Bush - and of Israeli prime
minister Olmert following the Lebanon war - means that an air assault on Iran cannot be ruled out. Death, destruction and
environmental damage would result in Iran, and the repercussions in the region would be huge.
There would inevitably be mass protests worldwide.
Retaliation by the Iranian regime on world
oil supplies would probably rebound on all the capitalist powers on the planet
by tipping the world economy into crisis.
Withdraw the troops!
US and all other imperialist forces must be withdrawn
from Iraq immediately. They are the cause of the disastrous
situation, and their presence is only worsening it. Only the Iraqi people can
bring an end to their nightmare, through starting to break with the many
divisive, tribal based and aspiring-capitalist leaders, instead building their
own working class organisations, involving other exploited sections of society.
Most urgent is the building of workers'
defence organisations that can appeal to workers from every ethnic background
to unite in a struggle against imperialist occupation as well as against
right-wing Iraqi leaders who orchestrate sectarian killings and bloody
retribution. Workers' unity also needs to be built based on the idea of the
sharing, planning and development of Iraq's resources for the benefit of Iraqi people from all
backgrounds, as opposed to the plunder of those resources for the profits of
the rich. This means the necessity of socialist ideas taking root, which is the
only way that a secure future for the Iraqi people can be realised.