America to Watch Entanglement in Iraq’s Bloody Saga
Dr. Mahboob A.
Khawaja
“We are waging
war on terrorism even as we embody terrorism. No wonder we seem sometimes to be
at war with ourselves, and have been for most of the 21st century….. No American under 12 Has Lived in a Country at Peace…whatever
the U.S.
government knows, or thinks it knows, is not widely shared with most of its
citizens….. The American Enemies List Is Decided Anonymously and
Secretly.” (William
Boardman, “ Is America a Country at war with an Illusion.” Information Clearing House: 8/19/2013).
Late Dr. Ali
Shariati (the persuasive intellectual force of Iran’s Islamic revolution), once
noted: “when people live in darkness, they lose sense of direction.” The 21st century knowledge-based
information age tells a lot about how some of the global politicians and
sadistic leaders tend to ignore the lessons of history. The darkness is
returning to Baghdad. In March 2003, America
waged a bloody war against Iraq
under a false pretext of having ‘Weapons of Mass Destruction.’ All impartial
accounts of the decade long war point out to the American-led savagery to have
murdered approximately 3 million innocent people in Iraq and destroyed countless human
habitats and hub of one of the well known ancient human civilizations. With $25
billion invested in decade long training of the Iraqi armed forces, American
occupation and war strategy built much hated sectarian divides and barriers to
maintain the law and order. It helped the US military echelon to ensure operational
capability of US contractors to manage the constant flow of precious oil
exports without Iraqi presence and control. George W. Bush was keen to see Iraq remaking the dollar as the only exchange currency
for oil exports and that all the major oil businesses were taken over by the US contractors
including of his own family and the reconstruction work to be carried out by
Halliburton under Dick Cheney-the VP. According
to the Project for the New American Century - PNAC, it is clear that George W.
Bush administration had no other interests to propagate human rights, freedom
or democracy in that part of the troubled world. It was a ‘mission accomplished’ by occupation.
Iraq
continued to be a place of bloody sectarian encounters, political and economic
instability and missing legitimate political governance since that invasion of
the few monsters of history. Iraq’s
one-sided Shiite governance by Nour Al-Malki regime is under threat of being
replaced by a new popular movement of the ISIS groups led by Abu-Bakr
Al-Baghdadi after their sudden success in capturing several major towns in Iraq.
Again this
weekend, American war psyche is gearing up to explore all the possibilities to
reclaim insanity and discard rationality. America
faces no challenge like Putin in Ukraine to stop thinking of
entanglement in Iraqi affairs. President Obama faces multiple problems both at
home and abroad. American politics is a
game of pretensions, money, big talks and people who act fist and think later.
This is how an estimated of 5,000 American soldiers were killed in Iraq and more
than 30,000 wounded. The real figures could be much higher. Nobody can explain
to justify if all the human lives were lost for any rational cause to preserve
human dignity, freedom, democracy or justice in Iraq. America
failed to achieve any triumph or glory in Iraq
except prolonged occupation, hanging Saddam Hussain and stealing Iraq’s gold
reserves and oil production. Recently, an international tribunal has indicted
George W. Bush and Tony Blair (PM of Britain)
with war crimes committed in Iraq.
The ICC at The Hague is currently pursuing an
investigation against Britain
of war crimes in Iraq.
This could well involve the US
suspected crimes against the people of Iraq too.
Post 9/11, the
American Congress authorized the President to use military force against those
who perpetrated the 9/11 attack and those countries who harbored those
individuals. That’s it, that’s the only legal authorization to use of military
force available to the US
President. Saddam Hussain or Iraq
was not listed in the US
charge sheet of the 9/11 attacks. At the outset, it was a PNAC’s per-planned
scheme of things to wage wars and to occupy the Middle East oil enriched region
for the future strategic priorities and security of the US. The then UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan called the US invasion as “illegal war.”
Glenn Greenwald
(IS Obama Fulfilling the Neocon Dream of Mass Regime Change in
Muslim World?, Democracy Now: 11/28/2011.), the constitutional law attorney
and political and legal blogger (Salon.com) points out the rationale of
crossing over the firing lines:
“What we’re
doing in essence is not only going way beyond what we were supposed to be doing
when the Congress authorized military force, but what we’re really doing is
we’re constantly manufacturing the causes of our war. Everywhere we go, every
time we kill Pakistani troops or kill children in Yemen
or in Afghanistan,
we’re generating more and more anti-American sentiment and violence, and
therefore, guaranteeing we will always have more people to fight.”
Glen Greenwald recalls having heard General Wesley Clark
(speech he gave in 2007 to the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco):
"in which he recounted
meetings that he had at the Pentagon with people with whom he had close
relationships in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, and he talked about how, as
he had done before, that he was told within a week or two after 9/11 that the
Pentagon intended to attack Iraq, even though no one thought that they were
involved in the 9/11 attack."
This week, Iraq appears to
be on the brink of political disintegration. The ISIS groups have seized
control of Mosul, Iraq’s
second-largest city, Tikrit - former dictator Saddam Hussein’s hometown, and
Dhuliya which is about 60 miles northwest of Baghdad. The ISIS fighters are pushing
forward to Baghdad.
Meanwhile, Iraqi Kurds have seized control of the northern oil city of Kirkuk. The ISIS groups
now control the area that stretches from the eastern edge of Aleppo,
Syria, to Fallujah in
western Iraq and the
northern city of Mosul.
The sudden advance and military success of the ISIS
attacks has surprised the military experts across the globe. The ISIS advance has caused an unthinkable humanitarian
catastrophe. Reportedly, five hundred thousand people have left Mosul to go into Kurdistan.
Save the Children reports that, "We are witnessing one of the largest and
swiftest mass movements of people in the world in recent memory.” The political and humanitarian dimensions of
the crisis must be analyzed in a non-partisan manner without prejudice and to
ensure the best interests, restoration of peace and safety of the people of Iraq as whole. Many international reporters portray the
people’s trust in the ISIS and are returning to safety in Mosul and other small locations. Contrary to the
Western political claims of “jihadist” encroaching Iraq, many observers get surprises
when they witness people returning to their homes in peace and express optimism
to see the marching rebels assume governance to serve the masses.
What happened across
Iraq
preceding the 2003 American invasion is no coincident but reactionary outbursts
of vengeful killings and sectarian atrocities watched indifferently by all the
global war players. Iraq needs people of new ideas to cope with
multiple scopes of the political and humanitarian crises to seek workable
solutions away from the entrenched political box of the few Shiite egoistic administrators.
This has not happened and will not come about as long as Nour Al-Mallki is
heading the secluded government of self-appointed cronies. President Obama in his yesterday’s statement clarified
that Iraq must make progress in finding political solutions and work on building
trust of the Sunni component of the Iraqi political landscape. American
leadership jumping into a prevalent chaotic and strategically volatile
situation will not sound a rational decision. Media reports point out that 5000
or so US sponsored oil contractors have already fled and taken planes out of Iraq. There are no American troops stationed in Iraq to fight against the ISIS.
Supposedly, if there were any US
marines stationed in Iraq,
how could they have rescued the endangered Al-Maliki regime from total
collapse?
While news media
reports indicate that Iran’s
spiritual leaders are sending the “Quds Guards” to fight and defend the Iraqi
Shiite regime, it will not be in the interest of Iran or the Muslim world to
intervene based on any sectarian consideration. The crisis in Iraq warrant
critical thinking and a mature and proactive response not a hasty reaction to
dispatch armed forces to side with one or another group. One would hope that Iran’s morally
and spiritually conscientious leadership would chalk-out its stance more
cautiously to maintain its balanced presence across the Muslim world. Whether
Sunni and Shiite followers of Islam, they are Muslim, and there is no religious
basis to fight or to kill one another. What would they be fighting for except
to protect a corrupt and an illegitimate political regime? Shrines at Karbala and Najf are
historically respectable places to both the Shiite and Sunni sects. There
should be no foreign interference from any corner to enflame the already worst
human catastrophic situations affecting the public life across Iraq. Surely, Iraq does not need
another influx of unwelcome American warriors to reignite the old wounds, fear
and hatred. The moral is, be it America,
Iran, Brits, Saudis or Kuwaitis or any outside nations, they must refrain from jumping into fire and inflicting
more pains, anguish and cruelty to the Iraqi masses.
If President Obama decides to
order air strikes or send warships or other secretive security forces measures
to support the PM Nour-Al-Maliki failing client regime, it could raise multiple
reactionary problems to deal with the Muslim world. Such actions could entrap
more hatred and hostilities rather than conflict management. The leaderless
Arab world is fast becoming a landscape of dehumanized economic culture,
political disintegration and losing its identity and usefulness in global
affairs. If the Arab leaders had wisdom, proactive vision, moral unity and were
open to learning, they could have helped the Palestinians to establish an
independent State of Palestine. Agreeably, political problems must be tackled
by politicians and people’s future must not be determined by guns and bullets. At
this stage, President Obama needs to analyze critically his weakness and
strength as a leader in coping with the global issues. America is not
in a moral and political strength to impose its hegemony on others. He has
already flunked in dealing with Syrian war problem, normalization of relations with
Iran and restoration of
sovereignty of Ukraine
under the Russian threat. Robert Pape, Professor, University
of Chicago's, and author of the Dying
to Win: the Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism (2005) points out the
alarmingly failing record of the US
war strategies in Iraq and Afghanistan:
"America is in unprecedented
decline. The self-inflicted wounds of the Iraq
war, growing government debt, increasingly negative current-account balances
and other internal economic weaknesses have cost the United States real power in today's
world of rapidly spreading knowledge and technology. If present trends
continue, we will look back on the Bush years as the death knell of American
hegemony."
One major factor
encouraging the global powers to go freely for warmongering and being unchallenged
out of their own hemisphere to far fetched lands and commit massacres and
destroy human habitats, is the obvious corrupt system of global peace and
security operated by the UNO. It is nothing more than a debating club
overwhelmed by the few – the five obsolete global powers at the UN Security
Council to claim legitimacy to rule the nations of the world. If the UNO could
be reformed and made responsible to the people of the globe, it could certainly
play an effective role in global peace and security.
What is the
cure to raging indifference and cruelty to the interests of the people of Iraq, United
States, and Europe and
for that matter to the whole of the humanity? The 21st century new-age complex political, economic,
social and strategic challenges and the encompassing opportunities warrant new
thinking, new leaders and NEW Visions for change, conflict management and participatory
peaceful future-making. But change and conflict resolution and new visions will
not grow out of the obsolete, redundant and failed authoritarianism of the few
insane and egoistic leaders. Be it the Obama, Bush, Blair or Nour Al-Maliki, none
have the understanding of contemporary societal peace or understanding of human
interests seeking peaceful co-existence in a God-given splendid and living
Universe. Once in power, they engage to assert one-way self-serving polices and
practices in complete disregard of the interests of the people and their sense
of peace, solidarity and happiness. To challenge the deafening silence of the
US, Europeans, Russian, and of all the authoritarian rulers of the Arab Middle
East for global peace and security, the humanity must find ways and means to
look beyond the obvious and troublesome horizons dominated by the few warlords
and continued to be plagued with massacres, barbarity against human culture and
civilizations, destruction of the habitats and natural environment as if there
were no rational being and people of reason populating the God’s created splendid
and living Universe. The informed and mature global community looks towards to those
thinkers, educated and honest proactive leaders enriched with coherent unity of
moral, spiritual, intellectual and physical visions and abilities to be
instrumental to lead and rescue the mankind from the planned encroachment of
the few global warlords.
|