| Interview
with Veteran activist Tariq Ali on: What’s next in Iraq?
Interview by
Eric Ruder
OpEdNews.Com
TARIQ ALI is a
veteran political activist since the 1960s, and a filmmaker, novelist and
author. His most recent books include The Clash of Fundamentalisms and
Bush in Babylon: The Recolonization of Iraq. Tariq spoke to interviewer
ERIC RUDER about the aims of the U.S. occupation and the growing Iraqi
resistance.
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WHAT ARE the motives for the U.S. occupation? The Bush
administration, of course, claims that it has removed an evil dictator and
is promoting democracy and freedom.
I DON’T think that very many people outside the U.S. believe this.
Even in countries that have troops there, the population is against the
war and occupation.
With every passing day, it becomes clear that the principal aim of the
U.S. in invading and occupying Iraq had very little to do with democracy
or even toppling a dictator, and a great deal to do with exercising
imperial power, showing both the region and the rest of the world that
this is how modern imperialism works--that the U.S. cannot be defied, and
if it is defied, it reserves the right to punish defiance.
Iraq was meant to be the country where this would be demonstrated.
Another principal reason was to grab the Iraqi market--to grab Iraqi oil
and divide it among the West, as used to be the case long years ago when
Iraq was ruled by the British.
This occupation takes place now in a very changed international
context. This is a 21st century occupation. It takes place in the context
of neoliberal economics and a global offensive by corporate capitalism.
And another feature of this global offensive is a continuing effort on
the part of the U.S. not to allow countries in different parts of the
world to develop regional alliances, but to deal bilaterally with the U.S.
That’s what they’ve done in the Far East, that’s what they’ve done
in South Asia, that’s what they’ve done in the Middle East, that’s
what they impose on Latin America.
Any attempt to create a strong regional alliance that could challenge
neoliberal hegemony, they will crush. Iraq was a country outside their
control economically and politically, and they wanted to "set it
right."
There is a subsidiary reason, though I don’t think that it’s a main
reason. The Israeli regime wanted Iraq out of the way because it felt that
this was the only country that had the potential to stop Israeli
atrocities against Palestine. Not that Iraq would have done this, but it
could have done this, and why not remove the risk altogether?
These were the principal reasons for the U.S. entry into Iraq. If you
look on the economic level, what’s going on is very straightforward. The
entire Iraqi economy has been privatized. The American corporations are
in.
The South Koreans and the Japanese have been promised concessions and
contracts if they commit troops. The South Korean president more or less
said that. After Korea won 100 odd contracts, he said, "You see, if
we did not send troops, we would not have gotten this contract."
He’s honest. But that is the reason that a number of these countries
sent troops--apart from the East Europeans who had just wanted to be U.S.
satellites.
But the Polish president is getting cross now--pretending to be
irritated, and saying that he didn’t know there were no weapons of mass
destruction--because Poland got very tiny contracts. Even the British, who
backed Bush to the hilt, haven’t gotten many contracts.
It’s interesting that the British got the contract to redo the sewage
system, which is quite appropriate because that’s the role that Blair
plays--as the sewage cleaner of the American Empire. It’s quite
funny--whoever decided that in the Pentagon must have had a sense of
humor.
This is the process that’s now underway. Iraq’s health system,
Iraq’s housing, Iraq’s educational system are all being privatized.
They are waiting to implant a puppet government, which they hope to do
after the "handover" on June 30. Then they’ll start dealing
with the oil as well.
There’s no doubt that one of the big demands on Ahmed Chalabi and the
puppets will be to make the oil accessible to foreign companies. And the
argument that the puppets and the U.S. will use is that the amount of
investment needed to clear up the backlog in Iraqi oil and the mess in the
Iraqi oilfields can’t come from an Iraqi state devastated by war, but
can only come from foreign companies.
This is the plan. But the question is: Is the plan being implemented in
an effective way? And you can read every day on the front page of the Los
Angeles Times and the New York Times that this plan is not
effective. The resistance is now targeting foreign businesses. This is
going to pose problems for political, military and economic planning by
the U.S.
Militarily, they’re in a mess. If the leaders of the southern part of
the country decide to go into rebellion openly, then that would be, in my
view, the end of the first phase of the occupation and the emergence of a
big national liberation movement. It hasn’t happened as of yet, but all
the indications are that it could.
THE BUSH administration said that the resistance was made up of Saddam
loyalists, and then foreigners, and then Islamists, and then foreign
Islamists. It also claimed that the capture of Saddam Hussein would
disorient the resistance. What’s the reality?
THE RESISTANCE, as some of us argued, was there from the beginning of
the occupation. If you compare the Iraqi resistance--its scale, its size,
its effectiveness--to the resistance in France or Belgium against German
occupation during the Second World War, or in Italy against the fascist
dictatorship, there’s no comparison.
It took a number of years for the French resistance to reach the stage
that the Iraqi had reached from week one. The Iraqi resistance to
pre-emptive wars and foreign occupation has been on a much higher level in
terms of military planning than the French, Italian and Belgian resistance
were during the Second World War against German occupation.
I think the principal mistake that the U.S. made was to believe--if, in
fact, they believed it--that the resistance was being masterminded by
Saddam. All the information from Iraq right from the beginning showed that
Saddam was out of it--that essentially the resistance was decentralized,
based in individual cities, villages and sections of the country.
There’s no way that any single person could control it.
I remember arguing, well before Saddam’s capture, with Christoper
Hitchens on the Democracy Now! radio program, and I said the notion
that the capture of Saddam will end the resistance is just not serious.
Hitchens actually agreed with me on that, but most other supporters of the
Bush regime didn’t. They thought that once Saddam was captured, that
would be it.
Howard Dean, the former Democratic presidential contender, who said at
the time that Saddam’s capture would not solve the problem, was
denounced by the mainstream press for having dared to say it. But he was
right on that particular question.
And so were all of us who argued that, in fact, Saddam’s capture
might enhance the resistance, because lots of people who might not have
wanted to come forward, fearing that Saddam’s wing of the Baath Party
might emerge again, would now do so. That’s exactly what happened.
The resistance has grown, and we see attacks on occupation forces every
day--and not just the U.S. forces. In southern Iraq, there’s been a
growth in the resistance, relatively speaking. British soldiers have come
under fire. They’ve been attacked on the streets of Basra by kids.
There’s a real connection now with the occupation of Palestine and
the occupation of Iraq. The Israelis are advising the Pentagon to do what
the Israelis do--stay in their own military bases, and go out and hit when
they want to hit.
We’ll see if the U.S. follows the Israeli model in punishing Falluja
for what happened last week, when the American contractors were ambushed.
If the U.S. follows Israel’s advice, they will bomb Falluja and kill
people to punish them. But this would be very foolish--just totally
counterproductive.
This is what happens in a colonial situation--you’re attacked, you go
and punish people who attacked you, lots of innocent people are killed,
the killing of Iraqi innocents then creates more anger, and more people
join the resistance. This is the iron law of resistance movements. So if
the U.S. follows Israeli advice and Israeli patterns, I’m afraid the
situation will escalate very rapidly.
WHAT DO the killings in Falluja attack say about developments within
the resistance?
BASICALLY, THE number of resistance groups is growing. There are two
forms of resistance in Iraq today. There’s an unarmed resistance, which
is being waged by Shiite religious leaders in the south.
The key leader here is Ayatollah Sistani. He is fighting politically
and sending messages--this is what we want, this is what we don’t want.
He is demanding free elections to a constituent assembly, which he is not
going to get. So far, he asks for these things, some concessions are made,
and he retreats. But there’s a limit to how long this can go on.
The U.S. handover at the end of June will be--to be perfectly frank--a
total charade. The U.S. will hand over power to people they trust, appoint
the prime minister of the new Iraq, retreat to eight or nine key
bases--essentially the old bases of the Iraqi army--and let the puppets do
the bidding of the U.S. The very weak police and army units of the puppet
government will take the hits from the resistance.
But this is not going to change anything, in my opinion. The only thing
that could change is that Sistani and some of the religious parties in the
South would see that the handover is a complete fraud and demand immediate
elections.
If these elections are denied, they could break from the governing
council, and if these groups break, there will be mayhem in Iraq--have no
doubt about that. The U.S. is fearful of permitting an election because
they know that the puppets that they have brought over--the "house
Arabs" they’ve transported from the U.S.--will not win these
elections.
The elections will be won by parties that want the U.S. out and that
want Iraqi control of Iraqi oil. Given that this wasn’t the aim of the
invasion and occupation of Iraq, there’s no way that the U.S. is going
to accept that.
So what I foresee is a continued struggle until there is a large
antiwar movement in the U.S., which puts sufficient pressure on senators
and congressional representatives to pull out of Iraq, like happened in
Vietnam. These are very different times, and it won’t be exactly the
same.
But nonetheless, what is argued in the U.S. is of enormous
significance. The tragedy is that the Democrats have picked a leader to
run for president who changes his mind every second day and who is not
credible as a candidate. He hasn’t come out staunchly against the war.
He says that the war was wrong, but instead of saying that they should
pull out, he wants more troops to be sent to shore up the occupation.
In this situation, until the election is over, the antiwar movement, I
think, will be on tenterhooks. But once the election is over, regardless
of who wins, the goal has to be to really up the pressure on the White
House and the officialdom in the U.S. to demand an end to the occupation.
I mean, you have a big growth in Iraqi civilian casualties, and you
have American soldiers and others being killed. There’s no reason on
earth why these soldiers or Iraqi civilians should be killed. That is why
an end to the occupation is absolutely necessary.
And the notion that the Iraqi people are incapable of determining their
own future is a total joke. They are perfectly capable of doing deals with
each other--they’ve done so in the past, and they’ll do so again.
And you can’t exclude the Ba’ath Party from this. Purged of Saddam
and his factions, which were totally degenerated, the Ba’ath is a
legitimate party, just like the religious parties, just like the Iraqi
Communist Party--both the collaborationist wing that supports the U.S.
occupation and the non-collaborationist wing.
If these people get together at a convention--and there are signs that
this could happen--the U.S. won’t be able to keep control of the
country. And it will be in the interest of Kurdish leaders to go along
with this, because if the Kurds isolate themselves, there will be no one
to defend them against any Turkish intrusions.
HAS THE U.S. attempt to win support for their plans from Shiite leaders
failed?
I THINK it’s on the verge of failure in my opinion. I think that once
the handover takes place, you will have a jockeying for power. And if
Sistani and the groups that are allied to him are denied what they want,
they will break.
Bush’s National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice said in public,
"We want to change the Iraqi mind." This is a pretty disgusting
statement actually. It’s a sort of semi-fascist statement. What she is
saying is that we want the Iraqis to support the occupation, and if they
don’t, we’ll denounce them as supporters of Saddam.
What this completely fails to understand--and this is what I argued at
length in my book Bush in Babylon--is that there are large numbers
of people in Iraq who loath Saddam Hussein and his regime and everything
it stood for, but who are equally, if not even more, hostile to the U.S.
for occupying their country.
The notion that Iraqi politics can only be divided into two--either
you’re for Saddam, or you’re for the occupation--is a joke. It’s the
same thing that Bush said after 9/11--if you’re not with us, you’re
for the terrorists. It’s a completely false dichotomy. It was wrong in
relation to 9/11, and it’s totally wrong in relation to Iraq.
The fact is that the war is going badly for them--and that’s why you
see serious splits within the ruling elite itself--as you saw with Paul
O’Neill’s departure as treasury secretary and now Richard Clarke
walking out of the White House and basically denouncing the regime in
quite sharp language for invading Iraq. This would not have happened had
there not been a resistance in Iraq.
THE MEDIA is playing up the killings of the U.S. contractors in Falluja
as evidence of the barbarism of the Iraqi "insurgents." How do
you think we should respond to this?
FIRST, IT’S very interesting that in the press conference about
Falluja given by the U.S. Brigadier Gen. Mark Kimmit, he said that there
are two different sorts of violence in Iraq. One is that used by
terrorists who carry out suicide bombings, and this is largely the work of
al-Qaeda--and incidentally, I don’t think that’s totally true.
The second form of violence that he distinguishes from terrorism is
"insurgence." "Insurgence" is the code word that the
American military uses to describe the resistance. This is the word that
they’ve instructed the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and
the rest of the American media to use.
Kimmit said very clearly that what took place in Falluja was an act by
insurgents. Obviously, what took place was pretty horrific, there’s no
denying that. It was very brutal, which is not something I defend.
But what is equally interesting is that none of the real footage was
shown in the Western media. It was shown on the Arab networks, but not the
Western media. They showed a car being blown up, but they didn’t show
the atrocities.
The reason that they don’t show it is that they don’t want to
demoralize American public opinion. Because even people who support the
war would say, "My God, we didn’t realize it was as bad as
this."
I’ve always argued that when you have ugly occupations, you cannot
have a pretty resistance. It’s the character and form of the occupation
that determines the nature of the resistance.
This article originally appeared in Socialist
Worker |