Lesser Evil John Kerry danced like James Brown atop the precarious,
tiny table that he calls his “plan” for Iraq, easily out-presidentialing
the Pure Evil Pirate, George Bush, in last week’s debate. For those
of us who believe the fate of the human species may hang in the balance
on November 2, it was a night of great exhilaration. We may yet live
to tangle with a President Kerry – and tangle we must for, as Freedom
Rider columnist Margaret
Kimberley has written, “President Kerry
should face thousands of demonstrators if he continues the disastrous
occupation of Iraq and the take over of Haiti.”
(Note that PBS troglodyte moderator Jim Lehrer, who claims to have
composed all the questions for the candidates, didn’t even think Haiti – the other Bush
invasion and regime change – was worthy of debate.)
Kerry’s Iraq “plan” is purposely fuzzy, amounting as it does to an
admission that, not just Iraq, but a wired planet is in various stages
of rebellion against American imperial rule – including the conservative
elites of Europe and the developing world. (See , “The Global Redlining
of America, October 16, 2003.) In a sane country it would not
take great courage to explain to a fairly literate public that the
war in Iraq is lost and the U.S. must try to regroup with its
various former partners in crime, the Europeans. In other words, to
cut Bush’s losses. This is the “truth” that Kerry kept faulting Bush
for failing to acknowledge, but which Kerry himself dares not articulate
to an America born of a singular (white) Manifest Destiny. Instead,
Kerry spoke of his determination to call a “summit” at which he hopes
to “bring fresh credibility, a new start.”
Kerry is talking to Europeans as much as to Americans. His speeches
and debating points are written by operatives of the corporate-funded
Democratic Leadership Council (DLC) which, as we wrote on September
9, has been “determined to hold on to the ground it thinks the
Bush men have gained in Iraq.” However, the reality unfolding daily
in Iraq has forced John Forbes Kerry – a War Democrat, like the other
JFK – to begin to confront the fact that Iraq cannot be held by military
means, and certainly not as a U.S. corporate colony and franchise.
In what may have been the solitary substantive straw worth grasping
from the debate, Kerry declared:
”I think a critical component of success in Iraq
is being able to convince the Iraqis and the Arab world that the
United States doesn't
have long-term designs on it. As I understand it, we're building
some 14 military bases there now, and some people say they've got
a rather
permanent concept to them.
”I will make a flat statement: The United States
of America has no long-term designs on staying in Iraq.”
Kerry seems to be saying, obliquely, that he would
halt the hardening of the 14 bases that Halliburton is busily constructing
in Iraq. This is somewhat more substantive than his general disavowal
of “long-term” designs, a meaningless statement that could – and has – been
made by Bush.
Only in America could a War Democrat get credit from progressives
(including ) for making even the slightest bow to the facts
of U.S. defeat. The truth is, the Americans and British
are one fatwa away
from eviction from Iraq – only the timing and authorship of the
initiating clerical directive(s) is in question. That the occupation
force must evacuate,
and a lot sooner than four years from now, has been evident to
us since the day the invasion began. (See , “They Have Reached
Too Far,” March
20, 2003.) The question is: how shall the Americans
leave? Will
it be in a hideous spasm of destruction – a ghastly, racist,
regionalized lashing out at the hated hajis in Syria
and Iran that
could easily lead to a global conflagration – or under cover
of some face-saving exit plan concocted with the collaboration
of Europeans?
We believe the latter is the emerging, but still inchoate, Kerry
exit option.
Please note that we did not say that Kerry actually has a “plan” to
get out of Iraq. Rather, he is floating the sketchy outlines of his “option” as
if it were a plan – for both American and European consumption – and
attempting to contrast that as sharply as he can with Bush’s “resolve” to
provide “more of the same” of a “wrong” policy.
is not overly concerned that Kerry further flesh out his “plan,” since
the Americans are not in control of events in Iraq, anyway. His “plan” will
be shaped by Iraqi actions on the ground and the resulting “options” that
remain available. We’re also not upset that Kerry calls the aggression
against Iraq a “mistake” rather than a “crime.” Most white people in
the United States still refuse to admit that enslavement of Africans
and extermination of Native Americans was a crime; they prefer the
terms “mistake” or “tragedy.” What matters is that Bush be prevented
from unleashing a Middle East holocaust – “Shock and Awe” in reverse
on his way out the door – in the death throes of his grand aggression.
The Bush Pirates will not go quietly, even in defeat. As Americans,
on November 2 we can give the coup de grace to the criminal
offensive begun on March 19, 2003. We must then thwart Kerry’s DLC
Euro-Plan to subvert by other means the aspirations of the people of
Iraq – whatever that plan turns out to be.
A report in last week’s Financial Times (UK) indicates the U.S.
is actively exploring its fallback option: a partition of Iraq
that would separate Baghdad and central Iraq from the oil fields
of the heavily
Kurdish north and the Shi’ite south. In the usual fashion, the
paper quotes an “unidentified
diplomat” as saying: “The south
has been desperately disappointed, and they see Baghdad as continuing
to leave
them without representation. So they are working on ways to organize
themselves to have more clout with the center.” The southern
provinces in question are centered around Basra, Iraq’s second
largest city, patrolled by 9,000 British troops. The FT’s “diplomat” source
then points the finger at neighboring Iran as
the instigator of partition
sentiment in the south. Yet, as Iraq specialist Prof. Juan
Cole pointed out, back in March of this year:
”No major indigenous Iraqi political party or actor
favors partition. Even the Kurds want a loose federalism. Turkey
has threatened to go to war to prevent the emergence of an oil-rich
independent Kurdistan, which its leaders fear might entice the Turkish
Kurds of eastern Anatolia into a separatism that would fragment Turkey.
The Iranians less truculently maintain a similar view, because of
sensitivities about their own Kurdish minority.”
The Brits are, of course, masters of partition, their neocolonial
strategy of choice. They drew the lines in the sand that severed
Kuwait and its oil fields from the “protectorate” of Iraq, after
World War One. But the Clinton administration was testing Iraq
partition
balloons
in 1999, according to contemporaneous reports from Agence
France-Presse (AFP):
”The US Defense Secretary William Cohen currently
making a tour of the Gulf region is attempting to obtain the support
of the Gulf
states for a tactical plan to partition Iraq, a report
said.
”AFP said that United Arab Emirates al-Khaleej daily
quoted well-informed diplomatic sources in Doha as saying
that Cohen is trying to convince countries
of the region, especially the Gulf states, of a US plan aimed
at perpetuating the independence of northern Iraq by establishing
a Kurdish entity, but this
entity is not to be split from Iraq but to be linked to it in
a confederation that will be a starting point for the opposition
against the Iraqi government.
”The same sources added that this plan will not deal with
southern Iraq with the same logic, under the pretext that
by doing so it will avail the
chance for establishing an entity which would constitute a center
point for Iranian influence (in reference to the Shiites
of southern Iraq).
So, de facto partition of Iraq is a bipartisan project. Today, rightist
Republicans and Democrats speak of the “threat” of civil war dividing
Iraq in three parts: Kurdish, Sunni and Shi’ite. The Financial Times
report, probably planted by Brits or Americans, is a variation on that
theme. In reality, civil war is the second item on the neocolonial
wish-list. Should occupation of the whole of Iraq become untenable,
they will foment inter-Iraqi strife in hopes of holding on to the oil-rich
parts of the country through agreements with potentates of mini-states – sectarian
and ethnic warlords, much like in Afghanistan.
However, we think the Bush regime, still frozen in its original, delusional
ambitions to oversee a Greater Middle East “market” of “transformed” states,
has neither the time, presence of mind nor competence to effect a partition
strategy. Kerry, the Euro-minded guy, is another story, the first chapter
of which may begin on January 20.
It is up to the Iraqis to oust the U.S. occupation forces. But only
U.S. voters can prevent the mad, vengeful Apocalypse that will accompany
an American exit, as surely as night follows day, if Bush remains at
the helm – an orgy of superpower violence that might engulf us all.
The world can’t risk Pirate fingers on the Rapture button.
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