It’s easy to be smug. It’s easy to see every new attack against the United States or its allies in Iraq, including this week’s bomb in Fallujah, as a tragedy, yes, but also a cruel vindication of the warning the anti-war camp gave again and again — but which would not be heard. It’s tempting, as we watch the US (and British) effort in Iraq sinking into the bog, to clamber to the rooftops and shout with a full throat: ”We told you so!”
Heaven knows events in ”post-war” Iraq have given those of us who opposed the adventure every reason to feel self-satisfied. The anti-war camp has been proved right in almost every particular.
Now we know that the grounds on which the war was fought were false: Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction and Iraq had no link to al-Qaeda (though it has now). We know that the warmakers’ predictions for life after Saddam were just as spectacularly wrong.
They thought the invading troops would, in the words of US Vice-President Dick Cheney, ”be greeted as liberators”, rather than as the target of daily attacks. They thought that, while the morally repugnant Ba’athist elite would disappear, a solid, middle class, ”Mesopotamian bureaucracy” would stay at their desks to run the country: instead the pen-pushers disappeared, leaving only chaos.
And the US planners estimated the cost to the US of rebuilding Iraq would be a mere $1,7-billion, as opposed to the $87-billion now sought from Congress.
We know, too, that the Bush administration’s arrogance in preparation for the war’s aftermath was immense, its incompetence stunning. It shelved a long-range State Department study, The Future of Iraq, because its conclusions did not fit the hawks’ plans.
The war party always knew best. So it made basic errors — witness the US officials, newly arrived in Baghdad, searching in vain for several Iraqi ministry buildings, lost because they had the wrong addresses — and some comic ones, like Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s suggestion that former New York boss Rudy Giuliani become mayor of Baghdad.
We know all this and cannot be blamed for wanting to wallow in self-righteousness. As director Michael Moore might bellow: ”We were right and they were wrong.” That is true, but we cannot leave it there. We have to do better than that. We have to move on.
For what is going on now, the daily killing of foreign troops, the bombs hurled at aid agencies and the unending hardship of Iraqis, means more than settling an argument millions of citizens had with President George W Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair. All the issues that were at stake then — what is right for Iraqis, the Middle East and the world? — are at stake again now. If you cared about the war, you have to care about the peace — or lack of it.
It’s no good thinking, as some on the left have, that there could be merit in the US (especially) getting a bloody nose in Iraq. We have to think about who is administering the punch. Sometimes it will be young patriots, new to combat, who have signed up for armed resistance against a foreign occupier. This kind of indigenous insurgency is said to be growing, gaining grassroots support and, with it, the legitimacy of a popular movement.
But not all of Iraq’s resistance will fit this romantic, Maquis image. Some will be Ba’athist hold-outs, Saddamites who once served as henchmen to a murderous dictator. No progressive should want to see these villains land a blow on British or US forces.
Others, their numbers not yet established, will be Islamists, some from abroad, who are graduates of the al-Qaeda school of morality. People who can murder United Nations or Red Cross workers do not deserve to be viewed as warriors in a heroic anti-imperialist struggle. No progressive should derive any satisfaction from their operations, even if their ultimate target is an occupation we opposed from the start.
Instead we have to look at the likely consequences of this resistance. Strikes such as Monday’s against the Red Cross will only deter other non-governmental agencies from coming to Iraq, and the only people to suffer from that will be Iraqis — denied the medical care or food aid they so badly need. It’s possible that success for the guerrillas will bring the end of the occupation and a moment of national liberation — but it could just as easily bring violent chaos, civil war, a return to Saddam-style dictatorship or a fundamentalist theocracy. Surely none of these are outcomes peace campaigners would wish on the Iraqis.
Those who opposed the war need to start thinking ahead. Some activists are already doing just that, debating what needs to happen next. The instinctive slogan is to call for an immediate US and British withdrawal: Iraq for the Iraqis, now! That sounds appealing — not least to the twitchy wing of the Republican party, which has seen the latest polls and dreads the prospect of Bush going into next year’s election as the body-bag candidate, the president who led US troops to their deaths in a Vietnam-style quagmire (a word that has now entered the US conversation, via Republican Senator and Vietnam vet John McCain).
But it is no position for the anti-war camp. All it would mean is permission for London and Washington to have trashed Iraq — and then leave Iraqis to clear up the mess. No, occupiers have responsibilities: once they take over a country, it is up to them to make sure power and water works, schools and hospitals function. The Americans and Brits cannot just cut and run.
Rather, they should work out a fast-track plan for a peaceful withdrawal, handing power over Iraq to Iraqis themselves. Such a plan should have two elements, both inspired by the recent experience of East Timor. The first, and most immediate, is to internationalise authority. In place of an American pro-consul, the country needs to come under a UN mandate.
That would require a loss of face by Washington, letting the likes of France and Germany in on the action, but the alternative — young American soldiers remaining a shooting gallery for Iraqi fighters — is surely worse.
Britain and the US should plan a gradual stepping back and eventual exit, to be replaced by UN-authorised forces. Those could come from a variety of sources — politically speaking, almost any country you can name would be less of a provocation than the US military. Perhaps moderate Arab states, led by the Arab League, might step up to do their bit.
Finally, a war whose golden purpose was said to be the delivery of democracy to Iraq should start with the basic building block of self-government: elections. Under outside auspices, a ballot of all Iraqis should be timetabled as soon as possible to choose the body that will draw up a Constitution for the new Iraq. Transfer of sovereignty would not have to wait until the new government is in place: the handover from the UN to Iraqis could be a gradual process, starting right away.
Think of it as the East Timorification of Iraq. Maybe that’s not a slogan for a banner in Hyde Park, but the peace camp has to put its victory in the last argument behind it — and fight the battle ahead. — Â