Iraq and the Failures
of Democracy
by Richard Falk and David Krieger*, February
10, 2003
There is no decision in foreign policy more serious
than recourse to war. As the Bush administration prods the country
toward an unpopular and illegal war with Iraq, it is a matter
of national urgency to question whether our constitutional system
of government is providing adequate protection to the American
people against the scourge of war. Given the turbulence of the
current world scene and considering America’s military primacy
on the global stage, what the United States does affects the well-being,
and possibly the survival, of others throughout the world. So
we must question whether our system of representative democracy
is currently working in relation to this momentous question of
war or peace.
Without doubt the events of September 11 were a
test of the viability of our institutions under a form of stress
never before experienced, the menace of a mega-terrorist enemy
lurking in the concealed recesses of dozens of countries, including
possibly our own. To respond effectively without losing our democratic
identity in the process required wise and sensitive leadership.
It required as well a display of political and moral imagination
to devise a strategy capable of dealing effectively with mega-terrorism
while remaining ethical and in keeping with our values as a nation.
At this point, on the brink of a war against Iraq, a country that
has not been persuasively linked to the terrorist attacks of September
11, it is impossible to conclude that our government is meeting
this unprecedented challenge. Indeed, the Bush administration
appears likely to intensify the danger while further widening
the orbit of death and destruction.
The American system of constitutional government
depends on a system of checks and balances. Such checks and balances
among the three main branches of government is a fundamental principle,
and never more so than in relation to war and peace. At the very
least, Congress has the responsibility of restraining a rush to
war by engaging in serious public debate. To date Congress has
only held low profile hearings some months back. No opponents
of the approach taken by the Bush administration were invited
to participate in the hearings, which almost exclusively analyzed
the costs and benefits of the war option as applied to Iraq. There
was no consideration of alternatives to war, no reflections on
the dubious legality of the preemptive war doctrine, no discussion
of the absence of urgency and necessity that undermined the argument
that there was no time to waste in achieving “disarmament”
and “regime change” in Iraq.
Congress has so far failed in its constitutional
responsibilities. In passing the USA Patriot Act shortly after
the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, Congress seriously eroded
traditional American guarantees of freedom and privacy found in
the Bill of Rights. The Act allows the government to conduct secret
searches, provides for FBI access to extensive personal and financial
records of individuals without court order or even probable cause
of a crime, and creates a new, broad definition of “domestic
terrorism” that could subject individuals who engage in
public protest to wiretapping and enhanced penalties.
The open-ended resolution of Congress authorizing
the president to resort to force only accentuates its failure
to uphold these responsibilities. It would seem that the patriotic
mood that followed the terrorist attacks, along with shortsighted
anxieties about challenging a popular president, has dulled the
critical faculties of Congress as a whole despite the willingness
of a small number of senators and congressmen to raise their voices
in opposition. As a republic, the US Government cannot function
properly if Congress fails to exercise its constitutional responsibilities
in relation to the ultimate issues of war and peace, and simply
gives spineless deference to the president.
Closely connected with this institutional breakdown,
is the lamentable behavior of the Democratic Party, particularly
its leadership. They have failed in the role of an opposition
party to raise issues of principle, especially when so much is
at stake. The passivity of the Democratic Party in these circumstances
can only be explained by its ill-considered opportunism with regard
to domestic politics, including an inappropriate pretension of
patriotism. Given the importance of the party system, our governing
procedures cannot protect the citizenry against unacceptable policies
if the opposition party becomes mute and hides in the face of
anticipated controversy.
These issues have been compounded by a compliant
mainstream media, especially the corporate-owned news networks.
The media has largely viewed its role in terms of promoting patriotic
obedience to the government and mobilizing the country for war
against Iraq rather than illuminating the debate about whether
such a war is justified and necessary. The media has focused its
attention on when the war will begin, how it will be fought, and
what kind of occupation policy and exit strategy will be attempted.
It has refrained from considering the question of why the US should
or should not engage in war or from examining the many serious
possible consequences to the Middle East and to the US itself
of engaging in this war.
There are numerous qualified critics among the
American citizenry, as well as overseas, and yet their voices
are virtually never heard in the mainstream media. The media tends
to orient its analysis around compliant “military analysts”
and conservative think tank policy wonks. Even when prominent
military figures, such as General Norman Schwartzkopf or General
Anthony Zinni, express doubts about the rush to war, their objections
are given virtually no attention. This spectacle of a self-indoctrinated
and self-censored media weakens our democratic fabric, depriving
the citizenry of information and perspectives that are needed
to reach intelligent conclusions as to support or opposition.
Most important of all, the Bush administration
seems to be moving toward a non-defensive war against Iraq without
providing a coherent account to the American public. It has presented
evidence to the UN Security Council suggesting that Iraq retains
unreported stocks of biological and chemical weaponry, but has
provided no convincing proof of this and certainly no rationale
on this basis for war. The American people need to realize that
there are at least twenty countries with greater capabilities
than Iraq with respect to such weaponry. A number of these countries
are far more likely to be a conduit for such weaponry to pass
into the hands of al Qaeda or other terrorist operatives, which
is the greatest danger.
It is also important for the American people to
understand that in the course of an American attack on Iraq, its
leadership would only then have an incentive, in their helplessness,
to turn such weaponry as they possess over to al Qaeda or to use
it against American troops. Without such an incentive, Iraq is
likely to remain the most deterred country on the planet, fully
aware that any provocative step involving deployment or threats
of weapons of mass destruction would bring about the instant annihilation
of the Baghdad regime and Iraq as an independent country.
Under these circumstances, we must wonder why the
Bush administration, with pro forma Congressional support, is
plunging ahead with a war that seems so contrary to reason. There
are two lines of explanation, both raising disturbing questions
about the legitimacy of governance under the leadership of the
Bush administration. The first explanation is that the shock impact
of September 11 has upset the rationality of the policy process
to such an extent that an unwarranted war is being undertaken.
Part of this explanation is the frustration experienced by the
Bush administration in the aftermath of the Afghanistan War. Not
knowing what to do next has led the administration irrationally
to treat Saddam Hussein as if he were Osama Bin Laden and to treat
Iraq as if it were al Qaeda. Such irrationality overlooks the
radical difference between responding to a terrorist network that
cannot be deterred and dealing with a hostile and unpalatable
minor state. War is neither needed nor acceptable in the latter
case.
The second line of explanation, the more likely
in our judgment, is that the American people and the other governments
of the world are not being told the main reasons behind the US
war policy. From this perspective, the alleged preoccupation with
Iraqi weaponry of mass destruction is largely diversionary, as
is the emphasis on Saddam’s brutality. The real reasons
for the war are oil and regional strategic control, a military
beachhead in relation to the volatile Middle East. Such justifications
for war make strategic sense if, and only if, America is pursuing
global dominance to ensure that its current economic and military
preeminence is sustained into the future. But it is undoubtedly
impolitic for the Bush administration to reveal such motives for
war. The American people are overwhelmingly unwilling to spill
blood for oil or empire. And most of the international community
would certainly oppose the war if Washington’s strategic
goals were made explicit.
The suspicion that the underlying reasons for war
are not being disclosed is not based on adherence to a conspiracy
theory of government. If we examine closely the worldview expressed
years before September 11 by the Pentagon hawks and Vice President
Cheney, this understanding of American goals in the world becomes
more transparent. What September 11 did was to provide an anti-terrorist
banner under which these grandiose schemes could be realized without
public acknowledgement. Again, this is not a paranoid fantasy.
President Bush explicitly endorsed this vision of America’s
world role in his West Point commencement address last June, and
more subtly, in the major document issued by the White House in
September 2002 under the title The National Security Strategy
of the United States of America.
We are left then with two related problems. The
first is that of concealment from the American people, and the
second is the substantive issue of whether the United States should
initiate a war to promote this grand design of American power
and empire. It seems reasonable to assume that the motives for
concealment are connected with the administration’s assessment
of the political unacceptability of their undisclosed motives
for war. This double image of our democratic crisis is particularly
troublesome in the face of the breakdown of our constitutional
reliance on checks and balances.
But all is not lost. There are many indications
that opposition to the war is growing at the grassroots level
in America, and has been robust all along among the peoples of
the world. In the United States, polling information shows that
more than 70 percent of the people do not support a unilateral
preemptive war led by the United States. More than 70 city councils
across the country have registered their opposition to a war against
Iraq, and the number continues to grow. Recently over forty American
Nobel Laureates went on record opposing a US preventive war against
Iraq. More and more Americans are taking to the streets in opposition
to the Bush administration’s plans for aggressive warfare.
These numbers can be expected to grow and the voices of protesters
become angrier as the administration moves ever closer to war.
It seems doubtful that this resistance at the level
of the citizenry can operate as a check in the short run on White
House zeal, but perhaps it can both strengthen the resolve of
Congress and the Democratic Party, and convey the wider message
that we need to recover trust in government if our constitutional
system is to uphold our security and our values as a democratic
republic. Already in the US Senate, Senators Edward Kennedy and
Robert Byrd have introduced a resolution (S. Res. 32) calling
on the president to provide full support to the UN weapons inspectors
to facilitate their ongoing disarmament work and obtain a new
resolution of approval by Congress before using military force
against Iraq without the broad support of the international community.
The stakes are extremely high. It is not only the
prospect of war against Iraq, but it is the whole relationship
of the United States to the world. Continuing down the path along
which the Bush administration is leading is likely to produce
a climate of perpetual fear and war. It is also likely to undermine
further our security and our freedoms at home, even moving us
in the direction of a police state. Already, American consulates
around the world are warning Americans of the heightened dangers
that they are likely to face in reaction to the Iraq War. At home,
the color-coded alert system created by the Department of Homeland
Security seems designed to keep Americans in a state of fear without
providing them with any positive steps they can take to increase
their security. With each passing week the government moves ahead
with its claims to exercise sweeping powers that erode our civil
liberties while arousing our fears that terrorists are poised
to strike at the American heartland. We do not need to have such
a future, but it will be difficult to avoid unless the American
people exercise their democratic prerogatives and rise in defense
of their civil liberties, as well as in support of peace, international
law and constitutional government.
*Richard Falk, a Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University
of California at Santa Barbara, is chair of the Nuclear Age Peace
Foundation. David Krieger
is a founder and president of the Foundation. They are the co-editors
of a recent Foundation Briefing Booklet, The Iraq Crisis and International
Law.
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