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The Meaning of Victory
by David Krieger*, April 3, 2003
"Day by day we are moving closer to Baghdad.
Day by day we are moving closer to victory."
--George W. Bush, March 31, 2003
With these words, Mr. Bush sought to reassure the American people
that his war plan is working, moving us closer to “victory.”
As the United States continues its heavy and unrelenting bombing
of Baghdad and other Iraqi cities, inflicting death and suffering
on the Iraqi people who we are supposedly liberating, we would
do well to explore the meaning of victory. Thus far, few journalists,
at least in the corporate mainstream US media, appear ready to
do so. Those concerned with the path the war is taking might have
added the following observations to Bush’s statement.
Day by day we are killing more Iraqi civilians.
One day US forces bomb a marketplace, killing 62 civilians. Another
day a car carrying women and children is fired on by US troops,
killing seven. An Iraqi mother describes watching her young children’s
heads severed from their bodies. According to news reports, some
500 to 700 Iraqi civilians have died thus far, and many more Iraqi
soldiers have been slaughtered.
Day by day the “untold sorrow” mounts.
One Iraqi man, whose family was killed by US bombing, cries out
in pain, “God take our revenge on America!”
Day by day more of our young soldiers are dying
and being maimed in battle and military accidents. Between US
and British troops, more than 60 coalition soldiers are dead.
Is this our victory, killing more of “them” than they
kill of “us”?
Day by day we are spending more of our wealth on
instruments of war as we relentlessly bombard Iraqi cities. Bush
has asked for supplementary budget approval of $75 billion as
a down payment on this war. This is in addition to the $400 billion
already allocated for our military forces.
Day by day we are destroying more of the infrastructure
of Iraqi cities that we are already allowing US companies to bid
on to rebuild. Perhaps we should return to less deadly ways of
transferring taxpayer wealth to favored corporations.
Day by day we are becoming more hated in the Middle
East. Middle Eastern newspapers are printing these headlines,
“Monstrous martyrdom in Baghdad” (Jordan), “Dreadful
massacre in Baghdad” (Egypt), and “Yet another massacre
by the coalition of invaders” (Saudi Arabia). Egyptian novelist
Ezzat El Kamhawy writes, “This war is affecting civilians
primarily. I did not expect to see civilians bombed and I feel
exceedingly angry.” Throughout the Middle East, the people
don’t seem to be celebrating our presence or our war, let
alone our “victory.”
Day by day we are creating more terrorists intent
upon attacking the US and American citizens. “When it is
over, if it is over, this war will have horrible consequences,”
says Egyptian President Hosni Mubarek. “Instead of having
one [Osama] bin Laden, we will have 100 bin Ladens.” Does
this fit with Mr. Bush’s concept of “victory”?
Day by day we are seeing the arrogance of the rush
to war by the Bush administration. We have yet to see the Iraqis
surrendering in large numbers and greeting the Americans as “liberators,”
as the administration boldly claimed would happen. Perhaps Mr.
Bush, so focused on victory and so lacking in historical perspective,
has forgotten the US experience in Vietnam and the potency of
nationalism in the defense of one’s country from outside
invaders.
Day by day the Bush administration is continuing
to alienate most of our key allies. The members of the “coalition
of the willing” that have actually provided troops in Iraq
consist of only the UK, Australia, Poland and Albania in addition
to the US. Not even the three countries whose leaders have vocally
supported the war--Spain, Italy and Bulgaria--are providing military
support.
Day by day polls throughout the world are showing
overwhelming opposition to the US invasion of Iraq, even in most
of those countries where the governments are nominally supporting
the US.
Day by day we are watching the erosion of our constitutional
system of government. Congress has shirked its constitutional
responsibility to declare war, and it seems poised to give the
president all the funds he is requesting for his war.
Day by day, laws pressed by the Bush administration,
such as the misnamed USA Patriot Act and planned supplements to
this legislation, are undermining our Bill of Rights.
Day by day Americans are being misled by our mainstream
corporate media, which seems comfortable acting as cheerleaders
for the war. When veteran war correspondent Peter Arnett said
on Iraqi television what he took to be the obvious truth, that
the US timetable was falling by the wayside in Iraq, he was summarily
fired by NBC.
Day by day Americans are expressing their support,
but also their ignorance about the war. The polls inform us that
72 percent of Americans support the war, but at the same time
51 percent of Americans believe that Iraq attacked the World Trade
Center, which is not true. Sixty-five percent of Americans cannot
find Iraq on a map.
Day by day we are ignoring other serious problems
in the world, including the dangerous potential for war on the
Korean peninsula and the possibility of North Korea’s further
nuclear proliferation. The Bush administration ignores North Korea’s
pleas for negotiations with the US and its constructive proposals
for a mutual security treaty.
Day by day we are using nuclear-tipped shells in
this war to attack tanks and other armored vehicles. The “depleted
uranium” in these munitions is transformed into fine dust
particles upon impact, and the inhalation of these particles is
thought to be responsible for the “Gulf War Syndrome”
that has afflicted so many of our troops from the first Gulf War
in 1991.
Professor Doug Rokke, ex-director of the Pentagon’s
depleted uranium project, has argued, “There is a moral
point to be made here. This war was about Iraq possessing illegal
weapons of mass destruction – yet we are using weapons of
mass destruction ourselves. Such double standards are repellent.”
Day by day we are moving closer to using nuclear
weapons, the real ones. The Bush administration has promulgated
a doctrine of reserving “the right to respond with overwhelming
force – including through resort to all of our options –
to the use of WMD [weapons of mass destruction] against the United
States, our forces abroad, and friends and allies.” The
reference to “all of our options” is meant to obliquely
send the message that nuclear weapons use is an option.
We don’t know whether Iraq has weapons of
mass destruction, but we have no reason to believe that they would
not use chemical or biological weapons as a last resort if they
did. And we have no reason to believe that the Bush junta would
not follow through on their threats to use “all of our options,”
including nuclear weapons.
Day by day the US economy is faltering. Since Bush
came to office, the US has moved from large budget surpluses to
large budget deficits. The stock markets have followed one major
trend, downward, and the war seems to be exacerbating this trend.
Day by day funding is being cut for education,
health care, head start programs and other important social programs
so that we can pay for war. In 2001, 41.2 million Americans had
no health insurance. There has been a 43 percent rise in unemployment
since Bush took office. Pell grants, which have funded college
educations particularly for worthy minority students, are being
cut back from covering 84 percent of the costs to 42 percent of
the costs. While important social programs are being cut back
or eliminated, Bush is pressing for a $700 billion tax break for
the wealthiest Americans.
Day by day the Bush administration is failing America’s
veterans. The House of Representatives recently voted approval
of a 2004 budget that will cut $25 billion over ten years from
veteran’s health care and benefit programs. This came just
one day after Congress voted overwhelmingly to “support
our troops.”
Day by day the most respected moral leaders in
the world are speaking out against a war they find to be immoral
and lacking in legitimacy. These leaders include The Pope, Archbishop
Desmond Tutu and former South African President Nelson Mandela.
The Pope has repeatedly insisted that a preventive
war has no legal or moral justification, and has called the war
“a defeat for humanity.” Nelson Mandela has called
Bush’s actions in Iraq “a tragedy.” “What
I am condemning,” Mandela said, “is that one power,
with a president who has no foresight, who cannot think properly,
is now wanting to plunge the world into a holocaust.”
As if to underline Mandela’s insights about
him, Bush, according to Time magazine, told three US Senators
as far back as March 2002, “F--k Saddam. We’re taking
him out.”
As we race toward the “victory” that
Mr. Bush seems so confident will be achieved, what are the consequences
likely to be?
-- There will be greater instability in the Middle
East as the US attempts to occupy Iraq.
-- The US will be roundly hated in the Middle East
and throughout the Muslim world.
-- Terrorism against the US will increase, including
terrorism in the US.
-- Our guaranteed freedoms in the US Bill of Rights
will continue to be reduced.
-- The US economy will be in shambles, with few
social programs left intact.
-- US alliances of long duration will be difficult,
if not impossible, to rebuild.
-- The likelihood of nuclear weapons proliferation
and use will increase.
Former US marine and UN weapons inspector Scott
Ritter has doubts about Bush’s “victory”: “We
find ourselves…facing a nation of 23 million, with armed
elements numbering around seven million – who are concentrated
at urban areas. We will not win this fight. America will lose
this war.”
But Mr. Bush tells us, “Day by day we are
moving closer to victory.” General Tommy Franks, the commander
of the US war effort, tells us, “The outcome is not in doubt.”
In all likelihood, however, it will not be the outcome that Mr.
Bush and his administration are anticipating, but one far worse
for all of us. It is past time for the American people to wake
up to the meaning of “victory.”
* David Krieger is president
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (www.wagingpeace.org). He
is the author of Choose Hope, Your Role in Waging Peace in the
Nuclear Age (Middleway Press, 2002) and editor of Hope in a Dark
Time, Reflections on Humanity’s Future (Capra Press, 2003).
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