www.newsandletters.org












NEWS & LETTERS, JUNE 2003

Editorial

Occupation of Iraq: What happens now?

The Bush administration is learning the age-old truth that it is easier to defeat a country militarily than to occupy it and control the population. It is not surprising that the U.S. government, a representative of advanced capitalism, was able to employ advanced capitalist technology to bomb Iraq into submission. We opposed the war and we opposed Saddam Hussein's oppressive regime; we "take sides" only to support movements for genuine liberation. Now everyone wants to know, what comes next?

It's hard to believe that Bush's experts were as unaware as it seems of the human problems that would follow the war--from the immediate looting of hospitals and historical treasures, to the continuing lack of electricity, water, food and medicine, six weeks after the bombing ended. According to a UN warning issued May 14, more than 300,000 Iraqi children currently face death from acute malnutrition, twice as many as before the invasion. The Bush administration undoubtedly knew what could happen to the people of Iraq; they just did not care.

NO DEMOCRACY IN SIGHT

The U.S. is now faced with the long-term problems of restoring the economy and governing a diverse country that does not want to be occupied, all the while arguing that its heinous war was justified in order to bring democracy and a better life to the Iraqi people. No prospect of either democracy or a better life is in sight. Rather, Iraq is sinking into chaos and the rule of fiefdoms and mafias. People, especially women, are afraid even to leave their houses due to the violence and destruction.

The best organized mass movements at this time are led by Islamic fundamentalist clerics, who stand ready to take the reins of government while the U.S. government flounders about. The retired general who had been sent to govern Iraq was replaced, as the State Department and Pentagon argue over what to do.

Current U.S. policy seems to be to let everything in the country collapse. Whether or not the worsening conditions are intentional, they seem designed to cause people to give up the hope for self-determination that the fall of Saddam engendered, to eviscerate any nationwide political movements by "divide and conquer," and to make an exhausted population grateful just to receive handouts to keep them alive.

At the beginning of the war, the U.S. seemed determined to leave the Ba'ath party bureaucracy and police in place so as to prevent any opportunities for social revolution. That was the reason the U.S. did not remove Saddam during the first Gulf War. This time the plan was quickly rejected by the Iraqi masses, who took matters into their own hands as soon as Saddam was killed (or, as is now reported, fled the country at the start of the war with a billion dollars in cash).

Doctors and hospital workers demonstrated in Baghdad in May against the U.S. attempt to re-install the Ba'ath commissioner of health, forcing the U.S. rulers to reverse themselves and announce that no such officials would be allowed back in power. Women have been completely ignored by the U.S. overseers, but now are speaking out against the possibility of losing the rights they had. Feminist groups are demanding a say in the new government and denouncing U.S. attempts to court religious leaders by holding out the possibility of an "Islamic democracy."

Without women's rights and secular law, there can be no democracy. But of course, the U.S. has no intention of allowing the Iraqis to participate in deciding their future. Bush's experts had to give up immediately their plan to install a puppet government of Iraqi exiles, so now they state publicly that there will be no self-government for a long time.

Iraq's likely future can be seen in Afghanistan, which underwent devastating U.S. bombing a year-and-a-half earlier than Iraq did. Although Afghanistan was a much poorer country and had an Islamic fundamentalist government, we can expect the U.S. will act--and not act--in a similar manner in Iraq as it has in Afghanistan. There the U.S. installed a puppet government and some troops in Kabul, leaving the rest of the country in the hands of fundamentalist warlords, whose tacit support it pays for with money and permission to control their fiefdoms. Little U.S. aid has gone to re-building or improving conditions.

The U.S.'s claim that its war on Iraq will bring democracy is as big a lie as its claim to have "freed the women of Afghanistan." One Afghan group that has consistently opposed all wars, occupations and fundamentalist regimes over the past 26 years is RAWA, the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan.

WOMEN'S STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM

Tahmeena Faryal, a RAWA representative on tour in the U.S., declared, "Little has changed in Afghanistan, especially for women. We don't have democracy; student demonstrators were recently attacked and killed for asking for water and electricity. The fundamentalists are gaining support. Conditions for the 85% of women in rural areas are just as bad as they were under the Taliban."

Women's position everywhere is a measure of society's unfreedom, and their struggles are beacons toward a new way of life for women and men alike. As those kinds of beacons, two feminist organizations have been operating in Northern Iraq--Defense of Women's Rights and Independent Women's Organization (See page 2).

Only social revolution by the masses themselves can bring freedom. RAWA and the Iraqi women's organizations arose from within two of the most oppressive countries in the world. Their ideals and practice can inspire our own movements, and help to put the issue of social revolution back on the world's agenda.

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons