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The Logic of Withdrawal

By Anthony Arnove, In These Times. Posted March 28, 2006.


The eight reasons why leaving Iraq now is the only sensible option.
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We find ourselves in a remarkable situation today. Despite a massive propaganda campaign in support of the occupation of Iraq, a clear majority of people in the United States now believes the invasion was not worth the consequences and should never have been undertaken.

Likewise, people strongly disapprove of the foreign policy of Republicans and Democrats in Congress, particularly their position on the war in Iraq. In a September 2005 New York Times-CBS News poll, support for immediate withdrawal stood at 52 percent, a remarkable figure when one considers that very few political organizations have articulated an "Out Now" position.

The official justifications for the war have been exposed as complete fallacies. Even conservative defenders of U.S. empire now complain that the situation in Iraq is a disaster.

Yet many people who opposed this unjust invasion, who opposed the 1991 Gulf War and the sanctions on Iraq for years before that, some of whom joined mass demonstrations against the war before it began, have been persuaded that the U.S. military should now remain in Iraq for the benefit of the Iraqi people. We confront the strange situation of many people mobilizing against an unjust war but then reluctantly supporting the military occupation that flows directly from it.

In part, this position is rooted in the pessimistic conclusions many drew after the February 15, 2003, day of international demonstrations -- perhaps the largest coordinated protest in human history -- failed to prevent the war. This pessimism was exacerbated by some of the leading spokespeople for the antiwar movement, who misled audiences by suggesting that the demonstrations could stop the war. As inspiring as the demonstrations were, it would have taken a significantly higher degree of protest, organization, and disruption of business as usual to do so.

The lesson of February 15 is not that protest no longer works, but that protest needs to be sustained, coherent, forceful, persistent, and bold -- rather than episodic and isolated. And it needs to involve large numbers of working-class people, veterans, military families, conscientious objectors, Arabs, Muslims, and other people from targeted communities, not just as passive observers but as active participants and leaders.

We will need this kind of protest to end the occupation of Iraq. But we will also need to be able to answer the objections and concerns of thoughtful, well-meaning people who have been persuaded by one or more of the arguments for why U.S. troops should remain in Iraq, at least until "stability" is restored. Below, I outline eight reasons why the United States should leave Iraq immediately, addressing common arguments for why the United States needs to "stay the course."

The U.S. Military has no right ro be in Iraq in the first place.

The Bush administration built its case for invading Iraq on a series of deceptions. The war in Iraq was sold on the idea that the United States was preempting a terrorist attack by Iraq. But Iraq posed no threat. The country was disarmed and had overwhelmingly complied with the extremely invasive weapons inspections. In a rare moment of honesty, Vice President Dick Cheney told CNN in March 2001,"I don't believe [Saddam Hussein] is a significant military threat today."

As the case for war has crumbled, so has the case for occupation, which also rests on the idea that the United States can violate the sovereignty of the Iraqi people and all the laws of occupation, such as the Hague and Geneva Conventions, which clearly restrict the right of occupying powers to interfere in the internal affairs of an occupied people.

The United States is not bringing democracy to Iraq.

Having failed to find any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq -- the first big lie of the invasion -- the United States has turned to a new big lie: George Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, John Negroponte, Condoleezza Rice, John Bolton, and their friends are bringing democracy to the Iraqi people. Democracy has nothing to do with why the United States is in Iraq. The Bush administration invaded Iraq to secure long-established imperial interests in the Middle East -- the same reason Washington backed Saddam Hussein as he carried out the worst of his crimes against the Iraqi people, the Kurds, and the Iranians.

By invading Iraq, Washington hoped not only to install a regime more favorable to U.S. oil interests; it hoped to use Iraq as a staging ground for further interventions to redraw the map of the Middle East. Several U.S. bases have been established in Iraq and are likely to remain long after U.S. troops are expelled. All of this has nothing to do with democracy. In fact, the United States has long been a major obstacle to any secular, democratic, nationalist, or socialist movements in the region that stood for fundamental change, preferring instead what is euphemistically called "stability," even if it meant supporting the most reactionary fundamentalist religious forces or repressive regimes.


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This article is adapted from Anthony Arnove's forthcoming book Iraq: The Logic of Withdrawal, due out on April 18 from The New Press.

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View:
Big Egos -- Again
Posted by: Moonray on Mar 28, 2006 12:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a Vietnam veteran, watching the Iraq War unfold has been like watching a rerun of the Southeast Asia debacle. Only the names are different.

Again, it was the big egos of a few powerful men who got us into this mess. Back then, LBJ tried to impose Pax Americana on the wily commies (through enormous slaughter, of course). This time it's Bush Jr. and Dick Cheney who are determined to show Saddam that he can't diss the Mighty USA and get away with it. And the fact that Halliburton and the oil industry are benefiting enormously from the war is just icing on the cake.

This is all pretty tragic, but it's even more tragic to reflect that it will keep on happening until Americans make it a lot more difficult for their leaders to embark on unnecessary wars. Unfortunately, the military-industrial complex and its minions continue to call the shots, and can bamboozle most of us by waving Old Glory and spouting a few patriotic slogans.

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It's Time for a CHANGE
Posted by: thinkverybig on Mar 28, 2006 1:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The United States immigration policy needs a complete overhaul. My question is this. Why are Cubans allowed to come ashore to the U.S. and Haitians are sent back at sea? This blatant act of racism is shameful and disgraceful and should be changed immediately. The United States is so set on trying to maintain control of its super power status that it doesn’t care who it tramples on the keep it. But what is the reason for not allowing people of color to enter into the U.S. other than racism? What is the reason it has allowed illegal immigrants to enter into the U.S. and work for wages well below minimum wage? For businesses to continue to prosper while keeping the bridge wider between the rich and the poor, which is a new form of present day slavery by big business with the U.S. Government’s approval. Haven’t we had enough of free labor? I think 400 years of it is quite enough and by the way, where is that 40 acres and a mule you promised those slaves?

While the republicans were spending millions of dollars of tax payers money to investigate and impeach President Clinton, we could have been focusing on issues such as illegal immigration, poverty, jobs for Americans, campaign finance reform, political corruption, the outsourcing of jobs to other countries, the environment, overpaid CEO’s, outlawing lobbying, outlawing monopolies, corporations taking advantage of citizens with ridiculous late fees on credit cards, bank teller fees and more

It’s time for a change in our political, social and judicial system. The time has come. I’m ready, are you?

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» RE: It's Time for a CHANGE Posted by: bryanhurst
» RE: It's Time for a CHANGE Posted by: blueneck
» RE: It's Time for a CHANGE Posted by: thinkverybig
Dems just as guilty
Posted by: nbrown on Mar 28, 2006 1:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm glad this was just an adaptation from a full-length book. This piece was very short, probably too short to be effective.

For the sake of brevity, one can get a similar view of the war by reading the Iraq War Timeline. It includes political quotes and events, in chronological order, that together build a more complete picture of the war. And it speaks for itself.

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Good article
Posted by: WhatNow? on Mar 28, 2006 3:59 AM   
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I am ashamed of my country. Hussien provided better living conditions for most Iraqis than the gold ole USA has.

This article reflects my opinion perfectly.

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» RE: well, maybe not quite Posted by: blueneck
Mission Failed?
Posted by: Colin on Mar 28, 2006 4:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course, the article assumes that any one of the factors listed matters so much. There is the flip side which could be interpreted as suggesting the war was a resounding success and with every day it continues, continues to be. After all...

1) America/UK coalition has its hands on Iraqi oil which is being pumped out by the pipe load.
2) Permanent military bases are being set up in the region ensuring that No.1 is ongoing.
3) Nigh on useless puppet government keeps up appearences.
3) Billions have been stolen.
4) Billions more has been promised but never given by instead handing it to other American's on behalf of the people of Iraq. The net result being that the money never leaves America but you get to look dead generous.
5) Who knows what other deals have been struck benefitting the individuals who have made this mess?
6) The entire region is now weaker. This might sound contrary to news articles saying Muslims are standing together but really they aren't, are they? Imagine if the middle east formed the kind of partnership you see with the EU. Once you consider the energy reserves they have, they would have the entire planet by the balls. That's not going to happen at the moment is it...?

And all it took to achieve this? The right few words (even though everyone knew nobody actually meant what they were saying) from the right few people. There is a lesson in human psychology there somewhere.

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» RE: Mission Failed? Posted by: douglashoyt
» RE: Mission Failed? Posted by: cinattra
questions unanswered
Posted by: bryanhurst on Mar 28, 2006 5:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While I've been leaning toward an immediate withdrawal of US and coalition troops for some time now, this article STILL doesn't address the one legitimate reason to maintain some kind of occupation of Iraq: to prevent an all-out civil war and to fix what we've broken. Poorly as our occupation is going in its present state, the author doesn't make any kind of case that a complete withdrawal WON'T lead to a bloodbath. We can't undo what has been done, but I worry that we may very well make a bad situation even worse by withdrawing all of our troops from Iraq.

If you hired a plumber to fix your house's plumbing, and he ends up breaking much of it, of course you fire the plumber (and sue for reperations). But you don't just leave the broken plumbing unfixed.

We have an obligation to the people of Iraq, that much we can all agree on. What's not clear is, where do we go from here?

Had the Bush regime really been serious about "fixing" Iraq, it would have heeded the advice of its generals on the ground and put hundreds of thousands of troops on the ground immediately after the "mission accomplished" moment. It didn't, and it's no doubt too late for that now.

I think we should do three things:

1. As John Murtha suggests, redeploy our troops from the populated areas of Iraq, where they are inflaming the insurgency, to nearby unpopulated areas from where they can secure the borders and maintain a "quick strike" force that can quickly intervene should sectarian violence flare up.

2. Establish a "trust fund" of sorts, with tens of billions of dollars, to go toward the rebuilding of Iraq. (And, as the author suggests, forgive whatever debt Iraq still has with the US.)

3. Cancel ALL contracts the US government may have with American companies like Halliburton, Bechtel, etc. Allow and encourage Iraq to do its own rebuilding and provide its own services, and to contract on its own for that which they're not able to do themselves - using a normal bidding process, not the no-bid contracts that the Bush regime gives to its cronies.

The author of this article does a good job of acknowledging what the US has done wrong in Iraq, but doesn't really do much of a job suggesting what we should do to fulfill our enormous obligations there.

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» RE: questions unanswered Posted by: douglashoyt
» RE: questions unanswered Posted by: Ellen Remore
» RE: questions unanswered Posted by: Abushite
» RE: questions unanswered Posted by: blueneck
» RE: questions unanswered Posted by: cinattra
The One Reason Why we "shouldn't" leave Iraq
Posted by: oneMan on Mar 28, 2006 6:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I say shouldn't, but as I don't agree with the agenda it could more accurately be "won't". You see Iraq is too strategic a location for permanent military bases for us just to withdraw. View the world as a chess board. Iraq is nearly the exact center of the board (a highly strategic position for the non chess players). The American government has dedicated far too many resources towards gaining this position to simply abandon that now. There are many problems in Iraq. None of those problems in any way hinder the usage of our bases in Iraq as launch points for proactive strikes. From Iraq American attack Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Iran, Syria, Turkey, Pakistan and India (just to name a few) within a matter of hours from the air and in less than two days (less in some cases) on the ground. The American Empire simply is not going to give up such a strategic location during its expansion phase. The only possible way the US is going to leave is if Hannibal shows up early and unfortunately for him elephants aren't as impressive any more.

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Len Hart
Posted by: Len Hart on Mar 28, 2006 6:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The best reason for withdrawing from Iraq is the fact that we should never have attacked and invaded that sovereign nation in the first place. Bush flouted international conventions and laws to which the U.S. is bound, principles which the U.S. itself had insisted upon at the end of WWII. The attack and invasion of Iraq was and remains a crime —a capital crime by U.S. Codes; Section 2441. Our staying does nothing to improve conditions in Iraq nor does it undo the crime. There is no merit to any position that says, in effect, that we should continue the commission of a crime. There is no merit to any position that maintains, in effect, that one should keep on doing whatever it is that makes you sick.

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Human beings aren't pawns in a global game of chess!
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Mar 28, 2006 7:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real reasons for invading Iraq had nothing to do with WMDs, and everything to do with domestic political concerns, 'geopolitical strategy' as a method of crushing aspiring countries (as in the 'Project for a New American Century'), and the desire to control Iraq's oil. The people behind this lack a basic sense of humanity; they do view humans as expendable (using names like 'raghead, camel jockey, etc. is a way of reinforcing this). See Palast's piece.

Even if we get troops out of this war, chances are that these neocon crazies will immediately try and invade Iran, Nigeria, Venezuela - a long list of oil-rich regions could be targeted. Nevertheless, the troops should all be brought home now, and the death squads operating out of the Iraqi Ministry of the Interior should be brought to justice. The best way to do this might be for American citizens to vocally support an international war crimes tribunal focusing on all aspects of the invasion and war in Iraq. I'd like to see Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld called before such a tribunal. In the end, they will have to answer for their crimes against humanity.

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Drip, leak, flow, gush
Posted by: knitter on Mar 28, 2006 8:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ah, but to use your plumbing analogy, the inept plumber who broke the pipes would not be the choice for repairing them. Having the failed plumber get to choose who would follow (no-bid government contracts) is a plan for more leaky pipes.
Pack up the tool kits and go home.

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» RE: Drip, leak, flow, gush Posted by: knitter
Why Bush Failed
Posted by: Fade on Mar 28, 2006 9:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://spaces.msn.com/risingsons/

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When simply doesn't matter
Posted by: Ellen Remore on Mar 28, 2006 11:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Having perpetrated a war of agression, destroyed the nation's infrastructure, economy, morale, and reduced it to a state of barbaric anarchy, all Bush's contractors and all Bush's men simply can't put it together again. The fallacy of hanging around to install a democracy will only result in more dead Americans, to say nothing of Iraqis. It is their country, and whether we get out next week, or 30 years from now, five minutes after we leave, they will exercise their sovereign right, and do precisely what the exigencies of the moment happen to dictate. The waste of one more life for Bush's Big Lie is completely insupportable.

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WRONG: The United States is not preventing civil war in Iraq
Posted by: ashrock on Mar 28, 2006 12:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This U.S. is preventing civil war in Iraq - at least in all of Iraq. Clearly, there is much sectarian violence going on in Iraq. But it will get much worse if we leave.

I encourage all of you to see the recent FRONTLINE episode "The Insurgency." There is a scene with an Iraqi who says that about 25% of the country is in civil war, but this is preferable to 100% of the country which is what would happen if we withdrew immediately.

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» RE: Not Civil War Posted by: blueneck
Damed if you Do Damed if you Don't....
Posted by: Captainmagic on Mar 28, 2006 12:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America leaves tommorrow and Iran Invades. Thats the sticking point of the occupation....are there any Pro-Shites in Iraq!!!....Thats the Bloody Mess...How do you get it so wrong..so quickly..This defeat in the middle east is so comprehensive it defies imagination. So where do you go from here...only one way..the good ole USA way...ATTACK!! Make sure you lay blame for the losses squarely at the feet of the few...for there will be many.

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Iran won't invade
Posted by: cardboardurinal on Mar 28, 2006 1:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The reason they will never invade is that they don't need to. The new Iraqi government has already shown itself to be sympathetic to the Iranian government, so why would Iran take a risk at hurting its army to take a country that is already its ally?

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» RE: Iran might invade Posted by: blueneck
Another reason: Credit!
Posted by: mythbuster on Mar 28, 2006 2:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alexander Hamilton realized during our War for Independence that the only way to defeat the British Empire was to destroy British credit. The war ended when British merchants and politicians realized it was bankrupting the Crown. Bush will be seen as the great um-maker of empire. Under his "leadership" just about every index of American financial life has eroded. Without a constant expansion of consumer credit (and draconian new bankruptcy laws) our economy would stall. I've always believed that the Iraq War was our first out-and-out predatory war since the Spanish-American War. Look around: We are losing market share worldwide. War making is our business. Problem is, we can't afford it. Not for much longer....

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» RE: Another reason: Credit! Posted by: cinattra
Nukes for defence
Posted by: phindrup on Mar 28, 2006 5:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Furthermore, the invasion of Iraq is spurring the drive for countries to develop a deterrent to U.S. power. The most likely response to the invasion of Iraq is that more countries will pursue nuclear weapons, which may be the only possible protection from attack.
Any country that is potentially under threat from the US -- and that is any country with substantial reserves of raw materials -- ought to be arming themselves with nukes.
I think that any government that is not doing so is failing in its first duty to its citizens.
From one of the Iraqi sites: 'If the US leaves, we will have a mess, but it will be our mess.'

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» RE: Nukes for defence Posted by: cinattra
» RE: Nukes for defence Posted by: ggeddis
rover
Posted by: Roverton on Mar 29, 2006 9:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cheaper gas. the thing that will just accumulate and kill us all later anyway.

Brilliant little species, we.

Sometimes I'll look up at the night sky and ponder how many of those billion-fold worlds have gone though this issue successfully and how many have not.

Then I wonder which of those will we be.

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