Thursday, October 27, 2005

Iraq War @American blunder

Since March 2003 when American started war in Iraq thinking that they are worlds sole policemen,people in Iraq are paying the price for it with there lives.
One can hardly defend the logic of war in Iraq except the hegemonic attitude and the politics of the region.
If the US administration is really concerned about the democracy in the world and terrorism in the world than north Korea and Pakistan would have been the primary targets,but Iraq was chosen because the oil resources and political scores.
Having taken world and Europe for the ride regarding the WMD now Bush faces the task to answering the people of country as the body count for American soldiers reached 2000,which is most important for Americans as it seems that they don't value the life of people other than Americans .Its surprising that hardly any human rights organizations in America are making any noises when 30000 Iraq people are died due to American blunder.
Its intresting to note that they make noise for ten or fifteen death in India or china when people in Iraq are suffering, nothing comes out of there mouth. With body count for American soldiers crossing 2000 finally American people are becoming alert to the fact that war in Iraq need to stopped if not for people of Iraq but for there own people.
With even draft for the constitution hanging in air.With increase in the insurgency every day,American have made mess of the Iraq with wrong polices,which in think even Saddam Hussein might not have created.
With election and elected government far in the sight it looks that with increase pressure of the American people bush will not be left with choice but to leave Iraq in the mess and let them make place for new civil war.
I hope United Nations become active for change and do something for the people of the Iraq .
Otherwise the life of people in Iraq will be left in the hands of American election politics which will be the most sad thing for the world community.

8 Comments:

Blogger Shobha said...

Its a policy of absolute contempt...apna khoon khoon, doosron ka khoon paani types...its sad, its damn sad...i feel Bush should be put behind bars as a war criminal...bloody murderer...

7:03 PM  
Blogger Arundhati said...

Sankalp

You should read Arundhati Roy's articles on this. I think you will like them

By the way, I see that you have turned word verification on! Sorry I did not reply to your email, it went into the junk folder for some reason! (Honestly, I have nothing against Orthopedic Surgeons, though I kicked one when the tried to "set" by broken ankle!)

cyao dude, don't break too many bones!

-Arundhati

5:15 AM  
Blogger drsankalp said...

DEAR AMY
its impressive the way you doled out the figure to support your so called RIGHT SIDE ...about the war.
But you mean to say that few tones of enriched uranium is good enough reason to get millions of iraqi homeless?
And when there are 20 people dying everyday in Kashmir due to terrosism of Pakistan, US label them as main ally in fighting against terrorism !Is that great joke or geopolitical compulsion?
When North korea is claiming to have enough uranium to have 40 nuclear bomb America is not daring to take action because they are not good enough to take on them right now .
May be there is no oil there as well!
Also they went to Kuwait not because of the support for democracies they wanted to keep the oil rich nation away from saddam influence....they cant not afford to keep there hand away because how can they protect American oil reserve otherwise.More importantly how can they control crude prices internationally.
As regard to gradtefulness of the iraqies one thing is sure if you get opinion poll in Iraq, like you do for everything in USA (even for victory secrets!)you will find more than 90 percent iraqi people would have been reasonably happy with condition in 1990 rather than in 2005.
Sucessive american intervention is only increased the plight of the the people in iraq.
The main issue for america was saddam phobia .
Here are some of the facts on AMERICAN BLUNDER AND IRAQ WAR

Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy." AfterDowningStreet.org is a coalition of veterans' groups, peace groups, and political activist groups, which launched on May 26, 2005, a campaign to urge the U.S. Congress to begin a formal investigation into whether President Bush has committed impeachable offenses in connection with the Iraq war.
By a margin of 50% to 44%, Americans want Congress to consider impeaching President Bush if he lied about the war in Iraq, according to a new poll commissioned by AfterDowningStreet.org, a grassroots coalition that supports a Congressional investigation of President Bush's decision to invade Iraq in 2003.


The poll was conducted by Ipsos Public Affairs, the highly-regarded non-partisan polling company. The poll interviewed 1,001 U.S. adults on October 6-9.

The poll found that 50% agreed with the statement:

"If President Bush did not tell the truth about his reasons for going to war with Iraq, Congress should consider holding him accountable by impeaching him."

44% disagreed, and 6% said they didn't know or declined to answer. The poll has a +/- 3.1% margin of error.

Among those who felt strongly either way, 39% strongly agreed, while 30% strongly disagreed.

"The results of this poll are truly astonishing," said AfterDowningStreet.org co-founder Bob Fertik. "Bush's record-low approval ratings tell just half of the story, which is how much Americans oppose Bush's policies on Iraq and other issues. But this poll tells the other half of the story - that a solid plurality of Americans want Congress to consider removing Bush from the White House."

The report released October 6 by Charles Duelfer, head of the Iraq Survey Group (ISG), is an indictment not merely of a president or an administration, but of an entire ruling elite. The report confirms that the claims about Iraq’s supposed weapons of mass destruction, advanced by three US administrations, Democratic and Republican, and parroted uncritically by the American media, were outright lies.

The Iraqi government was telling the truth about its alleged stockpiles of WMD. UN inspectors Mohammed ElBaradei and Hans Blix were telling the truth about the lack of any evidence of WMD stockpiles or nuclear weapons activity. Former weapons inspector Scott Ritter was telling the truth when he said Iraq had long before dismantled its WMD capacity.

The hundreds of millions of people around the world who saw through the lies of the American government and demonstrated in dozens of countries against the US invasion were right. It is US imperialism that stands condemned for taking a page from the book of Goebbels and using the technique of the “Big Lie” to carry out a criminal conspiracy.

The Duelfer report found that Iraq’s chemical and biological weapons were destroyed in 1991 and never reconstituted. The country did not possess a nuclear weapons program and was doing nothing to develop either the materials or the production techniques required to build nuclear weapons. On the contrary, under the impact of a devastating US-backed economic blockade—which caused the deaths of an estimated one million Iraqis, half of them children, for lack of food and medical supplies—the country’s ability to sustain any sort of military establishment steadily deteriorated.

The Iraq Survey Group mobilized more than 1,200 inspectors under the direction of the CIA and searched the country for 15 months following the US invasion. It found none of the stockpiles, weapons factories, secret laboratories or other facilities claimed by the Bush administration. The evidence gathered by the ISG disproved all of the most-publicized declarations by officials of the White House, Pentagon, State Department and CIA during the runup to the invasion of Iraq.

* There was no active Iraqi nuclear weapons program. According to Duelfer, the ISG investigation “uncovered no indication that Iraq had resumed fissile material or nuclear weapons research and development activities since 1991.”

* Iraq imported aluminum tubes to use in producing small military rockets, as Iraqi officials had said, not as parts for centrifuges to enrich uranium.

* Iraq did not try to buy uranium overseas after 1991, and even rejected an offer of uranium from an African businessman, citing UN sanctions.

* The trailers that US officials claimed were mobile biological weapons laboratories were actually being used to make hydrogen for weather balloons, as the Iraqis said.

* There was no “red line” south of Baghdad, where Iraqi troops armed with chemical weapons were supposed to unleash WMD on invading US troops.

Duelfer, who spent six years as the deputy head of the UN weapons inspectors in Iraq, was selected to head the ISG by CIA Director George Tenet, and enjoyed the warmest relations with the Bush White House. Before taking the ISG post, he had said he was convinced that there was a connection between Iraq and the September 11 terrorist attacks. But when he appeared before the Senate Armed Services Committee to present his report Wednesday, he told the panel, “We were almost all wrong” on Iraq.

Bush administration officials have combed the ISG report for anything they could use to justify their claims that Hussein’s Iraq represented a threat to US national security. They have cited claims that Hussein retained the “capability and the intention” to possess dangerous weapons, as Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage put it. This is so much clutching at straws.

While Duelfer speculated that Hussein intended to develop chemical, biological and nuclear weapons in the event UN sanctions were lifted, he admitted that the ISG had found no actual plans or other evidence to substantiate such conjectures. As for the “capability,” this only means that Iraq, like any other country with even a modest industrial base, had scientists and engineers who could have produced such weapons if given the resources and facilities to do so.


How the war of aggression was prepared

Perhaps the most important finding of the ISG is that Iraq’s unconventional weapons programs were virtually abandoned after the 1991 Persian Gulf War. The Hussein regime originally developed chemical weapons for use in the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-88, which Hussein initiated, at US instigation, and in which he functioned as a virtual US agent, attacking the Islamic fundamentalist regime that had overthrown the Shah, the principal US ally in the region.

US officials stepped up military, intelligence and diplomatic aid to Iraq even after the widespread use of chemical weapons against Iranian troops had been confirmed. Donald Rumsfeld, now secretary of defense, served as a special envoy to Iraq in 1983-84, visiting Baghdad twice to reassure Hussein of continued support from the Reagan administration.

In 1991, after US troops drove the Iraqi forces out of Kuwait, killing tens of thousands of virtually defenseless conscripts, Hussein accepted a strict regime of UN weapons inspection which quickly dismantled his chemical weapons facilities, as well as research programs on nuclear and biological weapons. The last research facility was destroyed in 1996, according to the ISG report.

Yet throughout the 1990s, Iraq’s alleged possession of weapons of mass destruction and its supposed refusal to cooperate with UN weapons inspectors were cited over and over by US officials as the basis for the continued economic strangulation of the country. The first Bush administration began this long-running fraud; the Clinton administration continued it for eight years (1993-2001); the second Bush administration took the matter to its conclusion, with the invasion and conquest of Iraq.

It is not an accident that the WMD fraud began in 1991; that was the year of the collapse of the Soviet Union. Even during the Persian Gulf War, which ended in February 1991, the first Bush administration was constrained from marching on Baghdad and seizing full control of the oil-rich country by the existence of the USSR, a potent military adversary with longstanding ties to the Ba’athist regime.

With the end of the USSR in December 1991, US imperialism no longer feared military retaliation or had to reckon with Soviet aid to Iraq. A consensus rapidly developed within the American ruling elite to seize control of the country’s oil wealth and establish an American military and political foothold in the crucial region of the Middle East.

There were different shades of opinion over how best to accomplish this. The first Bush administration was wary of a US ground war and military occupation in the Middle East. It believed that the impact of military defeat, sanctions and US covert and overt actions would result in the fall of Saddam Hussein, and enable the US to install a more pliant regime. In the meantime, it backed Hussein against the Kurdish and Shi’ite uprisings, fearing these would lead to an Iraq aligned with Iran.

When the expected military coup against Saddam failed to materialize, factions that were dissatisfied with the results of the first war and determined to push for a US military invasion and occupation of Iraq stepped up their activities. In 1992, Paul Wolfowitz, working at the direction of Richard Cheney, then the secretary of defense, drew up the first plans for long-term US military intervention in the Middle East.

This document was the first draft of the program advocated by neo-conservatives in groups such as the Project for a New American Century, who called for worldwide American hegemony and a policy of “regime change” against any country that they deemed an obstacle to US foreign policy.

Clinton sought to pursue an intensified version of the strategy of the first Bush administration. His administration carried out repeated cruise missile strikes and two brief but bloody bombing campaigns, organized provocations by the UN inspectors, maintained the sanctions and the “no-fly” zones, and infiltrated CIA agents among the UN inspectors in order to plan the assassination of Saddam Hussein. Clinton also authorized several abortive coup attempts, as well as overt CIA terrorist actions, including those carried out in the mid-1990s by Ayad Allawi, now the US-appointed interim prime minister. Clinton also signed the Iraq Liberation Act, making “regime change” the official policy of the United States.

As the sanctions began to unravel, and US rivals such as France and Russia more aggressively pursued their political and oil interests in Iraq, the US ruling elite increasingly turned towards war as the desirable option. With the installation of the Bush administration, inaugurated in January 2001, the proponents of invasion and occupation came to power. Their plans for an invasion of Iraq were well under way when 9/11 occurred—under mysterious and still unexplained circumstances—and provided a pretext that they eagerly seized on to prepare the execution of their plans.

From the beginning, the US has used the WMD issue as a cover for its predatory aims. It was a convenient red herring, which was used to justify provocations and military strikes and provide an all-purpose pretext for destroying the country and asserting US domination. It also served to frighten and disorient the public, and condition it to accede to a “preemptive” war against Iraq.

But the WMD lie campaign never succeeded in creating mass support for the war, even in the aftermath of 9/11. The invasion was carried out in the teeth of mass opposition, both in the US and internationally. Millions of Americans knew in March 2003 that Iraq was no threat—imminent, gathering or grave.


The Iraq war: a crime, not a “mistake”

What does this history signify? It means that the invasion of Iraq was not a sudden aberration on the part of George W. Bush. It arose out of a policy pursued for over a decade, under three administrations, both Republican and Democratic. Such as decision is not a “mistake,” as Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry maintains. It is a monstrous crime: the criminal pursuit of a calculated policy, for which the entire US ruling elite must be held accountable.

The Duelfer report maintains that while there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, US officials nonetheless believed that there were, and acted accordingly. The last-ditch apologists for the Bush administration’s decision to invade Iraq, such as the editors of the Washington Post, embrace this view, declaring, in their editorial on the report’s release, that even though Bush was wrong about WMD, given the intelligence information he received, he was obliged to make the decision for war.

This is yet another lie. The issue was never weapons of mass destruction—which did not exist—or a genuine fear on the part of the Bush administration that Iraq posed a threat. On the contrary, the conspirators who prepared the invasion of Iraq counted on the fact that the country was essentially defenseless.

The Bush administration chose to go to war with Iraq because it knew that the country was bled white, devastated by the sanctions, incapable of serious military resistance, and, consequently, ripe for the taking. It was an act of plunder, motivated by the desire to lay hold of Iraq’s vast oil resources and position American troops at the center of the Middle East, a strategic position which would give US imperialism a decisive advantage over all its rivals, both European and Asian.

This is a war crime in the fullest sense of the word. Under the Nuremberg precedent, the planning and preparation of aggressive war is a crime against humanity. The record of such planning and preparation by those who today wield power is ample. In the months before September 11, 2001, for example, Cheney’s closed-door energy task force, which included top US energy executives, pored over maps of Iraqi oilfields and discussed how they could be parceled out among the many claimants in the US and European oil industries.

For all of Kerry’s current posturing as a critic of “the wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong time,” the Democratic Party has served as an accomplice and partner in the rape of Iraq, not an opponent. The Democratic administration of Bill Clinton helped starve the Iraqi people for eight years, bombing and killing, and perpetuating the myths that provided the basis for Bush’s war propaganda. Since the invasion, Clinton and his wife, Senator Hillary Clinton, have been firm supporters of the conquest and continued occupation of Iraq.

Kerry himself, along with his running mate John Edwards, voted in October 2002 for the congressional war resolution, knowing full well that Bush intended to use it.

In the wake of the Duelfer report, there were new efforts by the Democrats to distance themselves from the war. The ranking Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, John D. Rockefeller IV, called the report “devastating.”

“The administration would like the American public to believe that Saddam’s intention to build a weapons program, regardless of actual weapons or the capability to produce weapons, justified invading Iraq,” Rockefeller said in a statement. “In fact, we invaded a country, thousands of people have died, and Iraq never posed a grave or growing danger.”

The Democrats are caught in irreconcilable contradictions when they attempt to posture as critics of the war. They criticize the decision to invade, but pledge to continue the war. They declare the war a “mistake,” but vow to carry it through to victory. They join with the Republicans in labeling the Iraqis who are fighting foreign occupation as “terrorists” and “enemy forces” who must be crushed.

The deepening disaster in Iraq has provoked an acute crisis with the ruling elite and its machinery of state. Hence the sudden shift of the Kerry campaign to a seemingly more critical stance on the war, and the barrage of reports—many of them generated from the highest levels of the military-intelligence apparatus—undermining one after another of Bush’s lies. The harshly critical character of the Duelfer report—and the timing of its release, at the height of the US presidential campaign, when it will do the maximum damage to the Bush administration—indicates the depth and intensity of this conflict.

The American working class, however, cannot align itself with either faction in this struggle among the imperialists. Whether Bush or Kerry wins the presidency, the next occupant of the White House will be a loyal defender of imperialism, implacably committed to maintain US domination of Iraq and the entire Middle East.

The task of American working people is to build an independent mass political movement that opposes imperialist war and the US ruling elite of corporate bosses and multimillionaires whose interests are inseparably bound up with war. This is the perspective for which the Socialist Equality Party is fighting in the 2004 election campaign and in preparation for the mass political struggles that will inevitably follow.

There are millions of the evidence if you go through the database that what Bush said was PURE LIE the WAR WAS SOLD TO AMERICA BY PRESIDENT WITH CIA OF THE COVER PAGE and when the time came the TENET was made accountable.
This infact put question mark on the so called democratic set up of US and UK which look much like the Saddan regime where everyone supported the administration when everyone knew what was going on was wrong.
Even american MEDIA was looking sold out at one stage of the war.
Only some one like COOK in uk shown courage to speak against and resign on the principals.
With regard to the UN its not potent organisation anyway .
They dance to the tunes of americans most of the time .
How can be UK and Frace remain permant member of Security Coucil who are no way near GERMANY ,JAPAN OR INDIA By any criteria in new world order.

There is no way you can do one more crime to remove so called criminal from some nation
Because there is
NO GOOD CRIME AND BAD CRIME!
THERE IS NO SMALL CRIME AND BIG CRIME.
Thank you for your comments .
I appreciate the the duties done by the American soldiers and there relatives who are forced to the War which was not required.
I respect and appreciate you views and contributaion of your husband as soldier.
I have nothing personal against AMERICA OR AMERICANS....!
Only thing is that
I BEG TO DIFFER WITH MR.BUSH on WAR ON IRAQ.

2:00 AM  
Blogger drsankalp said...

Dear Amy
i never said that Saddam should have been there i said one crime cant be better than other crime.
There were other ways to get saddam out but why america needs to do that let iraqies decide what they want?
America has no right to decide the future of other country.
Even if they take care of americans thats good enough.
isnt it?
see new real documentation not from govt or media who are with govt.
US forces used 'chemical weapon' in Iraq
http://ansa.it/main/notizie/awnplus/english/news/2005-11-16_1976236.html
Is this better than what saddam did?

3:08 AM  
Blogger drsankalp said...

Also...
Iraqi prisoner abuses by american troops were not great examples of the true civilised and disciplined army and great democratic values..isnt it?

3:17 AM  
Blogger drsankalp said...

You can very well trust the words of hundred people and ignore words of millions others.

2:56 PM  
Blogger drsankalp said...

Your logic of sidechair seems illogical as if you mean to say since bin laden is killing the people rather than watching from side why not join the party!

2:58 PM  
Blogger drsankalp said...

If you see what you have written you have always sidestepped the issues of the broader principals about these policies and pakistan and north korea .

3:00 PM  

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