May 28, 2005
U.S. Provoking Civil War in Iraq—Should Divide And Quit
By Paul Craig Roberts
What are we to make of
the news reports that Baghdad is to be encircled and
divided into smaller and smaller sections by 40,000
Iraqi and 10,000 US troops backed by US air power and
armor in order to conduct house to house searches
throughout the city to destroy combatants?
Is this
generous notice of a massive offensive a ploy to
encourage insurgents to leave the city in advance, thus
securing a few days respite from bombings?
Is the offensive a
desperate attempt by the Bush regime and the Iraqi
government to achieve a victory in hopes of reviving
their flagging support?
Or is it an act of
revenge? The insurgency has eroded American support for
Bush’s war. A majority of Americans now believe Bush’s
invasion of Iraq was a mistake and that Bush’s war is
not worth the cost. The insurgency has proved the new
Iraqi government to be impotent both as a unifying agent
and source of order.
US frustration with a
few hundred insurgents in Fallujah resulted in the
destruction of two-thirds of the former city of 300,000
and in the deaths of many civilians.
Are we now going to
witness Baghdad reduced to rubble?
Considering reports
that 80% of Sunnis support the insurgency passively if
not actively, it looks as if extermination of Sunnis
will be required if the US is to achieve "victory"
in Iraq.
If this Baghdad
offensive is launched, it will result in an escalation
of US war crimes and outrage against the US and the new
Iraqi "government."
Obviously, the
Americans are unwilling to take the casualties of house
to house searches. That job falls to the Iraqi troops
who are being set against their own people.
If insurgents remain
and fight, US air power will be used to pulverize the
buildings and "collateral damage" will be high.
If insurgents leave
and cause mayhem elsewhere, large numbers of innocent
Iraqis will be detained as suspected insurgents. After
all, you can’t conduct such a large operation without
results.
As most households
have guns, which are
required for protection as there is
no law and order, "males of military age"
will be detained from these armed households as
suspected insurgents.
The detentions of
thousands more Iraqis will result in more torture and
abuses.
Consequently, the
ranks of the active insurgency will grow.
Neocon court historians of empire, such as
Niall Ferguson, claim that the US cannot withdraw
from Iraq because the result would be a civil war and
bloodbath.
However, a bloodbath
is what has been going on since the ill-fated
"cakewalk" invasion.
Moreover, the planned
Baghdad Offensive is itself the beginning of a civil
war. The 50,000 troops represent a Shi’ite
government. These troops will be hunting Sunnis. There
is no better way to start a civil war.
As George W. Bush has
made clear many times, he is incapable of admitting a
mistake. The inability to admit a mistake makes rational
behavior impossible. In place of thought, the Bush
administration relies on coercion and violence.
Nevertheless, Congress does not have to be a doormat for
a war criminal. It can put a halt to Bush’s madness.
The solution is not to
reduce Iraq to rubble. The US can end the bloodshed by
exiting Iraq.
A solution is for Iraq
to organize as a republic of
three largely autonomous states or provinces—Shi’ite,
Sunni, and Kurd—along the lines of the original American
republic. The politicians within each province will be
too busy fighting one another for power to become
militarily involved with those in other provinces.
The problem is that
Bush wants "victory," not a workable solution,
and he is prepared to pay any price for victory.
The neocons, who are
in effect Israeli agents, want to spread their war
against Islam to Syria and Iran.
For neocons, this is a
single-minded pursuit. Their commitment to war is not
shaken by reality or rationality.
The Bush
administration has proven beyond all doubt that it is
duplicitous and has delusions that are immune to
reality. America’s reputation is being destroyed.
We are becoming the
premier war criminal nation of the 21st century. We are
all complicit.
How much more evil
will we tolerate?
Paul
Craig Roberts, a former Reagan Administration official,
is the author of
The Supply-Side Revolution and, with Lawrence M.
Stratton, of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice.
Click
here
for Peter Brimelow’s
Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the
recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.
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