September 17, 2002
Invade Iraq – Or Rethink Israel And/Or
Immigration?
By Paul Craig Roberts
Wars have unintended consequences
even for those who win them. Before the
U.S. invades Iraq, let us give careful consideration
to unintended consequences.
The possibility is real that a U.S.
invasion would
stir up one billion Muslims at a time when the U.S.
has run out of both money and belief.
Government edifices in the Middle
East are built on a political fissure. Secular rulers
lack the support of large and fervent percentages of
populations that are influenced by mullahs and Muslim
schools. An American attack on Iraq could further
compromise the Pakistani, Egyptian, and Saudi Arabian
governments, leading to their eventual overthrow.
Saddam Hussein is bad news. But is
removing him worth the risk of delivering large
populations and
Pakistani nuclear missiles into the hands of hostile
Islamic governments? Before invading Iraq, the U.S.
should be certain that an invasion will not play into
radical hands and unite the Middle East against us.
Israel, too, is at risk. Whereas
one of the goals of the invasion of Iraq is to reduce
threats to Israel, the threats will increase if secular
governments topple. In order to protect Israel, the U.S.
could find itself at war with much of the Middle East.
Does the U.S. have the economic and
cultural strength for such an undertaking? Few
policymakers realize U.S. weaknesses. In recent decades
the U.S. has lost much of its economic, cultural, and
psychological strength.
Twenty years ago when I was
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, the U.S. trade
deficit was due to oil imports. Today the U.S. has a
$350 billion annual
deficit in manufactured goods. Millions of
well-paying manufacturing jobs, including
engineering and development jobs, have been
exported to China, India, and other low cost
countries.
America’s loss of jobs that
provided middle class incomes and upward mobility,
together with the annual importation of millions of poor
and unskilled immigrants, have dramatically reduced our
economy’s income growth potential. The loss of high
productivity jobs and the importation of low
productivity immigrants cannot be rectified with
monetary and fiscal policies. Lower per capita real
income growth is the price the U.S. pays for exporting
jobs and importing people.
American employment no longer
generates the income to support America’s share of world
consumption. Foreigners finance our consumption by their
willingness to hold dollars. Lower U.S. growth potential
will reduce foreign willingness to hold dollars.
A dollar declining in value would
make it difficult for the U.S. to pacify the Middle East
and defend Israel. A declining dollar would also raise
the cost of the foreign manufactured goods on which the
U.S. has become dependent.
Militarily and economically, Iraq
is no match for the U.S. But if the invasion stirs a
Muslim hornets’ nest, the U.S. could find itself
embroiled in a wider and prolonged conflict that is
beyond its economic means.
Stomach for conflict also requires
belief, but the U.S. is culturally and psychologically
hollowed out. The U.S. is no longer a homogeneous or
united country. Politics are organized along race and
gender lines. White Americans, especially males, are
under assault as
“hegemonic oppressors.”They are demonized in the
universities and
media and discriminated against in university
admissions,
employment, and
promotion.
A prolonged U.S. conflict with
Muslims will be cast as a
“white man’s war against people of color.” The vast
inflow of immigrants from the third world and
Muslimized native-born blacks have no commitment to
Israel. The white majority has been politically and
culturally marginalized to the extent that the U.S.
cannot control its borders. A marginalized majority
cannot sustain prolonged conflict.
The U.S. faces a terrorist threat
for two reasons: immigration and the security arrangement with
Israel. Before risking stirring up the Middle East by
invading Iraq, the U.S. should hold an unemotional
debate on immigration and on the commitment to Israel.
If the U.S. is to maintain its
security commitment to Israel and if no political and
economic accommodation can be made with Arabs that would
reduce their hostility to Israel, the U.S. must close
its borders and prepare for war with the Middle East.
Paul Craig Roberts is the
co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions: How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice.
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