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Iraq a failed imperialist venture

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Auld Bob

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Jul 4, 2009, 11:07:04 AM7/4/09
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Iraq a failed imperialist venture

Jul 02, 2009 04:30 AM

Haroon Siddiqui

American troops were not welcomed with flowers in Iraq but their
departure from cities and towns has been.

Iraqis celebrated National Sovereignty Day Tuesday as U.S. troops were
yanked out of populated centres and put into remote bases.

In time, even that hidden presence will begin to grate on the Iraqis,
just as a U.S. military base in Saudi Arabia had spurred Osama bin
Laden and others.

Yet this limited troop pullout is being hailed as a triumph. One is
reminded of Richard Nixon's 1973 boast of "peace with honour" in
Vietnam. The 1973 Paris treaty that led to the U.S. troop withdrawal
was a face-saving formula.

In Iraq, too, the U.S. has little choice but to get out.

Not only did the Iraqi invasion and occupation prove the limits of
military power, it also exposed how incapable America has become at
nation-building. Its postwar incompetence was stunning.

America plunged Iraq into chaos, shattered the infrastructure and
destroyed the society, reducing human beings to their basest
instincts. They turned on each other and found safety only in family,
tribe, clan and sect. Shiites and Sunnis, who had lived together for
ages, ethnically cleansed each other's neighbourhoods, which to this
day remain separated by barricades, walls and checkpoints.

Having unleashed the forces that put Iraq's three main communities at
war with each other, the U.S. toyed with the idea of dividing the
country into the Kurdish north, a Sunni centre and a Shiite south,
much like the British had divided India in two in 1947.

Having created the chaos, violence and jihadism, the U.S. said, in
colonial fashion, it had to stay to curb the chaos, violence and
jihadism. Having crippled the state, it had no choice but to prolong
the occupation until the natives were ready to govern themselves.

Iraq exhausted America more than the 1917-32 British invasion and
occupation sapped the British. It also created killing fields on a
vast scale.

Yet Iraqis have been brushed out of the American narrative – Iraq is
free of Saddam Hussein, it is democratic, it is stabilized, it is this
and it is that.

There's nary a mention of how many Iraqis are dead (between 100,000
and 1.2 million, depending on who's counting), how many maimed (not
known), how many displaced (4 million), and how many tortured with
Saddam-like methods in Abu Ghraib and elsewhere (not known).

Besides the damage to U.S. credibility, and not just in the Muslim
world, the Iraq adventure empowered Iran far more than the U.S. would
ever acknowledge.

Finally, the quest for oil may also turn out to be a mirage.

This week, Iraq's oil minister, Hussain al-Shahristani, a U of T
graduate, put development rights up for international bidding. No more
no-bid contracts for U.S. firms, unlike under the Bush-Cheney domain.

Nor did George W. and Dick get what they wanted out of the Status of
Forces Agreement. Passed by the Iraqi parliament last fall, it
stipulates that all U.S. troops must be out by Dec. 31, 2011. No U.S.
military operation can be carried out without Iraqi consent (a
provision Hamid Karzai can only dream of). Iraqi soil cannot be used
by the U.S. to launch a war on any neighbour (Iran).

Iraq is the imperial adventure that both Stephen Harper and Michael
Ignatieff, one a neo-con hawk and the other a liberal hawk, fully
backed. A monumental failure in judgment, their common stance was, and
remains, an affront to the collective will of Canadians.

Haroon Siddiqui`s column appears Thursday and Sunday.

http://www.thestar.com/article/659106

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