
Remember Fallujah? Shortly after the 2003 invasion of
Iraq, the US military fired on unarmed protestors, killing as many as 20
and wounding dozens. In retaliation, local Iraqis attacked a convoy of
US military contractors, killing four. The US then launched a full
attack on Fallujah to regain control, which left perhaps 700 Iraqis dead
and the city virtually destroyed. According to press reports last
weekend, Fallujah is now under the control of al-Qaeda affiliates. The
Anbar province, where Fallujah is located, is under siege by al-Qaeda.
During the 2007 “surge,” more than 1,000 US troops were killed
“pacifying” the Anbar province. Although al-Qaeda was not in Iraq
before the US invasion, it is now conducting its own surge in Anbar. For
Iraq, the US “liberation” is proving far worse than the
authoritarianism of Saddam Hussein, and it keeps getting worse. Last
year was Iraq’s deadliest in five years. In 2013, fighting and bomb
blasts claimed the lives of 7,818 civilians and 1,050 members of the
security forces. In December alone nearly a thousand people were
killed. I remember sitting through many hearings in the House
International Relations Committee praising the “surge,” which we were
told secured a US victory in Iraq. They also praised the so-called
“Awakening,” which was really an agreement by insurgents to stop
fighting in exchange for US dollars. I always wondered what would happen
when those dollars stopped coming. Where are the surge and awakening
cheerleaders now? One of them, Richard Perle, was interviewed last year
on NPR and asked whether the Iraq invasion that he pushed was worth it.
He replied:
I’ve got to say I think that is not a reasonable
question. What we did at the time was done in the belief that it was
necessary to protect this nation. You can’t a decade later go back and
say, well, we shouldn’t have done that.

Many
of us were saying all along that we shouldn’t have done that – before
we did it. Unfortunately the Bush Administration took the advice of the
neocons pushing for war and promising it would be a “cakewalk.” We
continue to see the results of that terrible mistake, and it is only
getting worse. Last month the US shipped nearly a hundred air-to-ground
missiles to the Iraqi air force to help combat the surging al-Qaeda.
Ironically, the same al-Qaeda groups the US is helping the Iraqis combat
are benefiting from the US covert and overt war to overthrow Assad next
door in Syria. Why can’t the US government learn from its mistakes? The
neocons may be on the run from their earlier positions on Iraq, but
that does not mean they have given up. They were the ones pushing for an
attack on Syria this summer. Thankfully they were not successful. They
are now making every effort to derail President Obama’s efforts to
negotiate with the Iranians. Just last week William Kristol urged Israel
to attack Iran with the hope we would then get involved.
Neoconservative Senators from both parties recently introduced the
Nuclear Weapon Free Iran Act of 2013, which would also bring us back on
war-footing with Iran. Next time the neocons tell us we must attack,
just think “Iraq.”
No comments:
Post a Comment