Losing
all three wars on Iraq
PressInfo #
180
April
2, 2003
By
Jan
Oberg,
TFF director
There are basically three wars or struggles in the
Iraq conflict. There is the war the media is waging for
the hearts and minds of people. Second, there is the
military war and the promised removal of the Iraqi
regime. And, third, there is the war to control and run
post-war Iraq and live up to the official motives of
bringing freedom, democracy, welfare and prosperity to
its 24 million citizens.
War # 1: The public relations
war
The public relations war is aimed at the hearts and
minds of people around the globe. It attempts to demonise
the Baghdad regime while contrasting it with the noble,
altruistic goals to be achieved by the war. Heads of
state and governments that were in favour of war have
promoted these aims through propaganda, public relations
campaigns, psychological warfare, etc, in an effort to
sell the war to audiences in the West, in the Arab world
- including Iraq's citizens - and to other parties around
the world, including the UN.
It goes without saying that this war for people's
hearts and minds that, by the way, cost hundreds of
million dollars ended in defeat. Millions upon millions
of citizens around the globe mobilised in defiance and
created the largest ever pre-war, anti-war sentiment.
Mainstream media sensed it and raised more critical
questions than, say, during the wars in Bosnia,
Serbia/Kosovo, Somalia and Afghanistan. So, selling the
war turned out to be anything but a "cake-walk."
War # 2: The military
war
So, too, with the second war, the military war,
that rages at the moment. It is neither re-assuring nor
convincing when Pentagon officials, as well as General
Tommy Franks and Vincent Brooks at the US Central Command
in Dohar, repeat the mantra that everything is going
according to plan. If this is so, even a civilian like
myself suspects that it must have been a pretty lousy
plan.
Here are a few of the failures that have become rather
obvious after 14 days of fighting:
- The mother of all Bush/Blair miscalculations
maintained that the Iraqis would welcome the invaders
("coalition") as liberators.
One might almost believe that this was a conspiracy of
a) parts of the Iraqi opposition abroad, b) CIA and MI5,
c) Israel-friendly experts, and d) hawkish think tanks
who were against the two leaders. Convinced about their
own excellence, no one in their administrations seems to
have asked: what if America is not that loved by the
Iraqis - and what if they struggle for Iraq, for their
country, for their pride and not (only) for Saddam
Hussein? What if they want to get rid of Saddam but don't
trust the US and UK because they gave Saddam the weapons
in the first place and humiliated the country?
What if the people, educated and informed as they are,
knew perfectly well that the US and the UK have been the
staunchest advocates of the cruel sanctions? These
sanctions have been one long economic war on the people
during the last 12 years, the main reason for Iraq's
misery and have crippled the economy, education and
health of the people. What if they felt just a little
annoyed by repeated statements that they would be bombed
as no one had ever been before in history?
The intellectual level of the US and UK leadership did
not permit the hypothesis that not liking Saddam
didn't automatically imply loving Bush. And, surprise,
surprise, not even the Shia Muslims in the south rose in
any great number to help topple the regime leaders in
Baghdad.
Intoxicated with the power of their high-tech military
muscle, the US and UK thought they could afford to
abandon working on the brain and the heart.
This war has become a terrible reality check for the
architects of what may turn out to be the largest US
foreign policy misjudgement in decades.
- The military problems
In contrast to the promised "shock and awe", the war
started out with the unplanned "target of opportunity" to
kill Saddam Hussein and the other leaders in one go. It
wasn't successful. Then there was the idea that troops
could push rapidly toward Baghdad going around towns and
cities. It didn't work as the Iraqi military resisted far
more than had been predicted in Umm Qasr, Basra, Najaf,
Kabala, Nasiriyah, etc; these were euphemistically
described in the first days as "pockets" of resistance.
After two weeks, Umm Qasr is the only important town
under (almost) full "coalition" control. Then there were
the problems with the number of troops and with the long
and very vulnerable supply lines. And then there was the
Turkey that did not obey. And there was the problem of
conducting both regular warfare and guerrilla warfare on
land and in townscapes which the defenders, of course,
knew much better than the invaders.
And then there are the stray missiles that are landing
in Iran and Turkey. As if this was not enough there is
also:
- Friendly fire
There were "coalition" helicopters colliding in the
air. A Patriot missile shot down a British Royal Air
Force Tornado GR4 fighter near the Kuwaiti border,
killing both crew members. A frustrated officer threw
hand grenades around, killing and wounding a dozen of his
own. There was an F-16 that attacked a US Patriot missile
battery. Patriot missiles went astray over Saudi-Arabia.
And what about the missile in the heart of Kuwait City?
Would it have disappeared that quickly from the
media if it had really been fired by Saddam? A British
soldier died and four were wounded in a friendly fire
("blue on blue") incident near Basra.
Here is an another example:
http://www.globeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20030401.ubrit0401/BNStory/International.
London - There is anger and bitterness among
the British soldiers who survived a friendly-fire
incident in Iraq in which one of their comrades was
killed by a U.S. aircraft, exacerbating broader
tensions between the two allies over strategy and the
conduct of the war. Four British soldiers also were
injured in the incident on Friday, when a U.S. A-10
Thunderbolt aircraft, also known as the Tankbuster,
attacked two British Scimitar armoured reconnaissance
vehicles, apparently mistaking them for Iraqi
tanks.
Lance-Corporal Steven Gerrard, who suffered shrapnel
wounds in the attack, accused the American pilot of
having "absolutely no regard for human life. I believe
he was a cowboy."
All this raises very legitimate doubts, of course,
about the de facto versus presumed precision of modern
weaponry - and thereby about the likelihood that civilian
casualties can be minimised in the future.
- The grotesque amount of "collateral
damage."
On April 2, The Iraq Body Count [http://www.iraqbodycount.net/background.htm]
stood at between 565 and 724 innocent civilians killed,
about 50 a day in average. Just think of the girls'
school in Basra. The Syrian bus hit. The missile in the
market area of Baghdad. The killing of civilians in a bus
at a checkpoint. The demolished apartment houses. The 56
civilians killed by bombing raids over Baghdad in the
night between March 31 and April 1. See the telling
pictures and analysis by a world expert, Professor Marc
W. Herold in Dissident Voice [http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Articles3/Herold_PrecisionBombing.htm].
And see this article about US precision weapons
[http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=540&e=1&u=/ap/20030331/ap_on_re_mi_ea/war_bomb_accuracy_1].
And, while this was being written, news came in of
American human shields in a bus moving towards the border
being hit by US missiles. What a high-tech-low-moral
defeat!
Perhaps it is too early to draw the conclusion that
this second type of war is already lost due to
technicalities that ripple into ethics and legitimacy.
This war comes on top of a war policy that is deemed to
counter international law; it comes without a United
Nations mandate and with stiff public opinion resistance.
If the leaderships in London and Washington were not in
the grips of autism and group think, they should be very,
very worried already.
It may well be argued that some assumptions always
turn out to be wrong, that a war never goes exactly
according to plan - weather is difficult to predict, too.
Sure, there will always be some friendly fire, and
civilian casualties can never be completely avoided in
this type of war. There is no perfect war. As in
peacetime, both humans and machines malfunction. I am no
expert in these matters, but I can't help wondering
whether all these arguments mean a damn thing to the
innocent Iraqi children, men and woman who suffer from
the "unavoidables" which stem from the self-assured
motives of doing Good to the people.
I don't know whether to laugh or cry when on March 28,
2003, President Bush spoke to American war veterans and
said, "We care about the human conditions of those in
Iraq. In every way Allied forces are showing kindness and
respect to the Iraqi people." Later he also stated that,
"every Iraqi atrocity has confirmed the justice and the
urgency of our cause."
A few hours before, however, two Allied 4,700-pound
'bunker busters' struck a communications tower in
Baghdad. And a few ours later, Reuters put these two
stories on its front page:
Iraqis die in Baghdad market
Fri March 28, 2003 03:55 PM ET
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraqis said more than 50 people were
killed on Friday in an air raid they said targeted a
popular Baghdad market after the United States unleashed
some of the heaviest air strikes of the war on the
capital.
Half a Million Iraqi Children May Suffer Trauma
Fri March 28, 2003 01:52 PM ET - By Karen Iley
GENEVA (Reuters) - Half a million or more Iraqi children
caught in fighting may be left so traumatized they will
need psychological help, the United Nations children's
agency said on Friday.
Whether there will be more or less of it in this war
than in other wars remains to be seen. But judged on its
own premises, the first two weeks of this war look more
like a fiasco-in-the-making than as the predicted,
successful 'cake-walk'. For invading forces that aim to
win the hearts of the Iraqi people and be seen as
legitimate and as liberators, nothing could be more
devastating than a prolonged war in which the above
things happen repeatedly.
Because, if they do, the third type of war will be
lost too.
How the war may develop into
disaster
Nobody knows the outcome of this "Operation Iraqi
Freedom". I sense three possible scenarios:
- it will be a prolonged, lower-intensity,
war with months of suburban and street-to-street
fighting and thousands of civilian casualties on the
Iraqi side and considerable human loss on the
"coalition" side;
- the invading forces will try to make short work
of the Iraqis, civilian as well as military, give up
their concerns about causing civilian casualties, do a
series of high-intensive shock and awe operations,
flatten, bulldoze and destroy the cities physically
and thereafter move into them to fight the military
(and civilians who may have chosen to remain in the
ruins); in short, the Jenin "solution" with
unspeakable human losses;
- the coalition will get bogged down, warfare will
spread to other parts of the Middle East and boomerang
effects will hit the West itself; the coalition will
be forced to leave Iraq.
There could be other options and combinations.
However, this war cannot but be very ugly, in total
contrast to any understanding of words such as
liberation, freedom, welfare, respect, tolerance,
co-operation and reconciliation. With the war option
being chosen against all odds and world opinion, with the
war beginning the way it has, there are no good outcomes
possible anymore. For that to be the case, the
diplomatic, civilian, UN-based options should have been
chosen.
Whatever the outcome, it will mean a moral
defeat for the coalition; no means will be able to
achieve the official goals.
War # 3: The post-war
struggle to control and run Iraq
People may surrender, and they may do so increasingly
as the overwhelming technological power of the coalition
forces advances. But there will be few, if any, who
welcome the coalition forces as the occupiers they will
be. In the aftermath of one of the scenarios just
mentioned, they will be hated. This does not preclude of
course, that more people in Iraq will find Western
occupation more acceptable if or when Saddam Hussein's
regime is gone, after all what choice would they
have?
But even those who may see it as a liberation will
feel deeply hurt and humiliated for a very long time. It
will not be possible to buy them with any amount of
humanitarian aid and promises of economic aid. They know
the potentials of their country without foreign
occupiers.
During my one-month fact-finding mission, I never met
a single Iraqi who said he or she would welcome a war of
liberation or foreign occupation. Even regime-critical
people told me that although they would be happy to see
Saddam leave, they would prefer him to any foreigner
running their affairs. Dozens of internationals who have
worked there for years and know the sentiments of the
people confirmed my impressions, although they made
different assessments as to how this general attitude was
expressed or what would happen to it should the war break
out.
While you can hope to avoid killing many civilians
when you only bomb from the air, there is no way you can
attack, invade, occupy and take over a country without
killing many civilians and increase the resilience,
aversion, hatred - as well as the cohesiveness and
determination - of the subjects. It is here the mother of
all miscalculations lies: the West did not understand
Iraqi society and people, the view they have of us, the
strength of the "Arabness" and "Iraqiness" in them in
spite of their internal differences (which are many). The
West, including its media, has been operating on a series
of foolish assumptions and myths, including the one that
the Iraqis would embrace invading soldiers voluntarily.
The complexities of that society have been lost
completely on the strategists and the politicians.
Most of west had no embassies in place, no direct
person-to-person contacts with that society and its sweet
and proud people. It became easy to target them. Leaders
also forgot what Sun-Tzu, writing 2300 years ago, said,
that you must know yourself and the enemy well to win the
battle. The Iraqis know the West much better than we know
them and their culture. Military high-tech was to solve
all problems it seems, in the poor imaginations of the
self-righteous.
During the last 10 weeks I have given 80 public
lectures and interviews in 8 countries. Everywhere I
spoke, I said that if you ever see the Iraqis welcoming
American and British soldiers with flowers, it's certain
they have been paid a few dollars to do so. Because I
cared enough to go to Iraq and listened with an open
heart, tried to empathise with what they have been
through not only because of Saddam Hussein's ruthless
regime but also because of Western policies in the past
and now, I began to understand what an enormous
self-created trap Mr. Bush and Mr. Blair were about to
fall into.
Like the Vietnamese, the Iraqis do not hate Americans.
They cherish everything Western and many of their leaders
are educated in the West. Iraq used to be an ally of the
West. But they do loathe the Bush regime and the Blair
government. They will loathe anyone who tries to rule
them. They love visitors; a guest is treated with
tremendous generosity, openness and respect, as any
visitor can testify. An invader gets the opposite
treatment.
Freedom doesn't go together well with occupation.
Democracy doesn't go together well with total ignorance
and contempt for the people. Respect for human rights
doesn't go together well with killing and maiming tens of
thousands of civilians and statements about bringing
freedom, democracy and human rights. And Goliath's war on
David doesn't go together well with peace and
justice.
No, it has all gone wrong already. It went wrong
before the war even started. This war is a hopeless case.
Iraq will be turned into a surreal slaughterhouse,
whether intended or not. The war will only bring
catastrophe, fear and sorrow to the Iraqis, the Middle
East, Europe, to the rest of the world and to the
coalition countries themselves. Even if Saddam and his
regime fall, the price will have been far too high.
It would be better for everyone if it stopped now and
the United States could withdraw with a little bit of
honour left. They will anyhow achieve neither their
stated nor real goals there in the cradle of their own -
now sadly derailed - civilisation. These are dark times,
indeed, for all of us.
© TFF 2003
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