Iraq
war revisited
S P
SETH
By now it is generally accepted that the US-led invasion of Iraq in
2003 was based on a big lie. Now an exhaustive report of Britain’s role in the
whole affair, when Tony Blair was the country’s prime minister, more or less,
nails it down. The seven-year
investigation, led by Sir John Chilcot, has produced a voluminous report of 2.6
million words that is damning about all aspects from Tony Blair’s obeisance to
then US president George Bush to the point of accepting whatever role the
United Kingdom was assigned. In other words, London abandoned any serious
effort to question and debate basic assumptions underlying the operations. The
truth of the matter is that George Bush and his administration were set on
attacking Iraq. And with this already settled, they went on looking for
‘evidence’ that would support their plans. And they were prepared to go it
alone and would have ignored Blair, as they did the French and Germans (and
Russians), who weren’t prepared to go along with the US. Blair didn’t want that,
as he feared that this would affect his country’s special relationship with the
US.
He wrote to George Bush, “I will be with you whatever…” Blair,
though, was reportedly aware that things could go disastrously wrong like:
“Suppose it got militarily tricky--- suppose Iraq suffered unexpected civilian
casualties…suppose the Arab Street finally erupted…suppose the Iraqis feel
ambivalent about being invaded and real Iraqis…decide to offer
resistance…suppose that any difficulties are magnified and seized on by hostile
international opinion… The possibility of unintended consequences will persist
through and beyond the military phase.” He also supposed, if “Saddam…let off
WMD”. Apart from the WMD part, which was a red herring, almost everything that
Blair supposed in his letter has come true and worse.
Even though Chilcot report looks into British involvement and role
in the Iraq war, it indeed is a perceptive and exhaustive dissection of the disasterous
Iraq war saga. Indeed, the political decision to invade Iraq, already made by
the Bush administration, sought conveniently corroborative and manufactured
intelligence to prosecute their case. And Blair, even if he had some qualms,
nevertheless willingly decided to follow the US lead. For instance, as Chilcot
said, “The judgments about the severity of the threat posed by Iraq’s WMDs were
presented with a certainty that was not justified.” In plain words, the threat
was non-existent, but to make a case for invading Iraq it was necessary to
present the worst-case scenario. He said that the British government’s policy
on Iraq “was made on the basis of flawed intelligence and assessments.” And:
“They were not challenged as they should have been.” Britain, therefore,
accepted the US lead regarding intelligence and timetable for the invasion
without a supportive Security Council resolution, which wasn’t forthcoming.
The post-invasion disaster and chaos was not unpredictable. Blair’s
defense that there was no way of knowing what followed was dismissed by Chilcot:
“We do not agree that hindsight is required—the risks of internal strife in
Iraq, active Iranian pursuit of its interests, regional instability, and
al-Qaeda activity in Iraq, were each explicitly identified before the
invasion.” In other words, a rigorous examination of what might go wrong,
though known, was brushed aside as Operation Iraqi Freedom was considered to
have moral validity of its own. And where morality and power were on the side
of the attackers, what could go wrong? It was as if the US-led invasion was a
blessed enterprise against an important segment of the axis of evil--- other
two being Iran and North Korea—that might have been next on the hit list. Bush
seemed to believe, and James Merritt, once President of the Southern Baptist
Convention, reportedly told him that he was God’s instrument at that time after
the 9/11 attacks on US soil.
The conservative cabal around George Bush, like his vice-president Dick
Cheney, defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and others who crafted the Iraq
policy and much more, had felt that the US had missed opportunities to reshape
the world after it became the only superpower, following the collapse of the
Soviet Union in the nineties. Following 9/11 terrorist attacks on the US soil,
the Bush administration turned its attention to the Middle East, particularly
Iraq, where his father had not quite finished the job by leaving Saddam Hussein
in power after the first Gulf War; even though the country was subjected to most
comprehensive sanctions and Saddam was hardly a threat. But it was decided that
Saddam’s Iraq had weapons of mass destruction and since he was not willing to
surrender, the country was invaded in March 2003 to remove him and his (non-existent)
weapons of mass destruction.
However, it was not imperative for the United Kingdom to join the US
in this enterprise. But Blair did, earning him the title of “Washington’s
poodle”, fearing that any independent role might damage Britain’s special
relationship with the United States. However, France and Germany managed to
maintain their independence without any real damage to their relationship with
their ally, the US, even though Washington wasn’t happy about it. As Chilcot
has noted, dwelling on the lessons for Britain, that “all aspects” of military
intervention would “need to be calculated, debated and challenged with the
utmost rigor”, meaning it was not done when London simply followed Washington
in invading Iraq.
Even though the US was leading the charge to reshape the world to
its dictates, starting with the Middle East, Britain was a willing partner.
Bush and Blair governments were keen on pushing a new ‘enlightened’ version of
imperialism. There was talk of creating new facts and new narratives for a new
world. The terminology like Operation Iraqi Freedom, and the axis of evil, were
supposed to end any argument about the desirability of ridding the world of
‘immoral’ and ‘criminal’ regimes and systems. It was assumed that the Iraqi
people would welcome and embrace the US and British invasion designed to
liberate them from Saddam Hussein’s yoke and giving them the ultimate gift of
freedom and democracy. And we know, even without the damning Chilcot report,
how the entire enterprise of invading Iraq has unfolded with the terrorism of
IS and its affiliates and ‘lone wolf’ killers inflicted on the world.
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times.
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