By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies
March 18, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - While
the world is consumed with the terrifying
coronavirus pandemic, on March 19 the Trump
administration will be marking the 17th anniversary
of the U.S. invasion of Iraq by
ramping up the conflict there. After an
Iran-aligned militia allegedly struck a U.S. base
near Baghdad on March 11, the U.S. military carried
out retaliatory strikes against five of the
militia’s weapons factories and announced it is
sending two more aircraft carriers to the region, as
well as new Patriot missile systems and
hundreds more troops to operate them. This
contradicts the
January vote of the Iraqi Parliament that called
for U.S. troops to leave the country. It also goes
against the sentiment of most Americans, who
think the Iraq war was not worth fighting, and
against the campaign promise of Donald Trump to end
the endless wars.
Seventeen years ago, the U.S. armed forces
attacked and invaded Iraq with a force of over
460,000 troops from all its armed services,
supported by
46,000 UK troops, 2,000 from Australia and a few
hundred from Poland, Spain, Portugal and Denmark.
The “shock and awe” aerial bombardment unleashed
29,200 bombs and missiles on Iraq in the first
five weeks of the war.
The U.S. invasion was a
crime of aggression under
international law, and was actively opposed by
people and countries all over the world, including
30 million people who took to the streets in 60
countries on February 15, 2003, to express their
horror that this could really be happening at the
dawn of the 21st century. American historian Arthur
Schlesinger Jr., who was a speechwriter for
President John F. Kennedy, compared the U.S.
invasion of Iraq to Japan’s preemptive attack on
Pearl Harbor in 1941
and wrote, “Today, it is we Americans who live
in infamy.”
Seventeen years later, the consequences of the
invasion have lived up to the fears of all who
opposed it. Wars and hostilities rage across the
region, and divisions over war and peace in the U.S.
and Western countries challenge our
highly selective view of ourselves as advanced,
civilized societies. Here is a look at 12 of the
most serious consequences of the U.S. war in Iraq.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
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1. Millions of Iraqis Killed and
Wounded
Estimates on the number of people killed in the
invasion and occupation of Iraq vary widely, but
even the most conservative
estimates based on fragmentary reporting of
minimum confirmed deaths are in the hundreds of
thousands. Serious
scientific studies estimated that 655,000 Iraqis
had died in the first three years of war, and about
a million by September 2007. The violence of the
U.S. escalation or “surge” continued into 2008, and
sporadic conflict continued from 2009 until 2014.
Then in its new campaign against Islamic State, the
U.S. and its allies bombarded major cities in Iraq
and Syria with more than
118,000
bombs and the heaviest
artillery bombardments since the Vietnam War.
They reduced much of Mosul and other Iraqi cities to
rubble, and a preliminary Iraqi Kurdish intelligence
report found that more than
40,000 civilians were killed in Mosul alone.
There are no comprehensive mortality studies for
this latest deadly phase of the war. In addition to
all the lives lost, even more people have been
wounded. The Iraqi government’s Central Statistical
Organization says that
2 million Iraqis have been left disabled.
2. Millions More Iraqis Displaced
By 2007, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) reported that nearly
2 million Iraqis had fled the violence and chaos
of occupied Iraq, mostly to Jordan and Syria, while
another 1.7 million were displaced within the
country. The U.S. war on the Islamic State relied
even more on bombing and artillery bombardment,
destroying even more homes and
displacing an astounding 6 million Iraqis from
2014 to 2017.
According to the UNHCR, 4.35 million people have
returned to their homes as the war on IS has wound
down, but many face “destroyed properties, damaged
or non-existent infrastructure and the lack of
livelihood opportunities and financial resources,
which at times [has] led to secondary displacement.”
Iraq’s internally displaced children represent “a
generation traumatized by violence, deprived of
education and opportunities,”
according to UN Special Rapporteur Cecilia
Jimenez-Damary.
3. Thousands of American, British and
Other Foreign Troops Killed and Wounded
While the U.S. military downplays Iraqi
casualties, it precisely tracks and publishes its
own. As of February 2020,
4,576 U.S. troops and 181 British troops have
been killed in Iraq, as well as 142 other foreign
occupation troops. Over 93 percent of the foreign
occupation troops killed in Iraq have been
Americans. In Afghanistan, where the U.S. has had
more support from NATO and other allies, only 68
percent of occupation troops killed have been
Americans. The greater share of U.S. casualties in
Iraq is one of the prices Americans have paid for
the unilateral, illegal nature of the U.S. invasion.
By the time U.S. forces temporarily withdrew from
Iraq in 2011,
32,200 U.S. troops had been wounded. As the U.S.
tried to outsource and privatize its occupation, at
least 917 civilian contractors and mercenaries
were also killed and 10,569 wounded in Iraq, but not
all of them were U.S. nationals.
4. Even More Veterans Have Committed
Suicide
More than 20 U.S. veterans kill themselves every
day—that’s more deaths each year than the total U.S.
military deaths in Iraq. Those with the highest
rates of suicide are young veterans with combat
exposure, who commit suicide at rates “4-10
times higher than their civilian peers.” Why? As
Matthew Hoh of Veterans for Peace explains, many
veterans “struggle to reintegrate into society,” are
ashamed to ask for help, are burdened by what they
saw and did in the military, are trained in shooting
and own guns, and carry mental and physical wounds
that make their lives difficult.
5. Trillions of Dollars Wasted
On March 16, 2003, just days before the U.S.
invasion, Vice President Dick Cheney projected that
the war would cost the U.S. about $100 billion and
that the U.S. involvement would last for two years.
Seventeen years on, the costs are still mounting.
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated a
cost of
$2.4 trillion for the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan in 2007. Nobel Prize-winning economist
Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard University’s Linda
Bilmes estimated the cost of the Iraq war at more
than
$3 trillion, “based on conservative
assumptions,” in 2008. The UK government spent at
least
9 billion pounds in direct costs through 2010.
What the U.S. did
not spend money on, contrary to what many
Americans believe, was to rebuild Iraq, the country
our war destroyed.
6. Dysfunctional and Corrupt Iraqi
Government
Most of the men (no women!) running Iraq today
are still former exiles who flew into Baghdad in
2003 on the heels of the U.S. and British invasion
forces. Iraq is finally once again exporting
3.8 million barrels of oil per day and earning
$80 billion a year in oil exports, but little of
this money trickles down to rebuild destroyed and
damaged homes or provide jobs, health care or
education for Iraqis,
only 36 percent of whom even have jobs. Iraq’s
young people have taken to the streets to demand an
end to the corrupt post-2003 Iraqi political regime
and U.S. and Iranian influence over Iraqi politics.
More than 600 protesters were killed by
government forces, but the protests forced Prime
Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi to resign. Another former
Western-based exile,
Mohammed Tawfiq Allawi, the cousin of former
U.S.-appointed interim prime minister Ayad Allawi,
was chosen to replace him, but he resigned within
weeks after the National Assembly failed to approve
his cabinet choices. The popular protest movement
celebrated Allawi’s resignation, and Abdul Mahdi
agreed to remain as prime minister, but only as a
“caretaker” to carry out essential functions until
new elections can be held. He has called for new
elections in December. Until then, Iraq remains in
political limbo, still occupied by about 5,000 U.S.
troops.
7. Illegal War on Iraq Has Undermined the
Rule of International Law
When the U.S. invaded Iraq without the approval
of the UN Security Council, the first victim was the
United Nations Charter, the foundation of peace and
international law since World War II, which
prohibits the threat or use of force by any country
against another. International law only permits
military action as a necessary and proportionate
defense against an attack or imminent threat. The
illegal 2002
Bush doctrine of preemption was
universally rejected because it went beyond this
narrow principle and claimed an exceptional U.S.
right to use unilateral military force “to preempt
emerging threats,” undermining the authority of the
UN Security Council to decide whether a specific
threat requires a military response or not. Kofi
Annan, the UN secretary-general at the time, said
the
invasion was illegal and would lead to a
breakdown in international order, and that is
exactly what has happened. When the U.S. trampled
the UN Charter, others were bound to follow. Today
we are watching Turkey and Israel follow in the
U.S.’s footsteps, attacking and invading Syria at
will as if it were not even a sovereign country,
using the people of Syria as pawns in their
political games.
8. Iraq War Lies Corrupted U.S. Democracy
The second victim of the invasion was American
democracy. Congress voted for war based on a
so-called “summary”
of a National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) that was
nothing of the kind. The Washington Post
reported that only six out of 100 senators and a few
House members
read the actual NIE. The
25-page “summary” that other members of Congress
based their votes on was a document produced months
earlier “to make the public case for war,” as
one of its authors, the CIA’s Paul Pillar, later
confessed to PBS Frontline. It contained astounding
claims that were nowhere to be found in the real NIE,
such as that the CIA knew of 550 sites where Iraq
was storing chemical and biological weapons.
Secretary of State Colin Powell repeated many of
these lies in his
shameful performance at the UN Security Council
in February 2003, while Bush and Cheney used them in
major speeches, including Bush’s 2003 State of the
Union address. How is democracy—the rule of the
people—even possible if the people we elect to
represent us in Congress can be manipulated into
voting for a catastrophic war by such a web of lies?
9. Impunity for Systematic War Crimes
Another victim of the invasion of Iraq was the
presumption that U.S. presidents and policy are
subject to the rule of law. Seventeen years later,
most Americans assume that the president can conduct
war and assassinate foreign leaders and terrorism
suspects as he pleases, with no accountability
whatsoever—like a dictator. When
President Obama said he wanted to look forward
instead of backward, and held no one from the Bush
administration accountable for their crimes, it was
as if they ceased to be crimes and became normalized
as U.S. policy. That includes
crimes of aggression against other countries;
the
mass killing of civilians in U.S. airstrikes and
drone strikes; and the
unrestricted surveillance of every American’s
phone calls, emails, browsing history and opinions.
But these are crimes and violations of the U.S.
Constitution, and refusing to hold accountable those
who committed these crimes has made it easier for
them to be repeated.
10. Destruction of the Environment
During the first Gulf War, the U.S.
fired 340 tons of warheads and explosives made
with depleted uranium, which poisoned the soil and
water and led to skyrocketing levels of cancer. In
the following decades of “ecocide,” Iraq has been
plagued by the
burning of dozens of oil wells; the pollution of
water sources from the dumping of oil, sewage and
chemicals; millions of tons of rubble from
destroyed cities and towns; and the burning of
huge volumes of military waste in open air “burn
pits” during the war. The pollution
caused by war is linked to the high levels of
congenital birth defects, premature births,
miscarriages and cancer (including leukemia) in
Iraq. The pollution has also affected U.S. soldiers.
“More than 85,000 U.S. Iraq war veterans… have been
diagnosed with respiratory and breathing
problems, cancers, neurological diseases, depression
and emphysema since returning from Iraq,” as the
Guardian reports. And parts of Iraq may
never recover from the environmental devastation.
11. The U.S.’s Sectarian “Divide and
Rule” Policy in Iraq Spawned Havoc Across the Region
In secular 20th-century Iraq, the Sunni minority
was more powerful than the Shia majority, but for
the most part, the different ethnic groups lived
side-by-side in mixed neighborhoods and even
intermarried. Friends with mixed Shia/Sunni parents
tell us that before the U.S. invasion, they didn’t
even know which parent was Shia and which was Sunni.
After the invasion, the U.S. empowered a new Shiite
ruling class led by former exiles allied with the
U.S. and Iran, as well as the Kurds in their
semi-autonomous region in the north. The upending of
the balance of power and deliberate U.S. “divide and
rule” policies led to waves of horrific sectarian
violence, including the ethnic cleansing of
communities by Interior Ministry
death squads under U.S. command. The sectarian
divisions the U.S. unleashed in Iraq led to the
resurgence of Al Qaeda and the emergence of ISIS,
which have wreaked havoc throughout the entire
region.
12. The New Cold War Between the U.S. and
the Emerging Multilateral World
When President Bush declared his “doctrine of
preemption” in 2002, Senator Edward Kennedy
called it “a call for 21st century American
imperialism that no other nation can or should
accept.” But the world has so far failed to either
persuade the U.S. to change course or to unite in
diplomatic opposition to its militarism and
imperialism. France and Germany bravely stood with
Russia and most of the Global South to oppose the
invasion of Iraq in the UN Security Council in 2003.
But Western governments embraced Obama’s superficial
charm offensive as cover for reinforcing their
traditional ties with the U.S. China was busy
expanding its peaceful economic development and its
role as the economic hub of Asia, while Russia was
still rebuilding its economy from the neoliberal
chaos and poverty of the 1990s. Neither was ready to
actively challenge U.S. aggression until the U.S.,
NATO and their Arab monarchist allies launched proxy
wars against
Libya and
Syria in 2011. After the fall of Libya, Russia
appears to have decided it must either stand up to
U.S. regime change operations or eventually fall
victim itself.
The economic tides have shifted, a multipolar
world is emerging, and the world is hoping against
hope that the American people and new American
leaders will act to rein in this 21st-century
American imperialism before it leads to an even more
catastrophic U.S. war with Iran, Russia or China. As
Americans, we must hope that the world’s faith in
the possibility that we can democratically bring
sanity and peace to U.S. policy is not misplaced. A
good place to start would be to join the call by the
Iraqi Parliament for U.S. troops to leave Iraq.
Medea Benjamin is cofounder of
CODEPINK for
Peace, and author of several books, including
Inside Iran: The Real History and Politics of the
Islamic Republic of Iran. Nicolas J. S.
Davies is an independent journalist, a researcher
with CODEPINK and the author of
Blood On Our Hands: the American Invasion and
Destruction of Iraq.
Read other articles by Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J.
S. Davies.
• This article was produced by
Local Peace Economy, a project of the
Independent Media Institute.
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