My
heart is Iraqi
The carnage doesn't change the truth: the US lost before it
invaded Iraq
By Hana Al-Bayaty
03/24/06 "
Al-Ahram Weekly " -- -- Three years have passed and
the world continues diving into ever obscurantist times. On 15
February 2003, collective humanity felt it so deeply that it
used every available tool to get organised against power, taking
to streets simultaneously across the planet to oppose this
terrifying war. Three years have passed and as we sensed pre-emptively,
it's a massacre; a bloodshed of unspeakable brutality. Three
years have passed and Iraq has been destroyed as a state and as
a nation. Its natural resources have been plundered, its
civilisational and cultural heritage looted, its religious
heritage desecrated, its people raped, tortured, drilled,
murdered and even melted. Cynicism nowadays refuses the call for
an immediate and complete withdrawal of occupation forces for
fear of civil war.
Since the very first day of this occupation we have witnessed
the development of a two-sided power system. One side is the
occupation and its stooges; the second is the Iraqi people and
its various forms of resistance. Even if some part of the
population might have been inclined to welcome an occupier,
temporarily, the methods used by the occupation, along with its
ultimate end, are contrary to the interest of the Iraqi people,
therefore challenged and blunted by an ever- increasing number.
The US strategy in Iraq has been to destroy its Arab- Muslim
identity and partition it into a minimum of three weak and
conflicting protectorates, along sectarian lines, in order to
ensure American political, economic and military domination. The
invasion of Iraq was and remains an illegal war, a crime of
aggression. Iraq and Iraqis are protected by international law
-- by the founding Charter of the United Nations as well as the
Geneva Conventions and the Hague IV Convention. By recognising
UN Security Council Resolution 1533, in which the US is
described as an occupying power, the US bound itself to
inalienable obligations, stated under international humanitarian
law. These treaties stipulate that an occupying power cannot
change the social, economic or political make-up of the occupied
country and cannot link this country to any agreements or
treaties that exceed the occupation. This includes the
constitution, elections and all contracts that have been
created.
The US-led political process was and remains illegal. However
the Bush administration will attempt to disguise it --
"liberation", "nation-building" or "transitional period" -- this
political process is illegal and illegitimate. The "liberation"
of Iraq did not result in any kind of sovereignty for the Iraqi
people. All primary state powers remain in the hands of the
occupation. To achieve their plan the US fomented sectarian and
civilian strife among the Iraqi people by promoting secondary
identities such as Sunni and Shia, in grand tradition of the
divide to rule strategy of empire. It supported, financed,
trained and recruited sectarian militias, death squads and all
sorts of mercenaries. It has resorted to outrageous
disproportionate use of force against entire towns and cities,
resulting in the destruction of the holy city of Najaf, martyred
Falluja, Tel Afar, Al-Qaim, Haditha, Baquba, Samaraa, Ramadi,
among others and the death of tens of thousands of Iraqis, and
detention of tens of thousands more. Occupation is the highest
form of dictatorship as it intends to dictate the laws of a
country by military means.
While it is true that this policy creates local corrupted
individuals, feudalisms and warlords who profit from the
occupation, the majority of society itself -- especially the
marginalised and impoverished educated middle classes, the
working classes, which lost the benefit of state services, and
the youth, which suffers from unemployment and the absence of
civil liberties -- reject US policy in Iraq. This will be the
source of the never-ending social struggle against the
occupation and eventually its defeat, and the defeat of its
policies.
Since the very day the occupation forces came to Iraq and the
Iraqi state collapsed, there has been an uprising by all Iraqi
movements and organisations; including those defending women, or
unemployed youth, human rights organisations, trade unions,
professional syndicates, agencies defending environmental issues
and the rights of prisoners, and all other cultural and
political organisations, side-by-side with provincial and tribal
communities and peaceful and armed resistance groups. A national
movement, which opposes occupation and sectarianism, has
developed. It took various forms, from civil to armed
resistance. One does not contradict the other but rather
supports the other in its own choice of struggle.
The methods used by different Iraqi forces to oppose this
occupation depend on their specific situation. They form a
second power and live in pain and solidarity with one another.
The civil and armed resistance recognise the necessity, legality
and legitimacy of each other. They have a common struggle to
defeat the occupation, its stooges and its criminal plans. Like
the civil resistance, the Iraqi armed resistance defends the
independence, sovereignty over national resources, territory and
future of Iraq. Unlike Germany and Japan, Iraq has a sovereign
army that did not surrender, sign a treaty or capitulate to the
aggressor. In rising up against occupation, in its struggle to
warrant Iraqis their sovereignty, the Iraqi resistance is the
legal continuity of the Iraqi state.
Throughout the history of the Iraqi patriotic movement, since
the 1920s until now, it has been clear that the main criterion
for true patriotism was to confront the "hegemony" of foreign
powers in Iraq. Iraq's nationalisation of its oil wealth, and
its success in investing oil revenues in economic development
and infrastructure projects, has demonstrated Iraq's ability to
build its own cadre for the proper administration of oil
industries, making the ultimate end of such industry serving the
interests of Iraq. Even when expertise, capital or any sort of
foreign assistance was required, Iraq could get it through
contracting and cooperation. It has always insisted there is no
justification for rendering ownership of its oil fields to any
other party but the state.
For the past 4,000 years, Iraq has been a social and economic
entity. This comes from geopolitical considerations. Iraq is a
basin in which several civilisations and peoples settled, the
latest being the Arab-Muslim civilisation. The Iraqi people are
the expression of the heritage of these civilisations and
peoples, regardless of their religion or ethnicity. Never in
history could two states cohabitate in this area. Always one
state had to surrender to the other, because it is the
geopolitical interest of these peoples to organise together in a
common state of its citizens. There have been many unsuccessful
imperial attempts to divide the Iraqis. It would take more than
a century to destroy the Arab-Muslim identity of Iraq by force.
The present uprising of Iraqis is not merely a part of the wider
struggle against savage globalisation and "free" capital; it is
its forefront battle. It is because the Iraqis refuse to
surrender their sovereignty to multinational corporations that
Iraq is being destroyed so blatantly. We should all be humbled
by the loses this people has been prepared to endure for our
sake and demand the complete, unconditional and immediate
withdrawal of occupation forces from Iraqi soil, along with the
cancellation of any law, treaty, agreement or contract passed
under occupation and the fair payment of reparations and
compensations for the human and material loses the Iraqis have
suffered.
The US plan has already failed -- politically, morally,
economically and even militarily. There are two types of
strategy in warfare: either you have the ability to destroy your
enemy or you have to destroy his will to fight. The US has
failed in the first attempt, and can only completely eradicate
the Iraqi population to succeed in the second. The Iraqi
people's right to resist is the basis of, and is protected by,
the Charter of the United Nations. This people's struggle will
be our future pride if it is not already. Supporting the Iraqis
in their legitimate and heroic fight does not mean supporting
the return of any previous order. Iraqis have proven their
determination in defining their fate and future. They have taken
it into their hands and will not and cannot accept any kind of
future tyranny.
The Iraqi youth will refuse any occupation, foreign
interference, one party state, despotism, or authoritarian rule.
It holds the heritage, technical skills and modernism to defend
the separation of religion and state, equality between men and
women and sovereignty over Iraq's natural resources. This youth
will not accept selling short the rights of the country and
nation. While humanity has neared the edge of moral suicide, the
success of their struggle is our salvation. My heart is Iraqi.
The writer is a member of the Executive Committee of The
Brussels Tribunal (
www.brusselstribunal.org ) .
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