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Iraq war 7th anniversary Archives - Occasional Planet https://ims.zdr.mybluehost.me/tag/iraq-war-7th-anniversary/ Progressive Voices Speaking Out Sat, 16 Feb 2013 04:10:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 211547205 This is the way the war ends: not with a bang, but a whimper https://occasionalplanet.org/2011/12/18/this-is-the-way-the-war-ends-not-with-a-bang-but-a-whimper/ https://occasionalplanet.org/2011/12/18/this-is-the-way-the-war-ends-not-with-a-bang-but-a-whimper/#comments Sun, 18 Dec 2011 15:18:33 +0000 http://www.occasionalplanet.org/?p=13496 The war in Iraq is officially over. But did anyone notice, really? The last troops [except for the ones that are staying and the

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The war in Iraq is officially over. But did anyone notice, really? The last troops [except for the ones that are staying and the 5,000 mercenaries—oops, I mean contractors] are on their way home. President Obama welcomed them and thanked them. And that’s it?

Of course, there was no dancing in the streets, no victory parades, no flashy photos of sailors kissing nurses in Times Square. Why would there be? No one is proud of what the U.S. did in—or should we say “to”—Iraq. No valid mission has been accomplished. There’s no victory and nothing to celebrate. It’s just, sort of, over. Poof.

At least when the last U.S. combat troops finally left Viet Nam in 1975, the long overdue, ignominious ending was a media event: For those of us old enough to remember, it’s hard to forget the images of desperate Vietnamese citizens rushing the gates of the U.S. Embassy in Saigon and clinging to the skids of helicopters airlifting out the last few Americans. Those scenes were ugly and uncomfortable—a fitting visual punctuation to the ugly war they symbolized.

What a contrast with our last days in Iraq. Surely, given the absence of coverage and analysis of the U.S. exit from Iraq and the deafening silence in Congress, Dick Cheney and the neo-cons who ginned up this so-called war must be chortling and high-fiving, realizing that they got away with one of the biggest military con games in American history.

In the run-up to this bogus “war,” there was at least some debate and analysis. [An outspoken, courageous Illinois State Senator Barack Obama—remember that guy?—was an early critic, and his skepticism launched his ascent toward the Presidency.] But most of what opposition there was [to their credit, 23 U.S. Senators voted against the invasion] became overwhelmed by a sustained propaganda campaign to whip up support for a war that had been looking for an excuse since neo-conservatives hatched “The Project for A New American Century” plan in 1998. Those of us who protested [as I did, on a bridge in central Florida, where I was one of about 20 peace activists in a crowd of at least 400 war supporters] were told that we were unpatriotic. It wasn’t a very productive debate, but at least we were confronting the issue.

Now, at the other end of this thing, media coverage and meaningful analysis are hard to find.

When the invasion of Iraq began, CNN and every other American media outlet couldn’t wait to get on board a troop transport, ride along in a tank and breathlessly document the operation. Admittedly, there wasn’t much critical thinking going on then, either—just a mostly blind acceptance of the Bush Administration’s [false] assertion that Saddam Hussein had “weapons of mass destruction,” and that Iraq was a player in the September 11 attacks.

In the intervening years, as 4,483 Americans were killed and thousands more wounded and disabled, fighting for…what, again?…the facts emerged and public opinion—and attention—turned away from the invasion/occupation. Maybe it was just too painful to watch. Or, perhaps voters, politicians and policymakers just lost the energy to keep debating the demerits of a military action that was so clearly wrong from the start, yet so difficult to disengage from.

Sure, now that it’s “over” [and even that is debatable], we’d all rather close our eyes, walk away, focus on something easier—like the latest celebrity wedding—and dismiss what happened in Iraq as a thing of the past.

But it’s not. The war-mongering, xenophobia, American exceptionalism and profiteering that led us into an unjustified invasion of a sovereign nation that posed no direct threat to the U.S. lives on. Just listen to the Republican candidates for president. Incredibly, just as the U.S. is getting out of Iraq, they seem to be shifting their attention to Iran, duking it out in the “debates” to see who can rattle the sabers loudest. [Ron Paul stands alone as the one candidate with a sane view of war in general, and U.S. policy in the Middle East in specific.] Michelle Bachmann, Rick Perry, Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney have been spouting increasingly warlike rhetoric, and their contention that Iran poses a threat because it might be developing a nuclear weapon sounds alarmingly similar to what we heard about Iraq 10 years ago. And, of course, there’s the issue of Abu Ghraib and torture, elements of our sojourn in Iraq that have fallen off the media radar screen–except for some frightening pronouncements by Republican candidates who assert that “waterboarding isn’t torture,” and that they’d use “enhanced interrogation techniques” in the future.

If there was ever a time to pause and reflect on the meaning of Iraq, this is it.

 

 

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The waste of war https://occasionalplanet.org/2010/03/27/the-waste-of-war/ https://occasionalplanet.org/2010/03/27/the-waste-of-war/#respond Sat, 27 Mar 2010 09:00:32 +0000 http://www.occasionalplanet.org/?p=1220 March 19 was the 7th anniversary of the U.S-led invasion of Iraq, yet it came and went without much notice in the news. In

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March 19 was the 7th anniversary of the U.S-led invasion of Iraq, yet it came and went without much notice in the news. In March of 2003, we had not been attacked and were in no danger of being attacked by Iraq. Yet George Bush did what he and his neoconservative friends had wanted to do for some time. He started a preemptive war to fill the coffers of American corporations, to boost his presidency, and to insure Republican hegemony for decades to come. He used the attacks of 9/11 as an excuse, lied to the American people and Congress about Iraq having weapons of mass destruction, and engaged in fear mongering to whip up support for an invasion that never should have happened. Seven years later, it is good to reflect for a moment on the horrible cost of war and the waste of human life and treasure it represents.

According to Robert Greenwald the war in Iraq has cost:

  • More than 4,300 American lives
  • At least 95,600 Iraqi lives (some estimating more than six times that number)
  • More than $747 billion in hard-earned taxpayer dollars

What the war accomplished was the removal of a two-bit dictator who was not a threat to the United States, the theft of Iraq’s oil, the massive destruction of the infrastructure of a country, the enrichment of innumerable corporate contractors who have committed massive fraud against the American middle class taxpayer, and the perpetuation of our war based economy.

When it became clear that Iraq did not have weapons of mass destruction, the Bush administration switched to another bogus reason for invading—bringing democracy to the Middle East. However, in a recent survey of 180 countries, Transparency International ranked the current Iraq government as the fifth most corrupt in the world.

If the war in Iraq had not happened, tens, if not hundreds of thousands of people—Iraqis, Americans, and others—would be alive today. A country would not have been looted and destroyed, and hundreds of thousands of people would not have been displaced from their homes. And what could we have done with the $747 billion?  How about:

  • repair our aging infrastructure,
  • improve our public schools
  • provide single payer health care for all
  • provide decent jobs and job training
  • invest in green energy
  • provide broadband internet for all
  • fund elections with public money
  • provide a free college education for all

It is time to consider moving the United States from a war economy to a peace economy. That may sound ridiculously naïve, but envisioning what that would look like is a start.

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