|
|
||||||||
|
/Information
The Peace Movement After the Invasion of Iraq, by Felix Kolb and Alcia Swords
The Peace Movement After the Invasion of Iraq, by Felix Kolb and Alcia Swords - Attac- Sand in the Wheels, number : 171
The disgust and unbounded outrage against the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq made hundreds of thousands of demonstrators protest against the war on the streets of Amman, Berlin, Damascus, Paris and Mexico City, as well as London, Sydney, New York, San Francisco and Washington. While no one wondered about the people in the Arab world who displayed their feeling of impotent rage, the continuing and even intensifying protests in the USA have surprised commentators. In general, one would have expected that the long series of demonstrations and actions in the USA would come to a quick end as soon as the war began. And indeed, opinion polls showed an increase in public support for the war shortly after it started. But unlike past wars, where even most opponents rallied behind the president after the war started, a considerable minority of American people resisted this impulse. Contrary to what many people feel and think these days, the fact that protests continued during the war is a reason for confidence, and is only one of several indicators that the global peace movement, with its unprecedented strength, has had important successes and consequences. Admittedly, the peace movement could not prevent this war from happening, although many of us devoted all our energy and spare time to opposing the war for many months. As exhausted and depressed as we may be, if we compare the peace movement’s main goal - preventing this war - with the cruel reality, it seems just natural to conclude that the peace movement failed and thus that we wasted our time. While compelling at first glance, this conclusion is false. There is of course no question that President Bush and American corporate media won’t do anything to contradict this conclusion, because it is very convenient for them. However, in order to really understand and to be able to appreciate the impact of the peace movement we need to take a different perspective. First, we must imagine how the Iraq conflict would have unfolded without the actions of the peace movement. Second, we must ask what the likely long-term consequences of the recent peace movement will be. Counterfactual reasoning is always difficult, but we feel safe enough to propose several alternative outcomes in the absence of strong global peace movement. In the first place, Bush probably would not have attempted to gain a UN mandate at all, which would not have paved the way for the return of the UN weapons inspectors. This process gave the peace movement critical time to continue to organize and mobilize. World-wide rejection of war on Iraq dashed the Bush administration’s hopes for gaining international legitimacy by bribing countries to pass a UN resolution for an invasion. The global rejection of war prevented the war resolution from gaining the necessary majority in the Security Council, as the demonstrations on February 15 made absolutely clear. Without the pressure of the German and French peace movements especially, Schröder and Chirac might have relented and the Iraq War could have been legitimised by a UN mandate, which would have been extorted by the USA. A similar argument can be made for other important swing vote states in the UN Security Council as Mexico, Pakistan and Chile. In addition, there may be long-term implications of these protests that we cannot yet measure, but should not underestimate. For emphasis, let’s look at historical examples of long-term impacts of peace movements : - The creation of the League of Nations a decade after activists efforts to prevent World War I - The U.S.-Soviet strategic nuclear arms reduction negotiations starting in 1970, after the big anti-nuclear demonstrations of the late 1950s and early 1960s - The U.S. "Vietnam syndrome," a reluctance to intervene militarily, after massive protests against the Vietnam war The current global peace movement has helped significantly to elevate the barrier for future military interventions. We hope this can thwart the plans of the neoconservative hard liners in the White House. At the beginning of April British Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, signalled that Britain would have "nothing whatsoever" to do with any military action against Syria or Iran. Spanish prime minister Jose Maria Aznar, faced with a 91% majority of his people opposing the war, is likely to lose next year’s elections because of his support for President Bush, and thus probably won’t be willing to support another aggression. However, we still may not be strong enough to stop the Bush administration from launching its next "preventive" attack against Syria, Iran or North Korea. But the international support in subsequent wars will be even smaller than it was this time and that will strengthen the US peace movement. As the Washington Institute for Political Studies (IPS) has documented, the so-called "Coalition of the Willing" is composed of just 46 of 191 UN member nations - representing 19% of the world’s population. Yet even in the countries of the "Coalition of the Willing," public opinion is overwhelmingly opposed to the Iraq War. Although we cannot be sure, the most likely next target of the Washington Hawks seems to Syria. Right now the US threats could be seen as a strategy to force Syria not to support any public resistance against a military occopuation government in a de facto re-colonized Iraq. Unfortunately, the chances are that a war could distract the American public from the devastating economic situation in the US and from the problems in establishing American freedom in Afghanistan and Iraq. Or, to put it more brutally, assuming that Bush Jr. had learned his father’s lesson, if the US economy is not recovering in the next couple of month, a new war might seem the only way to secure his (re-)election in 2004. In order to be prepared to prevent further wars, it is not enough to recall the peace movement’s achievements, but we must also ask ourselves why the peace movement wasn’t able to prevent the Iraq war and what lessons can be learned from this experience. There is a series of fundamental reasons, which we probably won’t be able to change in the short run :
These problems are so deeply rooted in the American political system and the political economy of mass media that only long-term solutions can bring about the necessary fundamental changes. In the long-term, we must work for changes in campaign financing and the electoral system to increase the chances of dissent and to prevent trade-offs between supporting third parties and the Democrats. We need alternative mainstream news sources. The radio program ’Democracy Now’ is great, but too radical to appeal to the American mainstream. The idea of MoveOn Media Corps to hold mass media accountable to fair reporting and basic journalist standards is important, but won’t transform US news media in the ways needed. We need more thinktanks and more coherent conceptions of foreign policy to counter the neoconservative elites and to convince the American public that "promoting democracy" does not justify killing innocent people. The proposal for ’Global Action to Prevent War’ is one promising long-term strategy for the implementation of political peace agenda. These long-term strategies are necessary, but in the current situation we also need more short-term approaches. We offer the following list of ideas as a beginning, to begin debate.
Attac- Sand in the Wheels, number : 171 ATTAC - Weekly newsletter - Wednesday 16/04/03 http://attac.org/attacinfoen/attacn... *** NOTICE : In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Feel free to distribute widely but PLEASE acknowledge the original source. *** posted by Natacha Quester-Séméon |
|||||||
|
© 2003 |
||||||||