U.S. tanks
will roll out of Iraq on a road paved with excuses
"Great news from America!" the cashier at my local Beirut
bookshop shouted at me the other morning, raising her thumbs in the air.
"Things will be better after these elections?" Alas, I said. Alas,
no. Things are going to get worse in the Middle East even if, in two years'
time, the U.S. is blessed with a Democrat (and democratic) president.
For the disastrous philosophers behind
the bloodbath in Iraq are now washing their hands of the whole mess and crying
"Not Us!" with the same enthusiasm as the Lebanese lady in my
book shop, while the "experts" on the mainstream U.S. East Coast
press are preparing the ground for our Iraqi retreat -- by blaming it all on
those greedy, blood-lusting, anarchic, depraved, uncompromising Iraqis.
I must say Richard Perle's
version of a mea culpa did take my breath away. Here was the ex-chairman of the Pentagon's Defense Policy Board
Advisory Committee -- he who once said,
"Iraq is a very good candidate for democratic reform" -- admitting he
"underestimated the depravity" in Iraq. He holds the president
responsible, of course, acknowledging only that -- and here, dear reader,
swallow hard -- "I think if I had been Delphic, and had seen where
we are today, and people had said: 'Should we go into Iraq?' I think now
I probably would have said, 'No, let's consider other strategies ... '
"
Maybe I find this self-righteous, odious mea culpa all the more
objectionable because the same miserable man was shouting abuse down a radio
line to me in Baghdad a couple of years ago, condemning me for claiming that
the U.S. was losing its war in Iraq and claiming that I was "a supporter
of the maintenance of the Baathist regime." That lie, I might add, was
particularly malicious as I was reporting Saddam's mass rapes and mass hangings
at Abu Ghraib prison when Perle and his cohorts were silent about Saddam's
wickedness and when their chum Donald Rumsfeld was cheerfully shaking the
monster's hand in Baghdad in an attempt to reopen the U.S. embassy there.
Not that Perle isn't in good company.
Kenneth Adelman, the Pentagon neocon who also beat the drums for war, has been
telling Vanity Fair that "the idea of using our power for moral good in
the world" is dead. As for Adelman's mate David Frumm, well he's decided
that President Bush just "did not absorb the ideas" behind the
speeches Frumm wrote for him. But this, I'm afraid, is not the worst to
come from those who encouraged us to invade Iraq and start a war that has cost
the lives of 600,000 civilians.
For a new phenomenon is creeping into the pages of The New York Times
and those other great organs of state in the U.S. For those journalists who
supported the war, it's not enough to bash Bush. No, they've got a new flag to
fly: The Iraqis don't deserve us. David Brooks -- he who once told us that
neocons such as Perle had nothing to do with the president's decision to invade
Iraq -- has been ransacking his way through Elie Kedourie's 1970 essay on the
British occupation of Mesopotamia in the 1920s. And what has he discovered?
That "the British tried to encourage responsible leadership to no
avail," quoting a British officer at the time as concluding that Iraqi
Shiites "have no motive for refraining from sacrificing the interests of
Iraq to those which they conceive to be their own."
But the Brooks article in The New York Times was also frightening. Iraq,
he now informs us, is suffering "a complete social integration" and
"American blunders" were exacerbated "by the same old Iraqi
demons: greed, blood lust and a mind-boggling unwillingness to compromise, even
in the face of self-immolation." Iraq, Brooks has decided, is
"teetering on the edge of futility" and if U.S. troops cannot restore
order, "it will be time to effectively end Iraq," diffusing authority
down to "the clan, the tribe or sect" which -- wait for it -- are
"the only communities which are viable."
Nor should you believe that the Brooks article represents a lone voice.
Here is Ralph Peters, a USA Today writer and retired U.S. Army officer.
He had supported the invasion because, he says, he was "convinced that the
Middle East was so politically, socially, morally and intellectually stagnant
that we (sic) had to risk intervention -- or face generations of terrorism and
tumult." For all Washington's errors, Peters boasts, "we did give the
Iraqis a unique chance to build a rule-of-law democracy."
But those pesky Iraqis, it now seems, "preferred to indulge in old
hatreds, confessional violence, ethnic bigotry and a culture of
corruption." Peters' conclusion? "Arab societies can't support
democracy as we know it." As a result, "it's their tragedy, not ours.
Iraq was the Arab world's last chance to board the train to modernity, to give
the region a future ..." Incredibly, Peters finishes by believing that
"if the Arab world and Iran embark on an orgy of bloodshed, the harsh
truth is that we may be the beneficiaries" because Iraq will have
"consumed" "terrorists" and the United States will
"still be the greatest power on Earth."
It's not the shamefulness of all this -- do none of these men have any
shame? -- but the racist assumption that the hecatomb in Iraq is all the fault
of the Iraqis, that their intrinsic backwardness, their viciousness, their
failure to appreciate the fruits of our civilization make them unworthy of our
further attention. At no point does anyone question whether the fact that the
U.S. is "the greatest power on Earth" might not be part of the
problem. Nor that Iraqis who endured among their worst years of
dictatorship when Saddam was supported by the United States, who were
sanctioned by the United Nations at a cost of a half a million children's lives
and who were then brutally invaded by our armies, might not actually be
terribly keen on all the good things we wished to offer them.
Many Arabs, as I've written before, would like some of our democracy,
but they would also like another kind of freedom -- freedom from us.
But you get the point. We are preparing our get-out excuses. The Iraqis
don't deserve us. Screw them. That's the grit we're laying down on the desert
floor to help our tanks out of Iraq.
Robert Fisk writes from the Middle East for The Independent of Britain