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Reject Defeatism...
Organize!
by Michael Albert and Stephen R. Shalom
March 19, 2003
The onset of war does not negate the unprecedented antiwar activism in recent weeks and
months, nor does it provide reason to diminish our efforts. Quite the contrary.
Struggle for change should not be apocalyptic. The task is to steadily amass growing
commitment to prevent U.S. imperial, anti-democratic, illegal, and immoral assaults on
defenseless third world nations. We must persist in our rejection of war on Iraq, on Iran,
on Syria, on Venezuela, on North Korea.
The FBI has reported that "the intensity and scope of opposition to a U.S.-led war
against Saddam Hussein has grown to levels that far exceed any such opposition that
existed in 1991. (Wilgoren, NYT, 3/19/03) We haven't prevented this war, but that is not
the key point in assessing our efforts. The key point is that our efforts to prevent
immoral wars are growing ever larger and ever more effective, and are on a path -- a long
path, to be sure -- toward not only preventing such wars but then removing their
institutional causes.
We should not apply wrong standards to our efforts. We should not snatch defeat from the
jaws of victory.
The assault on Iraq will be horrific. The risk to citizens there and to people around the
globe will be enormous. But, at the same time, the emergence of massive, coordinated, and
rapidly escalating and maturing movements against war and corporate globalization across
the planet is more than just hopeful, exciting, and optimistic. It is the stuff of new
worlds.
There are now two super powers in the world, the New York Times told its readers, after
the February 15th demonstrations.
On one side there is the U.S. military machine. On the other
side, there is international public opinion.
True, the latter has not yet restrained the former. But we
need to understand our achievements and step up our efforts. We should not mourn our
failure to prevent war as if it means we are on a losing trajectory.
Objective assessment is good but defeatism will reduce our potentials even when the
prospects for victory have never been nearer.
We hope the following questions and answers will help activists deal with the difficult,
chaotic conditions likely to confront us in the immediate days and weeks ahead.
(1) What is the point of demonstrating and organizing? How can it
win? When can it win?
We demonstrate in order to win outcomes that we desire -- it could be higher wages, it
could be affirmative action, it could be a new law, or, as now, it could be preventing or
terminating a grotesque war.
Activism does not rationally convince elites to change their
policies. Nor does activism massage their hearts and lead to a moral transformation.
Activism wins when it creates conditions within which elites making critical decisions
feel they have no choice but to change their behavior. They change when they decide that
to pursue their policies and otherwise ignore popular demands, with the risk that this
will energize dissent, is a worse course of action for them than not doing so.
In the case of war in Iraq, subsequent occupation of Iraq, and then war against other
victims of the U.S. Empire, the U.S. government -- the "Asses of Evil" -- is
seeking to change the rules of international relations. They want increased control over
oil and the power to broker and coerce outcomes that that control bestows. They want to
demonstrate U.S. power to intimidate, and they want to weaken and perhaps literally
destroy international law so that it cannot restrain their options and choices. But mostly
it seems that they want to create a unipolar world in which military might -- which
Washington monopolizes -- is the only currency, and thus which the U.S. rules.
Our dissent must raise very substantial costs for elites,
creating a situation in which they decide that the pursuit of their aims is no
longer advisable because the dissent it engenders is too costly to their interests.
Instead of gaining greater power and sway as they desire from war, elites must face the
prospect that the war's side-effect creation of popular opposition actually threatens to
reduce their power and sway.
When can a movement raising such a threat win? At any moment. It has, for example, already
convinced large sectors of owners and political leaders that war against Iraq is too risky
for what they value most: their authority. These elements, including whole governments,
now oppose war. When dissent convinces enough elite elements that war risks their
interests, the policies will be abandoned.
(2) What are the right issues on which to focus in order to be most
effective? Should our efforts be single or multi-issue?
A movement is effective to precisely the extent that it conveys to elites an indication
that continued rejection of the movement's demands will lead to growing costs and risks
for them. In our current case, the movement must convey that continued pursuit of war and
occupation in Iraq, and then subsequent war against other targets, will produce an
opposition that elites simply don't want to bring into existence. This is the logic of
dissent and of elite reactions to it.
So, we need only ask, what type of movement raises social costs and threatens to be a
continuing and growing problem for elites? Is it a movement that has a very narrow focus
on a single war or a single policy? Is it a movement which will dissolve once that primary
issue is no longer in the forefront? Or is it a movement which certainly focuses on the
opposed policy -- in this case war in Iraq -- making it clear that continued pursuit of
the war is enlarging the movement, but which also stretches and grows to address other
dimensions of international relations and then of corporate and political power, thereby
making clear that if the movement is produced by continued pursuit of the war, it will not
just fade away with the war's conclusion, and that once it is brought into being it will
not only persist, but will function to obstruct and challenge state policies on diverse
fronts held in even higher priority by elites than the war itself?
To ask the question is to answer it. We need to continually
reach out and enlarge the movement if its trajectory of development is to effectively
raise costs for elites. But we also need to present clear evidence that the growing
opposition is extending beyond the immediate issue to basic defining relations and
institutions of society. This is what will cause elite constituencies
served by Bush to think to themselves "our war policy is threatening the fabric of
our rule over society, it is disrupting our capacity to undertake business as usual, it is
taking the next generation from us and making them our enemy, it is putting at risk things
we hold even more dear than the war policy -- our power and wealth -- therefore, we must
cease our support for war.
(3) Regarding the war itself, what demands should we be raising?
We should call for an immediate end to the war.
We should particularly condemn violations of international humanitarian law, such as the
use of cluster bombs and other indiscriminate weapons, and the targeting of infrastructure
needed by civilians.
We should condemn the press censorship and demand access for independent media.
We should denounce the grossly inadequate humanitarian preparations and demand that as the
occupying power the United States accept its legal responsibility to provide for the
welfare of the civilian population.
We should push for democracy in Iraq, giving as little say to the invading forces as
possible (and this includes Turkey).
We should insist that the U.S. is entitled to absolutely
none of Iraq's oil. It is the property of the Iraqi people.
As soon as humanitarian supplies are assured, all U.S. troops should be withdrawn from
Iraq. Any military bases or U.S. occupation is an imperial imposition and unacceptable.
(4) What's the right tactic to use to be most effective? Should our
movements be single or multi-tactic and with what mix?
Imagine a movement that keeps growing, but there is no diversification of approach, and
therefore no evidence of increasing depth of commitment and perseverance, or a movement
that shrinks but its diminishing numbers are evidently becoming more committed, or a
movement that is continually growing, and which has a growing subset of members who
display growing militancy and commitment and whose involvement seems in time to be the
destination point for all other members as well.
Isn't it clear that the last option presents a far more threatening prospect to elites? If
so, then isn't it obvious that the task is to combine diverse tactics suitable for
different sectors but without in any way curtailing the movement's ability to reach out to
new and less committed people and to engage their participation as well?
What we need to incorporate if we are to have the most
effective movement is a combination of consciousness-raising activities, demonstrations
and marches, strikes and civil disobedience, all of them mutually supportive, and none of
them pursued in a way that undermines the rest.
That approach is what can simultaneously enlarge the movement, make the movement congenial
to its members, and raise the greatest threat of continued development and danger for
elites.
(5) What happens and how do we respond if there is a terrorist
attack on the U.S.?
The prospects of a terrorist attack on the United States or American citizens abroad is
very real. And if any attack does occur it will likely be used by the Bush administration
just as 9-11 was used -- to mobilize public opinion behind more repression at home and
more aggression abroad. People's critical judgment is often a major victim of terrorist
attack and the Bush administration knows this. Bush's approval rating jumped from 50
percent in late August 2001 to 89 percent a week and a half after 9-11. National Security
Advisor Condoleezza Rice asked her senior staff "how do you capitalize on these
opportunities?" (quoted in New Yorker, 4/1/02) And capitalize they did.
The Bush administration will claim that any new terrorist attack proves the wisdom of its
having gone to war. But this argument is utterly illogical; it proves not that Bush was
right but that his critics were.
The antiwar movement noted, for example, the likely affect of any U.S. war against Iraq
would be to "super charge" recruiting for al Qaeda type organizations, to use
the words of General Wesley Clark. And sure enough, that's precisely what's been
happening. (See Sebastian Rotella, "Threat of war in Iraq is adding to the pool of
potential recruits for Al Qaeda and others," Los Angeles Times, 3/2/03; Don Van Natta
Jr. and Desmond Butler, "Anger on Iraq Seen as New Qaeda Recruiting Tool," New
York Times, 3/16/03.)
As for Saddam Hussein, the CIA stated on October 7, 2002:
Baghdad for now appears to be drawing a line short of conducting terrorist attacks with
conventional or C.B.W. chemical and biological weapons against the United States.
Should Saddam conclude that a U.S.-led attack could no longer be deterred, he probably
would become much less constrained in adopting terrorist actions. Such terrorism might
involve conventional means, as with Iraq's unsuccessful attempt at a terrorist offensive
in 1991, or C.B.W. (http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/iraq/2002/iraq-021007-cia01.htm)
U.S. officials are well aware that their war increases the risks of terrorism against the
United States. "There is a certainty that terrorists will attempt to launch multiple
attacks" against the United States and its allies, declared the State Department's
coordinator for counterterrorism. The FBI's Deputy Assistant Director told senators that
there is some intelligence about the Iraqis "indicating an interest in taking
terrorist actions against the U.S." (CNN, 3/18/03) (This is quite an intelligence
coup, given that suicide bomber squads have marched through the streets of Baghdad and
Saddam has warned that the invaders would be fought anywhere in the world.) Hussein
presumably hopes to "shock and awe" the U.S. population, ignoring the clear
lesson of history that terror tends to yield hatred and resolve rather than capitulation.
The U.S. counterpart may be immense enough to induce an Iraqi surrender, but it surely
won't lessen hatred for the United States throughout the world.
So rather than reducing anti-U.S. terrorism, U.S. policy has the effect -- the predictable
effect -- of increasing it. In Israel/Palestine we have often seen this same pattern. When
there is a lull in the violence, and peace proposals are in the air, the Israeli
government launches an assassination or a military operation killing many civilians. There
is then a Palestinian attack on civilians, which Israel claims shows the need for the
continued iron fist. There is in fact a symbiotic relationship between the terrorists on
both sides in maintaining the cycle of violence.
The Bush administration will no doubt try to use any
terrorist incident to discredit and silence the antiwar movement. In that fevered
atmosphere, it will be hard for us to speak up. But we need to do so. We need to make
these points:
- We condemn all attacks on civilians and we sympathize with the victims of all such
attacks.
- As the CIA and the antiwar movement warned, the U.S. war policy led to anti-U.S.
terrorism.
- Real measures to deal with the threat of terrorism against the United States have long
been urged by the antiwar movement, both long term (changing U.S. foreign policy to reduce
the level of anti-U.S. hatred in the world) and short term (desisting from an unjust and
unnecessary war, adequately funding first-responders, providing financial aid to bankrupt
cities, building ties to, rather than alienating immigrant communities, and so on). To
take just one example, Congress required the Justice Department to submit a report by
August 2002 on the vulnerabilities of U.S. chemical facilities. The report has still not
been prepared and there exists no legislation requiring chemical plants to protect
themselves and no federal agency monitors whether they have done so voluntarily.
(GAO-03-439) Instead of pursuing policies that might actually have dealt with the
terrorist threat, the administration, against all advice, chose the course of war, with
its predictable -- and horrible -- consequences.
(6) What happens and how do we respond if the TV shows cheering in
the streets of Baghdad?
We need to keep in mind how easy it is for the media to give
a false picture of what is going on. The Pentagon has been making every
effort to exclude independent journalists from the war zone, and with a compliant media it
is not hard to make a handful of supporters of the U.S. invasion appear to represent the
general Iraqi reaction.
In Afghanistan the media broadcast scenes of cheering women throwing off their burqas as
if this were a widespread phenomenon. In fact, it was a scene confined to Kabul, or parts
of Kabul, and over the following months our television screens did not focus on the
warlordism outside the capital, or the narrowing opportunities for women, or the growing
number of people in need of food (exceeding that under the Taliban), or the non-arrival of
promised Western aid.
Saddam Hussein is rightly despised by many Iraqis and millions will be thrilled at his
ouster. We too ought to cheer his removal, though not the means by which it was
accomplished. (There's no contradiction here: the ends do not justify the means. If the
police catch a murderer, but kill several innocent bystanders in the process, we're glad
that the murderer has been apprehended, but we condemn the way it was done.) That people may dance in the streets at Hussein's fall does not
tell us that they favored the U.S. war (and those lying under the rubble
of buildings struck by U.S. bombs are presumably not out celebrating.), and certainly does
not tell us what their attitude is to the coming U.S. occupation. Recall that when Hussein
released thousands of prisoners last October, many people cheered, without necessarily
supporting the dictator, long-term or short-term. "'Saddam is our hero,' said one,
before adding quickly, 'for today.'" (Washington Post, Oct. 21, 2002)
(7) What happens and how do we respond if Saddam Hussein uses
chemical weapons or if U.S. forces discover prohibited weapons of mass destruction? Does
that mean Bush was right?
This is certainly the spin that the Bush administration will try to put on it. Already,
administration officials have told the New York Times that discovery of weapons of mass
destruction "would vindicate the administration's decision to go to war."
(3/19/03) But this is unadulterated nonsense. The issue here is not whether Iraq has WMD.
Although the antiwar movement has pointed to exaggerated charges and suppressed
exculpatory evidence (such as the full testimony of defector Hussein Kamel), its claim was
not that Saddam Hussein had no proscribed weapons. Most
antiwar analysts had no illusions about Hussein and knew that he was morally capable of
producing and hiding WMD. Rather, the claim has been that whatever weapons
Hussein might have (1) they constitute a negligible military threat to the United States
or any one else beyond Iraq's borders; and (2) the danger they posed was being reduced
even further by the inspections process.
Given the Bush administration's record for pushing forgeries, plagiarized documents, and
photographic evidence of what Hans Blix tactfully noted "could just as easily have
been a routine activity," one should naturally be suspicious of any
"discovery" claimed by U.S. forces. But in any event, the only way Bush will
have been proven right is if evidence is found that Hussein had a WMD capability that
posed an imminent military threat that could neither be deterred nor uncovered by the
inspectors.
Nor would Hussein's use of chemical weapons against the U.S.
invasion prove Bush right. On the contrary, it would confirm that the antiwar movement was
right. Antiwar activists had insisted all along -- citing the CIA -- that
the only conceivable circumstances under which Saddam Hussein would consider using any
chemical weapons he might have was precisely in the event of a U.S. attack. Such a use of
chemical weapons would be unconscionable and violate international law, but it would not
prove that the weapons would have been used in the absence of the U.S. attack (which
itself is more seriously unconscionable and contrary to international law).
(8) How do we respond to the entreaty to "support our
troops" and the assertion that opposing the war is treasonous?
Even before the war began, the jingoists were proclaiming that anyone who isn't a traitor
needs to rally around Washington to "support our troops." Opponents of the war
have several possible replies.
We could point out that our troops in Iraq are barely in danger at all because they are
assaulting a tenth-rate opponent that has no serious means to defend Iraq much less to
attack the world's sole superpower.
Or we could point out that the lives of American troops are no more worthy of
compassionate support than the lives of Iraqis.
And of course we could explain how unleashing a campaign to "shock and awe" a
country is unjust and immoral, and an archetype of the terrorism the U.S. claims to be
against.
But the response we propose is a bit different. It is that we too "support our
troops."
We support our troops coming home alive, but we also support
our troops not having to kill people in Iraq. We support our troops not dying in Iraq
figuratively or literally, physically or psychologically. We support our
troops coming home with their hearts not broken, retaining humanity and compassion
essential to feeling true solidarity with those who confront tyrannical behavior abroad,
or right here in the U.S. with its 30 million tyrannized poor.
So: Support our troops, bring them home, provide them housing, provide them health care,
provide them socially valuable jobs.
Support our troops and one day they will join the fight for
justice for all.
(9) What happens and how do we respond if there's a massive
government crackdown on dissent?
There are two sides to this question. The first is how do we prevent the use of ever more
destructive and damaging policies of repression by the government. The second is, to the
extent that they do escalate their tactics, how do we reply.
What takes options out of play for the government is a belief by them that to use those
options would do their efforts more harm than good. Why doesn't the government drop bombs
on demonstrators in the streets of Washington DC? Because it
would lead to a growth rather than diminution of the opposition; it would strengthen
rather than weaken resistance. What determines the government's choice of tactics is their
estimate of our response, and of the response of the population at large to the tactic's
use.
What will protect the most militant dissenters is huge numbers of less militant dissenters
who would be horribly upset at the forceful repression of the militants. What will protect
huge numbers of less militant dissenters is a population at large that would be horribly
upset at the repression of the dissidents.
If we allow repression to silence us, our ability to protect ourselves will diminish and
the repression will grow. If we continually talk to our neighbors, our classmates, our
fellow workers, discuss the war with them, expose government lies to them, point out how
the liberties of all of us are in danger, we can create an environment within which the
government cannot get away with repression. We must not induce paranoia by overstating the
level of repression, but nor should we minimize actual government repression.
In the event that repressive policies are forthcoming, our response should be no different
than our response to war policies themselves. It is to enlarge the movement, to increase
the ties between the movement and the public -- and at the same time to enlarge the more
militant sectors of the movement and increase the ties between them and other dissenters.
Nothing else wards off repressive or even violent government response. Arrests will be
employed if they cripple dissent, avoided if they boost dissent. Repressive force will be
employed if it cripples dissent, avoided if it promotes dissent.
We will have to react to repression but should do so in the
context of continuing to react to war...and the balance and mix of
attention we should give to each ought to be determined, for us, precisely by what
enlarges and deepens overall dissent. Whatever works more to that end, we should do.
Whatever doesn't work to that end, we should leave aside.
The exact balance is often hard to know, and there is little gain in fighting about
alternative choices. Just explore them, apply energy to what seems wise and worthy...and
let others do likewise.
(10) What happens and how do we respond if there's a massive
crackdown on immigrants, Muslims, Arabs, etc.?
Immigrants are especially vulnerable and therefore we need to make special efforts to
protect them. The government goes after immigrants as part of its salami tactics, cutting
off one piece of the opposition at a time, hoping that non-immigrants will not protest
very much because it's "them" not "us." Our response, therefore, is
clear: we need to vigorously defend the basic rights of immigrants.
Protecting the rights of immigrants, particularly the Arabs
and Muslims who are especially singled out, must become an additional focus of our
movement, along with the war itself, and with raising broader consciousness.
This is morally right and it is also strategically right. A movement that will not stand
up in solidarity with its own supporters is a movement which won't retain its supporters.
A movement that fails to protect the most vulnerable will find that everyone is
vulnerable.
(11) What happens and how do we respond if Israel uses a war to
escalate its repression of Palestinians?
After the Iraqi civilian population, the people most at risk as a result of a U.S. attack
on Iraq are the Palestinians. Ever since September 11, 2001, the Israeli government has
used the U.S. "war on terrorism" as a cover and justification for increased
repression against Palestinians.
Today Israel is ruled by an extreme right-wing government. Headed by Ariel Sharon, the
person found responsible by an Israeli commission for the massacre of thousands of
Palestinians at the Sabra and Shitila refugee camps in Lebanon, the cabinet includes Uzi
Landau (who suggested doing to the Palestinians "what the Iraqis did to the
Kurds." [Ha'aretz, 2/20/02]); Gideon Ezra (who said regarding a U.S. attack on Iraq
"The more aggressive the attack is, the more it will help Israel against the
Palestinians. The understanding would be that what is good to do in Iraq, is also good for
here." [Christian Science Monitor, 8/30/02]); and two members of the National Union
Party, which calls for the "transfer" of the Palestinian population to
neighboring Arab countries (one of the two, Benny Elon, told Evangelical Christians in the
U.S. "Let's turn to the Bible, which says very clearly... we have to resettle them,
to relocate them." (Forward, 10/18/02) Polls show that a fifth of the Israeli
population supports the idea of "transfer."
Three circumstances are particularly worrisome: if Iraq
strikes Israel with missiles, if Palestinians display public support for Iraq, or if some
Palestinian group launches a large-scale terrorist attack -- it is possible that the
Israeli response might be mass expulsions of Palestinians. Even if the
government does not itself do this, if mobs of angry Israelis try to drive out
Palestinians, it is quite possible that the armed forces will not intervene -- just as
they recently allowed Jewish settlers to prevent Palestinians from harvesting their olive
crops.
Fortunately, the U.S. government, which in general shares the Israeli government's
strategic interests, does not want anything to happen that might incite Arab opinion
against the United States while the war with Iraq is going on. Whereas Washington might be
willing to permit all sorts of quiet atrocities against the Palestinians, it would likely
block any actions that threatened to become the focus of world attention. The task of the U.S. antiwar movement then is obvious: we must
make sure that any stepped up Israeli attacks on the Palestinians are widely known and
hugely protested.
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