A Letter to President Arafat

‎ Bitter Rice (2)‎or: The March of Folly‎

The following passage may look familiar:

“On the fourth day of the 1982 Israeli attack on Lebanon, I crossed ‎‎the border at a lonelyspot near Metulla and looked for the front, which ‎‎had already reached the outskirts ofSidon. I was driving my private car, ‎‎accompanied by a woman photographer. We passed a dozenShiite ‎‎villages and were received everywhere with great joy. We extracted ‎‎ourselvesonly with difficulty from hundreds of villagers, each one ‎‎insisting that we have coffee attheir home. On the previous days, they ‎‎had showered the Israeli soldiers with rice.‎ ‎ A fewmonths later I joined an army convoy going in the opposite ‎‎direction, from Sidon to Metulla.The soldiers were now wearing ‎‎bulletproof vests and helmets, many were on the verge ofpanic. ‎ ‎ What had happened? The Shiites had received the Israeli soldiers as ‎‎liberators.When they realized that they had come to stay as occupiers, ‎‎they started to kill them.

“When the Israeli troops entered Lebanon the Shiites were a ‎‎down-trodden, powerlesscommunity, held in contempt by all the others. ‎‎After a year of fighting the occupiers, theybecame a political and ‎‎military power. The Shiite Hizbullah is the only military force inthe Arab ‎‎world that has beaten the mighty Israeli army.”‎

‎End of passage. I wrote it in an article called “Bitter Rice”, which ‎‎appeared on March 22,2003, on the eve of the invasion of Iraq, and ‎‎which started with the words: “Beware of theShiites. The troubles of the ‎‎occupation will start after the fighting is over…”‎ ‎ BarbaraTuchman died too soon. Otherwise she could add a chapter ‎‎about this war to her book “The Marchof Folly”.‎

It should be remembered that Tuchman was very strict in the choice ‎‎of her examples. It wasnot enough that a government acted foolishly. In ‎‎order to gain a place in her book, twoadditional conditions had to be ‎‎met: that the results of the folly could be foreseen, andthat there was ‎‎indeed someone who warned in advance of these results.(For example: the British king George III lost America because of a ‎‎number of foolishacts. This could have been foreseen, and, indeed, the ‎‎British politician and author EdmundBurke warned of them at the time.)‎ ‎ What is happening now in Iraq was completely predictable.It is an ‎‎exact repeat of all that happened to us in Lebanon. Otto von Bismarck ‎‎onceremarked: “A fool learns from his experience. A wise person learns ‎‎from the experience ofothers.” If so, how to define President George W. ‎‎Bush, who is not even able to learn from hisown experience?

If I have already quoted myself, I may as well do it again. On February ‎‎8, 2003, in an articleentitled “The Smell of War”, I wrote: “This is not a ‎‎war about terrorism‎‏.‏‎ This is not a warabout weapons of mass ‎‎destruction‎‏.‏‎ This is not a war about democracy in Iraq‎‏. ‏‎Thisis a war ‎‎about something else…There is a strong smell of oil in the air.”‎

At the time, this sounded like defamation. Today it is already clear ‎‎beyond doubt that theAmerican invasion had nothing to do with either ‎‎the “war on terrorism”, nor with weapons ofmass destruction, nor with ‎‎the crimes of Saddam Hussein or with democracy. This has beenproven ‎‎and documented beyond all doubt, most recently by the testimony of ‎‎RichardClarke, who has been Bush’s man in charge of the “war against ‎‎terrorism”. From the momentBush entered the White House, he and his ‎‎handlers pursued one aim in the Middle East: tooccupy Iraq.

The Bushes are oilmen. Among the big-money people who helped to ‎‎put the two Bushes, Sr. andJr., into the White House, oilmen played a ‎‎leading role. They have decided that the AmericanEmpire needs to get ‎‎its hands on the vast oil reserves of Iraq and to establish a permanent‎‎military base in the middle of the oil region, between the oil of the ‎‎Caspian Sea and the oilof the Persian/Arabian Gulf.‎ ‎ The neo-con fanatics, most of whom are right-wing Zionists,added to ‎‎this another objective: to eliminate the Iraqi threat to Israel, before ‎‎freeingIsrael of the Syrian and Iranian threats. But this was a secondary ‎‎aim. It would not havesucceeded in dominating American policy without ‎‎the decisive impact of Dick Cheney and theother Bush handlers, who ‎‎wanted to establish direct American military control over most ofthe ‎‎earth’s oil.‎

This aim has been achieved. Iraq was conquered. 135 thousand US ‎‎soldiers uphold theoccupation regime, with the addition of a few troops ‎‎of the satellite countries, such asPoland, the Ukraine, the UK, ‎‎El-Salvador and Italy. A small (and not very intelligent)official named “L. ‎‎Paul Bremer 3rd”, no less, has become Governor of the new colony, and ‎‎heintends to “hand over sovereignty” to an Iraqi government he himself ‎‎has appointed.‎

That is to say, sovereignty over garbage collection and hospitals, but ‎‎definitely notover the really important functions, which will be firmly in ‎‎the hands of American”advisors”. For this purpose, the biggest US ‎‎Embassy in the world is being built in Baghdad:over 3000 officials, who ‎‎will control every aspect of government in the country.

That reminds one of the Vichy regime of Marshal Petain in France. ‎‎The Iraqis themselveswill be reminded of the British colonial power ‎‎structure in their country, which operatedthrough an Arab “king”.‎ ‎ As far as the Americans are concerned, this could last forever. Not‎‎for a year, not for two years, but for decades, like the Israeli occupation ‎‎of thePalestinian areas. But, unlike the Israelis, they call this “nation ‎‎building” and”establishing the first democracy in the Arab world”. ‎‎George Orwell would have enjoyedit.‎

A minor factor was overlooked: the Iraqi people. But one really ‎‎cannot think abouteverything, can one?‎ ‎ When the armed resistance started, the Americans comforted‎‎themselves with talk about “remnants of the Saddam regime”, or ‎‎”terrorists”, perhapsforeign agents of Osama Bin-Laden. More than any ‎‎other colonial regime, the Americans findit difficult to accept the most ‎‎simple fact in the world: that an occupied people will ariseagainst its ‎‎occupier. And really, what have the Iraqis to complain about, after the‎‎idealistic Americans, out of the kindness of their hearts, liberated them ‎‎from the evilSaddam?‎ ‎ Now the Americans are considering whether to bring in more troops. ‎‎Thepoliticians ask the generals: how many more soldiers do you need ‎‎in order to control Iraq?And the generals ponder in all earnest: 10 ‎‎thousand more? 20 thousand more? If there had beenone serious ‎‎person among them, he would have answered: “Even 500 thousand will ‎‎not beenough. When a whole people rises, foreign soldiers are ‎‎helpless.”‎ ‎ The Americans wereready for the Sunnis to be dissatisfied. They had ‎‎been ruling the Iraqi state since it wasfounded by the British after the ‎‎first World War, and were going to lose their supremacy. Butthe ‎‎Shiites? After all, in the “democracy” that the Americans were about to ‎‎establish,the Shiites could expect a major share in power. But the ‎‎Shiites do not want to receive”power” in a country that stays occupied. ‎ ‎ Even before the war, we warned (don’t worry, I amnot going to quote ‎‎myself a third time!) that it was well-nigh impossible to maintain a state‎‎of three mutually hostile peoples: the Sunnis, the Shiites and the Kurds. ‎‎That is stilltrue today. But perhaps a miracle is happening now: Shiites ‎‎and Sunnis are fightingtogether against the occupation. Who knows, ‎‎the common struggle may just, and for the firsttime, forge a real Iraqi ‎‎nation and prevent a bloody civil war along the road. Let us hope so.

Now the Americans are caught in a trap of their own making. Even if ‎‎they wanted to leave Iraq(which they certainly do not!), they would be ‎‎unable to do so. As the Hebrew saying goes, theycan neither swallow it ‎‎nor spit it out.

There is really nothing they can do. They will sink ever deeper into ‎‎the quagmire, kill andbe killed, destroy and be destroyed, with ever ‎‎growing brutality, in a kind of a new desertVietnam. In the hourly news ‎‎on Al Jazeera, it is already difficult to distinguish betweenour soldiers ‎‎in Ramallah and the American soldiers in Falluja. What is happening to ‎‎uswill happen to them, only on a larger scale.‎

How will this similarity influence Bush and his people? They might ‎‎say: One quagmire isenough. Let’s get out of one of them. Let us ‎‎compel Sharon to make, at long last, an agreementwith the ‎‎Palestinians, instead of babbling about “unilateral disengagement”, ‎‎whichwill probably never happen anyhow.‎

But Bush and the Bushites could also say: If we are so much alike, let ‎‎us embrace Sharon evenmore closely. Such a reaction would find its ‎‎well-earned place in “March of Folly 2”.‎

That might even be a good thing, allowing these two gentlemen the ‎‎pleasure of leaving thestage together.