The West's warlords will get their way
Simon Tisdall, Guardian News Service, London
Casualty lists are usually compiled after the battle. But since the coming war in Iraq has been so heavily trailed, it is possible to identify its victims in advance -- or preemptively, to use one of George W. Bush's favorite words.
The casualties of Desert Storm II, physical and figurative, will include Iraqi civilians and combatants on both sides; the people of Israel and of sidelined Palestine; Kurdish hopes of self-rule; Iran's pro-western civil reform movement; the entire region's security, living standards and environment if chemical or biological weapons are used; the Arab and Muslim world's already strained relationship with "Christendom"; state sovereignty as defined in international law; and democracy.
Of these, the more lasting damage may be to democracy for it is in that cause, and under that supposedly liberating banner, that this war of "disarmament" will ultimately be fought. Yet it is dysfunctional democracy of the bowdlerized variety currently practiced in the United States, Britain, the United Nations and elsewhere that has brought the world to the brink.
The war's protagonists will claim a mandate that in truth they have not secured by either vote or argument. They will say their policy, debated and discussed, has moral and constitutional force. In fact they have manipulated the democratic machinery and simply rejected opposing views.
They talk of reaching out for greater global understanding but their actions will widen the gulf. They warn vaguely of terror attacks somehow linked to Iraq while the "real" freelance terrorists of al-Qaeda wait to pounce. In this maze of suspicion and half-truth, the only certainty is the west's vulnerability at home as it chases dragons abroad.
Conflating paranoia, propaganda and patriotism, they will demand ever more unquestioning public support as the self-made crisis deepens. But this travesty of consultation is both trap and trick, an ostensibly rational, reasonable but predestined process that by stages and by stealth will be used to justify the infinitely irrational. Thus by sleight of hand, not show of hands, are we relentlessly led to the slaughter.
How did this happen? In the U.S., democracy's bamboozlement came in three installments. The key Bush decision was to merge the elusive Osama and international terrorism with the familiar Saddam and the more easily targeted "evil axis" states. Then came Bush's demand for congressional authority and the mid-term elections.
To get his way in both, Bush played on post-Sept. 11 fear and insecurity, thumped his bully pulpit as it has rarely been thumped, and implicitly accused opponents of disloyalty or worse. The result? Bush 3, Democracy 0.
At the UN, the U.S. and Britain sidestepped a massive general assembly anti-war majority, piling pressure on other security council permanent members. Since the perpetually unreformed council is more oligarchic than democratic, the outcome was never really in doubt. The result? Anglo-American 15, Rest of the World 0.
Now, according to the U.S. and Britain at least, the UN can be ignored for all practical purposes while they decide whether Iraq has tripped on one of their many, exquisitely adaptable war- triggering hurdles. And when Saddam stumbles? "Gotcha!" they will cry.
In Britain, despite parliament's September recall, there is no evidence that the subsequent Iraq debate tempered Blair's thinking. The next commons setpiece, on the UN resolution and its "severe consequences", is likely to be every bit as inconsequential in policy terms, however much backbenchers shout and pout.
The decision to start a war using British troops, it transpires, rests not with the people, or parliament, or armed forces chiefs, or even the cabinet. It is Blair's alone. Just as his basic view has not changed in recent months, nor has the absurdity of pretending that this is a level playing field, a democratic process whose outcome can be contested. The probable result? Match abandoned due to full-pitch invasion.
Whether the contrary view comes from the Arab League or from protesters in Florence or London, it has made no difference.
The die, they say, is not cast -- and yet, it surely is. Constantly, patronizingly and without shame, the west's warlords sing the same, deceptive siren song: We are listening, we have made no decisions, we will consult.
With every twist in the downward descent, it becomes ever plainer that this is a mere charade or worse, a gradual, insidious process of conditioning, coercing, co-opting and entrapping the public. One day soon, this undemocratic war will start. Don't be surprised to hear that it is fought in your name.