|
Printer Friendly PDF Format
Subscribe to FFF Email Update
Subscribe to Freedom Daily
DONATE TO FFF
Is Any War Civil?
by
Sheldon Richman,
December 4, 2006
Whether Iraq is embroiled in a civil war is a matter of some controversy. News organizations such as NBC have dramatically announced that, indeed, it is. Pundits solemnly the debate the question on cable news talk shows. Former Secretary of State Colin Powell says yes.
Present Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice says no.
Of course, the president of the United States agrees with
Rice. He has two good reasons for doing so. If President
Bush admits we have a civil war on our hands, the
American people will (1) know that the Bush doctrine is a
big flop, and (2) wonder why we should stay in Iraq.
So what sounds like a debate over semantics is really a
matter of politics.
For the record, the American Heritage
Dictionary defines civil war as a
war between factions or regions of the same
country. If thats not what is going on in
Iraq, then what is going on?
The mental contortions being undertaken by the Bush
administration on this question are pitiful. The
presidents press secretary, Tony Snow, denied a
civil war is going on in Iraq because a civil war is a
situation in which people break up into clearly
identifiable feuding sides clashing for supremacy within
the land.
Huh?
But heres something more outrageous: Snow said that
in contrast to Iraq, a good example of a civil war is
what happened in the United States from 1861 and 1865.
Really? Although that conflict is called the Civil War,
in fact it does not satisfy Snows definition. In no
sense were there clearly identifiable feuding sides
clashing for supremacy within the land.
Northerners and Southerners were not fighting over who
would control the government of the United States. Eleven
southern states had tried to leave the Union and become
their own country, the Confederate States of America.
President Lincoln declared the secession illegal and went
to war to prevent it. Whatever you think of the justice
of one side or the other, it was not a civil war.
In the end, it doesnt matter whether Iraq is having
a civil war nor not. In either case that country is in a
situation that the U.S. presence can only make worse.
Why? Because the U.S. military is a foreign occupier, and
it is perceived as such. Polls show that the Iraqis do
not want American troops there. A strong majority says
its okay to kill Americans. How can we justify even
one more day there?
The stupidity of the Bush policy becomes more obvious
every day. (According to a recently leaked memo, outgoing
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld seems to agree.) Not
only has the policy plunged Iraq into a caldron of
violence, it predictably has given Iran what it
couldnt achieve on its own: dominance over its
next-door neighbor. Considering that Bush regards Iran as
the leader of the axis of evil, his policy
looks peculiar indeed.
Bush is so deeply invested in his mistake that he
cant even hint that something is gravely wrong. He
doggedly insists, against all evidence, that al-Qaeda is
the cause of the violence. In public he praises Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki as the right guy for
Iraq while his national security advisor writes
memos calling Maliki ignorant, dishonest, or incompetent.
Everything about the Bush policy is an insult to the
intelligence of the American people. If the opinion
polling is accurate, the people arent as stupid as
the administration thinks.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation, author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of The Freeman magazine. Visit his blog Free Association at www.sheldonrichman.com. Send him email.
|