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"War
as Peace: A Dangerous Concept"
Analysis
of President George W. Bush's State of the Union
Address
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By
HORACE
CAMPBELL and
SREERAM CHAULIA
Publish by THE MODERN TRIBUNE, February 4, 2003
WASHINGTON, D.C. - In his State
of the Union address delivered before the joint houses
of Congress in Washington D.C, President George Bush
drove home that he was going to war in order to
achieve peace. Outlining why it was necessary for the
US government to launch a war against the state and
people of Iraq, he noted, “We seek peace. We strive
for peace. And sometimes peace must be defended. A
future lived at the mercy of terrible threats is no
peace at all. If a war is forced upon us, we will
fight in a just cause and by just means- sparing in
every way, the innocent. And if war is forced upon us,
we will fight with the full force and might of the US
military – and we will prevail.”
These words communicated the
philosophies of ‘just cause’ and ‘just war’ and
rekindled the classic realist view that the best way
to obtain peace is to prepare for war. The State of
the Union speech left no doubt in the minds of the
ordinary US citizen that her country was on the brink
of a major military adventure in the Middle East. Bush
delivered this message in an aggressive and
belligerent tone, with the vow that America is
prepared to fight “every danger, every enemy.” It was
a telling opening comment from the head of an
administration that spelt out to Bob Woodward the
pre-emptive doctrine of neo-imperialist leaders
forever on the lookout for new enemies and dangers.
The main corpus of this doctrine was published in the
book, Bush at War.
To the uninitiated, Bush’s
speech represented the concerns of a compassionate but
dedicated President who cares about the state of the
Union (strong) and the economy (recovering). One
newspaper captured the three-pronged exertions of the
President in this way, “Bush: Grow Economy, Fix
Medicare and Prepare for War.” The clear lesson was
that war was also necessary for fixing the economy and
ensuring that Americans remain a “free people.”
Contradictions within contradictions
Bush’s
zero concern for genuine peace and economic
reconstruction was compounded by a clear contradiction
of the moment. The President and his family belong to
a section of the American elite that is connected to
the petroleum industry. Yet, one of the contradictions
of this period is the revolutionary potential of
hydrogen fuel cell technology in a world that is fast
switching from hydrocarbons to renewable energy use.
Among the early notable points was Bush’s promise to
increase R&D on production of “more energy at home.”
He predicted that hydrogen-powered fuel cell
technology would revolutionise energy usage and reduce
US dependence on oil from the gulf.
The
contradictory position of the President is comparable
to the fate of a candle maker in the era of the
discovery of electricity. Revolutionary technologies
of this biotech era require new thinking, but
entrenched investments in the oil industry mean that
Bush and his allies are still willing to go to war to
control oil fields.
Protesters marching on streets are proclaiming, “No
Blood for Oil,” and so, the speechwriters of the
President forked out a long-held view among American
policymakers that the world’s largest energy consumer
is being held hostage by Arab countries owing to their
petroleum oligarchy. The reference to hydrogen fuel
cell technology was used as an alibi, i.e. a crafty
rebuttal of peace activist criticism that Bush is
interested mainly in Iraq’s 112 billion barrels of
oil. Mentioning hydrogen power as a wave of the future
is a reminder that American companies like the
Connecticut-based UTC Fuel Cells will be the energy
leaders of the future. It is also Bush’s way of
defending himself by asserting that traditional
fossil-fuel extracting petroleum bigwigs like Exxon
Mobil are not controlling US foreign policy.
But if
the current state of fuel cell research is probed,
Bush’s interest in Iraq attains a new dimension and
rationale. Iraq possesses as much as 326 trillion
cubic feet of hydrocarbon gas, from which hydrogen can
be easily separated for commercial use. Thus far,
scientists have failed to fully develop the technology
to separate hydrogen from natural air and therefore,
fuel cells cannot yet be derived from a renewable
source. Iraqi hydrocarbon fields are definitely a
prized booty in the minds of the war planners.
Bush and the Palestinian self-determination
project
Throughout most parts of the world, the posture of the
US towards Iraq is seen as a double standard in so far
as there is no major effort to pressure Israel to
respect the resolutions of the United Nations. In the
speech, Bush promised a “secure Israel and a
democratic Palestine,” indicating continued
encouragement of Ariel Sharon’s overwhelming use of
force for his legitimate “war on terrorism,” coupled
with US-backed attempts to dislodge Yasser Arafat on
grounds that he is undemocratic. This is one ‘regime
change’ Bush wants to achieve stealthily, without
causing much noise.
Throughout the Middle East and North Eastern Africa
the unresolved issue of Palestine is a destabilising
factor in the lives of ordinary people. This has
become vivid as the US increases its military and
security presence in Africa, especially Djibouti and
Kenya. The bombing of American embassies in Nairobi
and Dar-es-Salaam in 1998 and the recent bombing of a
hotel in Kenya are examples of how Africa is being
diverted and dragged into the present war on terrorism
at a moment when most Africans believe that the number
one human security problem of the world today is the
HIV-AIDS pandemic.
Bush and AIDS
Bush was supposed to visit the
continent of Africa at the end of January. The trip
was postponed to allow the US government to address
“other pressing priorities.” As a belated sop, Bush
announced in his speech an Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief worth $15 billion for Africa and the Caribbean.
The United Nations has declared HIV AIDS the most
serious crisis on the planet and superficially, Bush
seemed to be lending a genuine helping hand to a
global problem. However, the position of the US trade
representative within the World Trade Organization has
been to block all attempts of the African states to
develop indigenous capacity for production of generic
drugs to treat AIDS patients, fearful that it will
introduce low-priced competition for American drug
cartels.
The
advantage Bush sees in starting massive Congressional
spending on AIDS is that it will benefit the gigantic
pharmaceutical sector, which is the second largest
industry in the US economy after the
military-industrial-information complex. Bill Frist,
the new leader in the Senate, represents this vested
interest and his face was prominently displayed when
Bush announced the AIDS Plan. Merck, Bristol-Myers,
Abbot, Roche, Glaxo-Smithkline and other drug
corporations inspired the anti-generic drugs TRIPS
case in South Africa. When ‘public health’ was set
aside at the WTO as an exception to which intellectual
property rights cannot be applied, the pharmaceutical
conglomerates lost their strategic entry deterrence
and began facing heavy competition from cheap makers
of anti-retrovirals like the Indian companies, CIPLA
and Ranbaxy. No longer able to monopolise the African
market, US drug manufacturers drastically reduced the
prices of their AIDS cocktails to remain competitive.
Bush’s AIDS Relief Plan will open the way for these
discredited manufacturers to re-enter the African
market and regain public and governmental confidence.
The prime initiative of the US
government in Africa is known as the African Growth
and Opportunity Act. In numerous forums, policymakers
and thinkers are describing AGOA’s agenda of
unilaterally prising open African markets and
economies as “modern slavery.” This denunciation is
accompanied by a call for the US to release all
information on biological and chemical warfare trials
that were associated with Emerging Viruses in the
apartheid era. It is one more demand by Africans as an
integral part of the quest for reparations, truth and
justice.
More significantly, Bush’s
pledge to assist Africa must be seen in the context of
the call of Representative Charles Rangel to restore
the draft. In an article in the New York Times,
Rangel drew attention to the disproportionate numbers
of African Americans and Americans of color in the
armed forces. Representative Conyers was quoted on
Jan. 3, "It has unfortunately become the duty of
someone else's child to go to war and die, as the
privileged evade the tragic consequences of war."
This statement resonated throughout the black
community as it visualised black youths going off to
die for a vain cause in Iraq.
Conservatives were perturbed by
the discussion and senior Republicans responded to
Charles Rangel. In one commentary, former Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger insisted that African
Americans were in the armed forces due to their
loyalty to the country. It is this recent debate on
the war and Africans at home and abroad that best
explains the newfound compassion of George Bush
towards Africans and African Americans who are dying
of AIDS. AIDS is the leading cause of death among
African Americans between the ages of 22 to 40.
Bush, privatised medicine and the deficit
Health
care initiatives in the address must also be
understood as efforts to strengthen the drug and
insurance private sectors. Bush’s rejection of
nationalised health plans as stymieing innovation and
technical advances is confirmation that ‘Reagonomics’
will rein supreme in America. The welfare state is
destined to remain a chimera. Bush’s ambitious schemes
to rebuild the economy received round after round of
approbation from the Congressmen hearing the speech,
but it contrasts with the truth that in every American
state we see spending cuts in education and delivery
of medical care to the poor.
The
deep economic crisis in American society is reproduced
daily in the newspapers via stark stories of the
difficulties facing millions of ordinary US citizens.
Bush’s tax plans, instead of aiding poor Americans in
need, benefit the one percent of the US population
that controls levers of power. The same day that the
President announced intentions of going to war that
will cost more than US $60 billion (excluding
post-Saddam occupation costs), the New York
Times reported that the projected budgetary
deficit for 2003 would exceed US $300 billion.
Bush and the Dollar-Euro war
In the
present structure of the world economy, the US
government is able to use the reserves of other
countries because the dollar is still the standard
currency of world trade. The challenges to the dollar
from the Euro are manifest in the alliance between
France and Germany. The British Pound has been
umbilically linked to the dollar since the Bretton
Woods agreement of 1944, and the Blair government
hangs suspended between the future of the buoyant Euro
and a US dollar that is backed up by the might of the
world’s strongest military. After a joint meeting on
January 22 with the Chancellor of Germany, President
Chirac of France firmly rejected the military plans of
Bush and called on the US to work through the UN to
allow inspectors to complete their work in Iraq.
Chirac boldly stated that
the joint approach of
France
and Germany was "based on the two principles
that the UN Security Council is the only body
qualified to decide on military intervention, and
secondly that war is always an admission of failure
and the worst possible solution. Everything possible
should be done to avoid it".
This was
the strongest rebuke of the US President by his NATO
allies, who more or less accused him personally of
failure. The picture of France and Germany standing
together against Bush and Blair mirrors the emerging
struggle between the Euro and the dollar. Bush’s
confident espousal in the speech of “going it alone”
against Iraq reflects the subterranean trans-Atlantic
currency war.
Bush as military leader
After
rushing through domestic affairs, Bush began lauding
American armed forces ad nauseam, unprecedented
for a peacetime State of the Union speech. Chiefs of
military staff, who were sitting in the front row,
were seen clapping and rising whenever Bush reiterated
that America was strong and great. His bid to project
a ‘tough’ masculine image was obviously working, with
all attendees joining the applause.
On
Afghanistan, Bush took on critics who say Al Qaeda has
been forgotten in the chase for Iraq. He claimed that
Afghanistan has been “liberated” and that the country
was enjoying a peace dividend. This contrasts sharply
with the UN view that lawlessness and violence against
women have increased all over the Afghan countryside
and the threat of terrorism has not subsided at all.
Bush listed top Al Qaeda catches in Asia, Europe and
North America as proof that “we are winning” the war
against terrorists who are “learning the meaning of
American justice”, again a lot of braggadocio which
covers up the fact that except unseating Taliban, no
major US objective has so far been achieved in
Afghanistan-Pakistan.
Sticking to his “axis of evil” bashing, Bush harshly
criticised the governments of North Korea and Iran for
violating international norms and promoting terrorism.
He stole the liberal line by extending solidarity for
secular anti-fundamentalist students and reformers in
Iran, but excoriated the Iranian government. This can
be interpreted as an expression of displeasure at the
lack of (or low level of) Iranian support for US war
designs in Iraq. Alternatively, it is a warning to
Iran that unless it kowtows to the US, once Baghdad is
occupied, Bush will start plotting ‘regime change’ in
Tehran as well.
To
secure America against “evil men”, Bush announced that
his pet project of “protecting this nation against
ballistic missiles”, Nuclear Missile Defence, will
enter deployment this year. Another measure for
homeland security that he inaugurated was a ‘Project
BioShield’ to defend the US against bacteriological
attack. A practical question that crops up with the
justifications for these extravagant projects is why a
weak and poor country like North Korea or Iraq would
risk national decimation by launching a missile or
biological attack on America. Surely, Bush is being
cynical when he claims these ‘rogue states’ are
totally irrational.
Poor case for war against Iraq
Finally, moving on to the flavour of the times, Bush
painted graphic pictures of brutal ill treatment and
torture of prisoners in Iraqi jails. Conveniently
forgetting the dire need for prison condition reforms
in America, he cited human rights organisations that
have documented evidence of cruel, degrading and
inhuman punishment in Iraqi prisons. This cinematic
description of Iraqi torture chambers was a calculated
attempt at increasing US public revulsion for Saddam
Hussein as a pitiless tyrant who is the epitome of
evil. There was no acknowledgement of the former
relations between the US government and the same
Saddam Hussein.
Downplaying nuclear weapons proliferation, now that
Mohammad El Baradei of the International Atomic Energy
Agency has said no evidence of a renewed nuclear
programme was found in Iraq, Bush launched into a long
diatribe on chemical weapons production in Iraq.
Reminding that Saddam Hussein has “ambitions of
conquest,” Bush asked rhetorically why he was
developing weapons of mass destruction if not to use
them on his enemies. Bush also reported to the
audience knowledge that Iraqi intelligence had
clandestine links to anti-American terrorists. Each of
these charges has been proven by independent experts
to be baseless.
Bush as a man of peace
Asserting ironically that America “stands for peace,”
Bush imparted an emotional ring to his voice and
disclosed that US armed forces are ready to attack
Iraq for the sake of “defending peace.” Without
hinting when the war button will be pressed, he said
there are “crucial hours ahead” for American troops
and he was confident that they would not fail.
“Trusting in the sanity of Saddam Hussein is not an
option,” he averred. In the same vein, he revealed his
utter distrust and contempt for the United Nations by
stating, “we are not here to follow a process, but to
achieve results.” ‘Process’ is a euphemism for
multilateral negotiations at the UN to diplomatically
resolve the Iraq crisis. The crucial line in the
speech related to the possibility of terrorists
slipping into the USA to release biological or
chemical agents. “It would take just one vial, one
canister, one crate slipped into this country to bring
a day of horror like none we have ever known.” This
Hollywood thriller script line was intended to
mobilise frightened US citizens to support the march
to war.
Trying
to marry humanitarianism to his militarism, Bush then
promised “food, medicines, supplies and freedom” to
the people of Iraq, sweetening the pill of military
destruction that would be unleashed by American
fighter aircraft. Reaching a crescendo towards the
end, Bush intoned, “the day he (Saddam) and his regime
are removed from power will be the day of your
liberation.” The emphasis was on ‘your’, as if
Americans will really start basking in greater freedom
if there is regime change in Iraq. Though it is a
puzzling logic, Congressmen stood up at this point in
a bipartisan manner and began thunderous ovation.
Hillary Clinton, who was questioning war motives
during the November debates, was visibly moved and
clapped with the rest. It was an overwhelming
demonstration that Bush has appropriated the patriotic
high ground and politicians of all hues have decided
not to come out against war and get marginalised.
Words like ‘traitor’, going back to the McCarthyist
era, are not yet in circulation, but such is the power
of Orwellian mass media disinformation released by
Bush that the day when conscientious objectors will be
tried under anti-terrorism ‘patriot’ laws appears not
too distant.
Bush’s
entire speech was laced with religious overtones, in
an apparent premeditated plan to seize the initiative
from church groups who are opposing war in Iraq. He
constantly referred to God being on America’s side.
For a secular state where ‘In God We Trust’ is
mentioned only as a custom on currency notes, the
unending invocation of God was anomalous. But when the
President affirmed that America places “confidence in
the loving God,” the entire Legislature broke into
wild and deafening cheers, convinced that they are the
chosen people. A crusading spirit, as if Bush were
issuing a reveille call, was ever-present from start
to finish. It seemed like a poisonous current flowing
across all party affiliations in the hall.
What
is the gist of Bush’s State of the Union speech for
2003? In three words, the dangerous and misguided
doctrine: ‘war is peace.’ Cleverly maneuvering and
manipulating words, Bush has worked himself and the
country into believing that peace is achievable only
through war. However, there is a major difference felt
by conscientious people throughout the world as to the
real meaning of peace. Nelson Mandela demonstrated to
the world that the ideas of peace could not be
separated from reconciliation and forgiveness. Mandela
showed that it was not a sign of weakness to think
through concepts of peace and move voluntarily to
eschew and destroy weapons. One day after the state of
the union speech, he called Bush “a President who
can’t think properly and wants to plunge the world
into holocaust.” It is this same humanist who remarked
in a September 2002
interview
in Newsweek, “the attitude of the
United States of America
is a threat to world peace.”
Peace is not about “fighting with full force” and “prevailing” on
enemies. It is a live and let-live state of the mind
that the present caretaker of the state of the union
is incapable of comprehending.
Horace Campbell is
Professor of Political Science and African American
Studies, Syracuse University, New York.
Sreeram Chaulia works
for the International Rescue Committee, New York.
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