May 5, 2005
A MAJORETTE WITHOUT A PARADE:
How to End the War (Naomi Klein, May 5, 2005, In These Times)
The future of the anti-war movement requires that it become a pro-democracy movement. Our marching orders have been given to us by the people of Iraq. It’s important to understand that the most powerful movement against this war and this occupation is within Iraq itself. Our anti-war movement must not just be in verbal solidarity but in active and tangible solidarity with the overwhelming majority of Iraqis fighting to end the occupation of their country. We need to take our direction from them.Iraqis are resisting in many ways—not just with armed resistance. They are organizing independent trade unions. They are opening critical newspapers, and then having those newspapers shut down. They are fighting privatization in state factories. They are forming new political coalitions in an attempt to force an end to the occupation.
So what is our role here? We need to support the people of Iraq and their clear demands for an end to both military and corporate occupation. That means being the resistance ourselves in our country, demanding that the troops come home, that U.S. corporations come home, that Iraqis be free of Saddam’s debt and the IMF and World Bank agreements signed under occupation. It doesn’t mean blindly cheerleading for “the resistance.” Because there isn’t just one resistance in Iraq. Some elements of the armed resistance are targeting Iraqi civilians as they pray in Shia mosques—barbaric acts that serve the interests of the Bush administration by feeding the perception that the country is on the brink of civil war and therefore U.S. forces must remain in Iraq. Not everyone fighting the U.S. occupation is fighting for the freedom of all Iraqis; some are fighting for their own elite power. That’s why we need to stay focused on supporting the demands for self-determination, not cheering any setback for U.S. empire.
And we can’t cede the language, the territory of democracy. Anybody who says Iraqis don’t want democracy should be deeply ashamed of themselves. Iraqis are clamoring for democracy and had risked their lives for it long before this invasion—in the 1991 uprising against Saddam, for example, when they were left to be slaughtered. The elections in January took place only because of tremendous pressure from Iraqi Shia communities that insisted on getting the freedom they were promised.
“The courage to be serious”Many of us opposed this war because it was an imperial project. Now Iraqis are struggling for the tools that will make self-determination meaningful, not just for show elections or marketing opportunities for the Bush administration. That means it’s time, as Susan Sontag said, to have “the courage to be serious.” The reason why the 58 percent of Americans against the war has not translated into the same millions of people on the streets that we saw before the war is because we haven’t come forward with a serious policy agenda. We should not be afraid to be serious.
Part of that seriousness is to echo the policy demands made by voters and demonstrators in the streets of Baghdad and Basra and bring those demands to Washington, where the decisions are being made.
But the core fight is over respect for international law, and whether there is any respect for it at all in the United States. Unless we’re fighting a core battle against this administration’s total disdain for the very idea of international law, then the specifics really don’t matter.
We saw this very clearly in the U.S. presidential campaign, as John Kerry let Bush completely set the terms for the debate. Recall the ridicule of Kerry’s mention of a “global test,” and the charge that it was cowardly and weak to allow for any international scrutiny of U.S. actions. Why didn’t Kerry ever challenge this assumption? I blame the Kerry campaign as much as I blame the Bush administration. During the elections, he never said “Abu Ghraib.” He never said “Guantanamo Bay.” He accepted the premise that to submit to some kind of “global test” was to be weak. Once they had done that, the Democrats couldn’t expect to win a battle against Alberto Gonzales being appointed attorney general, when they had never talked about torture during the campaign.
And part of the war has to be a media war in this country. The problem is not that the anti-war voices aren’t there—it’s that the voices aren’t amplified. We need a strategy to target the media in this country, making it a site of protest itself. We must demand that the media let us hear the voices of anti-war critics, of enraged mothers who have lost their sons for a lie, of betrayed soldiers who fought in a war they didn’t believe in. And we need to keep deepening the definition of democracy—to say that these show elections are not democracy, and that we don’t have a democracy in this country either.
Sadly, the Bush administration has done a better job of using the language of responsibility than we in the anti-war movement. The message that’s getting across is that we are saying “just leave,” while they are saying, “we can’t just leave, we have to stay and fix the problem we started.”
We can have a very detailed, responsible agenda and we shouldn’t be afraid of it.
There's no lonelier role in politics today than trying to lead the Left towards decency. Posted by Orrin Judd at May 5, 2005 9:40 PM
It's hard to be decent when your views are so incoherent. Poor Naomi wants solidarity with the oppressed Iraqis to oust the troops, and then complains she and her ilk are mischaracterised as just wanting the troops to leave.
Posted by: jd watson at May 5, 2005 11:26 PMI take it that she supports the suicide bombers. That is not what I would call decent. Do you think she is trying to be decent OJ?
Posted by: Robert Schwartz at May 6, 2005 1:12 AMMr. Schwartz--
Nah, she pretty specifically disclaims the suicide bombers-- at least those that target Iraqi civilians. It's sort of unclear whether she's ok with those that target only US forces. She's definitely in favor of the more peaceful people who want us out.
Posted by: John Thacker at May 6, 2005 1:22 AM"Anti-war" used to be a code word for the coalition of cowards and shrirkers with Comsymps. There is no draft to drive the former, and the latter are wandering, lost, through the ash-heap of history. Let the vestigal peace-creeps have their say: it is well for us to reflect on the issues they raise.
Posted by: Lou Gots at May 6, 2005 7:47 AMLike Max Hastings' Tuesday's piece in the Guardian, this is one of those cognitive disconnect pieces where the writer understands that her political enemies have done something right, but can't link up the fact that what they did doesn't jibe with what she now wants the Iraqi people to do, which is basically to turn into Sweden while at the same time telling the United States to butt out, go home and take those Halliburton boys with you. But considering where the article was published, even Naomi's mild praise for the Bush Docterine and her chastizing those who oppose the democracy effort is something most of the paper's readers will find hard to swallow.
Posted by: John at May 6, 2005 8:00 AMNo, Naomi. Your marching orders were given by International:ANSWER, and their marching orders came from an Empire long dead.
These clods are so ultra-sophisticated and nuanced, but they still follow the losers. And they claim George Bush is an idiot.
Posted by: Mikey at May 6, 2005 8:14 AMI'll agree that the debt should be renounced.
Posted by: Rick T. at May 6, 2005 10:26 AM"Nah, she pretty specifically disclaims the suicide bombers-- at least those that target Iraqi civilians."
She said: "Some elements of the armed resistance are targeting Iraqi civilians as they pray in Shia mosquesbarbaric acts that serve the interests of the Bush administration by feeding the perception that the country is on the brink of civil war and therefore U.S. forces must remain in Iraq."
My take is that she condems bombings of mosques, but not bombings of police recruits or marketplaces, not because it is wrong to murder innocents, but because bombing mosques is bad PR for her side.
Robert--
You may very well be right. Half a brain cel may be better than none, though.
Posted by: John Thacker at May 6, 2005 12:29 PMErr, half a brain cel referring to her, of course, not Mr. Schwartz, who has considerably more.
Posted by: John Thacker at May 6, 2005 1:16 PMI don't think the question is whether she is smart. The left is full of smart people -- just ask them and they will tell you how much smarter they are than all those dumb hicks who voted for Bush.
The question is whether they have any moral sense. I would assert that a person who only condems suicide bombing because it is bad PR, lacks moral sense and is not decent.
Posted by: Robert Schwartz at May 6, 2005 3:21 PM