Seven Myths About the Iraq War: How BBC Newsnight failed journalism on the 10 year anniversary of the invasion
As a participant in BBC Newsnight special, "Iraq - 10 Years On", I
found myself feeling slightly miffed at the lack of real debate on the crucial
issues.
On the one hand, Newsnight presented a number of narratives
of the war and its aftermath as 'fact', which are deeply questionable. On the
other, there were no serious, factually-grounded criticisms of the war, despite
a diverse panel which included people who did not support it.
As author of a major book on the war and its historical
context, Behind
the War on Terror: Western Secret Strategy and the Struggle for Iraq,
as well as co-author of a new report, Executive
Decisions: How British Intelligence was Hijacked for the Iraq War, I
consider myself to be reasonably informed. Yet BBC Newsnight failed almost
entirely to bring any of these issues to light.
What follows is my Newsnight-inspired Iraq War Myth-Busting
exercise, based on what was, and wasn't, discussed on the show.
MYTH 1. Sectarian
violence has increased in postwar Iraq because sectarianism has always existed
in Iraq, and the removal of Saddam allowed it to erupt
One of the first Newsnight bloopers started with a short
introductory clip from John Simpson, the BBC's World Affairs Editor. Amongst
other things, Simpson talked about the rise of sectarian Sunni-Shi'a violence
in postwar Iraq, and argued that while Saddam's regime had clamped down on
sectarian divisions, regime change effectively unleashed those previously
suppressed divisions and allowed them to worsen.
This was the first of many oversimplifications about the
escalation of sectarian violence in Iraq. The reality, as pointed out on the
show by my colleague in the audience, anthropologist Professor Nadje al-Ali, is
that prior to the war, generic sectarian
antagonism was unheard of in Iraqi society. Although Saddam's regime was
unequivocally sectarian in its own violence against Shi'as and Kurds, as a
mechanism of shoring up the Ba'athist regime, Iraqis did not largely identify
in sectarian terms. As one Iraqi
blogger living in Baghdad noted:
"I always hear the Iraqi pro-war crowd interviewed on television from foreign capitals (they can only appear on television from the safety of foreign capitals because I defy anyone to be publicly pro-war in Iraq)... They go on and on about Iraq's history and how Sunnis and Shia were always in conflict and I hate that. I hate that a handful of expats who haven't been to the country in decades pretend to know more about it than people actually living there. I remember Baghdad before the war- one could live anywhere. We didn't know what our neighbors were- we didn't care. No one asked about religion or sect. No one bothered with what was considered a trivial topic: are you Sunni or Shia? You only asked something like that if you were uncouth and backward. Our lives revolve around it now. Our existence depends on hiding it or highlighting it- depending on the group of masked men who stop you or raid your home in the middle of the night."
Missing from the BBC Newsnight discussion was the fact that
the Bush administration planned from the outset to dominate Iraq by pursuing
the de facto ethnic partition of the
country into three autonomous cantons. The private US intelligence firm, Stratfor, reported that
the US was “working on a plan to merge Iraq and Jordan into a unitary kingdom
to be ruled by the Hashemite dynasty headed by King Abdullah of Jordan.” The
plan was “authored by US Vice President Dick Cheney” as well as “Deputy
Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz”, and was first discussed at “an unusual
meeting between Crown Prince Hassan of Jordan and pro-US Iraqi Sunni opposition
members in London in July” 2002. Under this plan, the central and largest part
of Iraq populated largely by Sunnis would be joined with Jordan, and would
include Baghdad, which would no longer be the capital. The Kurdish region of
northern and northwestern Iraq, including Mosul and the vast Kirkuk oilfields,
would become its own autonomous state. The Shi'a region in southwestern Iraq,
including Basra, would make up the third canton, or more likely it would be
joined with Kuwait.
Ultimately, of course, the specific detail of this plan did
not come to fruition - but the 'divide-and-rule' imperial thinking behind the
plan was implemented. As one US Joint Special
Operations University report documented, "US elite forces in Iraq
turned to fostering infighting among their Iraqi adversaries on the tactical
and operational level." This included disseminating and propagating
al-Qaeda jihadi activities by "US psychological warfare (PSYOP)
specialists" to fuel "factional fighting" and "to set
insurgents battling insurgents."
Pakistani defence
sources thus reported in early 2005 that the Pentagon had "resolved to arm small militias backed by
US troops and entrenched in the population," consisting of "former
members of the Ba'ath Party" - linked up with al-Qaeda
insurgents - to "head
off" the threat of a "Shi'ite
clergy-driven religious movement." Almost simultaneously, the Pentagon
began preparing its
'Salvador option' to sponsor Shi'ite death squads to "target Sunni
insurgents and their sympathizers" - a policy developed under the interim
government of former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi.
Ironically, the same Allawi also made an appearance on
Newsnight via Baghdad, rightly criticising the current government for failing
to incorporate an inclusive, non-sectarian political process. But Newsnight
didn't bother to ask him about his role in engendering the very sectarian violence
he now criticises by sponsoring death squads.
MYTH 2. We went to
war in Iraq based on a legitimate parliamentary process, even if lots of people
demonstrated against it - most Brits approved the war according to polls
When an audience member asked why the British government
still went to war despite the millions of people who protested against it, Independent columnist John Rentoul
argued that the war was in fact an example of proper democratic process -
because ultimately the MPs voted for it. He pointed out that we don't run
democracies based on "mob rule" - i.e. just because people protesting
in the street don't want something - but
on the basis of consensual parliamentary procedures. To this, host Kirsty Wark
added that 54% supported the war according to opinion polls at the time.
Really?
In mid-March, before the war, "just
26% of the public was saying in mid-March that they approved of British involvement
without a 'smoking gun' and a second UN vote, while 63%
disapproved." It was only once the bombs began to drop that
public opinion drifted slightly in favour of the war. Where did Kirsty Wark's
54% figure come from?
Disingenuously, it comes from an ICM poll which "found
a persistent majority against the war, reaching a low point of 29% support (and
52% oppose) in February. Support then
rose to 38% in the final pre-invasion poll (14-16 March, the same weekend
as MORI's) and jumped to 54% just a week later, with the war only a few days old."
Kirsty's 54% claim applies after the war - before the war, the majority of the British public
was overwhelmingly opposed to the invasion, a
fact which was not reflected in the parliamentary process.
And of course, since then, opposition to the war continued to
grow dramatically.
MYTH 3: The Iraq War
was, at worst, a colossal cock-up, simply because we didn't have good intel on
the ground about WMDs etc. So we didn't really go to war on the basis of a lie,
we went to war because our intel was wrong.
As I tried to point out in my brief intervention on the
show, this whole debate about whether the public approved the war or not to
some extent misses the point - which is that the Iraq War was ignited on the
basis of false claims about Saddam's WMD. Those false claims were promulgated
by senior American and British officials precisely to manipulate public
opinion, and pressurise the political system into a pre-made decision to go to
war, irrespective of the UN, irrespective of international law, and
irrespective of whether WMD really existed.
It's this fact which ultimately brings to light the extent
to which our political system, certainly when it comes to foreign policy
decisions, is broken, and has yet to be repaired. The historical record
confirms that all the intelligence available to British and American security
services, including information passed on through the UN weapons inspections process
throughout the 1990s, confirmed
unequivocally that Saddam had no functioning WMDs of any kind.
Amongst the intelligence available to the allies was the
testimony of defector General Hussein Kamel, Saddam's son-in-law and head of
Iraq's WMD programmes. He provided crates of documents to UN weapons
inspectors, as well as authoritative testimony on the precise nature of the WMD
programmes that Saddam had embarked on in preceding years. He was even cited by
senior officials as the key witness on the threat posed by Saddam's WMD's. What
these same officials conveniently omitted to mention is that Gen. Kamel had
also confirmed to UN inspectors in 1995 that Iraq had destroyed its
entire stockpile of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons, and banned
missiles, in 1991, shortly before the Gulf War - exactly as Saddam had claimed.
Yet such intelligence was ignored and suppressed.
MYTH 4: The decision
to go to war was based on a legitimate parliamentary process, legal advice from
the Attorney General, as well as consultations with the UN.
In reality, the decision to go to war was made jointly by senior
American and British officials prior to any democratic process, behind closed
doors, and irrespective of evidence or international law. This is confirmed by
a range of declassified official documents.
A leaked policy options paper drafted by officials in the Cabinet
Office's Overseas and Defence Secretariat (8th March 2002), records that:
"The only certain means to remove Saddam is to invade and impose a new government… [No legal justification] currently exists. This makes moving quickly to invade legally very difficult. We should therefore consider a staged approach."
Two "policy options" are considered in the paper:
"a toughening of the existing containment policy, facilitated by 11
September" and "regime change by military means." Under the heading,
''Toughening Containment', a plan is set out to "put real pressure on
Saddam…to lash out", and
"to make clear (without overtly
exposing regime change) [the] view that Iraq would be better off without
Saddam." A strategy is described as follows:
"Our aim would be to tell Saddam to admit inspectors or face the risk of military action… If they found significant evidence of WMD, were expelled or, in face of an ultimatum, not re-admitted in the first place… this could provide legal justification for large scale military action.”
The document notes the imperative "to first consider
what sort of Iraq we want" - namely "a pro-Western regime". The
paper then concludes that: "The use of overriding force in a ground
campaign is the only option." Iraq’s "refusal to admit UN weapons
inspectors, or their submission and likely frustration" would provide the
"justification for military action."
The paper thus effectively outlines a 'staged approach' to
achieving a pre-determined policy of regime change.
In this context, the focus
is not on meaningful diplomacy to achieve a real peaceful resolution, but to
manufacture a crisis by tripping up Saddam. In an email dated 18th March 2002,
Christopher Meyer, British Ambassador to Washington, reassured the British
Foreign Policy Adviser that when he'd met with US Deputy Secretary of Defense,
Paul Wolfowitz, "I stuck closely to the script you used with Condi Rice last
week…I went through the need to wrongfoot Saddam on the inspectors and the UNSCR’s."
Peter Ricketts, the Political Director of the Foreign Office
wrote to Jack Straw on 22nd March:
"To get public and Parliamentary support for military operations, we have to be convincing… ‘regime change’, does not stack up. It sounds like a grudge between Bush and Saddam. Much better, as you have suggested, to make the objective ending the threat to the international community from Iraqi WMD…This is at once easier to justify in terms of international law.”
The memorandum of a meeting on the 23rd July 2002 between
key members of the Cabinet, the Prime Minister and the heads of MI6 and the
JIC, amongst others - the notorious Downing Street memo
- concludes by urging those present to "work on the assumption that the UK
would take part in any military action."
The "UN route" was, in other words, conceptualised
as a public relations tool to drum up support for a war that had already been
decided. But the decision to go to war had nothing to do with the evidence
available. In leaked UK government memoranda between March and July 2002, references
are repeatedly made to "poor" intelligence about WMD, and the
"thin" case for war that it presented. Indeed, the head of MI6,
Richard Dearlove, confirms that "the
intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy" of regime
change, "justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD."
Senior intelligence
officers in MI6 and the CIA also confirmed that
intelligence was being deliberately politicised to support "the
opposite conclusion from the one they have drawn." One MI6 officer says: "You cannot
just cherry-pick evidence that suits your case and ignore the rest. It is a cardinal
rule of intelligence. Yet that is what the PM is doing." A CIA official
concurs: "We've gone from a zero position, where presidents refused to
cite detailed intel as a source, to the point now where partisan material is
being officially attributed to these agencies."
It should not come as a surprise then, either, that the Attorney
General Lord Goldsmith also came under immense political pressure to change
his original legal advice that the Iraq War would be illegal without UN
Security Council approval - while Foreign Secretary Jack Straw was
simultaneously trying to ignore the advice of FCO lawyers to the same effect.
The eventually successful pressure on Goldsmith to give "unequivocal"
advice that would support the legality of the invasion was used to hammer out
the chorus of legal opinion from Whitehall's own lawyers that the war would be
illegal - and to drum up parliamentary and public support.
MYTH 5: Even if the
WMD issue was not really the issue, we went to war to get rid of a brutal
dictator who had killed tens of thousands of people with chemical weapons.
During the show, Tony Blair talked about how, personally, he
went to war in Iraq because he wanted to rid the world of a brutal dictator who
was a threat to regional peace, stability, and democracy. He even cited the
gassings of the Kurds, and the Iran-Iraq War in the 80s, as examples of his
brutality. Great that he's now being a little bit more honest about his motives
for dragging the UK into this war - that WMD's were never really the issue, but
merely a way of manufacturing consent for a pre-made decision.
Disregarding this, though, Blair's imperial hubris
overlooked the fact that Saddam was installed and supported by the CIA and MI6;
and his genocidal campaigns against the Kurds and Shi'as were pursued with the support
of the British and Americans, who supplied hundreds of millions of dollars
of weapons - including chemical and biological weapons - to the dictator. As
one Reagan administration official put it, "Saddam Hussein is a bastard.
But he's our bastard."
So why did we go to war in Iraq in 2003? According to the
infamous Project
for a New American Century document endorsed by senior Bush administration
officials as far back as 1997, "While
the unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification"
for the US "to play a more permanent role in Gulf regional security,"
"the need for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends
the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein."
So Saddam's WMD was
not really the issue - and neither was Saddam himself.
The real issue is
candidly described in a
2001 report on “energy security” -
commissioned by then US Vice-President Dick Cheney - published by the
Council on Foreign Relations and the James Baker Institute for Public Policy.
It warned of an impending global energy crisis that would increase “US and
global vulnerability to disruption”, and leave the US facing “unprecedented
energy price volatility.” The main source of disruption is “Middle East
tension”, in particular, the threat posed by Iraq. In 2000, Iraq had
“effectively become a swing producer, turning its taps on and off when it has
felt such action was in its strategic interest to do so.” There is a
“possibility that Saddam Hussein may remove Iraqi oil from the market for an
extended period of time” in order to damage prices.
“Iraq remains a destabilising influence to... the flow of oil to international markets from the Middle East. Saddam Hussein has also demonstrated a willingness to threaten to use the oil weapon and to use his own export programme to manipulate oil markets. This would display his personal power, enhance his image as a pan-Arab leader... and pressure others for a lifting of economic sanctions against his regime. The United States should conduct an immediate policy review toward Iraq including military, energy, economic and political/diplomatic assessments. The United States should then develop an integrated strategy with key allies in Europe and Asia, and with key countries in the Middle East, to restate goals with respect to Iraqi policy and to restore a cohesive coalition of key allies.”
The Iraq War was
only partly, however, about big profits for Anglo-American oil conglomerates -
that would be a bonus (one which in the end has largely failed to materialise -
not for want of trying though). The real goal, as investigative journalist Greg Muttitt
has documented citing declassified Foreign Office files from 2003 on wards,
was stabilising global energy supplies as a whole by ensuring the free flow of
Iraqi oil to world markets - benefits to US and UK companies were a secondary
goal:
"The most important strategic interest lay in expanding global energy supplies, through foreign investment, in some of the world’s largest oil reserves – in particular Iraq. This meshed neatly with the secondary aim of securing contracts for their companies. Note that the strategy documents released here tend to refer to 'British and global energy supplies.' British energy security is to be obtained by there being ample global supplies – it is not about the specific flow."
This primary goal - mobilising Iraqi oil production to sustain global oil flows and moderate global oil prices has, so far, been fairly successful according to the International Energy Agency - though obstacles remain (not least due to ongoing instability and internal terrorism).
MYTH 6: We didn't plan for the aftermath of the Iraq War because of hubris, incompetence and general stupidity
Toward the end of the show, we heard from Colonel Tim
Collins as well as various BBC personalities that the British and Americans did
not plan for what would happen after the war -a grave and regrettable mistake
that has cost Iraqi lives, but which was entirely unintended.
This is only partly true. The reality is that the British
and American governments planned extensively for the aftermath of the war - it
just so happens that those plans did not consider the humanitarian and societal
connotations of the invasion to be of any significance. In fact, extensive and
detailed plans were drawn-up for postwar reconstruction, all of which were
focused overwhelmingly on maintaining the authoritarian structures of Saddam's
brutal regime after his removal, while upgrading Iraq's oil infrastructure to
benefit foreign investors.
"Outraged Iraqi exiles report that there won’t be any equivalent of postwar de-Nazification, in which accomplices of the defeated regime were purged from public life", reported the New York Times. "Instead the Bush administration intends to preserve most of the current regime: Saddam Hussein and a few top officials will be replaced with Americans, but the rest will stay. You don’t have to be an Iraq expert to realize that many very nasty people will therefore remain in power."
Furthermore, why didn't Newsnight draw on the evidence of
its own previous reporter, US investigative journalist Greg Palast? Palast obtained
a February 2003 State
Department document, “Moving the Iraqi Economy from Recovery to Growth,”
which in 101-pages, detailed plans for a complete rewrite of Iraq’s “policies,
laws and regulations”, based on low taxes on big business, and quick sales of
Iraq’s banks and bridges, “all state enterprises” to foreign investors. The
document also stipulated that Iraq would “privatize” its “oil and supporting
industries", and set out “a strict 360-day schedule for the free-market
makeover of Iraq.”
In fact, a series of news reports confirmed how the State
Department had set up 17
separate working groups to work out the post-war plan. “Britain and America have been working for months on detailed
proposals on how to rebuild Iraq after President Saddam”, reported The
Independent. “In the initial aftermath of any war, Iraq would be governed
by a senior US military officer... with a civilian administrator", which
would "initially impose martial law," while Iraqis would be relegated
to the sidelines as “advisers” to the US administration. The Washington
Post pointed to extensive “blueprints for Iraq’s future… outlin[ing] a
broad and protracted American role in managing the reconstruction of the
country", particularly control of Iraq's oil reserves. US officials said
that foreign troops would "likely
would remain at full strength in Iraq for months after a war ended, with a
continued role for thousands of US troops there for years to come", in
"defence of the country’s oil fields."
Myth 7: The number of
people who died as a consequence of the war is disputed, and will always be
disputed - could be anything from a hundred thousand to over half a million -
but who knows?
Kirsty Wark characterised the number of Iraq War civilian
casualties as an inherently "disputed" matter with no real resolution
in sight. But this just isn't true.
There are serious, scientific, peer-reviewed estimates of
the death toll tending toward higher numbers- and then there are speculative
estimates which are invariably lower - such as those produced by the Iraqi
Ministry of Health, or even worse, the Iraq Body Count project, which are based
on trying to cross-reference media reports alone.
The most rigorous epidemiological study of the Iraqi
civilian death toll was published in the leading peer-reviewed British medical
journal Lancet, and undertaken by John Hopkins University’s Bloomberg
School of Public Health. It estimated 655,000 excess Iraqi civilian deaths
due to the war, employing standard statistical methods widely used in the
scientific community.
According to the BBC itself,
the Ministry of
Defence’s chief scientific adviser described the survey’s methods as “close
to best practice” and its study design “robust”; and advised ministers henceforth not
to criticise the study in public. So the MoD has privately endorsed the 655,000
figure - but BBC Newsnight wants to pretend the lower figures are still valid.
Indeed, Lancet’s figures have been empirically verified. The
British polling agency, Opinion Business Research (ORB), which has tracked
public opinion in Iraq since 2005, visited several locations in Iraq at random
and discovered local reports of 4 to 5 times more deaths than those
conventionally acknowledged . Working with an Iraqi fieldwork agency, ORB
conducted face-to-face interviews with a nationally representative sample of
1,720 adults aged 18 plus. Interviewees were asked how many members of their
household had died as a result of the Iraq conflict since 2003. The ORB poll
found that the Iraqi civilian death toll since the invasion was 1.2
million.
That figure, of course, wasn't even mentioned on Newsnight
as a possibility.
Conclusions
Throughout, Newsnight ignored the now well-documented fact that the war was conceived for a set of narrow strategic goals which did not genuinely have the interests of the Iraqi people at heart.
What we should have been discussing on Newsnight is the implications of having an intelligence system that was so easily politicised, such that fraudulent 'intel' was cherry-picked to justify an illegal war. Resultantly, Whitehall was co-opted and manipulated by a narrow political class for a pre-conceived military agenda.
Despite the facts being widely and easily available in the public record, Newsnight's programme on the 10 year anniversary of the war obfuscated them to such an extent that the real, serious questions were largely overlooked.
Ten years on, we need to be thinking about how British democratic institutions were hijacked for a self-serving geopolitical strategy invented by a tiny group of American neoconservative politicians; and how, therefore, we might ensure that appropriate reforms of our political, parliamentary and intelligence processes can prevent such a situation from re-occurring.
Instead, Newsnight's Iraq War special devolved into a banal non-debate, skirting around the real issues, and failing to even acknowledge the critical facts already brought to light by decent US and British journalism.
But then, given all the recent hullabaloo at the BBC, should we be surprised?