End The Occupation Of Iraq


Bring The Troops Home Now!

OVER 600 Iraqis slaughtered in just one city. The corpses
of children, women and elderly as well as young men lying in the streets. 

70
coalition troops killed in just over a week. Foreign workers kidnapped. 100,000
people fleeing US Apache helicopter gunships in Falluja. 

Christine Thomas

This is what
‘liberation’, ‘freedom’ and ‘democracy’ looked like in Iraq, one year after the
fall of Baghdad.

Bush and his cronies say that coalition troops are fighting
a few "thugs, gangs and terrorists" and that 95% of those killed are
"legitimate targets". But the director of the main hospital in
Falluja said that women, children and the elderly made up the majority of those
who died.

Blair has given his total backing to this brutality and
bloodshed, which is turning more and more Iraqis against the occupation.
"Everyone has become a fighter" said one Iraqi journalist of the
situation in Falluja.

It is becoming increasingly clear that there will be no end
to this bloodshed as long as the occupation continues. The troops should be
withdrawn and the Iraqi people allowed to democratically decide their own
future.

Future

Instead, US commanders are calling for up to 10,000 more troops to be sent to Iraq. 

The spectre of Vietnam, of more and more troops
being sent into an unwinnable war against a whole country, is now haunting
George Bush.

A significant movement, involving the families of forces
serving in Iraq, has already been built in the US (see last week’s the
socialist), campaigning around the slogan "Bring them home now".

The chaos in Iraq could derail Bush’s plans to be reelected
president in November.

This would be a nightmare for his buddy Blair. Only last
month the Spanish people kicked out the government of pro-war Prime Minister
Aznar.

Build the socialist alternative

The new Spanish government is threatening to withdraw its
troops from Iraq. A mass movement here for British troops to be brought home
could put pressure on Blair who is anxious to avoid the fate of his fellow
warmonger.

At the same time, a political alternative needs to be built
in the form of a new mass workers’ party that can unite all those opposed to
war, privatisation and exploitation, and fight for socialism – the only
guarantee of a decent future for ordinary working people and youth in Britain,
Iraq and internationally.