End the occupation of Iraq

THE LOOMING ‘elections’ in Iraq are being daily exposed as a sham –
designed to get the right result for the US paymasters and the Iraqi interim
government. It is clear that large sections of the population won’t be able to
vote at all in the chaos created inside Iraq’s towns and cities by the
occupying forces.

Ken Smith

Even where people can vote, many will question the vote’s validity when a
White House official claimed "there is a willingness to play with the end
result."

By this he meant guaranteeing seats to candidates from Sunni areas, after
the biggest Sunni party withdrew from the elections and a majority of Sunnis
are expected to boycott the election.

But, whatever the end result of these elections, one thing is clear – the
resistance to the occupying forces and whatever government takes shape after
30 January will grow.

More troops

The deployment of more British troops shows that the occupying powers are
having growing difficulties in containing the situation.

As the deadline for the elections approaches the situation inside Iraq is
becoming increasingly unstable.

The evidence that has emerged about the barbaric destruction of Fallujah in
the last week will further fan the flames of resistance against the occupying
forces.

It is another reason why opposition inside Iraq will continue to grow and
why some US government sources talk of ten to 15 years of occupation to ‘sort
out’ the mess they have created.

Fallujah was razed to the ground with tens of thousands killed and hundreds
of thousands made homeless.

And while it seems US forces knew that most Iraqi fighters had left the
city, they carried on with its destruction because the US wanted to snuff out
the most visible sign of resistance to their illegal occupation.

Desperation

In their desperation to maintain dominance in Iraq, US imperialism is
prepared to lean on Shia and Kurdish forces to brutally crush the Sunni
resistance, thus bringing civil war far closer.

But, although the actions of the occupying forces bring the real threat of
a descent into civil war, it is not inevitable. Sectarian, religious and
ethnic divisions can be cut across. It is not automatic that the resistance to
US imperialism will gravitate to right-wing religious groupings.

A genuine and democratic mass struggle against occupation and for
democratic working-class ownership and control of Iraq’s vast economic
resources would fight to ensure jobs, homes and services to meet the needs of
all Iraqis and cut across any attempts at sectarian division.

Through unity in struggle, the occupying force can be forced out and a
movement can begin for a socialist Iraq and a socialist federation of the
Middle East.