Expulsion is Transfer:
The Colonial Logic of Bush's Response to New Orleans
Jonathan Scott
The Black Commentator, September 15th 2005
It’s not so much that the Emperor has no clothes but that his clothes, under
the black sky, are shining white, with many thousands gone, enabled deliberately
by his white imperial rule. I believe this to be the only honest, rational
conclusion to draw from all the evidence on the ground in New Orleans.
A lot of the shock and awe being expressed in the mainstream media over the
Bush administration’s four days of willful indifference toward the suffering
of Black people of New Orleans, those who either did not or could not leave,
is disingenuous. For example, Chicago’s Mayor Richard M. Daley’s comment
that he was “shocked” to hear that Bush wanted no part of a substantial material
aid package he had offered on Sunday, one day before the landing of Hurricane
Katrina in New Orleans, is a salient fragment of the noxious whole.
According to Mayor Daley, the Bush administration rejected on Sunday the
city’s offer of “36 members of the firefighters’ technical rescue teams,
eight emergency medical technicians, search-and-rescue equipment, more than
100 police officers as well as police vehicles and two boats, 29 clinical
and 117 non-clinical health workers, a mobile clinic and eight trained personnel,
140 Streets and Sanitation workers and 29 trucks, plus other supplies” (Chicago
Sun-Times, 9/3/05). Daley had emphasized in his offer to Bush that his city
personnel were “willing to operate self-sufficiently and would not depend
on local authorities for food, water, shelter and other supplies.” Bush replied
by saying that he needed only one truck from the City of Chicago. Pathetically,
Daley actually dispatched the lone truck to New Orleans.
Are we to believe that a mayor who regularly denies permits to anti-war protesters
in Chicago and who has attacked critics of U.S. torture at Guantanamo could
be now “shocked” that his president, who got to power precisely by disfranchising
Black voters, refused to save the Black survivors of the hurricane?
Likewise, commentators from the big television networks showed spirited outrage
that the American Red Cross was nowhere to be found. Against a visual backdrop
of Black babies dying of dehydration as well as elderly folk, white and Black
together, some of them seeming to be breathing their last breath, we saw
impassioned correspondents demand an immediate explanation for the lack of
relief. Yet if they had merely checked the American Red Cross web site, they
might have chosen to pursue a completely different line of reporting. For
the American Red Cross had already explained, in an official statement, that
“Access to New Orleans is controlled by the National Guard and local authorities
and while we are in constant contact with them, we simply cannot enter New
Orleans against their orders…. The state Homeland Security Department had
requested – and continues to request – that the American Red Cross not come
back into New Orleans following the hurricane. Our presence would keep people
from evacuating and encourage others to come into the city” (http://www.redcross.org).
The cross-racial and-class outrage might have felt good at the moment, at
least to those expressing it, considering that it rarely if ever gets voiced
in the mass media, but all the venting of indignant emotion had the predictable
effect of foreclosing a coherent narrative of the real story in the Gulf,
as well as preempting the most logical kind of analysis of the great New
Orleans catastrophe: the one highlighting the obviously intersecting patterns
of the U.S. colonial occupation of Iraq and the government’s further restoration
of white supremacy at home. From outside the U.S., these connections were
made rather quickly.
For instance, on September 3, the Agence France Presse released a report
featuring criticisms of the Bush administration dealt by New Orleans deputy
police commander W.S. Riley. “We expected a lot more support from the federal
government,” Riley told the French Press Agency. “We expected the government
to respond within 24 hours. The first three days we had no assistance…The
guard arrived 48 hours after the hurricane with 40 trucks. They drove their
trucks in and went to sleep. For 72 hours this police department and the
fire department and handful of citizens were alone rescuing people. We have
people who died while the National Guard sat and played cards. I understand
why we are not winning the war in Iraq if this is what we have.” Here is
the real story of the Bush government and New Orleans.
First, they order the American Red Cross to leave the site of the catastrophe
and not return. Whenever the Red Cross is thrown out of a human disaster
zone, the message to any other relief team, either church-based or public
is, don’t even think about it. This, incidentally, is the same military strategy
that the Israeli army used during its racist siege of Beirut in 1982, where
Israel refused to permit the Red Cross to visit Palestinian refugee camps
it had just bombed into oblivion (see Noam Chomsky’s The Fateful Triangle,
p. 231). In fact, the New York tabloid media seemed to sense this kind of
Israelization of the situation in New Orleans when it turned its attention,
instantly, to all the dangerous snipers shooting down cops, etc, etc.
This fixation on snipers provided the government’s official rationale for
martial law, even though the reality of the situation called not for martial
law but rather for urgent and massive relief efforts led by the Red Cross.
The Bush response to the New Orleans catastrophe was a white supremacist
military response, modeled in a precise way after the Israeli colonial occupation
of Arab Palestine and the U.S.’s own colonial occupation of Iraq, duly noted,
ironically, by commander Riley.
On this note, many neo-con pundits, who admitted Bush failed in the Gulf,
refused at the same time to accept that he failed because most of the suffering
folk are Black; smugly, they wanted to see it as a class issue. But, as they
say, this doesn’t pass the laugh test. We’re supposed to accept that this
same guard would have been napping, in between playing cards, had all the
destitute and dying been white. Needless to say, this French Press Agency
report has not been mentioned at all, to my knowledge, in the U.S. mainstream
media. Had the criticisms of commander Riley been repeated every day, on
every network, the evasion of the white racism issue at the heart of this
crisis would have been much harder to pull off.
The following question has been raised already by many independent commentators
and analysts, but we need to take seriously in the weeks and months to come
the fact that the Bush government is clearly a reactionary bourgeois military
junta, not a democratically-elected civil institution accountable to the
people of this country. The white left’s biggest mistake, in my view, has
been to treat the Bush regime as an unfortunate expression of a bunch of
ignorant and misguided Red-Staters instead of the patently illegal government
that it is.
Hence, when people say that the New Orleans catastrophe has finally lifted
the veil and shown that the Emperor has no clothes – that the Bushies are
now at their most vulnerable politically – we need to qualify that with some
sober realpolitik. And perhaps the best way to do this is to understand what
the Bush regime was doing immediately before the week of Hurricane Katrina,
and that which explains in large part Bush’s own description of the catastrophe,
one day after New Orleans went completely under water, as “a temporary disturbance.”
Indeed, from the standpoint of the racist U.S. imperialist social engineers
in Iraq, any domestic crisis, from an earthquake or hurricane to a major
airline workers’ strike or a collapse of the nation’s housing market, is
minor compared to the task of writing Iraq’s new constitution.
In other words, it is inaccurate and politically weak to say that the Bush
administration was unprepared for the catastrophe, because the Bush administration
is unprepared for absolutely everything except seeing through to the end
its neo-colonialist class project of remaking the former Arab nation of Iraq
into an intentionally fragmented region of ethnically and religiously segregated
Bantustans, governed militarily by the U.S. and in the political service
of Israeli apartheid in occupied Palestine. Anyone surprised by the federal
response to the New Orleans crisis has not been paying attention to Iraq
nor do they seem to understand the crucial role Israel has played in the
U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq.
Before looking closely and briefly at the U.S. engineering of Iraq’s new
constitution, consider the following overview of the possibilities of a dismantled
Arab Iraq provided by Oded Yinon, an Israeli journalist and former official
of the Israeli Foreign Ministry, in a report produced for the World Zionist
Organization in 1982. And while reading, keep in mind the precarious future
of Black New Orleans:
“Iraq, rich in oil on the one hand and internally torn on the other, is guaranteed
as a candidate for Israel’s targets. Its dissolution is even more important
for us than that of Syria. Iraq is stronger than Syria. In the short run
it is Iraqi power which constitutes the greatest threat to Israel…. In Iraq,
a division into provinces along ethnic/religious lines as in Syria during
the Ottoman times is possible. So three (or more) states will exist around
the major cities: Basra, Baghdad and Mosul, and Shiite areas in the South
will separate the Sunni and Kurdish North” (see The Zionist Plan for the
Middle East, edited by Israel Shahak, pp. 8-11).
In relation to the U.S. war in Iraq, Professor Ralph Coury has formulated
the problem nicely in his recent essay “The Demonisation of pan-Arab nationalism”
(Race & Class, vol. 46, no. 4). Coury argues that, from the standpoint
of the U.S. neo-conservative policy makers in the Bush administration who
are closely tied politically to Israel, “Arab unity is inherently dangerous.
A fragmented Arab world, reduced to primordial but manageable identities
(tribal, regional, religious and ethnic), will be incorporated into a redesigned
‘multicultural’ sub-imperial system dominated by the United States and its
principal non-Arab satrapies Israel and Turkey.”
During the past few months, the Bush regime has been busy putting into practice
these neo-conservative theories of U.S. colonial domination in Iraq. Impossible
to find in the mainstream media, there have been, however, many good articles
published in the independent media. One such article appeared two weeks ago
on the excellent Asiatimes.com site, written by Herbert Docena titled “How
the US got its neoliberal way in Iraq” (9/1/05). Studying closely his article
is highly recommended for obvious reasons, but also because in closing this
commentary I’m forced to provide just a brief synopsis of his research and
analysis.
Suffice it to say that the original draft of the new Iraqi constitution greatly
alarmed the U.S. occupiers. According to Docena, the Iraqis wanted “to build
a Scandinavian-type welfare system in the Arabian desert, with Iraq’s vast
oil wealth to be spent on upholding every Iraqi’s right to education, health
care, housing, and other social services. ‘Social justice is the basis of
building society,’ the draft declared. All of Iraq’s natural resources would
be owned collectively by the Iraqi people. Everyone would have the right
to work and the state would be legally bound to provide employment opportunities
to everyone. The state would be the Iraqi people’s collective instrument
for achieving development.”
But as direct occupiers, the U.S. wanted to enact laws that “give foreign
investors equal rights with Iraqis in the domestic market; permit the full
repatriation of profits; institute the flat tax system; abolish tariffs;
enforce a strict intellectual property rights regime; sell off a whole-range
of state-owned companies; reduce food and fuel subsidies; and privatize all
kinds of social services such as health, education and water delivery.”
Therefore, the original draft advanced by the Iraqis was “disappeared” by
the U.S. occupying forces, a process presided over by Paul Bremer and assisted
in by a small group of hand picked Iraqi exile politicians. Replacing it
became Article 25: “The state shall guarantee the reforming of the Iraqi
economy according to modern economic bases, in a way that ensures complete
investment of its resources, diversifying its sources and encouraging and
developing the private sector.”
If we are to act wisely on the freshly released anti-Bush energies and passions
in this immediate aftermath of the New Orleans catastrophe, it is critical
that we continue persuading people, including those calling themselves our
leaders, that the Bush regime must be completely removed from power in 2006,
which means in practice every elected official up for re-election who has
supported the war, Democrat or Republican. But we need to be precise. The
Iraq war and its new corollary, the Bush government’s particular response
to the New Orleans catastrophe, are not policy failures nor are they examples
of executive incompetence and gross negligence. They are the products of
a criminal military junta, deeply colonialist and therefore racist at its
core; and this group is determined, if given more opportunity, to induce
an even greater catastrophe than the one we’re going through right now.
The whole disgusting debacle evokes a compelling passage from The Communist
Manifesto. Marx wrote:
“The conditions of bourgeois society are too narrow to comprise the wealth
created by them. And how does the bourgeoisie get over these crises? On the
one hand, by enforced destruction of a mass of productive forces; on the
other, by the conquest of new markets, and by the more thorough exploitation
of the old ones. That is to say, by paving the way for more extensive and
more destructive crises, and by diminishing the means whereby crises are
prevented.”
Our platform should be simple: (1) the immediate withdrawal of all U.S. troops
from Iraq; (2) a popular-democratic, anti-racist reconstruction of the Gulf
in which “social justice is the basis of building society,” not some white-privileged
privatization frenzy organized for corporate monsters such as Halliburton;
and (3) freedom for Palestine.
The first requires us to get as many people we know to go to D.C. on September
24, and then to organize anti-war candidates in our communities to run in
2006. The second is much more complex, but somebody needs to call a national
mass meeting, organize and fund it. The third is simple: our anti-war and
anti-racist candidates in 2006 must be for ending all U.S. aid to Israel
so long as Israel maintains its illegal military occupation of Palestinian
land. To be against the dispossession and expulsion of Black people in New
Orleans is to be against the dispossession and expulsion of Palestinians.
And why is this so important? Because every colonial military occupation
the U.S. is involved with is a direct cause of our current national catastrophe.
Jonathan Scott is Assistant Professor of English
at the City University of New York, Borough of Manhattan Community College.
He can be reached at jonascott15@aol.com. This article was first published
in The Black Comentator at http://www.blackcommentator.com/150/150_scott_explusion_new_orleans.html