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The U.S.-centric nature of American politics often affects the 
U.S. left. It's hard to get out of USA mindsets long enough to grasp 
the global implications of decisions made here at home. Yet the 
effects of U.S. government policies are so enormous across the 
planet that some people have suggested -- with more than a little 
justification -- that every person on Earth should get to vote in 
U.S. presidential elections. 
 
      On the international left, no one has more credibility as an 
unwavering opponent of U.S. foreign policy than Tariq Ali. Raised in 
Pakistan, he was a leader of Britain's Vietnam Solidarity Campaign 
in the 1960s, and is now a prominent London-based writer and an 
editor at New Left Review. His recent books include "Bush in 
Babylon" and "The Clash of Fundamentalisms." As progressives in the 
United States try to make sense out of the current presidential 
campaign, Ali's perspective on the global significance of Bush's 
electoral fate deserves serious consideration. 
 
      "I travel a great deal, all the continents, and I think 
everywhere I go there is growing anger -- and if one can just be 
totally blunt, real hatred of this administration -- because of what 
it did in Iraq, the war it waged, the civilians it killed, the mess 
it's made, and its inability to understand even, the scale of what 
it's done," Ali said during an August 5 interview on WBAI Radio in 
New York. "And from that point of view, if the American population 
were to vote Bush out of office, I think the impact globally would 
be tremendous... People would say this guy took his country to war, 
surrounded by these neocons who developed bogus arguments and lies 
to go to war against Iraq, he lied to his people, he misused 
intelligence information, and the American people have voted him 
out. That in itself I think would have a tremendous impact on world 
public opinion." 
 
      Ali added: "A defeat for a warmonger government in Washington 
would be seen as a step forward. I don't go beyond that, but there 
is no doubt in my mind that it would have an impact globally." 
 
      Of course John Kerry has been eagerly touting his own brand of 
militarism, a fact that's very much on the minds of U.S. 
progressives. Interviewing Ali on the radio broadcast, Left Business 
Observer editor Doug Henwood raised the point: "A lot of people in 
the American left in particular, such as it is, are saying that 
Kerry's not much better, that Bush is really pretty much the same 
old thing, that he's an imperialist and a warmonger just like all 
his predecessors and there's not all that much difference, and 
Kerry -- who opened his acceptance speech with a military salute -- 
would be just pretty much more of the same. What do you say to 
that?" 
 
      "We're talking about the government which took the United 
States to war," Ali replied. ".... If Gore had been elected 
president, he would probably have gone to war on Afghanistan if a 
9/11 had happened, but personally I doubt whether he would have gone 
to war on Iraq. This is very much a neocon agenda, dominated by the 
need to both get the oil, as we know, but also to appease the 
Israelis, who've been very keen on this war. This particular war in 
Iraq is very much something this particular administration went for. 
So a defeat of this administration would be a defeat of the war 
party." 
 
      Speaking from an international perspective, Ali doesn't 
hesitate to challenge the odd notion that worse could actually be 
better: "There is an argument ... going around in the American left, 
which I read, which is the following. It goes like this -- 'Yeah, 
but Bush has really united the world against the United States 
empire, and that's a good thing.' But I do not like arguments like 
that." Ali went on: "This is an argument you can have from the 
luxury of your sitting room or kitchen in the United States, but the 
fact is that this particular regime has taken the lives of at least 
37,000 civilians in Iraq as a result of the war, not counting any 
members in the old army of Iraq. Thirty-seven thousand civilians 
have died, and for them it's not an abstract question... So a defeat 
for Bush would certainly be greeted in many parts of the world as a 
small victory. This doesn't mean that one has any illusions about 
Kerry. I certainly don't... I'm pretty disgusted by the militarism 
at the Democratic convention.... But despite all that -- and we know 
what the Democrats are, and we know the wars they've waged -- our 
option at the moment is limited. Do we defeat a warmonger government 
or not? Do we try our best to do it?" 
 
      As Ali put it, "I think there is a lot to be done at the 
present time. And my own feeling is that a defeat for Bush would 
create a different atmosphere, let's say in American political 
culture, to show it can be done. And it will make people much more 
critical..." 
 
      Tariq Ali's analysis comes at a crucial time for the American 
left. On the one hand, we're being encouraged by liberals to pretend 
that the Kerry-Edwards ticket is some kind of progressive dream 
team -- a fanciful notion that doesn't become any more true no 
matter how many times it's reiterated. On the other hand, there's a 
dangerous ultra tendency to say that it's no big deal whether we get 
four more years of Bush or four years of Kerry in the White House. 
Meanwhile, Ali has articulated a key question we must answer with 
our actions: "Do we defeat a warmonger government or not?"
 
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Jeff Cohen and Norman Solomon have co-authored three books together 
critically analyzing corporate media. Cohen was communications 
director of Kucinich for President in 2003. Solomon's latest book is 
"Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn't Tell You." 
 
            