How
many children, in how many classrooms, over how many centuries, have
hang-glided through the past, transported on the wings of these words? And now
the bombs are falling, incinerating and humiliating that ancient civilisation
The Guardian Wednesday April 2, 2003
On
the steel torsos of their missiles, adolescent American soldiers scrawl
colourful messages in childish handwriting: For Saddam, from the Fat Boy Posse.
A building goes down. A marketplace. A home. A girl who loves a boy. A child
who only ever wanted to play with his older brother's marbles.
On March 21, the day after
American and British troops began their illegal invasion and occupation of
Iraq, an "embedded" CNN correspondent interviewed an American
soldier. "I wanna get in there and get my nose dirty," Private AJ
said. "I wanna take revenge for 9/11."
To be fair to the correspondent, even though he was "embedded" he did sort of weakly suggest that so far there was no real evidence that linked the Iraqi government to the September 11 attacks. Private AJ stuck his teenage tongue out all the way down to the end of his chin. "Yeah, well that stuff's way over my head," he said.
According to a New York Times/CBS
News survey, 42 per cent of the American public believes that Saddam Hussein is
directly responsible for the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Centre and
the Pentagon. And an ABC news poll says that 55 per cent of Americans believe
that Saddam Hussein directly supports al-Qaida. What percentage of America's
armed forces believe these fabrications is anybody's guess.
It is unlikely that British and
American troops fighting in Iraq are aware that their governments supported
Saddam Hussein both politically and financially through his worst excesses.
But why should poor AJ and his
fellow soldiers be burdened with these details? It does not matter any more,
does it? Hundreds of thousands of men, tanks, ships, choppers, bombs,
ammunition, gas masks, high-protein food, whole aircrafts ferrying toilet
paper, insect repellent, vitamins and bottled mineral water, are on the move.
The phenomenal logistics of Operation Iraqi Freedom make it a universe unto
itself. It doesn't need to justify its existence any more. It exists. It is.
President George W Bush,
commander in chief of the US army, navy, airforce and marines has issued clear
instructions: "Iraq. Will. Be. Liberated." (Perhaps he means that
even if Iraqi people's bodies are killed, their souls will be liberated.) American
and British citizens owe it to the supreme commander to forsake thought and
rally behind their troops. Their countries are at war.
And what a war it is.
After using the "good
offices" of UN diplomacy (economic sanctions and weapons inspections) to
ensure that Iraq was brought to its knees, its people starved, half a million
of its children killed, its infrastructure severely damaged, after making sure
that most of its weapons have been destroyed, in an act of cowardice that must
surely be unrivalled in history, the "Allies"/"Coalition of the
Willing"(better known as the Coalition of the Bullied and Bought) - sent
in an invading army!
Operation Iraqi Freedom? I don't
think so. It's more like Operation Let's Run a Race, but First Let Me Break
Your Knees.
So far the Iraqi army, with its
hungry, ill-equipped soldiers, its old guns and ageing tanks, has somehow
managed to temporarily confound and occasionally even outmanoeuvre the
"Allies". Faced with the richest, best-equipped, most powerful armed
forces the world has ever seen, Iraq has shown spectacular courage and has even
managed to put up what actually amounts to a defence. A defence which the
Bush/Blair Pair have immediately denounced as deceitful and cowardly. (But then
deceit is an old tradition with us natives. When we are invaded/
colonised/occupied and stripped of all dignity, we turn to guile and
opportunism.)
Even allowing for the fact that
Iraq and the "Allies" are at war, the extent to which the
"Allies" and their media cohorts are prepared to go is astounding to
the point of being counterproductive to their own objectives.
When Saddam Hussein appeared on
national TV to address the Iraqi people after the failure of the most elaborate
assassination attempt in history - "Operation Decapitation" - we had
Geoff Hoon, the British defence secretary, deriding him for not having the
courage to stand up and be killed, calling him a coward who hides in trenches.
We then had a flurry of Coalition speculation - Was it really Saddam, was it
his double? Or was it Osama with a shave? Was it pre-recorded? Was it a speech?
Was it black magic? Will it turn into a pumpkin if we really, really want it
to?
After dropping not hundreds, but
thousands of bombs on Baghdad, when a marketplace was mistakenly blown up and
civilians killed - a US army spokesman implied that the Iraqis were blowing
themselves up! "They're using very old stock. Their missiles go up and
come down."
If so, may we ask how this
squares with the accusation that the Iraqi regime is a paid-up member of the
Axis of Evil and a threat to world peace?
When the Arab TV station
al-Jazeera shows civilian casualties it's denounced as "emotive" Arab
propaganda aimed at orchestrating hostility towards the "Allies", as
though Iraqis are dying only in order to make the "Allies" look bad.
Even French television has come in for some stick for similar reasons. But the
awed, breathless footage of aircraft carriers, stealth bombers and cruise
missiles arcing across the desert sky on American and British TV is described
as the "terrible beauty" of war.
When invading American soldiers
(from the army "that's only here to help") are taken prisoner and
shown on Iraqi TV, George Bush says it violates the Geneva convention and
"exposes the evil at the heart of the regime". But it is entirely
acceptable for US television stations to show the hundreds of prisoners being
held by the US government in Guantanamo Bay, kneeling on the ground with their
hands tied behind their backs, blinded with opaque goggles and with earphones
clamped on their ears, to ensure complete visual and aural deprivation. When
questioned about the treatment of these prisoners, US Government officials
don't deny that they're being being ill-treated. They deny that they're
"prisoners of war"! They call them "unlawful combatants",
implying that their ill-treatment is legitimate! (So what's the party line on
the massacre of prisoners in Mazar-e-Sharif, Afghanistan? Forgive and forget?
And what of the prisoner tortured to death by the special forces at the Bagram
airforce base? Doctors have formally called it homicide.)
When the "Allies"
bombed the Iraqi television station (also, incidentally, a contravention of the
Geneva convention), there was vulgar jubilation in the American media. In fact
Fox TV had been lobbying for the attack for a while. It was seen as a righteous
blow against Arab propaganda. But mainstream American and British TV continue
to advertise themselves as "balanced" when their propaganda has
achieved hallucinatory levels.
Why should propaganda be the
exclusive preserve of the western media? Just because they do it better?
Western journalists "embedded" with troops are given the status of
heroes reporting from the frontlines of war. Non-"embedded" journalists
(such as the BBC's Rageh Omaar, reporting from besieged and bombed Baghdad,
witnessing, and clearly affected by the sight of bodies of burned children and
wounded people) are undermined even before they begin their reportage: "We
have to tell you that he is being monitored by the Iraqi authorities."
Increasingly, on British and
American TV, Iraqi soldiers are being referred to as "militia" (ie:
rabble). One BBC correspondent portentously referred to them as
"quasi-terrorists". Iraqi defence is "resistance" or worse
still, "pockets of resistance", Iraqi military strategy is deceit.
(The US government bugging the phone lines of UN security council delegates,
reported by the Observer, is hard-headed pragmatism.) Clearly for the
"Allies", the only morally acceptable strategy the Iraqi army can
pursue is to march out into the desert and be bombed by B-52s or be mowed down
by machine-gun fire. Anything short of that is cheating.
And now we have the siege of
Basra. About a million and a half people, 40 per cent of them children. Without
clean water, and with very little food. We're still waiting for the legendary
Shia "uprising", for the happy hordes to stream out of the city and
rain roses and hosannahs on the "liberating" army. Where are the
hordes? Don't they know that television productions work to tight schedules?
(It may well be that if Saddam's regime falls there will be dancing on the
streets of Basra. But then, if the Bush regime were to fall, there would be
dancing on the streets the world over.)
After days of enforcing hunger
and thirst on the citizens of Basra, the "Allies" have brought in a
few trucks of food and water and positioned them tantalisingly on the outskirts
of the city. Desperate people flock to the trucks and fight each other for
food. (The water we hear, is being sold. To revitalise the dying economy, you
understand.) On top of the trucks, desperate photographers fought each other to
get pictures of desperate people fighting each other for food. Those pictures
will go out through photo agencies to newspapers and glossy magazines that pay
extremely well. Their message: The messiahs are at hand, distributing fishes
and loaves.
As of July last year the delivery
of $5.4bn worth of supplies to Iraq was blocked by the Bush/Blair Pair. It
didn't really make the news. But now under the loving caress of live TV, 450
tonnes of humanitarian aid - a minuscule fraction of what's actually needed
(call it a script prop) - arrived on a British ship, the "Sir
Galahad". Its arrival in the port of Umm Qasr merited a whole day of live
TV broadcasts. Barf bag, anyone?
Nick Guttmann, head of
emergencies for Christian Aid, writing for the Independent on Sunday said that
it would take 32 Sir Galahad's a day to match the amount of food Iraq was
receiving before the bombing began.
We oughtn't to be surprised
though. It's old tactics. They've been at it for years. Consider this moderate
proposal by John McNaughton from the Pentagon Papers, published during the
Vietnam war: "Strikes at population targets (per se) are likely not only
to create a counterproductive wave of revulsion abroad and at home, but greatly
to increase the risk of enlarging the war with China or the Soviet Union.
Destruction of locks and dams, however - if handled right - might ... offer
promise. It should be studied. Such destruction does not kill or drown people.
By shallow-flooding the rice, it leads after time to widespread starvation
(more than a million?) unless food is provided - which we could offer to do 'at
the conference table'."
Times haven't changed very much.
The technique has evolved into a doctrine. It's called "Winning Hearts and
Minds".
So, here's the moral maths as it
stands: 200,000 Iraqis estimated to have been killed in the first Gulf war.
Hundreds of thousands dead because of the economic sanctions. (At least that
lot has been saved from Saddam Hussein.) More being killed every day.
Tens of thousands of US soldiers
who fought the 1991 war officially declared "disabled" by a disease
called the Gulf war syndrome, believed in part to be caused by exposure to
depleted uranium. It hasn't stopped the "Allies" from continuing to
use depleted uranium.
And now this talk of bringing the
UN back into the picture. But that old UN girl - it turns out that she just
ain't what she was cracked up to be. She's been demoted (although she retains
her high salary). Now she's the world's janitor. She's the Philippino cleaning
lady, the Indian jamadarni, the postal bride from Thailand, the Mexican
household help, the Jamaican au pair. She's employed to clean other peoples'
shit. She's used and abused at will.
Despite Blair's earnest
submissions, and all his fawning, Bush has made it clear that the UN will play
no independent part in the administration of postwar Iraq. The US will decide
who gets those juicy "reconstruction" contracts. But Bush has
appealed to the international community not to "politicise" the issue
of humanitarian aid. On the March 28, after Bush called for the immediate
resumption of the UN's oil for food programme, the UN security council voted
unanimously for the resolution. This means that everybody agrees that Iraqi
money (from the sale of Iraqi oil) should be used to feed Iraqi people who are
starving because of US led sanctions and the illegal US-led war.
Contracts for the "reconstruction"
of Iraq we're told, in discussions on the business news, could jump-start the
world economy. It's funny how the interests of American corporations are so
often, so successfully and so deliberately confused with the interests of the
world economy. While the American people will end up paying for the war, oil
companies, weapons manufacturers, arms dealers, and corporations involved in
"reconstruction" work will make direct gains from the war. Many of
them are old friends and former employers of the Bush/ Cheney/Rumsfeld/Rice
cabal. Bush has already asked Congress for $75bn. Contracts for
"re-construction" are already being negotiated. The news doesn't hit
the stands because much of the US corporate media is owned and managed by the
same interests.
Operation Iraqi Freedom, Tony
Blair assures us is about returning Iraqi oil to the Iraqi people. That is,
returning Iraqi oil to the Iraqi people via corporate multinationals. Like
Shell, like Chevron, like Halliburton. Or are we missing the plot here? Perhaps
Halliburton is actually an Iraqi company? Perhaps US vice-president Dick Cheney
(who is a former director of Halliburton) is a closet Iraqi?
As the rift between Europe and
America deepens, there are signs that the world could be entering a new era of economic
boycotts. CNN reported that Americans are emptying French wine into gutters,
chanting, "We don't want your stinking wine." We've heard about the
re-baptism of French fries. Freedom fries they're called now. There's news
trickling in about Americans boycotting German goods. The thing is that if the
fallout of the war takes this turn, it is the US who will suffer the most. Its
homeland may be defended by border patrols and nuclear weapons, but its economy
is strung out across the globe. Its economic outposts are exposed and
vulnerable to attack in every direction. Already the internet is buzzing with
elaborate lists of American and British government products and companies that
should be boycotted. Apart from the usual targets, Coke, Pepsi and McDonald's -
government agencies such as USAID, the British department for international
development, British and American banks, Arthur Anderson, Merrill Lynch,
American Express, corporations such as Bechtel, General Electric, and companies
such as Reebok, Nike and Gap - could find themselves under siege. These lists
are being honed and re fined by activists across the world. They could become a
practical guide that directs and channels the amorphous, but growing fury in
the world. Suddenly, the "inevitability" of the project of corporate
globalisation is beginning to seem more than a little evitable.
It's become clear that the war
against terror is not really about terror, and the war on Iraq not only about
oil. It's about a superpower's self-destructive impulse towards supremacy,
stranglehold, global hegemony. The argument is being made that the people of
Argentina and Iraq have both been decimated by the same process. Only the
weapons used against them differ: In one case it's an IMF chequebook. In the
other, cruise missiles.
Finally, there's the matter of
Saddam's arsenal of weapons of mass destruction. (Oops, nearly forgot about
those!)
In the fog of war - one thing's
for sure - if Saddam 's regime indeed has weapons of mass destruction, it is
showing an astonishing degree of responsibility and restraint in the teeth of
extreme provocation. Under similar circumstances, (say if Iraqi troops were
bombing New York and laying siege to Washington DC) could we expect the same of
the Bush regime? Would it keep its thousands of nuclear warheads in their
wrapping paper? What about its chemical and biological weapons? Its stocks of
anthrax, smallpox and nerve gas? Would it?
Excuse me while I laugh.
In the fog of war we're forced to
speculate: Either Saddam is an extremely responsible tyrant. Or - he simply
does not possess weapons of mass destruction. Either way, regardless of what
happens next, Iraq comes out of the argument smelling sweeter than the US
government.
So here's Iraq - rogue state,
grave threat to world peace, paid-up member of the Axis of Evil. Here's Iraq,
invaded, bombed, besieged, bullied, its sovereignty shat upon, its children
killed by cancers, its people blown up on the streets. And here's all of us
watching. CNN-BBC, BBC-CNN late into the night. Here's all of us, enduring the
horror of the war, enduring the horror of the propaganda and enduring the
slaughter of language as we know and understand it. Freedom now means mass
murder (or, in the US, fried potatoes). When someone says "humanitarian
aid" we automatically go looking for induced starvation.
"Embedded" I have to admit, is a great find. It's what it sounds
like. And what about "arsenal of tactics?" Nice!
In most parts of the world, the
invasion of Iraq is being seen as a racist war. The real danger of a racist war
unleashed by racist regimes is that it engenders racism in everybody -
perpetrators, victims, spectators. It sets the parameters for the debate, it
lays out a grid for a particular way of thinking. There is a tidal wave of hatred
for the US rising from the ancient heart of the world. In Africa, Latin
America, Asia, Europe, Australia. I encounter it every day. Sometimes it comes
from the most unlikely sources. Bankers, businessmen, yuppie students, and they
bring to it all the crassness of their conservative, illiberal politics. That
absurd inability to separate governments from people: America is a nation of
morons, a nation of murderers, they say, (with the same carelessness with which
they say, "All Muslims are terrorists"). Even in the grotesque
universe of racist insult, the British make their entry as add-ons.
Arse-lickers, they're called.
Suddenly, I, who have been
vilified for being "anti-American" and "anti-west", find
myself in the extraordinary position of defending the people of America. And
Britain.
Those who descend so easily into
the pit of racist abuse would do well to remember the hundreds of thousands of
American and British citizens who protested against their country's stockpile
of nuclear weapons. And the thousands of American war resisters who forced
their government to withdraw from Vietnam. They should know that the most
scholarly, scathing, hilarious critiques of the US government and the
"American way of life" comes from American citizens. And that the funniest,
most bitter condemnation of their prime minister comes from the British media.
Finally they should remember that right now, hundreds of thousands of British
and American citizens are on the streets protesting the war. The Coalition of
the Bullied and Bought consists of governments, not people. More than one third
of America's citizens have survived the relentless propaganda they've been
subjected to, and many thousands are actively fighting their own government. In
the ultra-patriotic climate that prevails in the US, that's as brave as any
Iraqi fighting for his or her homeland.
While the "Allies" wait
in the desert for an uprising of Shia Muslims on the streets of Basra, the real
uprising is taking place in hundreds of cities across the world. It has been
the most spectacular display of public morality ever seen.
Most courageous of all, are the
hundreds of thousands of American people on the streets of America's great
cities - Washington, New York, Chicago, San Francisco. The fact is that the only
institution in the world today that is more powerful than the American
government, is American civil society. American citizens have a huge
responsibility riding on their shoulders. How can we not salute and support
those who not only acknowledge but act upon that responsibility? They are our
allies, our friends.
At the end of it all, it remains
to be said that dictators like Saddam Hussein, and all the other despots in the
Middle East, in the central Asian republics, in Africa and Latin America, many
of them installed, supported and financed by the US government, are a menace to
their own people. Other than strengthening the hand of civil society (instead
of weakening it as has been done in the case of Iraq), there is no easy,
pristine way of dealing with them. (It's odd how those who dismiss the peace
movement as utopian, don't hesitate to proffer the most absurdly dreamy reasons
for going to war: to stamp out terrorism, install democracy, eliminate fascism,
and most entertainingly, to "rid the world of evil-doers".)
Regardless of what the propaganda
machine tells us, these tin-pot dictators are not the greatest threat to the
world. The real and pressing danger, the greatest threat of all is the
locomotive force that drives the political and economic engine of the US
government, currently piloted by George Bush. Bush-bashing is fun, because he
makes such an easy, sumptuous target. It's true that he is a dangerous, almost
suicidal pilot, but the machine he handles is far more dangerous than the man himself.
Despite the pall of gloom that
hangs over us today, I'd like to file a cautious plea for hope: in times of
war, one wants one's weakest enemy at the helm of his forces. And President
George W Bush is certainly that. Any other even averagely intelligent US
president would have probably done the very same things, but would have managed
to smoke-up the glass and confuse the opposition. Perhaps even carry the UN
with him. Bush's tactless imprudence and his brazen belief that he can run the
world with his riot squad, has done the opposite. He has achieved what writers,
activists and scholars have striven to achieve for decades. He has exposed the
ducts. He has placed on full public view the working parts, the nuts and bolts
of the apocalyptic apparatus of the American empire.
Now that the blueprint (The
Ordinary Person's Guide to Empire) has been put into mass circulation, it could
be disabled quicker than the pundits predicted.
Bring on the spanners.