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A monument to hypocrisy
Every
one of us must raise our voices, and march in protest, now and again and again,
writes Edward Said.
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2003/625/op2.htm
It has finally become intolerable to listen to or look
at news in this country. I've told myself over and over again that one ought to
leaf through the daily papers and turn on the TV for the national news every
evening, just to find out what "the country" is thinking and planning,
but patience and masochism have their limits. Colin Powell's UN speech, designed
obviously to outrage the American people and bludgeon the UN into going to war,
seems to me to have been a new low point in moral hypocrisy and political
manipulation. But Donald Rumsfeld's lectures in
Munich
this past weekend went one step further than the bumbling
Powell in unctuous sermonizing and bullying derision. For the moment, I shall
discount George Bush and his coterie of advisers, spiritual mentors, and
political managers like Pat Robertson, Franklin Graham, and Karl Rove: they seem
to me slaves of power perfectly embodied in the repetitive monotone of their
collective spokesman Ari Fliescher (who I believe is also an Israeli citizen).
Bush is, he has said, in direct contact with God, or if not God, then at least
Providence
. Perhaps only Israeli settlers can converse with him. But
the secretaries of state and defence seem to have emanated from the secular
world of real women and men, so it may be somewhat more opportune to linger for
a time over their words and activities.
First, a few preliminaries. The
US
has clearly
decided on war: there seem to be no two ways about it. Yet whether the war will
actually take place or not (given all the activity started, not by the Arab
states who, as usual, seem to dither and be paralysed at the same time, but by
France, Russia and Germany) is something else again. Nevertheless to have
transported 200,000 troops to
Kuwait
,
Saudi Arabia
and
Qatar
, leaving aside
smaller deployments in
Jordan
,
Turkey
and
Israel
can mean only
one thing.
Second, the planners of this war, as Ralph Nader has forcefully said, are
chicken hawks, that is, hawks who are too cowardly to do any fighting
themselves. Wolfowitz, Perle, Bush, Cheney and others of that entirely civilian
group were to a man in strong favour of the
Vietnam
War, yet each of them got a deferment based on privilege, and therefore never
fought or so much as even served in the armed forces. Their belligerence is
therefore morally repugnant and, in the literal sense, anti-democratic in the
extreme. What this unrepresentative cabal seeks in a war with
Iraq
has nothing to
do with actual military considerations.
Iraq
, whatever the
disgusting qualities of its deplorable regime, is simply not an imminent and
credible threat to neighbours like
Turkey
, or
Israel
, or even
Jordan
(each of which
could easily handle it militarily) or certainly to the
US
. Any argument
to the contrary is simply a preposterous, entirely frivolous proposition. With a
few outdated Scuds, and a small amount of chemical and biological material, most
of it supplied by the US in earlier days (as Nader has said, we know that
because we have the receipts for what was sold to Iraq by US companies), Iraq
is, and has easily been, containable, though at unconscionable cost to the
long-suffering civilian population. For this terrible state of affairs I think
it is absolutely true to say that there has been collusion between the Iraqi
regime and the Western enforcers of the sanctions.
Third, once big powers start to dream of regime change --a process already begun
by the Perles and Wolfowitzs of this country --there is simply no end in sight.
Isn't it outrageous that people of such a dubious calibre actually go on
blathering about bringing democracy, modernisation, and liberalisation to the
Middle East
? God knows
that the area needs it, as so many Arab and Muslim intellectuals and ordinary
people have said over and over. But who appointed these characters as agents of
progress anyway? And what entitles them to pontificate in so shameless a way
when there are already so many injustices and abuses in their own country to be
remedied? It's particularly galling that Perle, about as unqualified a person as
it is imaginable to be on any subject touching on democracy and justice, should
have been an election adviser to Netanyahu's extreme right-wing government
during the period 1996-9, in which he counselled the renegade Israeli to scrap
any and all peace attempts, to annex the West Bank and Gaza, and try to get rid
of as many Palestinians as possible. This man now talks about bringing democracy
to the Middle East, and does so without provoking the slightest objection from
any of the media pundits who politely (abjectly) quiz him on national
television.
Fourth, Colin Powell's speech, despite its many weaknesses, its plagiarised and
manufactured evidence, its confected audio-tapes and its doctored pictures, was
correct in one thing. Saddam Hussein's regime has violated numerous human rights
and UN resolutions. There can be no arguing with that and no excuses can be
allowed. But what is so monumentally hypocritical about the official
US
position is
that literally everything Powell has accused the Ba'athists of has been the
stock in trade of every Israeli government since 1948, and at no time more
flagrantly than since the occupation of 1967. Torture, illegal detention,
assassination, assaults against civilians with missiles, helicopters and jet
fighters, annexation of territory, transportation of civilians from one place to
another for the purpose of imprisonment mass
killing (as in Qana, Jenin, Sabra and Shatilla to mention only the most
obvious), denial of rights to free passage and unimpeded civilian movement,
education, medical aid, use of civilians as human shields, humiliation,
punishment of families, house demolitions on a mass scale, destruction of
agricultural land, expropriation of water, illegal settlement, economic
pauperisation, attacks on hospitals, medical workers and ambulances, killing of
UN personnel, to name only the most outrageous abuses: all these, it should be
noted with emphasis, have been carried on with the total, unconditional support
of the United States which has not only supplied Israel with the weapons for
such practices and every kind of military and intelligence aid, but also has
given the country upwards of $135 billion in economic aid on a scale that
beggars the relative amount per capita spent by the US government on its own
citizens.
This is an unconscionable record to hold against the
US
, and Mr Powell
as its human symbol in particular. As the person in charge of
US
foreign
policy, it is his specific responsibility to uphold the laws of this country,
and to make sure that the enforcement of human rights and the promotion of
freedom --the proclaimed central plank in the
US
's foreign
policy since at least 1976 --is applied uniformly, without exception or
condition. How he and his bosses and co-workers can stand up before the world
and righteously sermonise against
Iraq
while at the
same time completely ignoring the ongoing American partnership in human rights
abuses with
Israel
defies
credibility. And yet no one, in all the justified critiques of the US position
that have appeared since Powell made his great UN speech, has focused on this
point, not even the ever-so-upright French and Germans. The Palestinian
territories today are witnessing the onset of a mass famine; there is a health
crisis of catastrophic proportions; there is a civilian death toll that totals
at least a dozen to 20 people a week; the economy has collapsed; hundreds of
thousands of innocent civilians are unable to work, study, or move about as
curfews and at least 300 barricades impede their daily lives; houses are blown
up or bulldozed on a mass basis (60 yesterday). And all of it with
US
equipment,
US
political
support, US finances. Bush declares that Sharon, who is a war criminal by any
standard, is a man of peace, as if to spit on the innocent Palestinians' lives
that have been lost and ravaged by Sharon and his criminal army. And he has the
gall to say that he acts in God's name, and that he (and his administration) act
to serve "a just and faithful God". And, more astounding yet, he
lectures the world on Saddam's flouting of UN resolutions even as he supports a
country,
Israel
, that has
flouted at least 64 of them on a daily basis for more than half a century.
But
so craven and so ineffective are the Arab regimes today that they don't dare
state any of these things publicly. Many of them need
US
economic aid.
Many of them fear their own people and need US support to prop up their regimes.
Many of them could be accused of some of the same crimes against humanity. So
they say nothing, and just hope and pray that the war will pass, while in the
end keeping them in power as they are.
But
it is also a great and noble fact that for the first time since World War Two
there are mass protests against the war taking place before rather than during
the war itself. This is unprecedented and should become the central political
fact of the new, globalised era into which our world has been thrust by the
US
and its
super-power status. What this demonstrates is that despite the awesome power
wielded by autocrats and tyrants like Saddam and his American antagonists,
despite the complicity of a mass media that has (willingly or unwillingly)
hastened the rush to war, despite the indifference and ignorance of a
great many people, mass action and mass protest on the basis of human
community and human sustainability are still formidable tools of human
resistance. Call them weapons of the weak, if you wish. But that they have at
least tampered with the plans of the
Washington
chicken hawks
and their corporate backers, as well as the millions of religious monotheistic
extremists (Christian, Jewish, Muslim) who believe in wars of religion, is a
great beacon of hope for our time. Wherever I go to lecture or speak out against
these injustices I haven't found anyone in support of the war. Our job as Arabs
is to link our opposition to
US
action in
Iraq
to our support
for human rights in
Iraq
,
Palestine
,
Israel
,
Kurdistan
and everywhere
in the Arab world --and also ask others to force the same linkage on everyone,
Arab, American, African, European, Australian and Asian. These are world issues,
human issues, not simply strategic matters for the
United States
or the other
major powers.
We
cannot in any way lend our silence to a policy of war that the White House has
openly announced will include three to five hundred cruise missiles a day (800
of them during the first 48 hours of the war)raining down on the civilian
population of Baghdad in order to produce "Shock
and Awe", or even a human cataclysm that will produce, as its boastful
planner a certain Mr (or is it Dr?) Harlan Ullman has said, a Hiroshima-style
effect on the Iraqi people. Note that during the 1991 Gulf War after 41 days of
bombing
Iraq
this scale of
human devastation was not even approached. And the
US
has 6000
"smart" missiles ready to do the job. What sort of God would want this
to be a formulated and announced policy for His people? And what sort of God
would claim that this was going to bring democracy and freedom to the people not
only of
Iraq
but to the
rest of the
Middle East
?
These
are questions I won't even try to answer. But I do know that if
anything like this is going to be visited on any population on earth it
would be a criminal act, and its perpetrators and planners war criminals
according to the Nuremberg Laws that the
US
itself was
crucial in formulating. Not for
nothing do General Sharon and Shaul Mofaz welcome the war and praise George
Bush. Who knows what more evil will be done in the name of Good? Every one of us
must raise our voices, and march in protest, now and again and again. We need
creative thinking and bold action to stave off the nightmares planned by a
docile, professionalised staff in places like
Washington
and Tel Aviv
and
Baghdad
. For if what
they have in mind is what they call "greater security" then words have
no meaning at all in the ordinary sense. That Bush and Sharon have contempt for
the non-white people of this world is clear. The question is, how long can they
keep getting away with it?
(c)
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