From owner-imap@chumbly.math.missouri.edu Mon Jan 6 13:39:11 2003
Date: Sun, 5 Jan 2003 11:49:27 -0600 (CST)
From: Mark Graffis
<mgraffis@vitelcom.net>
Subject: Fisk: Dubious Morality and Duplicity of This Fight Against
Article: 149379
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
I think I'm getting the picture. North Korea breaks all its
nuclear agreements with the United States, throws out UN inspectors
and sets off to make a bomb a year, and President Bush says it's
a diplomatic issue
. Iraq hands over a 12,000-page account of
its weapons production and allows UN inspectors to roam all over the
country, and - after they've found not a jam-jar of dangerous
chemicals in 230 raids - President Bush announces that Iraq is a
threat to America, has not disarmed and may have to be invaded. So
that's it, then.
How, readers keep asking me in the most eloquent of letters, does he
get away with it? Indeed, how does Tony Blair get away with it? Not
long ago in the House of Commons, our dear Prime Minister was
announcing in his usual schoolmasterly tones - the ones used on
particularly inattentive or dim boys in class - that Saddam's
factories of mass destruction were up [pause] and running [pause]
now.
But the Dear Leader in Pyongyang does have factories that are
up [pause] and running [pause] now
. And Tony Blair is silent.
Why do we tolerate this? Why do Americans? Over the past few days,
there has been just the smallest of hints that the American media -
the biggest and most culpable backer of the White House's campaign
of mendacity - has been, ever so timidly, asking a few
questions. Months after The Independent first began to draw its
readers' attention to Donald Rumsfeld's chummy personal visits
to Saddam in Baghdad at the height of Iraq's use of poison gas
against Iran in 1983, The Washington Post has at last decided to tell
its own readers a bit of what was going on. The reporter Michael Dobbs
includes the usual weasel clauses (opinions differ among Middle
East experts...
whether Washington could have done more to stop the flow to Baghdad of
technology for building weapons of mass destruction
), but the
thrust is there: we created the monster and Mr Rumsfeld played his
part in doing so.
But no American - or British - newspaper has dared to investigate
another, almost equally dangerous, relationship that the present US
administration is forging behind our backs: with the
military-supported regime in Algeria. For 10 years now, one of the
world's dirtiest wars has been fought out in this country,
supposedly between Islamists
and security forces
, in
which almost 200,000 people - mostly civilians - have been killed. But
over the past five years there has been growing evidence that elements
of those same security forces were involved in some of the bloodiest
massacres, including the throat-cutting of babies. The Independent has
published the most detailed reports of Algerian police torture and of
the extrajudicial executions of women as well as men. Yet the US, as
part of its obscene war on terror
, has cozied up to the
Algerian regime. It is helping to re-arm Algeria's army and
promised more assistance. William Burns, the US Assistant Secretary of
State for the Middle East, announced that Washington has much to
learn from Algeria on ways to fight terrorism
.
And of course, he's right. The Algerian security forces can instruct the Americans on how to make a male or female prisoner believe that they are going to suffocate. The method - US personnel can find the experts in this particular torture technique working in the basement of the Chbteau Neuf police station in central Algiers - is to cover the trussed-up victim's mouth with a rag and then soak it with cleaning fluid. The prisoner slowly suffocates. There's also, of course, the usual nail-pulling and the usual wires attached to penises and vaginas and - I'll always remember the eye-witness description - the rape of an old woman in a police station, from which she emerged, covered in blood, urging other prisoners to resist.
Some of the witnesses to these abominations were Algerian police officers who had sought sanctuary in London. But rest assured, Mr Burns is right, America has much to learn from the Algerians. Already, for example - don't ask why this never reached the newspapers - the Algerian army chief of staff has been warmly welcomed at Nato's southern command headquarters at Naples.
And the Americans are learning. A national security official attached
to the CIA divulged last month that when it came to prisoners, our
guys may kick them around a little in the adrenaline of the immediate
aftermath (sic).
Another US national security
official announced that pain
control in wounded patients is a very subjective thing
. But
let's be fair. The Americans may have learnt this wickedness from
the Algerians. They could just as well have learned it from the
Taliban.
Meanwhile, inside the US, the profiling of Muslims goes on apace. On
17 November, thousands of Iranians, Iraqis, Syrians, Libyans, Afghans,
Bahrainis, Eritreans, Lebanese, Moroccans, Omanis, Qataris, Somalis,
Tunisians, Yemenis and Emiratis turned up at federal offices to be
finger-printed. The New York Times - the most chicken of all the
American papers in covering the post-9/11 story - revealed (only in
paragraph five of its report, of course) that over the past week,
agency officials... have handcuffed and detained hundreds of men who
showed up to be finger-printed.
In some cases the men had expired student or work visas; in other cases, the men could not provide adequate documentation of their immigration status. In Los Angeles, the cops ran out of plastic handcuffs as they herded men off to the lockup. Of the 1,000 men arrested without trial or charges after 11 September, many were native-born Americans.
Indeed, many Americans don't even know what the chilling acronym
of the US Patriot Act
even stands for. Patriot
is not a
reference to patriotism. The name stands for the United and
Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to
Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act
.
America's $200m (#125m) Total Awareness Program
will permit
the US government to monitor citizens' e-mail and internet
activity and collect data on the movement of all Americans. And
although we have not been told about this by our journalists, the US
administration is now pestering European governments for the contents
of their own citizens' data files. The most recent - and most
preposterous - of these claims came in a US demand for access to the
computer records of the French national airline, Air France, so that
it could profile
thousands of its passengers. All this is
beyond the wildest dreams of Saddam and the Dear Leader Kim.
The new rules even worm their way into academia. Take the friendly
little university of Purdue in Indiana, where I lectured a few weeks
ago. With federal funds, it's now setting up an Institute for
Homeland Security
, whose 18 experts
will include executives
from Boeing and Hewlett-Packard and US Defense and State Department
officials, to organizeresearch programs
around critical
mission areas
. What, I wonder, are these areas to be? Surely
nothing to do with injustice in the Middle East, the Arab-Israeli
conflict or the presence of thousands of US troops on Arab
lands. After all, it was Richard Perle, the most sinister of George
Bush's pro-Israeli advisers, who stated last year that
terrorism must be decontextualized
.
Meanwhile, we are - on that very basis - ploughing on to war in Iraq,
which has oil, but avoiding war in Korea, which does not have oil. And
our leaders are getting away with it. In doing so, we are threatening
the innocent, torturing our prisoners and learning
from men who
should be in the dock for war crimes. This, then, is our true memorial
to the men and women so cruelly murdered in the crimes against
humanity of 11 September 2001.