From owner-imap@chumbly.math.missouri.edu Tue Feb 18 08:00:25 2003
Date: Mon, 17 Feb 2003 09:56:09 -0600 (CST)
Organization: South Movement
From: Dave Muller <davemull@alphalink.com.au>
Subject: [southnews] Fisk: War—US self-interest
Article: 152141
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
http://argument.independent.co.uk/commentators/story.jsp?story=378428
In the end, I think we are just tired of being lied to. Tired of being
talked down to, of being bombarded with Second World War jingoism and
scare stories and false information and student essays dressed up as
intelligence
. We are sick of being insulted by little men, by
Tony Blair and Jack Straw and the likes of George Bush and his cabal
of neo-conservative henchmen who have plotted for years to change the
map of the Middle East to their advantage.
No wonder, then, that Hans Blix’s blunt refutation of
America’s intelligence
at the UN yesterday warmed so many
hearts. Suddenly, the Hans Blixes of this world could show up the
Americans for the untrustworthy allies
they have become.
The British don’t like Hussein any more than they liked Nasser. But millions of Britons remember, as Blair does not, the Second World War; they are not conned by childish parables of Hitler, Churchill, Chamberlain and appeasement. They do not like being lectured and whined at by men whose experience of war is Hollywood and television.
Still less do they wish to embark on endless wars with a Texas
governor-executioner who dodged the Vietnam draft and who, with his
oil buddies, is now sending America’s poor to destroy a Muslim
nation that has nothing at all to do with the crimes against humanity
of 11 September. Jack Straw, the public school Trot-turned-warrior,
ignores all this, with Blair. He brays at us about the dangers of
nuclear weapons that Iraq does not have, of the torture and aggression
of a dictatorship that America and Britain sustained when Saddam was
one of ours
. But he and Blair cannot discuss the dark political
agenda behind George Bush’s government, nor the sinister
men
(the words of a very senior UN official) around the President.
Those who oppose war are not cowards. Brits rather like fighting; they’ve biffed Arabs, Afghans, Muslims, Nazis, Italian Fascists and Japanese imperialists for generations, Iraqis included though we play down the RAF’s use of gas on Kurdish rebels in the 1930s. But when the British are asked to go to war, patriotism is not enough. Faced with the horror stories, Britons and many Americans are a lot braver than Blair and Bush. They do not like, as Thomas More told Cromwell in A Man for All Seasons, tales to frighten children.
Perhaps Henry VIII’s exasperation in that play better expresses
the British view of Blair and Bush: Do they take me for a
simpleton?
The British, like other Europeans, are an educated
people. Ironically, their opposition to this obscene war may make them
feel more, not less, European.
Palestine has much to do with it. Brits have no love for Arabs but
they smell injustice fast enough and are outraged at the colonial war
being used to crush the Palestinians by a nation that is now in effect
running US policy in the Middle East. We are told that our invasion of
Iraq has nothing to do with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict a
burning, fearsome wound to which Bush devoted just 18 words in his
meretricious State of the Union speech but even Blair can’t get
away with that one; hence his conference
for Palestinian reform
at which the Palestinians had to take part via video-link because
Israel’s Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, refused to let them
travel to London.
So much for Blair’s influence over Washington the US Secretary
of State, Colin Powell, regretted
that he couldn’t
persuade Sharon to change his mind. But at least one has to
acknowledge that Sharon war criminal though he may be for the 1982
Sabra and Chatila massacres treated Blair with the contempt he
deserves. Nor can the Americans hide the link between Iraq and Israel
and Palestine. In his devious address to the UN Security Council last
week, Powell linked the three when he complained that Hamas, whose
suicide bombings so cruelly afflict Israelis, keeps an office in
Baghdad.
Just as he told us about the mysterious al-Qa’ida men who
support violence in Chechnya and in the Pankisi gorge
. This was
America’s way of giving Vladimir Putin a free hand again in his
campaign of rape and murder against the Chechens, just as Bush’s
odd remark to the UN General Assembly last 12 September about the need
to protect Iraq’s Turkomans only becomes clear when one realises
that Turkomans make up two thirds of the population of Kirkuk, one of
Iraq’s largest oil fields.
The men driving Bush to war are mostly former or still active pro-Israeli lobbyists. For years, they have advocated destroying the most powerful Arab nation. Richard Perle, one of Bush’s most influential advisers, Douglas Feith, Paul Wolfowitz, John Bolton and Donald Rumsfeld were all campaigning for the overthrow of Iraq long before George W Bush was elected if he was elected US President. And they weren’t doing so for the benefit of Americans or Britons. A 1996 report, A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm (http://www.israeleconomy.org/strat1.htm) called for war on Iraq. It was written not for the US but for the incoming Israeli Likud prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu and produced by a group headed by yes, Richard Perle. The destruction of Iraq will, of course, protect Israel’s monopoly of nuclear weapons and allow it to defeat the Palestinians and impose whatever colonial settlement Sharon has in store.
Although Bush and Blair dare not discuss this with us a war for Israel is not going to have our boys lining up at the recruiting offices Jewish American leaders talk about the advantages of an Iraqi war with enthusiasm. Indeed, those very courageous Jewish American groups who so bravely oppose this madness have been the first to point out how pro-Israeli organisations foresee Iraq not only as a new source of oil but of water, too; why should canals not link the Tigris river to the parched Levant? No wonder, then, that any discussion of this topic must be censored, as Professor Eliot Cohen, of Johns Hopkins University, tried to do in the Wall Street Journal the day after Powell’s UN speech. Cohen suggested that European nations’ objections to the war might yet again
be ascribed to anti-Semitism of a type long thought dead in the
West, a loathing that ascribes to Jews a malignant intent.
This
nonsense, it must be said, is opposed by many Israeli intellectuals
who, like Uri Avnery, argue that an Iraq war will leave Israel with
even more Arab enemies, especially if Iraq attacks Israel and Sharon
then joins the US battle against the Arabs.
The slur of anti-Semitism
also lies behind Rumsfeld’s
snotty remarks about old Europe
. He was talking about the
old
Germany of Nazism and the old
France of
collaboration. But the France and Germany that oppose this war are the
new
Europe, the continent which refuses, ever again, to
slaughter the innocent. It is Rumsfeld and Bush who represent the
old
America; not the new
America of freedom, the America
of F D Roosevelt. Rumsfeld and Bush symbolise the old America that
killed its native Indians and embarked on imperial adventures. It is
old
America we are being asked to fight for linked to a new
form of colonialism an America that first threatens the United Nations
with irrelevancy and then does the same to Nato. This is not the last
chance for the UN, nor for Nato. But it may well be the last chance
for America to be taken seriously by her friends as well as her
enemies.
In these last days of peace the British should not be tripped by the
oh-so-sought-after second UN resolution. UN permission for
America’s war will not make the war legitimate; it merely proves
that the Council can be controlled with bribes, threats or
abstentions. It was the Soviet Union’s abstention, after all,
which allowed America to fight the savage Korean war under the UN
flag. And we should not doubt that after a quick US military conquest
of Iraq and providing they
die more than we die there will be
plenty of anti-war protesters who will claim they were pro-war all
along. The first pictures of liberated
Baghdad will show Iraqi
children making victory signs to American tank crews. But the real
cruelty and cynicism of this conflict will become evident as soon as
the war
ends, when our colonial occupation of a Muslim nation
for the US and Israel begins.
There lies the rub. Bush calls Sharon a man of peace
. But
Sharon fears he may yet face trial over Sabra and Chatila, which is
why Israel has just withdrawn its ambassador to Belgium. I’d
like to see Saddam in the same court. And Rifaat Assad for his 1982
massacre in the Syrian city of Hama. And all the torturers of Israel
and the Arab dictatorships.
Israeli and US ambitions in the region are now entwined, almost
synonymous. This war is about oil and regional control. It is being
cheer-led by a draft-dodger who is treacherously telling us that this
is part of an eternal war against terror
. And the British and
most Europeans don’t believe him. It’s not that Britons
wouldn’t fight for America. They just don’t want to fight
for Bush or his friends. And if that includes the Prime Minister, they
don’t want to fight for Blair either.