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Media images, state propaganda and ‘happy
Iraqis’
By Tim Wise
Apr. 4 I figured it would happen sooner or later. Having written
several columns questioning the notion that the current war in Iraq is
about liberation of that nations people, it was only
a matter of time before I received an email like the one this morning.
Well smartass, it began, indicating the level of discourse
so common among some who support this war. I guess you and all your
leftist buddies were wrong. Picture after picture is coming out of Iraq
showing how happy the people are to be freed by our soldiers. They are
giving the thumbs up sign, even waving small American flags,
smiling and cheering. If it were up to people like you, they would have
to suffer for God knows how long under Saddam.
Well, actually, if it were up to people like me, the United
States would never have armed and supported Saddam in the first place.
If it were up to people like me, the CIA wouldnt have
backed Saddam beginning in the 1960s, encouraging him and the Baath
Party to assassinate the Iraqi President and usher in three decades of
vicious rule.
If it were up to people like me, the US would never have approved,
from 1985-1990, some 750 export licenses worth 1.5 billion dollars to
companies seeking to sell biological and chemical agents and equipment
with military application to Iraq. But of course, it wasnt up to
people like me. It was up to people like George Bush the First, and Donald
Rumsfeld in his previous incarnation as an apologist for Saddam and his
penchant for gassing other brown-skinned folks.
But putting all that aside, since history rarely means much to those like
my email detractor, whose historical memory has been programmed in this
culture to extend no further back than last nights eleven oclock
news, let us return to the gist of his charge, that we are creating happy
Iraqis in the wake of our march to Baghdad.
First, let us grant for the sake of argument that there will be many Iraqis
glad to see Saddam go. Of course this is true. Indeed, perhaps the vast
majority will feel this way. Why wouldnt they? He has been a despotic
and cruel tyrant, and was such during the entire time that we stood by
hima small detail about which the rest of the Muslim world is aware,
despite the fact that most Americans apparently arent. So of course
many Iraqis will be glad to have this regime gone, but that doesnt
mean that they will be glad about the way it is being done, or what may
come after. This is especially true if it involves a long US occupation,
the installation of an unpopular puppet government, and the ultimate abandoning
of the nation, as we have already done in Afghanistan, where the White
House proposes to spend zero dollars this year on rebuilding the infrastructure
that we have helped destroy since October 2001.
Secondly, let us reflect for a minute on the accuracy of the photos in
which my new pen pal seems to place so much stock. After all, with journalists
heavily controlled by the military as per the embedding concept,
and with stories and photos being regularly vetted first by [Central Command]
before they are allowed to be seen, does it really surprise anyone that
we wouldnt be seeing photos of angry Iraqis?
And just where does my friend think those Iraqis got American flags anyway?
I mean, does anyone really believe that such flags were a briskly selling
item in pre-invasion Iraq, or is it more likely that they have been given
those items by American troops, who then jumped back so the photographers
could get a better shot?
The fact is, people tend to like cameras, especially when they are poor
and havent seen many before. Go to the poorest, most oppressed places
on Earth and film the inhabitants or take their picture, and you will
find them smiling. Its second nature, not joy at being liberated.
I have a picture of my family from the 1850s and one of their slaves
is smiling too. So what? Are we to then assume that he was enjoying his
bondage? (And as a side note, how much more of a smile might he have had
if his father had slit the throats of my entire clan as they slept? Just
a thought, and one which American liberators might wish to
consider.)
It was just a week ago that reporters were noting the smiling faces of
Iraqi youth as coalition forces rolled by, only to note that
as soon as the troops were out of sight, they would curse their presence
and pledge allegiance to Saddam, even when there were no Baath officials
around to enforce such loyalty. And in my morning newspaper today, the
deception about Iraqi attitudes was blatant. On page one, there was a
heart-warming photo of crowds in Najaf greeting an American solider, and
beneath the picture an article entitled Cheers from Iraqis greet
US Yet on page six, in an article with the innocuous title, Baghdad
residents torn with emotion, one finds one after another comment
by Iraqis condemning the war on their nation, and the Hussein regime,
such as What does Bush want from us? Saddam is our choice, and even
if we have to survive just on bread, we still want him. Or alternately,
of course people are sad. They are targeting everything. Not just
government buildings. Or, Even if our President is the biggest
tyrant in the world as they say, we would not want to replace him.
Not to say that these voices are necessarily representative of Iraqi opinion
either, but surely they give the lie to the one-dimensional propaganda
about happy Iraqis and their love for our G.I. Joes. Perhaps most importantly,
if war supporters are now going to justify this invasion on the grounds
of liberating the Iraqishaving apparently given up the weapons of
mass destruction argument since none have been found or used by Iraq in
this warthen one wonders why limit the rationale to this one nation?
If the US is obligated to liberate the oppressed by force, there is surely
no reason to stop with Iraq. Assuming that oppressed peoples are equal
wherever they may be, then we should surely seek to overthrow the governments
of Saudi Arabia (whose human rights record is every bit as bad as Saddams),
Turkey (whose treatment of the Kurds has been considerably worse than
Saddams), Colombia (whose scorched earth tactics and death squads
are perhaps unparalleled right now anywhere on Earth), and Israel, whose
treatment of Palestinians continues to represent a form of not-so-subtle
ethnic cleansing.
But of course we wont invade any of those places to free the persons
oppressed by the respective governments, and the reason is obvious: because
we are allied with those nations, and implicated in the oppression of
the peoples mentioned. They can torture, imprison, rape, behead in public,
crush with tanks, and otherwise slaughter as many of these as they choose
and nothing will happen to them. Because we are not about liberation.
It is simply an excuse we use to help us sleep better at night, and because
we think the people of the world are so stupid as to actually believe
it.
Truth be told it takes a profound contempt for Iraqis to believe that
they will, by and large, view us as liberators. It takes a fundamental
belief in the intellectual inferiority and simple-mindedness of such folks
to expect them to believe this kind of thing.
They know, after all, that we have been behind the dictator we now seek
to depose. They know that without US support Saddam could never have taken
power, retained power, or tortured and killed the tens of thousands that
hes killed. Likewise, they know that without US-sanctions hundreds
of thousands of their fellow citizens would still be alive as well. And
let us not forget that even with the support of the Iraqi people, US actions
have planted the seeds of further terrorism, as millions throughout the
Middle East seek revenge for what they perceive as an American power grab
and anti-Arab, anti-Muslim crusade.
After all, we thought all was well after our liberation of
Kuwait in 1991, too. Kuwaitis were certainly happy, I suppose. But a certain
Saudi national was not. He saw the stationing of US troops in his nation
as an affront to his religion; an unholy incursion onto Muslim land. He
also saw the human costs of the war that liberated Kuwait
as an unacceptable massacre, and the sanctions that came after it as de
facto genocide. And at least nineteen others agreed with him.
Such is the inertia created by this kind of liberation.
Sleep well.
Source: Znet
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