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The unthinkable is becoming normal;
do not forget the horror
The saving of one little boy must not
be a cover for the crime of this war
By John Pilger
Apr. 20 Last Sunday, seated in the audience at the Bafta television
awards ceremony, I was struck by the silence. Here were many of the most
influential members of the liberal elite: the writers, producers, dramatists,
journalists, and managers of our main source of information, television;
and not one broke the silence. It was as though we were disconnected from
the world outside: a world of rampant, rapacious power and great crimes
committed in our name by our government and its foreign master. Iraq is
the test case, says the Bush regime, which every day sails
closer to Mussolinis definition of fascism: the merger of a militarist
state with corporate power. Iraq is a test case for western liberals,
too. As the suffering mounts in that stricken country, with Red Cross
doctors describing incredible levels of civilian casualties,
the choice of the next conquest, Syria or Iran, is debated
on the BBC, as if it were a World Cup venue.
The unthinkable is being normalized. The American essayist Edward Herman
wrote: There is usually a division of labor in doing and rationalizing
the unthinkable, with the direct brutalizing and killing done by one set
of individuals ... others working on improving technology (a better crematory
gas, a longer burning and more adhesive napalm, bomb fragments that penetrate
flesh in hard-to-trace patterns). It is the function of the experts, and
the mainstream media, to normalize the unthinkable for the general public.
Herman wrote that following the 1991 Gulf War, whose nocturnal images
of American bulldozers burying thousands of teenage Iraqi conscripts,
many of them alive and trying to surrender, were never shown. Thus, the
slaughter was normalized. A study released just before Christmas 1991
by the Medical Educational Trust revealed that more than 200,000 Iraqi
men, women and children were killed or died as a direct result of the
American-led attack. This was barely reported, and the homicidal nature
of the war never entered public consciousness in this country
[the UK], let alone America.
The Pentagons deliberate destruction of Iraqs civilian infrastructure,
such as power sources and water and sewage plants, together with the imposition
of an embargo as barbaric as a medieval siege, produced a degree of suffering
never fully comprehended in the West. Documented evidence was available
-- volumes of it -- by the late 1990s, more than 6,000 infants were dying
every month, and the two senior United Nations officials responsible for
humanitarian relief in Iraq, Denis Halliday and Hans von Sponeck, resigned,
protesting the embargos hidden agenda. Halliday called it genocide.
As of last July, the United States, backed by the Blair government, was
willfully blocking humanitarian supplies worth $5.4 billion, everything
from vaccines and plasma bags to simple painkillers, all of which Iraq
had paid for and the Security Council had approved.
Last months attack by the two greatest military powers on a demoralized,
sick, and largely defenseless population was the logical extension of
this barbarism. This is now called a victory, and the flags
are coming out. Last week, the submarine HMS Turbulent returned to Plymouth,
flying the Jolly Roger, the pirates emblem. How appropriate. This
nuclear-powered machine fired some 30 American Tomahawk cruise missiles
at Iraq.
Each missile cost $1,094,100: a total of $32,823,000,000. That alone would
provide desperate Basra with food, water, and medicines.
Imagine: what did Commander Andrew McKendricks 30 missiles hit?
How many people did they kill or maim in a population nearly half of which
are children? Maybe, Commander, you targeted a palace with gold taps in
the bathroom, or a command and control facility, as the Americans
and Geoffrey Hoon like to lie. Or perhaps each of your missiles had a
sensory device that could distinguish George Bushs evil-doers
from toddlers. What is certain is that your targets did not include the
Ministry of Oil.
When the invasion began, the British public was called upon to support
troops sent illegally and undemocratically to kill people with whom we
had no quarrel. The ultimate test of our professionalism is
how Commander McKendrick describes an unprovoked attack on a nation with
no submarines, no navy, and no air force, and now with no clean water
and no electricity and, in many hospitals, no anesthetic with which to
amputate small limbs shredded by shrapnel. I have seen elsewhere how this
is done, with a gag in the patients mouth.
One child, Ali Ismaeel Abbas, the boy who lost his parents and his arms
in a missile attack, has been flown to a modern hospital in Kuwait. Publicity
has saved him. Tony Blair says he will do everything he can
to help him. This must be the ultimate insult to the memory of all the
children of Iraq who have died violently in Blairs war, and as a
result of the embargo that Blair enthusiastically endorsed. The saving
of Ali substitutes a media spectacle of charity for our right to knowledge
of the extent of the crime committed against the young in our name. Let
us now see the pictures of the truckload of dozens of dismembered
women and children that the Red Cross doctors saw.
As Ali was flown to Kuwait, the Americans were preventing Save The Children
from sending a plane with medical supplies into northern Iraq, where 40,000
are desperate. According to the UN, half the population of Iraq has only
enough food to last a few weeks. The head of the World Food Program says
that 40 million people around the world are now seriously at risk because
of the distraction of the humanitarian disaster in Iraq.
And this is liberation? No, it is bloody conquest, witnessed
by Americas mass theft of Iraqs resources and natural wealth.
Ask the crowds in the streets, for whom the fear and hatred of Saddam
Hussein have been transferred, virtually overnight, to Bush and Blair
and perhaps to us.
Such is the magnitude of Blairs folly and crime that the contrivance
of his vindication is urgent. As if speaking for the vindicators, Andrew
Marr, the BBCs political editor, reported: [Blair] said they
would be able to take Baghdad without a bloodbath, and that in the end
the Iraqis would be celebrating. And on both of those points he has been
proved conclusively right.
What constitutes a bloodbath to the BBCs man in Downing Street?
Did the murder of the 3,000 people in New Yorks Twin Towers qualify?
If his answer is yes, then the thousands killed in Iraq during the past
month is a bloodbath. One report says that more than 3,000 Iraqis were
killed within 24 hours or less. Or are the vindicators saying that the
lives of one set of human beings have less value than those recognizable
to us? Devaluation of human life has always been essential to the pursuit
of imperial power, from the Congo to Vietnam, from Chechnya to Iraq.
If, as Milan Kundera wrote, The struggle of people against power
is the struggle of memory against forgetting, then we must not forget.
We must not forget Blairs lies about weapons of mass destruction
which, as Hans Blix now says, were based on fabricated evidence.
We must not forget his callous attempts to deny that an American missile
killed 62 people in a Baghdad market. And we must not forget the reason
for the bloodbath. Last September, in announcing its National Security
Strategy, Bush served notice that America intended to dominate the world
by force. Iraq was indeed the test case. The rest was a charade.
We must not forget that a British defense secretary has announced, for
the first time, that his government is prepared to launch an attack with
nuclear weapons. He echoes Bush, of course. An ascendant mafia now rules
the United States, and the Prime Minister is in thrall to it. Together,
they empty noble words liberation, freedom, and democracy
of their true meaning. The unspoken truth is that behind the bloody conquest
of Iraq is the conquest of us all: of our minds, our humanity, and our
self-respect at the very least. If we say and do nothing, victory over
us is assured.
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