BY
JOHN PILGER
LONDON, April 10 — A BBC television producer, moments before he was
wounded by a US fighter aircraft that killed 18 people with “friendly fire”,
spoke to his mother on a satellite phone. Holding the phone over his head
so that she could hear the sound of the American planes overhead, he said:
“Listen, that's the sound of freedom.”
Did I read this scene in Joseph Heller's Catch-22? Surely, the
BBC man was being ferociously ironic. I doubt it, just as I doubt that
whoever designed the Observer's page three on April 6 had Heller
in mind when he wrote the weasel headline, “The moment young Omar discovered
the price of war”. These cowardly words accompanied a photograph of a US
marine reaching out to comfort 15-year-old Omar, having just participated
in the mass murder of his father, mother, two sisters and brother during
the unprovoked invasion of their homeland, in breach of the most basic
law of civilised peoples.
No true epitaph for them in Britain's famous liberal newspaper; no honest
headline, such as, “This American marine murdered this boy's family”. No
photograph of Omar's father, mother, sisters and brother dismembered and
blood-soaked by automatic fire. Versions of the Observer's propaganda
picture have been appearing in the US-British-Australian press since the
invasion began: tender cameos of US troops reaching out, kneeling, ministering
to their “liberated” victims.
And where were the pictures from the village of Furat, where 80 men,
women and children were rocketed to death? Apart from the UK Mirror,
where were the pictures, and footage, of small children holding up their
hands in terror while Washington's thugs forced their families to kneel
in the street? Imagine that in a British high street. It is a glimpse of
fascism, and we have a right to see it.
“To initiate a war of aggression”, said the judges in the Nuremberg
trial of the Nazi leadership, “is not only an international crime; it is
the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in
that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole”. In stating
this guiding principle of international law, the judges specifically rejected
German arguments of the “necessity” for pre-emptive attacks against other
countries.
Nothing US President George Bush, British Prime Minister Tony Blair
and Australian Prime Minister John Howard, their cluster-bombing boys and
their media court do now will change the truth of their great crime in
Iraq. It is a matter of record, understood by the majority of humanity,
if not by those who claim to speak for “us”.
As Denis Halliday said of the Anglo-American embargo against Iraq, it
will “slaughter them in the history books”. It was Halliday who, as assistant
secretary general of the United Nations, set up the “oil for food” program
in Iraq in 1996 and quickly realised that the UN had become an instrument
of “a genocidal attack on a whole society”. He resigned in protest, as
did his successor, Hans von Sponeck, who described “the wanton and shaming
punishment of a nation”.
I have mentioned these two men, partly because their names and their
witness have been airbrushed from most of the media. I well remember Jeremy
Paxman bellowing at Halliday on BBC Newsnight shortly after his
resignation: “So are you an apologist for Saddam Hussein?”
That helped set the tone for the travesty of journalism that now daily,
almost gleefully, treats criminal war as sport. In a leaked e-mail Roger
Mosey, the head of BBC Television News, described the BBC's war coverage
as “extraordinary — it almost feels like World Cup football when you go
from Umm Qasr to another theatre of war somewhere else and you're switching
between battles”.
He is talking about murder. That is what the Americans do, and no-one
will say so, even when they are murdering journalists. They bring to this
one-sided attack on a weak and mostly defenceless people the same racist,
homicidal intent I witnessed in Vietnam, where they had a whole program
of murder called Operation Phoenix. This runs through all Washington's
foreign wars, as it does through their own divided society.
Last weekend, a column of US tanks swept heroically into Baghdad and
out again. They murdered people along the way. They blew off the limbs
of women and the scalps of children. Hear their voices on the unedited
and unbroadcast videotape: “We shot the shit out of it.”
Their victims overwhelm the morgues and hospitals — hospitals already
denuded of drugs and painkillers by Washington's deliberate withholding
of US$5.4 billion in humanitarian goods, approved by the Security Council
and paid for by Iraq. The screams of children undergoing amputation with
minimal anaesthetic qualify as the BBC man's “sound of freedom”.
Heller would appreciate the sideshows. Take the British helicopter pilot
who came to blows with an American who had almost shot him down. “Don't
you know the Iraqis don't have a fucking air force?”, he shouted. Did this
pilot reflect on the truth he had uttered, on the whole craven enterprise
against a stricken Third World country and his own part in this crime?
I doubt it. The British have been the most skilled at delusion and lying.
By any standard, the Iraqi resistance to the high-tech Anglo-American
machine was heroic. With ancient tanks and mortars, small arms and desperate
ambushes, they panicked the Americans and reduced the British military
class to one of its specialities — mendacious condescension.
The Iraqis who fight are “terrorists”, “hoodlums”, “pockets of Baath
Party loyalists”, “kamikaze” and “feds” (fedayeen). They are not real people:
cultured and cultivated people. They are Arabs. This vocabulary of dishonour
has been faithfully parroted by those enjoying it all from the broadcasting
box. “What do you make of Basra?”, asked the UK Today program's
presenter of a former general embedded in the studio. “It's hugely encouraging,
isn't it?”, he replied. Their mutual excitement, like their plummy voices,
are their bond.
On the same day, in a Guardian letter, Tim Llewellyn, a former
BBC Middle East correspondent, pointed us to evidence of this “hugely encouraging”
truth — fleeting pictures on Sky News of British soldiers smashing
their way into a family's home in Basra, pointing guns at a woman and manhandling,
hooding and manacling young men, one of whom was shown quivering with terror.
Roger Mosey says the suffering of Umm Qasr is “like World Cup football”.
There are 40,000 people in Umm Qasr; desperate refugees are streaming in
and the hospitals are overflowing. All this misery is due entirely to the
“coalition” invasion and the British siege, which forced the UN to withdraw
its humanitarian aid staff.
CAFOD, the Catholic relief agency, which has sent a team to Um Qasr,
says the standard humanitarian quota for water in emergency situations
is 20 litres per person per day. CAFOD reports hospitals entirely without
water and people drinking from contaminated wells. According to the World
Health Organisation, 1.5 million people across southern Iraq are without
water, and epidemics are inevitable. And what are “our boys” doing to alleviate
this, apart from staging childish, theatrical occupations of presidential
palaces, having fired shoulder-held missiles into a civilian city and dropped
cluster bombs?
A British colonel laments to his “embedded” flock that “it is difficult
to deliver aid in an area that is still an active battle zone”. The logic
of his own words mocks him. If Iraq was not a battle zone, if the British
and the Americans were not defying international law, there would be no
difficulty in delivering aid.
There is something especially disgusting about the lurid propaganda
coming from these PR-trained British officers, who have not a clue about
Iraq and its people. They describe the liberation they are bringing from
“the world's worst tyranny”, as if anything, including death by cluster
bombs or dysentery, is better than “life under Saddam”. The inconvenient
truth is that, according to UNICEF, the Baathists built the most modern
health service in the Middle East.
No-one disputes the grim, totalitarian nature of the Baathist regime;
but Saddam Hussein was careful to use the oil wealth to create a modern
secular society and a large and prosperous middle class. Iraq was the only
Arab country with a 90% clean water supply and with free education. All
this was smashed by the Anglo-American embargo. When the embargo was imposed
in 1990, the Iraqi civil service organised a food distribution system that
the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation described as “a model of efficiency
... undoubtedly saving Iraq from famine”. That, too, was smashed when the
invasion was launched.
Why are the British yet to explain why their troops have to put on protective
suits to recover dead and wounded in vehicles hit by US “friendly fire”?
The reason is that the Americans are using solid uranium-coating on missiles
and tank shells.
When I was in southern Iraq, doctors estimated a sevenfold increase
in cancers in areas where depleted uranium was used by the US and British
forces in the 1991 war. Under the subsequent embargo, Iraq, unlike Kuwait,
has been denied equipment with which to clean up its contaminated battlefields.
The hospitals in Basra have wards overflowing with children with cancers
of a variety not seen before 1991. They have no painkillers; they are fortunate
if they have aspirin. With honourable exceptions (such as Robert Fisk and
the al Jazeera network), little of this has been reported. Instead, the
Western media have performed their preordained role as imperial America's
“soft power”: rarely identifying “our” crimes, or misrepresenting it as
a struggle between good intentions and evil incarnate. This abject professional
and moral failure now beckons the unseen dangers of such an epic, false
victory, inviting its repetition in Iran, Korea, Syria, Cuba and perhaps
even China.
George Bush has said: “It will be no defence to say: `I was just following
orders.'” He is correct. The Nuremberg judges left in no doubt the right
of ordinary soldiers to follow their conscience in an illegal war of aggression.
Two British soldiers have had the courage to seek status as conscientious
objectors. They face court martial and imprisonment; yet virtually no questions
have been asked about them in the media. Veteran Scottish Labour MP George
Galloway has been pilloried for asking the same question as Bush. Galloway
and Tam Dalyell, the longest-serving member of the British House of Commons,
are facing the threats of retribution from the Labour Party.
Dalyell, 41 years a Labour member of the Commons, has said that Tony
Blair is a war criminal who should be sent to trial at the Hague. This
is not gratuitous; on the prima facie evidence, Blair — as is Bush
and Howard — is a war criminal, and all those who have been, in one form
or another, accessories should be reported to the International Criminal
Court. Not only did they promote a charade of pretexts few now take seriously,
they brought terrorism and death to Iraq.
A growing body of legal opinion around the world agrees that the new
court has a duty, as Eric Herring of Bristol University wrote, to investigate
“not only the regime, but also the bombing and sanctions which violated
the human rights of Iraqis on a vast scale”. Add the present piratical
war, whose spectre is uniting Arab nationalism with militant Islam. The
whirlwind sown by Blair, Bush and Howard is just beginning. Such is the
magnitude of their crime.
[Visit <http://www.johnpilger.com>.]
From Green Left Weekly, April 16, 2003.
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