My response to such a line is this: If you went into surgery to
correct a knee problem and the surgeon mistakenly amputated your entire
leg, what would you think if someone then remarked to you how nice it
was that "you actually no longer have a knee problem, thank God." ...
The people of Iraq no longer have a Saddam problem.
Unfortunately, they've lost just about everything else as well.
Twenty years of American bombing, invasion, occupation and torture have
led to the people of that unhappy land losing their homes, their
schools, their electricity, their clean water, their environment, their
neighborhoods, their archaeology, their jobs, their careers, their
professionals, their state-run enterprises, their physical health, their
mental health, their health care, their welfare state, their women's
rights, their religious tolerance, their safety, their security, their
children, their parents, their past, their present, their future, their
lives ... more than half the population either dead, disabled, in
prison, or in foreign exile ... the air, soil, water, blood and genes
drenched with depleted uranium ... the most awful birth defects ...
unexploded cluster bombs lie in wait for children ... a river of blood
runs alongside the Euphrates and Tigris ... through a country that may
never be put back together again.
In 2006, the UN special investigator on torture declared that reports
from Iraq indicated that torture "is totally out of hand. The
situation is so bad many people say it is worse than it has been in the
times of Saddam Hussein." Another UN report of the same time disclosed a
rise in "honor killings" of women. 2
"It is a common refrain among war-weary Iraqis that things were better before the U.S.-led invasion in 2003," reported the Washington Post on May 5, 2007.
"I am not a political person, but I know that under Saddam Hussein,
we had electricity, clean drinking water, a healthcare system that was
the envy of the Arab world and free education through college," Iraqi
pharmacist Dr. Entisar Al-Arabi told American peace activist Medea
Benjamin in 2010. "I have five children and every time I had a baby, I
was entitled to a year of paid maternity leave. I owned a pharmacy and I
could close up shop as late as I chose because the streets were safe.
Today there is no security and Iraqis have terrible shortages of
everything — electricity, food, water, medicines, even gasoline. Most of
the educated people have fled the country, and those who remain look
back longingly to the days of Saddam Hussein." 3
And this from two months ago:
"Protesters, human rights workers and security officials say the
government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has responded to Iraq's
demonstrations in much the same way as many of its more authoritarian
neighbors: with force. Witnesses in Baghdad and as far north as Kirkuk
described watching last week as security forces in black uniforms,
tracksuits and T-shirts roared up in trucks and Humvees, attacked
protesters, rounded up others from cafes and homes and hauled them off,
blindfolded, to army detention centers. Entire neighborhoods ... were
blockaded to prevent residents from joining the demonstrations.
Journalists were beaten." 4
So ... can we expect the United States and its fellow thugs in NATO
to intervene militarily in Iraq as they're doing in Libya? To protect
the protesters in Iraq as they tell us they're doing in Libya? To
effect regime change in Iraq as they're conspiring, but not admitting,
in Libya?
Similarly Tunisia, Egypt, Bahrain, Yemen, Syria ... all have been
bursting with protest and vicious government crackdown in recent months,
even to a degree in Saudi Arabia, one of the most repressive societies
in the world. Not one of these governments has been assaulted by the
United States, the UK, or France as Libya has been assaulted; not one of
these countries' opposition is receiving military, financial, legal and
moral support from the Western powers as the Libyan rebels are —
despite the Libyan rebels' brutal behavior, racist murders, and the
clear jihadist ties of some of them. 5
The Libyan rebels are reminiscent of the Kosovo rebels — mafiosos
famous for their trafficking in body parts and women, also
unquestioningly supported by the Western powers against an Officially
Designated Enemy, Serbia.
So why is only Libya the target for US/NATO missiles? Is there some
principled or moral reason? Are the Libyans the worst abusers of their
people in the region? In actuality, Libya offers its citizens a higher
standard of living. (The 2010 UN Human Development Index, a composite
measure of health, education and income ranked Libya first in Africa.)
None of the other countries has a more secular government than Libya.
(In contrast some of the Libyan rebels are in the habit of chanting that
phrase we all know only too well: "Allahu Akbar".) None of the others
has a human-rights record better than that of Libya, however imperfect
that may be — in Egypt a government fact-finding mission has announced
that during the recent uprising at least 846 protesters were killed as
police forces shot them in the head and chest with live ammunition. 6 Similar horror stories have been reported in Syria, Yemen and other countries of the region during this period.
It should be noted that the ultra-conservative Fox News
reported on February 28: "As the United Nations works feverishly to
condemn Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi for cracking down on
protesters, the body's Human Rights Council is poised to adopt a report
chock-full of praise for Libya's human rights record. The review
commends Libya for improving educational opportunities, for making human
rights a "priority" and for bettering its "constitutional" framework.
Several countries, including Iran, Venezuela, North Korea, and Saudi
Arabia but also Canada, give Libya positive marks for the legal
protections afforded to its citizens — who are now revolting against the
regime and facing bloody reprisal."
Of all the accusations made against Gaddafi perhaps the most
meaningless is the oft-repeated "He's killing his own people." It's
true, but that's what happens in civil wars. Abraham Lincoln also
killed his own people.
Muammar Gaddafi has been an Officially Designated Enemy of the US
longer than any living world leader except Fidel Castro. The animosity
began in 1970, one year after Gaddafi took power in a coup, when he
closed down a US air force base. He then embarked on a career of
supporting what he regarded as revolutionary groups. During the 1970s
and '80s, Gaddafi was accused of using his large oil revenues to support
— with funds, arms, training, havens, diplomacy, etc — a wide array of
radical/insurgent/terrorist organizations, particularly certain
Palestinian factions and Muslim dissident and minority movements in the
Middle East, Africa, and Asia; the IRA and Basque and Corsican
separatists in Europe; several groups engaged in struggle against the
apartheid regime in South Africa; various opposition groups and
politicians in Latin America; the Japanese Red Army, the Italian Red
Brigades, and Germany's Baader-Meinhof gang.
It was claimed as well that Libya was behind, or at least somehow
linked to, an attempt to blow up the US Embassy in Cairo, various plane
hijackings, a bomb explosion on an American airliner over Greece, the
blowing up of a French airliner over Africa, blowing up a synagogue in
Istanbul, and blowing up a disco in Berlin which killed some American
soldiers. 7
In 1990, when the United States needed a country to (falsely) blame
for the bombing of PanAm flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, Libya was
the easy choice.
Gaddafi's principal crime in the eyes of US President Ronald Reagan
(1981-89) was not that he supported terrorist groups, but that he
supported the wrong terrorist groups; i.e., Gaddafi was not
supporting the same terrorists that Washington was, such as the
Nicaraguan Contras, UNITA in Angola, Cuban exiles in Miami, the
governments of El Salvador and Guatemala, and the US military in
Grenada. The one band of terrorists the two men supported in common was
the Moujahedeen in Afghanistan.
And if all this wasn't enough to make Gaddafi Public Enemy Number One
in Washington (Reagan referred to him as the "mad dog of the Middle
East"), Gaddafi has been a frequent critic of US foreign policy, a
serious anti-Zionist, pan-Africanist, and pan-Arabist (until the
hypocrisy and conservatism of Arab governments proved a barrier). He
also calls his government socialist. How much tolerance and patience
can The Empire be expected to have? When widespread protests broke out
in Tunisia and Egypt, could Washington have resisted instigating the
same in the country sandwiched between those two? The CIA has been very
busy supplying the rebels with arms, bombing support, money, and
personnel.
It may well happen that the Western allies will succeed in forcing
Gaddafi out of power. Then the world will look on innocently as the new
Libyan government gives Washington what it has long sought: a
host-country site for Africom, the US Africa Command, one of six
regional commands the Pentagon has divided the world into. Many African
countries approached to be the host have declined, at times in
relatively strong terms. Africom at present is headquartered in
Stuttgart, Germany. According to a State Department official: "We've
got a big image problem down there. ... Public opinion is really against
getting into bed with the US. They just don't trust the US." 8
Another thing scarcely any African country would tolerate is an
American military base. There's only one such base in Africa, in
Djibouti. Watch for one in Libya sometime after the dust has settled.
It'll be situated close to the American oil wells. Or perhaps the
people of Libya will be given a choice — an American base or a NATO
base.
And remember — in the context of recent history concerning Iraq,
North Korea, and Iran — if Libya had nuclear weapons the United States
would not be attacking it.
Or the United States could realize that Gaddafi is no radical threat
simply because of his love for Condoleezza Rice. Here is the Libyan
leader in a March 27, 2007 interview on al-Jazeera TV: "Leezza, Leezza,
Leezza ... I love her very much. I admire her, and I'm proud of her,
because she's a black woman of African origin."
Over the years, the American government and media have fed us all a
constant diet of scandalous Gaddafi stories: He took various drugs, was
an extreme womanizer, was bisexual, dressed in women's clothing, wore
makeup, carried a teddy bear, had epileptic fits, and much more; some
part of it may have been true. And now we have the US Ambassador to the
United Nations, Susan Rice, telling us that Gaddafi's forces are
increasingly engaging in sexual violence and that they have been issued
the impotency drug Viagra, presumably to enhance their ability to rape.9 Remarkable. Who would have believed that the Libyan Army had so many men in their 60s and 70s?
As I write this, US/NATO missiles have slammed into a Libyan home
killing a son and three young grandchildren of Gaddafi, this after
repeated rejections of Gaddafi's call for negotiations — another
heartwarming milestone in the glorious history of humanitarian
intervention, as well as a reminder of the US bombing of Libya in 1986
which killed a young daughter of Gaddafi.
Two more examples, if needed, of why capitalism can not be reformed
Transocean, the owner of the drilling rig that exploded and sank in
the Gulf of Mexico a year ago, killing 11 workers and sending two
hundred (200) million gallons of oil cascading over the shoreline of six
American states, has announced that (through using some kind of arcane
statistical method) it had "recorded the best year in safety performance
in our Company's history." Accordingly, the company awarded obscene
bonuses on top of obscene salaries to its top executives. 10
In Japan, even as it struggles to contain one of history's worst
nuclear disasters, Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) has proposed
building two new nuclear reactors at its radiation-spewing power plant.
The plan had taken shape before the March 11 earthquake and tsunami and
TEPCO officials see no reason to change it. The Japanese government
agency in charge of approving such a project has reacted in shocked
horror. "It was just unbelievable," said the director of the agency. 11
Which leads us to A.W. Clausen, president of Bank of America, speaking to the Greater Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, in 1970:
"It may sound heretical to some in this room to say that business
enterprise is not an absolute necessity to human culture ... Ancient
Egypt functioned more than 3000 years without anything resembling what
we today understand by the term 'corporate enterprise' or even 'money'.
Within our span of years, we have witnessed the rise of the Soviet
Socialist empire. It survives without anything you or I would call a
private corporation and little that approaches our own monetary
mechanism. It survives and is far stronger than anyone might have
expected from watching its turbulent beginnings in 1917 ... It is easy
to mislead ourselves into thinking that there is something preordained
about our profit-motivated, free-market, private-enterprise system —
that is, as they used to say of gold, universal and immutable."
Items of interest from a journal I've kept for 40 years, part III
- Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez memoir, Wiser in Battle: A Soldier's Story,
pages 349-350: April 6, 2004. Sanchez was in Iraq in video
teleconference with President Bush, Secretary of State Colin Powell, and
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. One major American offensive was
in operation, another about to be launched. According to Sanchez,
Powell was talking tough that day: "We've got to smash somebody's ass
quickly, "Powell said. "There has to be a total victory somewhere. We
must have a brute demonstration of power." Then Bush spoke: "At the end
of this campaign al-Sadr must be gone. At a minimum, he will be
arrested. It is essential he be wiped out. Kick ass! If somebody
tries to stop the march to democracy, we will seek them out and kill
them! We must be tougher than hell! This Vietnam stuff, this is not
even close. It is a mind-set. We can't send that message. It's an
excuse to prepare us for withdrawal. ... There is a series of moments
and this is one of them. Our will is being tested, but we are resolute.
We have a better way. Stay strong! Stay the course! Kill them! Be
confident! Prevail! We are going to wipe them out! We are not
blinking!"
- Noam Chomsky: "If there is really authentic popular participation
in the decision-making and the free association of communities, yeah,
that could be tremendously important. In fact that's essentially the
traditional anarchist ideal. That's what was realized the only time for
about a year in Spain in 1936 before it was crushed by outside forces,
in fact all outside forces, Stalinist Russia, Hitler in Germany,
Mussolini's fascism and the Western democracies cooperated in crushing
it. They were all afraid of it."
- To Hitler, America was both the enemy and a role model, inspiring
in its imperial seizure of great territories by force, its use of slave
labor, its eradication of native populations.
- NATO's secretary general, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, made clear in a
speech to the Brookings Institution in Washington in 2008 that western
interests in Afghanistan went well beyond good governance to the
strategic interest in having a permanent military presence in a state
that borders central Asia, China, Iran and Pakistan.
- CIA Special Collections of documents; "Instances Of the Use of US Armed Forces Abroad, 1798 - 2010"
- Michael Collon: "Let's replace the word 'democratic' by 'with us', and the word 'terrorist' by 'against us'."
- Ron Paul: "Those who caution that leaving Iraq would be a disaster
are the same ones who promised the conflict would be a 'cake-walk'."
- Spc. Alex Horton, 22, writing in a blog while a marine in Iraq in
2007: "In the future, I want my children to grow up with the belief that
what I did here was wrong, in a society that doesn't deem that idea
unpatriotic."
- Henry Kissinger in a 1970 memo to Nixon: "The example of a
successful elected Marxist government in Chile would surely have an
impact on –– and even precedent value for –– other parts of the world,
especially in Italy; the imitative spread of similar phenomena elsewhere
would in turn significantly affect the world balance and our own
position in it."
- Paul Craig Roberts: "International polls show that the rest of the
world regard the US and Israel as the greatest dangers to world peace.
Americans claim that they are fighting wars against terrorism, but it
is US and Israeli terrorism that worries everyone else."
- Chris Hedges: "If you are a young Muslim American and head off to
the Middle East for a spell in a fundamentalist 'madrassa,' or religious
school, Homeland Security will probably greet you at the airport when
you return. But if you are an American Jew and you join hundreds of
teenagers from Europe and Mexico for an eight-week training course run
by the Israel Defense Forces, you can post your picture wearing an
Israeli army uniform and holding an automatic weapon on MySpace."
- "The US has never had a 'foreign policy' but a fanatical domestic
policy which, once it had bled through to the Pacific, sought new hosts
on which to feed." Patrick Wilkinson
- C. Wright Mills, The Power Elite (1956): "The only
seriously accepted plan for 'peace' is a fully loaded pistol. In short,
war or a high state of war preparedness is felt to be the normal and
seemingly permanent condition of the United States."
- The United States goes around the world sprinkling democracy dust.
- Iran, the latest threat to life as we know it.
- "Iran hit back at US allegations that it has failed to crack down
on fugitive al-Qaeda members, calling on Washington to apologize to the
world for its own past support of the network. 'The Americans should
present a full apology to the international community for the support
they gave to al-Qaeda,' said the foreign ministry, referring to a period
in the 1980s when millions of dollars of covert US aid was channeled —
through the Pakistani secret service — to Islamist groups battling the
Soviet occupation of Afghanistan." (Agence France Presse, June 2, 2003)
- Tom Hayden: They believe that the exposure of the generals to a
civilian academic atmosphere may humanize the process of war-making, not
worrying that the actual danger may be the militarizing of the
university.
-
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, in his 2007 book,
"The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a New World": "I'm saddened that
it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows: The
Iraq war is largely about oil."
After an avalanche of commentary, Greenspan backpedaled and
obfuscated in his comments. He insisted he was talking about "oil
security" and "the global economy". But this was just proving his own
point that mentioning oil as a motivation for war is "politically
inconvenient". It's no way to get young men to kill other young men
who've never done them any harm.
- The American people have no more authentic control over their
government than do people in countries that we call dictatorships,
particularly on issues of foreign policy.
Notes
- Video of Rice talk ↩
- Associated Press, September 21, 2006 ↩
- Common Dreams, August 20, 2010 ↩
- Washington Post, March 4, 2011↩
- Washington Times, February 24, 2011; The Telegraph (London), March 25, 2011; Alexander Cockburn, "Libya, Oh What a Stupid War; Fukushima, Cover-Up Amid Catastrophe"; "Al Qa'ida's Foreign Fighters in Iraq" (PDF), Combating Terrorism Center, US Military Academy, West Point, NY, December 2007 ↩
- Associated Press, April 20, 2011 ↩
- Gaddafi's history of supporting terrorism, real and alleged: William Blum, Killing Hope, chapter 48 ↩
- The Guardian (London), June 25, 2007 ↩
- Reuters news agency, April 29, 2011 ↩
- Washington Post, April 1, 2011 ↩
- Washington Post, April 6, 2011 ↩
–
William Blum is the author of:
- Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War 2
- Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower
- West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir
- Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American Empire
Portions of the books can be read, and signed copies purchased, at www.killinghope.org
Previous Anti-Empire Reports can be read at this website.
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