A
Glimpse of the Ghost of Vietnam in Iraq Lies and
Atrocities
Robert Fisk
12/27/04 "The Independent" -- Who said this
and when? The people of England have been led in
Mesopotamia into a trap from which it will be hard to
escape with dignity and honor. They have been tricked
into it by a steady withholding of information. The
Baghdad communiqués are belated, insincere, incomplete.
Things have been far worse than we have been told, our
administration more bloody and inefficient that the
public knows... We are today not far from a
disaster. Answer: TE Lawrence (of Arabia fame) in
The Sunday Times in August, 1920.
And every word of it is true today. We were lied to about
weapons of mass destruction. We were lied to about the
links between Saddam Hussein and Sept. 11, 2001. We were
lied to about the insurgents remember how they
were just dead-enders and
remnants? And we were lied to about the
improvements in Iraq when the entire country was steadily
falling outside the hands of the occupying powers or of
the government of satraps that they have set up in their
place. We are, I suspect, being lied to about elections
next month.
Over the past year, there has been evidence enough that
our whole project in Iraq is hopelessly flawed, that our
Western armies are being vanquished by a ferocious
guerrilla army, the like of which we have not seen before
in the Middle East. My own calculations suggest that in
the past 12 months, at least 190 suicide bombers have
blown themselves up, sometimes at the rate of two a day.
How does this happen? Is there a suicide-bomber
supermarket, an off-the-shelf store? What have we done to
create this extraordinary industry?
And American troops are sending home increasingly
terrible stories of the wanton killing of civilians by US
forces in the towns and cities of Iraq. Here, for
example, is the evidence of ex-Marine Staff Sgt. Jimmy
Massey, testifying at a refugee hearing in Canada earlier
this month. Massey told the Canadian board that he and
his fellow Marines shot and killed more than 30 unarmed
men, women and children, including a young Iraqi who got
out of his car with his arms up. We killed the
man, Massey said. We fired at a cyclic rate
of 500 bullets per vehicle. Massey assumed that the
dead Iraqis didnt understand the hand signals to
stop. On another occasion, according to Massey, Marines
in reaction to a stray bullet opened fire
and killed a group of unarmed protesters and bystanders.
The defector from the 82nd Airborne, Jeremy Hinzman, told
the court that we were told to consider all Arabs
as potential terrorists... to foster an attitude of
hatred that gets your blood boiling.
All this, of course, is part of the withholding of
information. It took months before the Abu Ghraib
torture and abuses were made public even though
the International Red Cross had already told the American
and British authorities. It took months, for that matter,
for the British government to respond to the outrageous
beatings and one killing carried out on
defenseless Iraqis in Basra, first exposed by The
Independent.
Still we are not told how many civilians were killed in
the American attack on Fallujah. The Americans
claim that they killed more than 1,000 insurgents
only insurgents, mark you, not a single civilian among
them is preposterous. Still we are not free to
enter the city. Nor, given the fact that the insurgents
still appear to be there, is it likely that anyone can do
so. Why are American aircraft still bombing Fallujah,
weeks after the US military claimed to have captured
it?
It is impossible to reflect on the year in Iraq without
realizing just how deeply the Israeli-Palestinian
struggle affects the entire Middle East. Iraqis watch the
Palestinian battle with great earnestness. And I doubt
very much if the suicide bomber would have come of age so
quickly in Iraq without the precedent set by the suicide
bombers of Palestine and, before them, of Lebanon.
It is this precedent-setting capacity of events in the
Middle East not the mythical foreign
fighters of George Bushs fantasy world
that is costing America so much blood in Iraq. When Ariel
Sharon tries to prevent Palestinian statehood, Iraqis
remember that his closest ally is represented in Iraq by
an army which most of them regard as occupiers. When US
forces learn their guerrilla warfare techniques from the
Israelis when they bomb houses from the air, when
they abuse prisoners, when they even erect razor-wire
round recalcitrant villages is it surprising that
Iraqis treat the Americans as surrogate Israelis? We
shouldnt need the evidence of ex-Marine Massey to
show us how brutal the occupying armies have become
and how irrelevant Iraqs interim
government truly is.
Who would have believed, in 2003, as US forces drove into
Baghdad, that within two years they would be mired in
their biggest guerrilla war since Vietnam? Those few of
us who predicted just that and The Independent was
among them were derided as naysayers,
doom-mongers, pessimists. Iraq is now proving all over
again what we should have learned in Lebanon and
Palestine/Israel: Arabs have lost their fear. It has been
a slow process. But a quarter of a century ago, they were
a submissive society and they did as they were told. The
Israelis even used a Palestinian police force
to help them in their occupation. Not any more. The
biggest development in the Middle East over the past 30
years has been this shaking off of fear. Fear of
the occupier, of the dictator is something that
you cannot re-inject into people. And this, I suspect, is
what has happened in Iraq.
Iraqis are just not prepared to live in fear any more.
They know they must depend on themselves our
betrayal of the 1991 rising against Saddam proved that
and they refuse to be frightened by their
occupiers. It was we who warned them of the dangers of
civil war, even though there never has been a civil war
in Iraq. As a people, they watched Westerners turn up by
the thousand to make money out of a country that had been
beaten down by a corrupt dictatorship and UN sanctions.
Is it any surprised that Iraqis are angry? The American
columnist Tom Friedman, in one of his less messianic
articles, posed a good question before the 2003 invasion.
Who knows, he asked, what bats will fly out of the box
when we get to Baghdad? Well, now we know. So we should
repeat Lawrences chilling remark without the
quotation marks and the date 1920. We are today not far
from a disaster.
Copyright: Arab News
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