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war pigs
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war This is a great article by John Pilger, a famous journalist and
documentary film maker with
an impressive list of British and international awards for both
journalism and film making.
For a biography see http://pilger.carlton.com/home/biography


Maher

The Blood
by John Pilger
February 17, 2003

As the world protests against war, we hear again the lies of old. "A
painful decision," say the supporters of an invasion. But it is not they
who will feel the pain: it will be the Iraqi infants writhing in the
dust when the cluster bombs fall

In "Dulce et decorum est", his classic poem from the First World War,
Wilfred Owen described young soldiers, doomed to die, "like old beggars
under sacks", and a man's "hanging face, like a devil's sick of sin".

If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,-
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori.

What has changed since Owen wrote those words, not long before his own
death in the trenches? In the Gulf war in 1991, the slaughter of Iraqi
conscripts was conducted in a similar industrial way. Three brigades of
the United States 1st Mechanised Infantry Division used snow ploughs
mounted on tanks and combat earth movers, mostly at night, to bury
terrified Iraqi teenagers, many of them still alive, including the
wounded, in more than 70 miles of trenches. A brigade commander, Colonel
Anthony Moreno, said: "For all I know, we could have killed thousands."

The policy of General Norman Schwarzkopf, the American field commander,
was that the Iraqi dead were not to be counted. "This is the first war
in modern times," said one of his aides, "where every screwdriver, every
nail, is accounted for." As for human beings, "I don't think anybody is
going to come up with an accurate count for Iraqi dead."

In fact, Schwarzkopf did provide figures to Congress, indicating that at
least 100,000 Iraqi soldiers had been killed. He offered no estimate of
civilian deaths. Almost a year later, the Medical Education Trust in
London published a comprehensive study of casualties. Up to a quarter of
a million men, women and children were killed or died in the aftermath
of the American-led attack.

As in 1914-18, the war was a bloodfest, with one difference. Almost all
the casualties were on one side, and as many as half of them were
civilians. A quarter of the 148 American soldiers who died were killed
by other Americans. Most of the British who died were also killed by
Americans, including nine blown to bits by an American tank. Little of
this was reported at the time. The massacre of conscripts and the
wounded was revealed six months later by one tenacious reporter, Knut
Royce, in New York's Newsday. Although journalists sent to report the
Gulf war enjoyed extraordinary communications, their editors allowed
them to be corralled in a censorial "pool" system.

Little had changed since 1914-18 when the Times correspondent Sir Philip
Gibbs (compliant media stars were knighted then; nowadays it's more
likely to be an OBE) wrote: "We were our own censors . . . some of us
wrote the truth . . . apart from the naked realism of horrors and
losses, and criticism of the facts which did not come within the liberty
of our pen." When the Gulf war was over, the BBC's foreign editor, John
Simpson, reported from Baghdad: "As for the human casualties, tens of
thousands of them, or the brutal effect the war had on millions of
others . . . we didn't see much of that." If the Gulf war was the most
"covered" war in history, it was also the most covered-up. With
honourable exceptions, the massacre of so many human beings was not
considered news.

Every effort is now being made to repeat this travesty, this "old lie".
In his interview on 6 February with the Prime Minister, the BBC's Jeremy
Paxman's only reference to the human cost of the Bush/Blair adventure
was to repeat a question from a woman in his audience. "She asked you,"
said Paxman to Tony Blair, "about the deaths of innocent people. I mean,
as a Christian, how do you feel about innocent people dying?" He then
allowed Blair to get away with a self-serving answer that included the
lie that, prior to Nato's attack on Yugoslavia, he "let the peace
negotiations go on for several more weeks in order to try and get them
sorted".

Paxman made no mention of a United Nations estimate, based on World
Health Organisation figures, that "as many as 500,000 people could
require treatment as a result of direct and indirect injuries" and that
an attack was "likely to cause an outbreak of diseases in epidemic if
not pandemic proportions". Neither did he ask Blair how he could justify
attacking a nation where almost half the population were children, and a
large proportion of them were stricken from the consequences of an
American and British-driven blockade. If the American and British
governments had no quarrel with the Iraqi people and wished to liberate
them, Paxman might have asked, quoting Blair himself, why was the United
States currently blocking more than $5bn worth of humanitarian supplies
approved by the Security Council?

No, the BBC's inquisitor was more concerned with the complexities of a
second UN resolution, a fig leaf, an amoral contrivance. The clear
implication was that as long as the killing of large numbers of innocent
human beings was backed by a second resolution, "the problem" was
solved. That the Security Council's principal members were themselves
the sources of numerous human rights crimes was not deemed relevant.

Suppressing the human cost of war is the "old lie" in Wilfred Owen's
wonderful poem. Yet in 2003, a privileged establishment journalist paid
large amounts of public money ensured that the prime minister did not
have to justify the old lie, just as he ensured that Blair did not have
to explain the hypocrisy and double standards of Britain's long and
cynical role in Iraq. He even allowed Blair contemptuously to dismiss
"the oil thing" as a "conspiracy theory". With the lives of thousands in
the balance, he asked Blair if he prayed with George W Bush.

The opposition of the great majority of the British people, and of
people all over the world, to an unprovoked attack on another country
has illuminated the indecency of those who claim to speak for and share
the public's essentially liberal values. From behind a humanitarian
mask, they promote killing. To this "liberal" lobby, it is wrong to kill
innocent people if you are Saddam Hussein (evil) and right to kill them
if you are Tony Blair (good). The actual deaths and the crime of killing
are irrelevant; the attitude of their killers is what matters.

On 3 February, I pointed out that the Observer, in its editorial of 19
January, had finally buried the principled "freethinking" legacy of its
great editor, David Astor. The paper that had stood against British
imperialism's attack on Egypt in 1956 announced it was for attacking
Iraq. Coming to the defence of the Observer's betrayal of its history
and readers was the Guardian group's latest right-wing provocateur,
David Aaronovitch, who exemplifies the mask-wearers. Promoting himself
as a "liberal", Aaronovitch is a former apparatchik of the Communist
Party that supported the crushing of the Hungarian uprising in 1956. The
transition from Party hack to pro-Bush warmonger is a smooth road
trodden by many. The obscenity of those like Aaronovitch is crystallised
in three words in his Observer column of 2 February. The attack on Iraq,
he wrote, will be "the easy bit".

"The easy bit" will be an onslaught of hundreds of missiles on a
defenceless population, resulting in countless, and uncounted, civilian
casualties. Defending the right of rapacious power to do what it likes
when it likes, from Hungary to Iraq, Aaronovitch's "easy bit" is the
callous dismissal of the lives of innocent people who will be cut to
pieces by cluster bombs, dropped by American and British pilots from a
safe height. "Shooting fish in a barrel", the American aircraft carrier
pilots called it in 1991.

Unlike the witness-nothing windbags, who appear almost to yearn for war,
I have seen the victims of cluster bombs. From many snapshots, here is
one. Two children writhe on a dirt floor, their bodies displaying
hundreds of small open wounds. They have been showered with tiny plastic
objects from an American "pellet bomb", the prototype of the cluster
bomb. As the darts move through their vital organs, they die a terrible
death, the equivalent of swallowing acid.

"For many of us [supporting an attack on Iraq]," wrote Aarono-vitch,
"this has become the most difficult and painful judgement to make."
Painful? What pain will he feel? Pain is what the children on the dirt
floor felt. Pain is what dying Iraqi infants, who are denied painkillers
by the Anglo-American blockade, feel. Ask Denis Halliday, the former UN
assistant secretary general and UN humanitarian co-ordinator for Iraq,
who watched them die and demanded that the embargo's enforcers, such as
Blair, join him and hear the children's screams.

Who among the "liberals" who say their motive for backing Bush and Blair
is to "liberate" the Iraqi people has spoken out against this medieval
siege that has "liberated" hundreds of thousands of Iraqis from life?
Their specious compassion is like that of the man who stands besides a
torturer, reassuring the victim that his ordeal will end if he accepts
the torturer's terms. "Nothing about Iraq is
hard for Pilger," wrote Aaronovitch. "He was opposed to the containment
of Saddam through the enforcement of the no-fly zones, dismissive of the
threats to the Kurdish people of the north." Once again, the unworthy
victims are airbrushed. The fishermen, farmers, shepherds and their
families and sheep, slaughtered by marauding "coalition" aircraft, are
simply omitted. Their deaths are documented in a United Nations security
section report and verified by the UN humanitarian co-ordinator for
Iraq.

As for "the threats to the Kurdish people of the north", year after
year, Kurdish villages in northern Iraq have been viciously attacked by
the Turkish military, guardians of Nato. They carry out their atrocities
under cover of the illegal "no fly-zones" and with the complicity of the
US and Britain, which routinely ground their own planes so that their
Turkish allies can get on with killing the Kurds. This is rarely
reported. In his seminal essay "The Banality of Evil", Edward S Herman
described the important state function of certain journalists and
commentators as "normalising the unthinkable for the general public".
What it is wonderful to see these days is that they have failed. There
has never been a time of such overwhelming popular opposition to a war
before it began. What Aaronovitch calls "the left" are people of decency
and common sense from right across the political spectrum.

I read a letter recently by a former conservative Australian politician,
Bob Solomon, writing on behalf of other Australian Tories. Its deeply
offended and angry tone is representative of the feelings of millions.
He wrote: "Wilful mixing of the 'war against terrorism' with alleged
threat from Iraq is an insult to our intelligence, and if there's one
thing I like less than mindless war, it's being treated like an idiot by
people not bright enough to know we know or too full of their own
importance to care. George Bush Junior is the worst leader of a major
democracy I have observed for more than 50 years."

Today, all over the world, the common decency of the majority of
humanity is ranged against Bush and Blair and their suburban
propagandists, who can either listen and draw back and save countless
lives - or they can do as Bertolt Brecht suggested in "The Solution":

The Secretary of the Writers' Union
Had leaflets distributed in the Stalinallee
Stating that the people
Had forfeited the confidence of the government
And could win it back only
By redoubled efforts. Would it not be easier
In that case for the government
To dissolve the people
And elect another? - Tue, 18 Feb 2003 6:45pm
Anonymous intresting read. - Tue, 18 Feb 2003 10:16pm
Anonymous that's the thing people keep talking about Saddam but nobody acknowledges the innocent civilians that are going to be killed. - Wed, 19 Feb 2003 4:22pm
lily_liquor
User Info...
Warring for peace is like screwing for virginity - Wed, 19 Feb 2003 4:24pm
Shaggy
User Info...
I'll screw for virginity anyday! Shit... Did I just say that out loud? :o - Wed, 19 Feb 2003 5:01pm
Jason
User Info...
"Warring for peace is like screwing for virginity"

I saw that on sign at the Vancouver demo. definately my fav of the day.

and yes that is a good read. Thanks for the post - Wed, 19 Feb 2003 5:48pm
Anonymous LOL! - Thu, 20 Feb 2003 5:57pm
Trailer Park Boy Julian Very good article, very well written, if you have any doubt about the whole war thing you should read this.... - Fri, 21 Feb 2003 2:31am
Anonymous one of many points of view - Fri, 21 Feb 2003 8:52pm
Dan everyone should read this if they're going to form an opinion about this war. - Sat, 22 Feb 2003 12:25pm
Anonymous more? - Sat, 22 Feb 2003 5:49pm
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