We'll go on cheering ' democracy' - and the Iraqis
will go on dying
They were supposed to be preparing for an election,
but they are bracing themselves for rivers of blood. 
Robert Fisk reports from Baghdad
The Independent UK
January 30, 2005
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article7910.htm

01/30/05 "The Independent" -- In Baghdad yesterday,
they were supposed to be preparing for an election.
But they were preparing for war.

The American Bradley armoured vehicles on the streets,
the US foot patrols, the old Russian personnel
carriers that Saddam Hussein bought on the cheap from
the Soviet Union - now dressed up in the dull
camouflage paint of the "new" Iraqi army - the hooded
and masked policemen; they don't look like the prelude
to an experiment in democracy. They are waiting for
the rivers of blood of which the insurgents have
warned. But there will be democracy in Iraq.

The mortars rained down yesterday morning on the Green
Zone where the US and British embassies are located. A
"thumpety-thump-thump" brought the American Apache
choppers over the surrounding highways in less than 30
seconds, but the insurgents had disappeared. Then a
fierce gun battle broke out in the centre of Baghdad
between Americans and insurgents. Too late again, the
gunmen got away. Fantasy attacks before a fantasy
election. Many Iraqis do not know the names of the
candidates, let alone their policies. But there will
be democracy in Iraq.

The media boys and girls will be expected to play
along with this. "Transition of power," says the
hourly logo on CNN's live coverage of the election,
though the poll is for a parliament to write a
constitution and the men who will form a majority
within it will have no power.

They have no control over their oil, no authority over
the streets of Baghdad, let alone the rest of the
country, no workable army or loyal police force. Their
only power is that of the American military and its
150,000 soldiers whom we could see at the main Baghdad
intersections yesterday.

The big television networks have been given a list of
five polling stations where they will be "allowed" to
film. Close inspection of the list shows that four of
the five are in Shia Muslim areas - where the polling
will probably be high - and one in an upmarket Sunni
area where it will be moderate. Every working-class
Sunni polling station will be out of bounds to the
press. I wonder if the television lads will tell us
that today when they show voters "flocking" to the
polls.

In the Karada district, we found three truckloads of
youths yesterday, all brandishing Iraqi flags, all -
like the unemployed who have been sticking posters to
Baghdad's walls - paid by the government to
"advertise" the election. And there was a cameraman
from Iraqi state television, which is controlled by
Iyad Allawi's "interim" government.

The "real" story is outside Baghdad, in the tens of
thousands of square miles outside the government's
control and outside the sight of independent
journalists, especially in the four Sunni Muslim
provinces which are the heart of Iraq's insurrection.

Right up to election hour, US jets were continuing to
bomb "terrorist targets", the latest in the city of
Ramadi - which, though Messrs Bush and Blair do not
say so - is now in the hands of the insurgents as
surely as Fallujah was before the Americans destroyed
it.

Every month since Mr Allawi, the former CIA agent, was
appointed premier by the US government, American air
strikes on Iraq have been increasing exponentially.
There are no "embedded" reporters on the giant
American air base at Qatar or aboard the US carriers
in the Gulf from which these ever-increasing and ever
more lethal sorties are being flown. They go
unrecorded, unreported, part of the "fantasy" war
which is all too real to the victims but hidden from
us journalists as we cower in Baghdad.

The reality is that much of Iraq has become a
free-fire zone - for reference, see under "Vietnam" -
and the Americans are conducting this secret war as
efficiently and as ruthlessly as they conducted their
earlier bombing campaign against Iraq between 1991 and
2003, an air raid a day, or two raids, or three. Then
they were attacking Saddam's "military targets" in
Iraq. Now they are attacking "foreign terrorist
targets" or "anti-Iraqi forces". I especially like
this one since the foreigners involved in this
violence happen in reality to be Americans who are
mostly attacking Iraqis.

And not only in Sunni areas. Just this month, for
example, US aircraft fired missiles at a students'
dormitory at the University of Erbil in the Kurdish
north of the country. Among the wounded Kurds was a
survivor of Saddam's gassing of Halabja - one of the
reasons Mr Bush and Mr Blair supposedly invaded this
wretched place. No explanations from the Americans.

So why were they bombing Kurds? To warn them that they
will not be given independence? Or to stop them
feuding over the city of Mosul, which "new" Iraq wants
to keep inside the national territory, not surrender
to some future "Kurdistan"?

Yes, I know how it's all going to be played out.
Iraqis bravely vote despite the bloodcurdling threats
of the enemies of democracy. At last, the American and
British policies have reached fruition - a real and
functioning democracy will be in place so we can leave
soon. Or next year. Or in a decade or so. Merely to
hold these elections - an act of folly in the eyes of
so many Iraqis - will be a "success".

The Shias will vote en masse, the Sunnis will largely
abstain. Shia Muslim power will be enshrined for the
first time in an Arab country. And then the
manipulation will begin and the claims of fraud and
the admissions that the elections might be "flawed" in
some areas.

But we'll go on saying "democracy" and "freedom" over
and over again, the insurgency will continue and grow
even more violent, and the Iraqis will go on dying.
But there will be democracy in Iraq.

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article7910.htm


                
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{Invite (mankind, O Muhammad ) to the Way of your Lord (i.e. Islam) with wisdom 
(i.e. with the Divine Inspiration and the Qur'an) and fair preaching, and argue 
with them in a way that is better. Truly, your Lord knows best who has gone 
astray from His Path, and He is the Best Aware of those who are guided.} 
(Holy Quran-16:125)

{And who is better in speech than he who [says: "My Lord is Allah (believes in 
His Oneness)," and then stands straight (acts upon His Order), and] invites 
(men) to Allah's (Islamic Monotheism), and does righteous deeds, and says: "I 
am one of the Muslims."} (Holy Quran-41:33)
 
The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said: "By Allah, if 
Allah guides one person by you, it is better for you than the best types of 
camels." [al-Bukhaaree, Muslim] 

The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)  also said, "Whoever 
calls to guidance will have a reward similar to the reward of the one who 
follows him, without the reward of either of them being lessened at all." 
[Muslim, Ahmad, Aboo Daawood, an-Nasaa'ee, at-Tirmidhee, Ibn Maajah] 
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