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From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: We Will Not Be Silenced [WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]

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We will not be silenced
MPs must be free to speak out against this absurd and
potentially disastrous war
George Galloway 
Saturday October 20, 2001
The Guardian
In exile in Switzerland, shortly before the Russian
revolution, Lenin opined that "there are decades when
nothing happens; and there are weeks when decades
happen". We are, it seems, living through such weeks.
It is hard to remember a time when political
instability, civil strife and the roar of bombs and
missiles have so scarred the international landscape.
Governments like Norway's fall, others like
Australia's cut and run for a khaki election. General
Musharraf, Pakistan's self-appointed military
strongman, admits he's forcing through a policy
rejected by 83% of his compatriots. General Sharon's
Israeli government, riven between hawks and
superhawks, now appears to have embarked on a doomsday
option, possibly including the assassination of
Arafat, following the slaying of the world's least
attractive "tourism" minister.
The "soft centered" European governments are beginning
to squirm and the Labour benches in the British
parliament are turning queasy at the slaughter of the
world's poorest by the world's richest. Coalition
comrades, India and Pakistan, are shelling each other
across the line of control in Kashmir. Aid agencies
are in "emotional" revolt and, like Mary Robinson, are
having to be ordered back into their box by Clare
Short. Muslim streets are burning from Gaza to
Jakarta. In the House of Commons, former defence
ministers, Labour rightwingers like Gwyneth Dunwoody
and MPs with large Muslim electorates have swollen the
ranks of the usual suspects - those like me, who have
opposed all the wars of the new imperialism.
Internationally, the coalition is shakier still. The
Arab League, echoing Nato leaders, has declared that
any attack on an Arab country will be regarded as an
attack against all of them. The Saudis, having denied
the US use of their bases and declined a visit by Tony
Blair, are now questioning the basis of the whole
campaign - even openly doubting the involvement of Bin
Laden in the crimes of September 11.
Meanwhile, the phone-in lines to Arab television
stations are jammed with opponents of the war and
blood-chilling threats of mayhem in revenge. Bush and
Blair may not be "at war with Islam", but "Islam" is
now at war with them and we will be lucky if that is
not soon visible on the streets of northern English
cities. 
Nowhere is that more evident than in the reaction to
the "Middle East fit for heroes" the Anglo-Americans
are promising. The Arabs simply don't believe it.
Perfidious Albion, after all, has a track record. The
Palestinian tragedy was authored here in the building
in which I write. During the Great War, while Lawrence
of Arabia rallied the tribal hordes to support our
jihad on the Turks - with the promise of Arab
independence - over in Downing Street Mr Sykes and
Monsieur Picot were carving up the area into British
and French colonies. And in 1991, Britain and America
offered the Arabs a new deal, with Israel forced to
implement international legality, if they backed the
fight against Iraq. Promises made and broken with a
handshake. 
Seldom can a western war drum have sounded more
hollow. Seldom can the prattle of ministers - Labour
ministers, many of whom I can still see sporting their
CND badges as they shuttled around looking for safe
seats in the 70s and 80s - about command and control
centres, air defences and radar capabilities have
seemed so obscenely stupid. The Afghans have none. The
airport at Kabul is no more than a collection of
shacks, whose telephones couldn't even make outgoing
calls. And the statement, delivered by our defence
secretary with all the gravitas of Captain Mainwaring,
that we had achieved "air-superiority" over
Afghanistan - over a Flintstones-style air force which
couldn't even leave the ground - will live forever as
one of those stories you really couldn't make up.
So what are the "allies" bombing? The four UN
mine-clearing staff, the shepherds and their families
in the village of Khorum, the Red Cross compound in
Kabul, the residents of Kandahar, the trucks full of
terrified refugees. More of these human and public
relations disasters will conspire to "bury" the
government's message. An already restless audience
here, never mind among the 1.3bn Muslims nursing their
wrath, will not sit through this unequal fight with
equanimity. And without a change of policy, the winter
snows will soon begin to tilt this disaster into an
international catastrophe.
Well, what should we do, ask the remaining subalterns
of the war party's thin red line. As the Irishman
famously replied: "If I wanted to get to Cork, I
wouldn't have started from here." The government was
repeatedly warned of the grisly consequences of its
tango with Islamic fundamentalism in Afghanistan. I
accused it on the eve of the fall of Kabul of having
opened the gates to the barbarians and of the long
dark night which would follow. Many of us have since
described the rising tide of radical Islam, buoyed by
our double standards towards Palestine and Iraq, and
our buttressing of stooge kings, generals and
99%-of-the-vote presidents of the Muslim world - now
laughably lined up behind "operation enduring
freedom". 
But even for those who have brought us to this
terrifying cusp in world events, there were
alternatives. The squeeze could have been kept up on
the Taliban - three weeks is not a long time to secure
extradition on a capital offence, especially without
providing evidence to the country concerned. The
judicious waving of carrots to tribal chiefs could
well have achieved the betrayal of Bin Laden. And if
military action was seen as unavoidable, the target
should have been the Arab legions in the mountains,
not the poor ragged Afghans they've colonised, who
never invited them in - we did - and have no way of
making them leave. This and a Lockerbie-type trial, in
a neutral country and including Muslim jurists, would
have been one way to show how "civilised" we were.
Instead we've answered savagery with savagery.
On the home front, there are disturbing signs of the
Downing Street general staff losing their nerve.
Careless talk circulates about members of parliament
being carpeted, media appearances vetted, ultimatums
issued. This would be the ultimate surrender to
democracy's enemies. Throughout the second world war,
Aneurin Bevan subjected the line of the Churchill
coalition government to excoriating criticism and
withering examination - as Churchill himself had done
with Chamberlain. Both would have scorned the idea of
their actions being licensed by whips, as if we were
circus dogs whose duty was to perform tricks for the
ringmaster. I too have now been summoned to see the
chief whip. Next week, over tea and biscuits at 11
Downing Street, I will have to courteously explain to
my old friend Hilary Armstrong that I, for one, will
not be gagged. This bombing has to stop - and the war
is too important to be left to ministers and generals
in conclave. 
? George Galloway is Labour MP for Glasgow Kelvin and
a columnist for the Scottish Mail on Sunday. He will
be online on guardian.co.uk/politics on Monday at 1
pm. 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

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