This side of the Atlantic, in his finest Orwellian double-speak, UK prime
minister Tony Blair could announce: "The values we believe in should shine
through in Afghanistan". 

Could this be the same Blair whose government armed the Indonesian
military machine that not so long ago ran rampage through East Timor? 

Whose government has signed 91 military export licences for Israel in the
last eight months of the current Intifada? 

Such instances fly in the face of the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office
claim that "we will not issue export licences where there is clearly
identifiable risk that the equipment might be used for internal repression
or adversely effect regional stability". 

Are these the same "values" which, on the same day as the attacks on the
US, allowed the DSEi arms fair to go ahead in London and to continue for
another two days? 

And are these same "values" informing a Labour government who, without any
mandate from the UN, has helped notch up 15,000 RAF/USAF bombing raids on
Iraq since the second Gulf War? 


These same values are now behind the decision that Britain and the US
should support a proxy army, the Northern Alliance, an outfit with an
impressive record of widespread rape, pillage and murder in Kabul, in its
confrontation with the Taliban. One of the key figures in the Northern
Alliance is Abdul Rashid Dostom, and ally of Uzbekistan's President
Karimov, who has made huge profits from exporting drugs via Uzbekistan,
and who allegedly was all to keen to secure Russian weapons and military
supplies in exchange for keeping the gas flowing north. 

Just as Blair's values can enable him to curry favour with Israel's Ariel
Sharon, architect of the slaughter in Qibya in 1953 and the 1982 massacres
in Sabra and Shatila, so can these same ideals prompt him into friendly
dialogue with President Karimov, whose airfields are suddenly
strategically important now the bombing of Afghanistan has commenced. 

Karimov, incidentally, holds 7,000 political prisoners, allows no free
press and no political opposition. And Karimov, of course, has other
reasons for supporting the anti-Taliban alliance. His corrupt police state
is facing bankruptcy and to prop it up he is intent on having a pipeline
through Uzbekistan and Afghanistan to a Pakistani port.


UK Foreign Secretary Jack Straw was castigated by his boss for making a
link between Palestine and the recent terrorist attacks in the US when he
said that Middle Eastern terrorism was bred "by the anger many people in
this region feel at events over the years in Palestine." Tony Blair was to
spend 15 minutes on the phone to Ariel Sharon, trying to calm him down and
get him to agree to meet Straw.


None of which surprises socialists. 

We are well attuned to the machinations of the elites of powerful
countries as they seek to promote the interests of their corporate
backers. Though it is no easy task for the uninitiated, we urge our fellow
workers to be as vigilant as ever. 

To believe the arguments of the likes of Bush and Blair is to disarm
yourself intellectually - for it is at times like the present, when the
media is dancing to the tunes of governments, when the trumpets of
jingoism, patriotism and reaction are sounding, that we need to be
fighting the war of ideas.

jt

http://communities.msn.com/realworldsocialism


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