PILGER: Sinister Events In A Cynical War
============= 

http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=15&ItemID=8827 


by John Pilger September 27, 2005 


Here are questions that are not being asked about the latest twist of a 
cynical war. Were explosives and a remote-control detonator found in the 
car of the two SAS special forces men "rescued" from prison in Basra on 19 
September? If true, what were they planning to do with them? Why did the 
British military authorities in Iraq put out an unbelievable version of 
the circumstances that led up to armoured vehicles smashing down the wall 
of a prison? 


According to the head of Basra's Governing Council, which has co-operated 
with the British, five civilians were killed by British soldiers. A judge 
says nine. How much is an Iraqi life worth? Is there to be no honest 
accounting in Britain for this sinister event, or do we simply accept 
Defence Secretary John Reid's customary arrogance? "Iraqi law is very 
clear," he said. "British personnel are immune from Iraqi legal process." 
He omitted to say that this fake immunity was invented by Iraq's 
occupiers. 


Watching "embedded" journalists in Iraq and London, attempting to protect 
the British line was like watching a satire of the whole atrocity in Iraq. 
First, there was feigned shock that the Iraqi regime's "writ" did not run 
outside its American fortifications in Baghdad and the "British trained" 
police in Basra might be "infiltrated". An outraged Jeremy Paxman wanted 
to know how two of our boys - in fact, highly suspicious foreigners 
dressed as Arabs and carrying a small armoury - could possibly be arrested 
by police in a "democratic" society. "Aren't they supposed to be on our 
side?" he demanded. 


Although reported initially by the Times and the Mail, all mention of the 
explosives allegedly found in the SAS men's unmarked Cressida vanished 
from the news. Instead, the story was the danger the men faced if they 
were handed over to the militia run by the "radical" cleric Moqtada 
al-Sadr. "Radical" is a gratuitous embedded term; al-Sadr has actually 
co-operated with the British. What did he have to say about the "rescue"? 
Quite a lot, none of which was reported in this country. His spokesman, 
Sheikh Hassan al-Zarqani, said the SAS men, disguised as al-Sadr's 
followers, were planning an attack on Basra ahead of an important 
religious festival. "When the police tried to stop them," he said, "[they] 
opened fire on the police and passers-by. After a car chase, they were 
arrested. What our police found in the car was very disturbing - weapons, 
explosives and a remote control detonator. These are the weapons of 
terrorists." 


The episode illuminates the most enduring lie of the Anglo-American 
adventure. This says the "coalition" is not to blame for the bloodbath in 
Iraq - which it is, overwhelmingly - and that foreign terrorists 
orchestrated by al-Qaeda are the real culprits. The conductor of the 
orchestra, goes this line, is Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian. The 
demonry of Al-Zarqawi is central to the Pentagon's "Strategic Information 
Program" set up to shape news coverage of the occupation. It has been the 
Americans' single unqualified success. Turn on any news in the US and 
Britain, and the embedded reporter standing inside an American (or 
British) fortress will repeat unsubstantiated claims about al-Zarqawi. 


Two impressions are the result: that Iraqis' right to resist an illegal 
invasion - a right enshrined in international law - has been usurped and 
de-legitimised by callous foreign terrorists, and that a civil war is 
under way between the Shi'ites and the Sunni. A member of the Iraqi 
National Assembly, Fatah al-Sheikh said this week, "There is a huge 
campaign for the agents of the foreign occupiers to enter and plant hatred 
between the sons of the Iraqi people and spread rumours in order to scare 
the one from the other . . . The occupiers are trying to start religious 
incitement and if it does not happen, then they will start an internal 
Shi-ite incitement." 


The Anglo-American goal of "federalism" for Iraq is part of an imperial 
strategy of provoking divisions in a country where traditionally the 
communities have overlapped, even inter-married. The Osama-like promotion 
of al-Zarqawi is integral to this. Like the Scarlet Pimpernel, he is 
everywhere but nowhere. When the Americans crushed the city of Fallujah 
last year, the justification for their atrocious behaviour was "getting 
those guys loyal to al-Zarqawi". But the city's civil and religious 
authorities denied he was ever there or had anything to do with the 
resistance. 


"He is simply an invention." said the Imam of Baghdad's al-Kazimeya 
mosque. "Al-Zarqawi was killed in the beginning of the war in the Kurdish 
north. His family even held a ceremony after his death." Whether or not 
this is true, al-Zaqawi's "foreign invasion" serves as Bush's and Blair's 
last veil for their "war on terror" and botched attempt to control the 
world's second biggest source of oil. 


On 23 September, the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in 
Washington, an establishment body, published a report that accused the US 
of "feeding the myth" of foreign fighters in Iraqi who account for less 
than 10 per cent of a resistance estimated at 30,000. Of the eight 
comprehensive studies into the number of Iraqi civilians killed by the 
"coalition", four put the figure at more than 100,000. Until the British 
army is withdrawn from where it has no right to be, and those responsible 
for this monumental act of terrorism are indicted by the International 
Criminal Court, Britain is shamed 

 










                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        [email protected]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

Reply via email to