Info about subscribing or unsubscribing from this list is at the bottom of this 
message.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

http://www.counterpunch.org/toufe06242005.html

>From the World Tribunal on Iraq in Istanbul
By Zeynep Toufe
June 26, 2005

A profound sense of disappointment with the American people greeted me
here in Istanbul where the final session of the World Tribunal on Iraq,
investigating and documenting war crimes in Iraq, modeled on the Bertrand
Russell Vietnam War Tribunal of 1967, is convening. The mood is the
opposite of what I encountered here and elsewhere after the anti-war
demonstrations of 2002 and 2003. Back then, enormous sympathy for victims
of 9/11, and respect for a people who took to the streets to try to stop
their government from committing acts of aggression before the invasion
had even begun, had generated admiration and warmth toward Americans, if
not their government.

After all, people said, Bush stole the 2000 election. And, look, they
would point out, Americans are trying to stop him. Americans are good
people with a bad government -- just like everywhere else -- they would
declare, and curse Bin Laden and Bush in one swift, contemptuous breath.

Now, however, I get confused looks, pained questions, and heads shaking
quietly in disbelief and disappointment. Don't the American people know, I
am asked, again and again. Explain please, they persist, how, after the
publication of pictures from Abu Ghraib, Bush got re-elected? Don't the
American people watch the news from Iraq? Where did the protests, the
outrage, the uproar go?

This is not just a sad turn of events; it is a profoundly dangerous
situation for the American people. Mass murder of civilians is rarely the
work of lonesome nuts operating totally outside of societal norms and
beliefs. On the contrary, scratch the surface of most of the horrors of
the twentieth century, and you will find a cold, cruel belief that the
victims brought it upon themselves. Everyone shakes their head and loudly
condemns the atrocity once the bodies are cold and deep under the earth;
however, a close examination of the events as they occurred often reveals
that there was an implicit and explicit turning of hearts and faces away
from the people who ended up slaughtered. The perception of indifference
and complicity of the American people to the crimes committed by their
government is obviously not a good development.

Let me try to be even more blunt: if there had been another attack on
American soil around or after the February 15, 2003 protests, I believe
that Islamist terrorism would take a nosedive in legitimacy in the Middle
East. Let alone being able to recruit would-be militants willing to kill
civilians, such groups would find it difficult to try to defend themselves
from the people of the region who would want to tear them from limb to
limb. But now, I fear, many people would shrug, with sadness for sure, if
America were to be attacked again. Of course, most people do not wish such
catastrophe upon the American people, but there seems to be a growing
level of indifference and dislike towards Americans because they are
perceived to have turned away from the crimes of their government.

And this is a made-in-heaven environment for recruitment for terrorist
groups. Just as our recruiters find it harder and harder to find
volunteers for the U.S. military, their recruiters, I sense, are finding
it easier and easier. It is, after all, a connected situation, a see-saw
of legitimacy.

At first I tried explain my questioners about the corporate control of
media and the lack of grassroots organizations, but, honestly, it all
rings a bit hollow. In the shops, on the buses and the ferries, and among
the participants of the Tribunal, everywhere, people persist: don't they
have Internet; don't they have alternative media; is nothing reported
about Iraq at all? What on earth is up? I also tried to tell people about
the stubborn remains of the anti-war movement, of the many people who
oppose the war and find it hard to find a way to register their
opposition, of the disregard for public opinion this administration has
shown, the attempts at alternative media, organizing, congressional
hearingsĀ… It was clear from the way my comments were received that it all
sounded like I was making excuses for a people who have indeed, at least
for the moment, seem to have shut out the systematic torture and the
brutal occupation out of their minds and hearts.

I realized I needed to do something else. I needed to talk about things
apart from the general positive things you can say about most any country
-- that there are people who remain committed to justice and peace, even
during the hardest of times. I needed to explain that are
almost-singularly and deeply American challenges to the shameful acts of
this administration. That what we are witnessing is also a struggle
between different American values, and the results are far from certain.

I started telling people about Navy Lt. Commander Charles Swift.

Lieutenant Commander Swift, a military lawyer, you see, was assigned to
defend Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a Yemeni who served as a driver for Osama bin
Ladin. Hamdan was charged before the kangaroo military commissions set up
by the Pentagon to try to provide a sense of legitimacy to the detentions
in Guantanamo and elsewhere. People like Mr. Hamdan were charged first
with the hopes that, finding it impossible to mount a plausible defense,
they would plead guilty, in return for reduced time. Their participation,
it was hoped, would make the process appear somewhat acceptable, if not
perfect.

Commander Swift and other military lawyers, however, put a stop to that
charade. They launched a vigorous defense, going all the way up to the
Supreme Court -- even filing lawsuits in civilian courts in their own
names on behalf of their clients who have no such access. They challenged
every aspect of the process, from the judges, to the rules of evidence, to
the tribunals themselves. They maintained that their clients had the right
to presumption of innocence, just like everyone else, and that the charges
against them would have to proven, not assumed. (In fact, Mr. Hamdan
maintains he was just a driver for hire trying to make a living.)

Cmdr. Swift and others persisted, and remarkably, they have torn apart the
whole sham -- very deservedly so. Hamdan v. Rumsfeld produced a stunning
loss to the administration as Judge James Robertson of the United States
District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that President Bush "had
both overstepped his constitutional bounds and improperly brushed aside
the Geneva Conventions in establishing military commissions to try
detainees at the United States naval base here as war criminals." Cmdr.
Swift and other military lawyers have been traveling at home and abroad,
openly and loudly denouncing the military commission system as
illegitimate, unfair and unacceptable.

People gasp with disbelief as they ponder these American career military
lawyers, randomly assigned to defend people their government has
designated as terrorists and locked up without charges, during a process
clearly designed to provide not justice but a fig-leaf show-trial, taking
on the executive branch so boldly and openly. How many countries, I ask,
produce men of such integrity in their armed forces who would actually
defend Osama Bin Ladin's driver as a client innocent until proven guilty?
Would you, I ask? Yes, there is a very ugly, cruel side to U.S. foreign
policy and imperialism, but there is also this.

I also remind people about the Taguba report, produced by
Filipino-American Maj. Gen. Antonio M. Taguba, son of Sgt. Tomas Taguba,
who had escaped from Japanese custody in the Bataan Death March during
World War II, but was retired from the U.S. army without recognition --
receiving a Bronze star and a Prisoner of War medal only at the age of
eighty. I tell people that it seemed as if this son had remembered the
racism, cruelty and discrimination his father had encountered in his
military career --and from the Japanese forces during the war-- when
writing that bold expose of the wrongs in Abu Ghraip. And this man, I
remind people, is a general in the U.S. army. He chose not to produce a
cover-up that would surely please some of his superiors, and brush the
moral wrongs he discovered back under the carpet. This too is America, I
say.

Lastly, I remind people of the many Americans who have traveled to this
Tribunal to join the world in holding their government accountable. From
lawyers here from Center for Constitutional Rights and groups, to women of
CodePink who showed up in hot pink skirts and t-shirts with anti-war
slogans, to folks from Deep Dish TV who have arrived here with their
equipment in order to provide a global broadcast, to renowned academics
like Richard Falk who gave a deeply moving opening speech, to the many
alternative media journalists struggling to carry these voices back home,
Americans are a well-represented contingent. This too is a face of
America, I say. I hope that face perseveres, people respond. I do too, I
say, I do too.

I also hope we can do more than hope.


Zeynep Toufe will be blogging from the World Tribunal on Iraq (
http://www.worldtribunal.org)at her blog, http://www.underthesamesun.org.
She can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

_____________________________

Note: This message comes from the peace-justice-news e-mail mailing list of 
articles and commentaries about peace and social justice issues, activism, etc. 
 If you do not regularly receive mailings from this list or have received this 
message as a forward from someone else and would like to be added to the list, 
send a blank e-mail with the subject "subscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
or you can visit:
http://lists.enabled.com/mailman/listinfo/peace-justice-news  Go to that same 
web address to view the list's archives or to unsubscribe.

E-mail accounts that become full, inactive or out of order for more than a few 
days will be deleted from this list.

FAIR USE NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the 
information in this e-mail is distributed without profit to those who have 
expressed a prior interest in receiving it for research and educational 
purposes.  I am making such material available in an effort to advance 
understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, 
scientific, and social justice issues, etc. I believe this constitutes a 'fair 
use' of copyrighted material as provided for in the US Copyright Law.

Reply via email to