----Original Message Follows----
From: "Firson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: we'll be blaming someone else
Date: Thu, 25 Oct 2001 00:10:33 -0600

The Independent

Robert Fisk: As the refugees crowd the borders, we'll be blaming someone 
else

'It is palpably evident that they are not fleeing the Taliban but our bombs 
and
missiles'


23 October 2001
http://argument.independent.co.uk/commentators/story.jsp?story=100895



Mullah  Mohammed  Omar's  10-year-old  son  is dead. He was, according to 
Afghan
refugees  fleeing  Kandahar,  taken to one of the city's broken hospitals by 
his
father,  the Taliban leader and "Emir of the Faithful", but the boy - 
apparently
travelling  in  Omar's  car  when  it  was attacked by US aircraft - died of 
his
wounds.

No  regrets,  of course. Back in 1985, when American aircraft bombed Libya, 
they
also  destroyed  the  life  of  Colonel  Muammar  Gaddafi's six-year-old 
adopted
daughter.  No  regrets,  of  course.   In  1992, when an Israeli pilot 
flying an
American-made  Apache  helicopter fired an American-made missile into the 
car of
Said  Abbas  Moussawi,  head  of  the  Hizbollah  guerrilla army in Lebanon, 
the
Israeli pilot also killed Moussawi's 10-year-old. No regrets, of course.

Whether  these  children  deserved their deaths, be sure that their fathers 
- in
our  eyes  -  were to blame. Live by the sword, die by the sword - and that 
goes
for  the kids too. Back in 1991, The Independent revealed that American Gulf 
War
military  targets included "secure" bunkers in which members of Saddam 
Hussein's
family  -  or  the families of his henchmen - were believed to be hiding. 
That's
how  the  Americans  managed  to  slaughter  well over 300 people in an air 
raid
shelter at Amariya in Baghdad. No Saddam kids, just civilians. Too bad. I 
wonder
- now that President George Bush has given permission to the CIA to murder 
Osama
bin Laden - if the same policy applies today?

And  so  the  casualties  begin to mount. From Kandahar come ever more 
frightful
stories  of civilians buried under ruins, of children torn to pieces by 
American
bombs.  The  Taliban  - and here the Americans must breathe a collective 
sigh of
relief  -  refuse  to  allow  Western journalists to enter the country to 
verify
these  reports. So when a few television crews were able to find 18 fresh 
graves
in  the devastated village of Khorum outside Jalalabad just over a week ago, 
the
US  Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld could ridicule the deaths as 
"ridiculous".
But not, I suspect, for much longer.

For if each of our wars for infinite justice and eternal freedom have a 
familiar
trade  mark  -  the  military  claptrap  about  air  superiority, 
suppression of
"command  and control centres", radar capabilities - each has an awkward, 
highly
exclusive  little  twist  to  it. In 1999, Nato claimed it was waging war to 
put
Kosovo  Albanian refugees back in their homes - even though most of the 
refugees
were  still  in  their  homes  when  the  war  began.  Our bombing of Serbia 
led
directly  to  their  dispossession. We bear a heavy burden of responsibility 
for
their  suffering - since the Serbs had told us what they would do if Nato 
opened
hostilities  -  although the ultimate blame for their "ethnic cleansing" 
clearly
belonged to Slobodan Milosevic.

But  Nato's escape clause won't work this time round. For as the Afghan 
refugees
turn  up  in their thousands at the border, it is palpably evident that they 
are
fleeing  not  the  Taliban  but  our  bombs  and  missiles.  The  Taliban is 
not
ethnically  cleansing  its own Pashtun population. The refugees speak 
vividly of
their  fear  and  terror  as  our  bombs fall on their cities.  These people 
are
terrified  of  our  "war  on  terror",  victims  as  innocent  as those who 
were
slaughtered in the World Trade Centre on 11 September.  So where do we stop?

It's  an  important  question  because,  once  the winter storms breeze down 
the
mountain  gorges  of  Afghanistan, a tragedy is likely to commence, one 
which no
spin  doctor  or  propaganda  expert  will be able to divert. We'll say that 
the
thousands  about  to  die or who are dying of starvation and cold are 
victims of
the  Taliban's  intransigence  or  the  Taliban's support for "terrorism" or 
the
Taliban's propensity to steal humanitarian supplies.

I  have  to  admit  - having been weaned on Israel's promiscuous use of the 
word
"terror"  every time a Palestinian throws a stone at his occupiers - that I 
find
the very word "terrorism" increasingly mendacious as well as racist. Of 
course -
despite the slavish use of the phrase "war on terrorism" on the BBC and CNN 
- it
is  nothing  of  the  kind.  We  are  not planning to attack Tamil Tiger 
suicide
bombers  or Eta killers or Real IRA murderers or Kurdish KDP guerrillas. 
Indeed,
the  US  has  spent  a  lot of time supporting terrorists in Latin America - 
the
Contras  spring  to  mind  -  not  to  mention  the rabble we are now 
bombing in
Afghanistan.  This  is,  as  I've  said  before,  a  war  on  America's 
enemies.
Increasingly,  as  the  date  of  11  September  acquires  iconic status, we 
are
retaliating  for  the  crimes  against  humanity in New York and Washington. 
But
we're not setting up any tribunals to try those responsible.

The figure of 6,000 remains as awesome as it did in the days that followed.  
But
what  happens when the deaths for which we are responsible begin to approach 
the
same figure? Refugees have been telling me on the Pakistan border that the 
death
toll  from  our  bombings in Afghanistan is in the dozens, perhaps the 
hundreds.
Once  the  UN agencies give us details of the starving and the destitute who 
are
dying  in  their  flight from our bombs, it won't take long to reach 6,000. 
Will
that  be  enough?  Will  12,000  dead  Afghans appease us, albeit that they 
have
nothing  to  do  with  the Taliban or Osama bin Laden? Or 24,000? If we 
think we
know what our aims are in this fraudulent "war against terror", have we any 
idea
of proportion?

Sure,  we'll  blame the Taliban for future tragedies. Just as we've been 
blaming
them  for  drug exports from Afghanistan. Tony Blair was at the forefront of 
the
Taliban-drug  linkage. And all we have to do to believe this is to forget 
the UN
Drug  Control  Programme's  announcement  last  week  that  opium  
production in
Afghanistan  has fallen by 94 per cent, chiefly due to Mullah Omar's 
prohibition
in  Taliban-controlled  areas.  Most  of  Afghanistan's current opium 
production
comes - you've guessed it - from our friends in the Northern Alliance.

This  particular  war is, as Mr Bush said, going to be "unlike any other"  - 
but
not  in quite the way he thinks. It's not going to lead to justice.  Or 
freedom.
It's  likely  to  culminate  in  deaths that will diminish in magnitude even 
the
crime  against  humanity  on 11 September. Do we have any plans for this? 
Can we
turn  the  falsity  of  a  "war  against  terror"  into a war against famine 
and
starvation  and  death, even at the cost of postponing our day of reckoning 
with
Osama bin Laden?


source : The Independent-UK




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