Can't
Blair See that this Country is
About to Explode? Can't Bush?
By Robert
Fisk
The
Independent
UK
Sunday 01
August 2004
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/fisk/story.jsp?story=546763
The Prime Minister has accused
some journalists of almost wanting a disaster to happen in
Iraq. Robert Fisk, who has spent the past five weeks reporting
from the deteriorating and devastated country, says the
disaster has already happened, over and over again.
The war is a fraud. I'm
not talking about the weapons of mass destruction that didn't
exist. Nor the links between Saddam
Hussein and al-Qa'ida
which didn't exist.
Nor all the other lies upon which we went to war. I'm talking
about the new lies.
For just as, before the war,
our governments warned us of threats that did not exist, now
they hide from us the threats that do exist. Much of Iraq has
fallen outside the control of America's puppet government in
Baghdad but we are not told. Hundreds of attacks are made
against US troops every month. But unless an American dies, we
are not told. This month's death toll of Iraqis in Baghdad
alone has now reached 700 - the worst month since the invasion
ended. But we are not told.
The stage management of this
catastrophe in Iraq was all too evident at Saddam Hussein's
"trial". Not only did the US military censor the tapes of the
event. Not only did they effectively delete all sound of the
11 other defendants. But the Americans led Saddam Hussein to
believe - until he reached the courtroom - that he was on his
way to his execution. Indeed, when he entered the room he
believed that the judge was there to condemn him to death.
This, after all, was the way Saddam ran his own state security
courts. No wonder he initially looked "disorientated" - CNN's
helpful description - because, of course, he was meant to look
that way. We had made sure of that. Which is why Saddam asked
Judge Juhi: "Are you a lawyer? ...
Is this a trial?" And swiftly, as he
realised that this really was an initial court hearing
- not a preliminary to his own hanging - he quickly adopted an
attitude of belligerence.
But don't
think we're going to learn much more about Saddam's future
court appearances. Salem Chalabi,
the brother of convicted fraudster Ahmad and the man entrusted
by the Americans with the tribunal, told the Iraqi press two
weeks ago that all media would be excluded from future court
hearings. And I can see why. Because if
Saddam does a Milosevic, he'll
want to talk about the real intelligence and military
connections of his regime - which were primarily with the
United States.
Living in Iraq these past few
weeks is a weird as well as dangerous experience. I drive down
to Najaf. Highway 8 is one of the
worst in Iraq. Westerners are murdered there. It is littered
with burnt-out police vehicles and American trucks. Every
police post for 70 miles has been abandoned. Yet a few hours
later, I am sitting in my room in Baghdad watching Tony Blair,
grinning in the House of Commons as if he is the hero of a
school debating competition; so much for the Butler report.
Indeed, watching any Western
television station in Baghdad these days is like tuning in to
Planet Mars. Doesn't Blair realise
that Iraq is about to implode? Doesn't Bush
realise this? The
American-appointed "government" controls only parts of Baghdad
- and even there its ministers and civil servants are
car-bombed and assassinated. Baquba,
Samara, Kut,
Mahmoudiya, Hilla,
Fallujah,
Ramadi, all are outside government authority.
Iyad Allawi,
the "Prime Minister", is little more than mayor of Baghdad.
"Some journalists," Blair announces, "almost want there to be
a disaster in Iraq." He doesn't get it. The disaster exists
now.
When suicide bombers ram their
cars into hundreds of recruits outside police stations, how on
earth can anyone hold an election next January? Even the
National Conference to appoint those who will arrange
elections has been twice postponed. And looking back through
my notebooks over the past five weeks, I find that not a
single Iraqi, not a single American soldier I have spoken to,
not a single mercenary - be he American, British or South
African - believes that there will be elections in January.
All said that Iraq is deteriorating by the day. And most asked
why we journalists weren't saying so.
But in Baghdad, I turn on my
television and watch Bush telling his Republican supporters
that Iraq is improving, that Iraqis support the "coalition",
that they support their new US-manufactured government, that
the "war on terror" is being won, that Americans are safer.
Then I go to an internet site and watch two hooded men hacking
off the head of an American in Riyadh, tearing at the
vertebrae of an American in Iraq with a knife. Each day, the
papers here list another construction company pulling out of
the country. And I go down to visit the friendly, tragically
sad staff of the Baghdad mortuary and there, each day, are
dozens of those Iraqis we supposedly came to liberate,
screaming and weeping and cursing as they carry their loved
ones on their shoulders in cheap coffins.
I keep re-reading Tony Blair's
statement. "I remain convinced it was right to go to war. It
was the most difficult decision of my life." And I cannot
understand it. It may be a terrible decision to go to war.
Even Chamberlain thought that; but he didn't find it a
difficult decision - because, after the Nazi invasion of
Poland, it was the right thing to do. And driving the streets
of Baghdad now, watching the terrified American patrols,
hearing yet another thunderous explosion shaking my windows
and doors after dawn, I realise
what all this means. Going to war in Iraq, invading Iraq last
year, was the most difficult
decision Blair had to take because he thought - correctly -
that it might be the wrong decision. I will always remember
his remark to British troops in Basra, that the sacrifice of
British soldiers was not Hollywood but "real flesh and blood".
Yes, it was real flesh and blood that was shed - but for
weapons of mass destruction that weren't real at all.
"Deadly force is
authorised," it says on
checkpoints all over Baghdad. Authorised
by whom? There is no accountability. Repeatedly, on the great
highways out of the city US soldiers shriek at motorists and
open fire at the least suspicion. "We had some Navy Seals down
at our checkpoint the other day," a 1st Cavalry sergeant says
to me. "They asked if we were having any trouble. I said, yes,
they've been shooting at us from a house over there. One of
them asked: 'That house?' We said yes. So they have these
three SUVs and a lot of weapons made of titanium and they
drive off towards the house. And later they come back and say
'We've taken care of that'. And we didn't get shot at any
more."
What does this mean? The
Americans are now bragging about their siege of
Najaf. Lieutenant Colonel Garry
Bishop of the 37th Armoured
Division's 1st Battalion believes it was an "ideal" battle
(even though he failed to kill or capture
Muqtada Sadr whose "Mehdi
army" were fighting the US forces).
It was "ideal", Bishop explained, because the Americans
avoided damaging the holy shrines of the Imams Ali and
Hussein. What are Iraqis to make of this? What if a Muslim
army occupied Kent and bombarded Canterbury and then bragged
that they hadn't damaged Canterbury Cathedral? Would we be
grateful?
What, indeed, are we to make
of a war which is turned into a fantasy by those who started
it? As foreign workers pour out of Iraq for fear of their
lives, US Secretary of State Colin Powell tells a press
conference that hostage-taking is having an "effect" on
reconstruction. Effect! Oil pipeline explosions are now as
regular as power cuts. In parts of Baghdad now, they have only
four hours of electricity a day; the streets swarm with
foreign mercenaries, guns poking from windows, shouting
abusively at Iraqis who don't clear the way for them. This is
the "safer" Iraq which Mr Blair
was boasting of the other day. What world does the British
Government exist in?
Take the Saddam trial. The
entire Arab press - including the Baghdad papers - prints the
judge's name. Indeed, the same judge has given interviews
about his charges of murder against
Muqtada Sadr. He has posed
for newspaper pictures. But when I mention his name in The
Independent, I was solemnly censured by the British
Government's spokesman. Salem Chalabi
threatened to prosecute me. So let me get this right. We
illegally invade Iraq. We kill up to 11,000 Iraqis. And
Mr Chalabi,
appointed by the Americans, says I'm guilty of "incitement to
murder". That just about says it all.