Untitled Document
Airline announcement: "To passengers waiting to board Flight ABC 123: your
plane has been delayed by fifteen minutes. We thank you for your patience and
regret any inconvenience."
US Military in Iraq announcement: "To the 68 year-old man whose house
we burst into in the middle of the night, firing stun grenades, and who we then
handcuffed, hooded and dragged off to interrogate and then discovered was entirely
innocent because we are a bunch of incompetent boobies, we regret any inconvenience."
That's the way it goes, folks. Explode into someone's house at 4 in the morning,
trash the place, steal valuables, rough up the elderly owner and terrify his
wife, haul him and his sons away, and after the whole thing is realized to have
been a total military balls-up announce that "It was determined that [the
victim] was detained by mistake and should be released. Coalition forces regret
any inconvenience and acknowledge Mr Hamid's co-operation in resolving this
matter." Then forget all about it.
If anyone is wondering why US occupation troops (ignore the misleading garbage
about "coalition forces") are increasingly detested and regarded with
fear and contempt by more and more Iraqis as the days go by, there is no need
to look further than their act of swaggering incompetence on May 30, because
it is typical of what they have been doing in Iraq since the invasion. The only
reason we know about this particular case of arrogance and stupidity on the
part of a bunch of clumsy thugs is because the man concerned, Dr Mohsen Abdul
Hamid, is a major political figure. The citizens of the United States didn't
hear much about the shambles, and they know nothing whatever about all the other
outrages because they do not involve high profile people. All the other smash
crash and bash operations of cloddish violence against the civil population
are reported only in non-US media.
The illegal abduction and gross humiliation of Dr Abdul Hamid are much more
important than the bungling ineptitude of the US military commander in Iraq.
(For it is he who is to blame. It was his cretinous subordinates who ordered
the raid, and his delinquent barbarians who assaulted the house of an innocent
family in dead of night. The buck stops -- or should stop -- right on the shoulders
of the senior star-wearer.)
The case is specially important because the President and Prime Minister of
Iraq protested to the United States of America about the US military's bizarre
treatment of one of their country's most prominent politicians. The violation
of his privacy and dignity and the statement by Iraq's President that "
. . . no one gave prior notice to the Presidential Council about the arrest
of Dr. Mohsen Abdul-Hamid. This way of dealing with such a distinguished political
figure is unacceptable" are not to be brushed aside. Their expressions
of deep concern were made on behalf of their citizens and have a direct bearing
on bilateral relations and policy. But Bush Washington ignored the protests.
Failure to respond promptly, publicly and courteously to a head of state in
such circumstances is one more example of calculated international vulgarity
on the part of the Bush administration. It shows the weak countries of the world
that Bush regards them with contempt. Bush would respond quickly enough to China's
head man (who personally despises him, with good reason), and if he didn't reply
to Russia's Putin, his intellectual superior by some scores of IQ points, he
would be put in his place very quickly. But little countries don't matter. And
little countries, to the Bush zealots, are those whose heads of state they can
insult, bully and denigrate without fear of retaliation.
Last month, President Karzai of Afghanistan dared to raise the matter of the
torture and murder of some of his citizens in the most bestial fashion by American
soldiers.
There was then immediate release in Washington (let's forget the word 'leak'
; this handout was a matter of Bush administration policy) of a cable from the
US embassy in Kabul declaring that President Karzai is entirely responsible
for the failure to counter the crisis of massive opium/heroin production in
his country. This grotesque announcement was intended to deflect attention in
America (the rest of the world doesn't matter) from President Karzai's expression
of concern about the savagery of US soldiers in the prison camps they run. The
ploy succeeded, of course. As intended by the Bush propaganda apparatchiks,
most news outlets swamped the first story by the second -- if indeed they had
even mentioned Karzai's protest, which many of them had not.
Deliberate release of the let's-trash-Karzai cable was not only contemptible
but ludicrous. The person in the Kabul embassy who composed it (if it is genuine)
is either insane, or a sniveling understrapper of the Washington system, or
absurdly and unbelievably ignorant of conditions in Afghanistan. Of course President
Karzai can't do anything to counter drug production or smuggling, because the
18,000 US troops in his country are forbidden to act against the drug barons
and their private armies. The speedy publication of the State Department's classified
cable immediately after President Karzai commented on criminal actions against
his citizens was intended to humiliate him and make it clear that if he ever
dares criticize US soldiers who torture and murder his people, and thus their
commander-in-chief, he does so at his peril.
The smear and jeer operation against President Karzai succeeded in spades.
It wasn't a shot across his bows: it was a broadside into his vitals. The poor
fellow was shown publicly to be a nonentity whose words mean nothing, and his
credibility in his own country was shattered. This malevolent and spiteful action
by Bush Washington destroyed such authority as he had, and has set back the
Afghan stability program by another decade or so. Well done, the deranged ninnies
who at all costs defend The Great Leader against the slightest word of disapproval.
What a bunch of squalid little jerks.
The warlords who control most of Afghanistan, almost all of whom are up to
their necks in the drug trade, now know for certain that the President of Afghanistan
is a mere figurehead. His request to Washington for some face-saving measure
of control over US forces was rejected out of hand. The literate inhabitants
of his country, all 30 per cent of them, now realize that the man they voted
to be president is only a dancer to the tune of the occupying power. The illiterate
majority, influenced by dangerous rabble-rousers, already firmly believed that
Karzai is a mere tool of the invader, which is exactly how Afghan puppet politicians
were regarded during the Soviet military occupation in the 1980s.
In similar vein, the President and Prime Minister of Iraq are supposed to be
the leaders of a free country, because Bush keeps telling us that he has liberated
Iraq and that it is now a democracy. But what "liberator" with any
sensitivity would call the main military base in an occupied country "Camp
Victory"?
Iraqis are a proud people, a fact which is regarded as quaint (where have we
heard that word before?) by the Bush zealots and their smash-the-door-down occupation
troops whose ferociously arrogant behavior began to alienate Iraqis immediately
after the occupation began. If they had behaved as liberators rather than conquerors
there wouldn't have been an uncontrollable uprising. It's too late now to reverse
the hatred they have generated, but it would help to at least try to appear
civilized by dropping such arrogant and triumphal (and, now, ironic) nomenclature
as "Camp Victory". And while we are covering naive, pathetic and immature
behavior, the US commander of Iraq should give an order forbidding his troops
to use the word "hajis" to describe its citizens. Perhaps he doesn't
know it is used. If so, he is failing in his duty. But if he does know that
it is usual for his soldiers to scream "get the fuck out of the way you
fucking hajis" at bewildered civilians, and does not forbid such atrociously
insulting behavior, then he is a moron.
So it is not surprising, given the policy and atmosphere of Bush-induced exultant
supremacy, that the leaders of the supposedly free nation of Iraq were not consulted
about the pre-dawn arrest of the head of one of the most important political
parties in their country, and that when they complained about it they were ignored.
This is the Bush version of the spread of freedom, and the world has become
accustomed to the use of uncouth boorishness in the US confrontation policy
that has replaced diplomacy.
The few US reporters in Iraq know perfectly well that the humiliation of Dr
Mohsen Abdul-Hamid was the most sensitive and important story in recent weeks,
if only because it has had enormous influence on the Sunni community whose support
is so critical in this terrible period of mayhem and murder. But no US paper
or network gave it the cover it should have, simply because that would mean
criticizing the US military and its goofy "we are the conquerors"
policy for the occupation, which has been so utterly disastrous.
Media outlets that do not "Support Our Troops" to the hilt, by doing
their utmost to conceal torture, murder, pre-dawn raids on innocent people,
and destruction of towns on a scale reminiscent of the Nazis' obliteration of
Guernica, are doomed to suffer the Bush/Nixon revenge for "disloyalty",
which is malicious, poisonous and vindictive. Some of them try to tell some
of the truth, but most just copy the US military mantra about its ruthless excesses
that have alienated so many Iraqis and Afghans and horrified so much of the
world. It's a phrase we all know well. A comfortable and contemptuous non-apology
for planes being late and innocent citizens being brutally persecuted: "We
regret any inconvenience." . . . .
Brian Cloughley writes on military and political affairs. He can be reached
through his website www.briancloughley.com