Father's Day: The Dangerous Notions of Michael
Berg
Part I: A Serviceable Villian and an Idealist Son
By Chris Floyd
06/15/06 "Information
Clearing House"
-- -- After last week's killing of terrorist chieftain Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi (or someone just like him) in Iraq, remembrances of
his most celebrated alleged victim surfaced briefly in the
press:
Nicholas Berg, the American businessman
whose horrific beheading was publicized in a video
fortuitously released less than two weeks after the first
revelations of U.S. torture at Abu Ghraib.
It was this video –
which featured five surprisingly chubby terrorists, masked, one
wearing a gold ring forbidden by extremist Islam, another
reading in halting Arabic – that made Zarqawi the Pentagon
poster boy for the insurgency. Pentagon documents unearthed
by the Washington Post this April revealed that the
elevation of Zarqawi's profile was a deliberate,
multimillion-dollar propaganda campaign aimed at the American
people to foment the lie that the insurgency was largely an al
Qaeda terrorist operation, not a native rebellion against the
occupation. As one Pentagon general told a group of deception
commandos: "The Zarqawi Psy-Op program is the most successful
information campaign to date."
Zarqawi – a Jordanian
thug who, like so many others, had been radicalized by the
American-backed anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan – was a White
House tool from the beginning. Before the war, his two-bit
terrorist wannabe organization in the Kurdish-held Iraqi north
had been targeted for destruction by U.S. Special Forces. But as
the Atlantic Monthly reports, George W. Bush prevented at
least three separate operations that would have eliminated the
Zarqawi group – because such a strike would have interfered with
that earlier psy-ops attack on the American people: the selling
of the Iraq invasion on false pretenses. Although Zarqawi's gang
was in U.S.-controlled territory where Saddam had no power, the
Regime's war-peddlers used it to "prove" the non-existent link
between Iraq and al Qaeda.
Spared by Bush,
Zarqawi proved a serviceable villian after the invasion, always
there to be blamed for a new terrorist spectacular whenever a
spate of bad war news hit the Homeland press – despite, once
again, being in the crosshairs of American forces on several
occasions. On at least three occasions in the past year,
Jordanian intelligence had pinpointed Zarqawi's location in Iraq
and passed the intelligence to their close compadres in the
American security organs; but every time, the Americans somehow
"arrived too late," as the Atlantic reports.
However by this
spring, with no amount of psy-ops able to halt Bush's plunge in
the polls – and with the horrific sectarian civil war unleashed
by Bush's aggression eclipsing all other violence – the "Zarqawi
program" was obviously faltering: not enough PR bang for the
buck. And so they did his quietus make – not with a bare bodkin
but a thousand pounds of bombs: a little bit of "shock and awe"
to goose the news cycle. Bush could have stopped him long ago;
he could have spared the Iraqi people the ravages of his favored
freebooter; but he chose not to.
Who can say if the
beheading of Nicholas Berg – which made Zarqawi a "star" and
adroitly demonized the whole Iraqi resistance at such a critical
moment – was part of that "most successful information campaign
to date"? One can only hope not; one can only hope that in this,
as in so many other instances, the Bush Regime was just lucky.
After all, who can forget that incredible stroke of good fortune
on September 11, 2001 – just one year after a group led by Dick
Cheney, Don Rumsfeld and Jeb Bush
declared that only a "new Pearl Harbor" could "catalyze" the
American people into accepting their radical militarist program
of conquering Iraq, establishing bases in Central Asia, waging
"pre-emptive" wars, weaponizing space, gutting nuclear treaties,
and larding the war-related industries with pork beyond the
dreams of avarice.
As Bush himself said while the Twin Towers were still
smoldering: "Through my tears, I see opportunity."
Nicholas Berg, on the
other hand, was remarkably unlucky. More of an idealist than a
chest-thumping corporate predator like ex-CEOs Bush, Cheney and
Rumsfeld, Berg, 26, had developed a method for helping
underdeveloped areas build safe, affordable structures where
steel is hard to come by, as Wikipedia reports. Progress, not
profit, was his motivating force. He was also an idealist in
another way: he believed in his government. The president said
Iraq had been liberated – "mission accomplished" – and that
American companies needed to help the Iraqi people rebuild their
land. Berg didn't realize that the president was a liar. Iraq
had not been liberated but delivered into a new hell. Mass
deaths, house raids, airstrikes, societal collapse and torture
had spawned a fierce armed resistance. Bush's invasion had also
loosed the most brutal, ignorant religious extremists – like
Zarqawi – to prey upon the land. Meanwhile, "reconstruction" was
a sick joke: it was just a pipeline for Bush cronies to drain
Iraq, and the U.S. Treasury, bone-dry.
Berg came alone: no
bodyguard of bristling mercenaries, no Halliburton subcontracts,
no Beltway cronies. Work was promised, but without that insider
grease, fell through. He decided to go home. Six days before his
scheduled departure, he was suddenly seized by Iraqi police and
turned over to U.S. forces. For reasons still unclear, he
was held for 13 days – during which time the Abu Ghraib
revelations ignited the land, and the tinderbox of Fallujah
exploded when four mercenaries were killed in retaliation for
the American shooting of Iraqi protestors a few days before.
Berg was released
into this heightened turmoil one day after his family filed a
lawsuit against his illegal detention; he disappeared four days
later. His remains were found one month later near a Baghdad
highway; the gruesome video appeared three days after that. Abu
Ghraib disappeared from the front pages; it was not an issue in
the presidential election that year.
Zarqawi – or "Zarqawi"
– was the fake emblem of a fake war, the "war on terror" that
the Bush Regime is pretending to fight while it goes about its
long-planned business of exploiting "opportunities" like 9/11.
Nicholas Berg was no emblem; he was just another human being
literally ripped to shreds in that dark maw where high politics
and low murder feast on the same lies, the same flesh.
Part II: A Dangerous Man
But despite the
central role that Berg unwillingly played in the concoction of
the Zarqawi legend, he was largely airbrushed from the lurid
coverage of its grand finale. That's because any new story on
Berg would naturally center around his most outspoken survivor,
his father Michael. And Michael Berg is
a man with a dangerous message, a radical subversion of
every value that the Bush Administration is fighting to
preserve.
In many ways, of
course, it's an ancient danger, a destabilizing notion that has
threatened the guardians of civilization for thousands of years.
Its advocates have always been relegated to the lunatic fringe,
ignored and forgotten, except in rare cases when their
subversion has taken hold, usually among the lower orders. In
each such case, however, down through the ages, the civilized
world has, like a healthy body, acted swiftly to remove the
carriers of disorder. Still, in every generation the bacillus
emerges once again, and Michael Berg, no doubt weakened by his
grief, has become seriously infected.
It's no wonder, then,
that his media appearances last week were so brief and
circumscribed. For there he was, father of a victim murdered in
the most gruesome fashion imaginable by the terrorist Zarqawi
(or someone just like him), a survivor fully entitled to exult
in the revenging fury and violent self-righteousness that are
among the chief values of the Bush Imperium – and all Berg could
talk about was mercy and forgiveness, peace and restoration. He
would not even take pleasure in the death of Zarqawi, whom he
called a "fellow human being." Instead, he grieved for Zarqawi's
family and wished that the brutal killer could have been
subjected to "restorative justice" – made to work in a hospital
with children maimed by war, for example – setting him on a path
where his human decency might have been restored.
Nor would Berg praise
the guardian of civilization, George W. Bush, for finally ending
the career of the terrorist he had used so cynically to justify
aggressive war. Instead, Berg
blamed Bush for unleashing mass death on the people of Iraq,
and
instigating the cycle of violence that had consumed his son.
But even for the authors of war, for the state terrorists who
kill on an industrial scale, by remote control, ensconced in
safety, comfort, privilege and wealth, Berg called for
restoration, not revenge: they should be removed from power and
compelled to some compassionate labor that might redeem their
corrupted humanity.
It goes without
saying that Berg's comments
were instantly condemned throughout the vast engine of
bile-driven groupthink known as the rightwing media. He was
reviled as a traitor, a fool, a terrorist-lover, "less than
human," a monster whose son will slap his face in the afterlife.
He was derided for his quixotic Congressional campaign as the
Green Party candidate for Delaware: what place do such weapons
of the weak – mercy, forgiveness, non-violence – have in the
halls of power? For the mainstream, he was just a blip, a quirky
diversion in the flood of triumphant stories on Zarqawi's
demise.
And to be sure, it is
foolish to oppose the cherished values of our 21st century
civilization: violence, bluster, ignorance and fear. It's
foolish to take upon oneself the responsibility to break the
cycle of violence at last, to say: "Let it end with me, if
nowhere else; let it end now, no matter what the provocation;
let something new, something more human, some restoration take
root in this bloodstained ground."
But what if such
folly is the only way for humankind to begin climbing out of the
festering pit we have made of the world?
Copyright Chris
Floyd. Visit his blog
www.chris-floyd.com
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