If you want the roots of terror, try here
I would love to have the Met in Beirut to counter terror in my part
of the world
By Robert Fisk
08/12/06 "The
Independent" -- -- When my electricity returned at
around 3am yesterday, I turned on the BBC World Service television.
There were a series of powerful explosions which shook the house -
just as they vibrated across all of Beirut - as the latest Israeli
air raids blasted over the city. And then up came the World Service
headline: "Terror Plot". Terror what, I asked myself? And there was
my favorite cop, Paul Stephenson, explaining how my favorite police
force - the ones who bravely executed an innocent young Brazilian on
the Tube, taking 30 seconds to fire six bullets into him - had saved
the lives of hundreds of innocent civilians from suicide bombers on
airliners.
I'm sure Independent readers will join me in watching how many of
the suspects - or "British-born Muslims" as the BBC defined them in
its special form of "soft" racism (they are surely Muslim Britons or
British Muslims, are they not?) - are still in custody in a couple
of weeks' time.
And I'm sure it's quite by chance that the lads in blue chose
yesterday - with anger at Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara's shameful
failure over Lebanon at its peak - to save the world. After all,
it's scarcely three years since the other great Terror Plot had
British armoured vehicles surrounding Heathrow on the very day -
again quite by chance, of course - that hundreds of thousands of
Britons were demonstrating against Lord Blair's intended invasion of
Iraq.
So I sat on the carpet in my living room and watched all these
heavily armed chaps at Heathrow protecting the British people from
annihilation and then on came President George Bush to tell us that
we were all fighting "Islamic fascism". There were more thumps in
the darkness across Beirut where an awful lot of people are
suffering from terror - although I can assure George W that while
the pilots of the aircraft dropping bombs across the city in which I
have lived for 30 years may or may not be fascists, they are
definitely not Islamic.
And there, of course, was the same old problem. To protect the
British people - and the American people - from "Islamic terror", we
must have lots and lots of heavily armed policemen and soldiers and
plainclothes police and endless departments of anti-terrorism,
homeland security and other more sordid folk like the American
torturers - some of them sadistic women - at Abu Ghraib and Baghram
and Guantanamo. Yet the only way to protect ourselves from the real
violence which may - and probably will - be visited upon us, is to
deal, morally, with courage and with justice, with the tragedy of
Lebanon and "Palestine" and Iraq and Afghanistan. And this we will
not do.
I would, frankly, love to have Paul Stephenson out in Beirut to
counter a little terror in my part of the world - Hizbollah terror
and Israeli terror. But this, of course, is something that Paul and
his lads don't have the spittle for. It's one thing to sound off
about the alleged iniquities of alleged suspects of an alleged plot
to create alleged terror - quite another to deal with the causes of
that terror and to do so in the face of great danger.
I was amused to see that Bush - just before my electricity was cut
off again - still mendaciously tells us that the "terrorists" hate
us because of "our freedoms". Not because we support the Israelis
who have massacred refugee columns, fired into Red Cross ambulances
and slaughtered more than 1,000 Lebanese civilians - here indeed are
crimes for Paul Stephenson to investigate - but because they hate
our "freedoms".
And I notice with despair that our journalists again suck on the
hind tit of authority, quoting endless (and anonymous) "security
sources" without once challenging their information or the timing of
Paul's "terror plot" discoveries or the nature of the details -
somehow, "fizzy drinks bottles" doesn't quite work for me - nor the
reasons why, if this whole panjandrum is correct, anyone would want
to carry out such atrocities. We are told that the arrested men are
Muslims. Now isn't that interesting? Muslims. This means that many
of them - or their families - originally come from south-west Asia
and the Middle East, from the area that encompasses Afghanistan,
Iraq, "Palestine" and Lebanon.
In the old days, chaps like Paul used to pull out a map when faced
with folk of different origins or religion or indeed different
names. Indeed, if Paul Stephenson takes a school atlas, he'll notice
that there are an awful lot of violent problems and injustice and
suffering and - a speciality, it seems, of the Metropolitan Police -
of death in the area from which the families of these "Muslims"
come.
Could there be a connection, I wonder? Dare we look for a motive for
the crime, or rather the "alleged crime"? The Met used to be pretty
good at looking for motives. But not, of course, in the "war on
terror", where - if he really searched for real motives - my
favourite policeman would swiftly be back on the beat as Constable
Paul Stephenson.
Take yesterday morning. On day 31of the Israeli version of the "war
on terror" - a conflict to which Paul and the lads in blue
apparently subscribe by proxy - an Israeli aircraft blew up the only
remaining bridge to the Syrian frontier in northern Lebanon, in the
mountainous and beautiful Akka district above the Mediterranean.
With their usual sensitivity, the pilots who bombed the bridge - no
terrorists they, mark you - chose to destroy the bridge when
ordinary cars were crossing. So they massacred the 12 civilians who
happened to be on the bridge. In the real world, we call that a war
crime. Indeed, it's a crime worthy of the attention of Paul and his
lads. But alas, Stephenson's job is to frighten the British people,
not to stop the crimes that are the real reason for the British to
be frightened.
Personally, I'm all for arresting criminals, be they of the "Islamic
fascist" variety or the Bin Laden variety or the Israeli variety -
their warriors of the air really should be arrested next time they
drop into Heathrow - or the American variety (Abu Ghraib cum laude)
and indeed of the kind that blow out the brains of Tube train
passengers. But I don't think Paul Stephenson is. I think he huffs
and he puffs but I do not think he stands for law and order. He
works for the Ministry of Fear which, by its very nature, is not
interested in motives or injustice. And I have to say, watching his
performance before the next power cut last night, I thought he was
doing a pretty good job for his masters.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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