Here come the odious
excuses
The philosophers behind the bloodbath in Iraq are now
washing their hands
By Robert Fisk
11/11/06 "The
Independent" -- -- "Great news from America!"
the cashier at my local Beirut bookshop shouted at me
yesterday morning, raising her thumbs in the air. "Things
will be better after these elections?" Alas, I said. Alas,
no. Things are going to get worse in the Middle East even
if, in two years' time, America is blessed with a Democrat
(and democratic) president. For the disastrous philosophers
behind the bloodbath in Iraq are now washing their hands of
the whole mess and crying "Not Us!" with the same enthusiasm
as the Lebanese lady in my book shop, while the "experts" on
the mainstream US east coast press are preparing the ground
for our Iraqi retreat - by blaming it all on those greedy,
blood-lusting, anarchic, depraved, uncompromising Iraqis.
I must say that Richard Perle's version of a mea culpa did
take my breath away. Here was the ex-chairman of the
Pentagon's Defence Policy Board Advisory Committee - he who
once told us that "Iraq is a very good candidate for
democratic reform" - now admitting that he "underestimated
the depravity" in Iraq. He holds the president responsible,
of course, acknowledging only that - and here, dear reader,
swallow hard - "I think if I had been Delphic, and had seen
where we are today, and people had said: 'Should we go into
Iraq?' I think now I probably would have said, 'No, let's
consider other strategies...'"
Maybe I find this self-righteous, odious mea culpa all the
more objectionable because the same miserable man was
shouting abuse down a radio line to me in Baghdad a couple
of years ago, condemning me for claiming that America was
losing its war in Iraq and claiming that I was "a supporter
of the maintenance of the Baathist regime". This lie, I
might add, was particularly malicious since I was reporting
Saddam's mass rapes and mass hangings at Abu Ghraib prison
(and being refused Iraqi visas) when Perle and his cohorts
were silent about Saddam's wickedness and when their chum
Donald Rumsfeld was cheerfully shaking the monster's hand in
Baghdad in an attempt to reopen the US embassy there.
Not that Perle isn't in good company. Kenneth Adelman, the
Pentagon neocon who also beat the drums for war, has been
telling Vanity Fair that "the idea of using our power for
moral good in the world" is dead. As for Adelman's mate
David Frumm, well he's decided that George Bush just "did
not absorb the ideas" behind the speeches Frumm wrote for
him. But this, I'm afraid, is not the worst to come from
those who encouraged us to invade Iraq and start a war which
has cost the lives of perhaps 600,000 civilians.
For a new phenomenon is creeping into the pages of The New
York Times and those other great organs of state in America.
For those journalists who supported the war, it's not enough
to bash George. No, they've got a new flag to fly: the
Iraqis don't deserve us. David Brooks - he who once told us
that neocons such as Perle had nothing to do with the
President's decision to invade Iraq - has been ransacking
his way through Elie Kedourie's 1970 essay on the British
occupation of Mesopotamia in the 1920s. And what has he
discovered? That "the British tried to encourage responsible
leadership to no avail", quoting a British officer at the
time as concluding that Iraqi Shia "have no motive for
refraining from sacrificing the interests of Iraq to those
which they conceive to be their own".
But the Brooks article in The New York Times was also
frightening. Iraq, he now informs us, is suffering "a
complete social integration", and "American blunders" were
exacerbated "by the same old Iraqi demons: greed, blood lust
and a mind-boggling unwillingness to compromise, even in the
face of self-immolation". Iraq, Brooks has decided, is
"teetering on the edge of futility" (whatever that means)
and if American troops cannot restore order, "it will be
time to effectively end Iraq", diffusing authority down to
"the clan, the tribe or sect" which - wait for it - are "the
only communities which are viable".
Nor should you believe that the Brooks article represents a
lone voice. Here is Ralph Peters, a USA Today writer and
retired US army officer. He had supported the invasion
because, he says, he was "convinced that the Middle East was
so politically, socially, morally and intellectually
stagnant that we (sic) had to risk intervention - or face
generations of terrorism and tumult". For all Washington's
errors, Peters boasts, "we did give the Iraqis a unique
chance to build a rule-of-law democracy".
But those pesky Iraqis, it now seems, "preferred to indulge
in old hatreds, confessional violence, ethnic bigotry and a
culture of corruption". Peters' conclusion? "Arab societies
can't support democracy as we know it." As a result, "it's
their tragedy, not ours. Iraq was the Arab world's last
chance to board the train to modernity, to give the region a
future...". Incredibly, Peters finishes by believing that
"if the Arab world and Iran embark on an orgy of bloodshed,
the harsh truth is that we may be the beneficiaries" because
Iraq will have "consumed" "terrorists" and the United States
will "still be the greatest power on earth".
It's not the shamefulness of all this - do none of these men
have any shame? - but the racist assumption that the
hecatomb in Iraq is all the fault of the Iraqis, that their
intrinsic backwardness, their viciousness, their failure to
appreciate the fruits of our civilisation make them unworthy
of our further attention. At no point does anyone question
whether the fact that America is "the greatest power on
earth" might not be part of the problem. Nor that Iraqis who
endured among their worst years of dictatorship when Saddam
was supported by the United States, who were sanctioned by
the UN at a cost of a half a million children's lives and
who were then brutally invaded by our armies, might not
actually be terribly keen on all the good things we wished
to offer them. Many Arabs, as I've written before, would
like some of our democracy, but they would also like another
kind of freedom - freedom from us.
But you get the point. We are preparing our get-out excuses.
The Iraqis don't deserve us. Screw them. That's the grit
we're laying down on the desert floor to help our tanks
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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