Blaming The Victims: Covering Up
Terrorism In Iraq
By Ghali Hassan
03/19/07 "ICH"
-- -- A recent cover story in the Time magazine
(March, 2007, Europe and Asia) by Bobby Ghosh, “Why They
Hate Each Other”, aimed at removing the Occupation as the
generator of violence against the Iraqi people, and portrays
the violence as “Iraqis killing Iraqis”. This media
distortion obfuscates the U.S. monopoly on terrorism and
allows the U.S. to use Iraq as a laboratory for terror at
the expense of the Iraqi people.
Nowhere in his story does Ghosh tell the readers that the
militias and the criminals were the creation of the
Occupation and that the violence is the only pretext left to
justify the ongoing Occupation. Why Iraqis didn’t “hate each
other” before the illegal invasion of their country is
totally ignored by Western media and remains a mystery to
most Westerners. It is important to remember that Time was
the leading propaganda organ which promoted the illegal
aggression against Iraq, and continues to play a vicious
role spreading Islamaphobia around the world.
To get a clearer picture of what has been done to Iraq and
to Iraqi society, it is vital to connect the nearly two-
decades of Anglo-American violence against the Iraqi people.
Violence has been the primary tool of U.S. foreign policy
and its dealing with smaller defenceless nations. Indeed,
history has shown that all nations who qualified for U.S.
violence were defenceless nations inhabited by coloured, or
nonwhite human beings.
From 1990 to 2003, Iraq was under 13-year genocidal
sanctions enforced by the U.S. and Britain. The sanctions
were the new weapons of mass killing the West used against
innocent civilians. The sanctions were in fact a silent
genocide that was deliberately used to target the most
vulnerable of Iraqi society. More than 1.6 million Iraqis
have died; a third of the victims were infants. In addition,
the sanctions accompanied by weekly acts of terrorism by
U.S. and British forces disguised as air raids to “enforce
the no-fly zones”. The pretext for this long and silent
genocide was (the non-existent of) Weapons of Mass
Destructions (WMDs). As the perpetrators failed to break the
will of the Iraqi people to survive, they initiated a war of
aggression using the same concocted pretext as justification
for war.
According to Robert H. Jackson, the Chief Prosecutor at the
Nuremberg Trial, "Any resort to war—any kind of war—is a
resort to means that are inherently criminal. War inevitably
is a course of killings, assaults, deprivations of liberty,
and destruction of property. An honestly defensive war is,
of course, legal and saves those lawfully conducting it from
criminality. But inherently criminal acts cannot be defended
by showing that those who committed them were engaged in a
war, when war itself is illegal". (
Nuremberg
Trial Proceedings, 2nd Day, 21 November, 1945, pp. 145-146).
Before the U.S-Britain illegal aggression, Iraqis were
living in relative safety. Iraq posed no threat to any other
nation. The primary objectives of the war were the
imperialist domination of the region by the U.S. and support
for Israel’s terror and Zionist policy in Palestine.
A short history is in order. At the outset of the
Occupation, Paul Bremer, the U.S. Proconsul during the early
phase of the Occupation, issued an order dissolving the
Iraqi State and disbanding the Iraqi Army and Police in
order to create lawlessness and chaos. Bremer then
hand-picked expatriate collaborators – most of them involved
in crimes and acts of terrorism against the State of Iraq –
and beguiled others to form the ‘Iraqi Governing Council’ (IGC).
The IGC was based on ethnic and religious affiliations, and
most of its members had lived outside Iraq for decades.
Bremer’s aim was to divide Iraqis according to religion and
ethnicity, which made the Iraqi people shiver in their
sleep. The IGC continues to function today under the name of
the “Iraqi Government” without any real power, reminiscent
of the Nazis-imposed Vichy regime in France.
Furthermore, the U.S.-drafted Iraqi “Constitution” is
designed specifically to divide the country on
ethnic-religious lines. The so-called “federation” is
euphemism for the geographical divisions of Iraq. The
“Constitution” relegated women’s rights to the Stone Age and
denied them equality. Before the Occupation, Iraq had one of
the most progressive Constitutions in the Muslim World.
In addition, the U.S. launched a campaign of terror and
assassinations – as the U.S. did in every country it invaded
or which backed its military junta. It all started with the
“Debaathification”; a euphemism for a murderous campaign
orchestrated by the occupying forces. U.S. Special Forces in
collaboration with the Israeli Mossad agents trained the
pro-invasion militias (the Kurdish Peshmerga, the SCIRI Badr
Brigades and other U.S.-trained militias) and began a reign
of terror targeting anyone with anti-Occupation tendency.
Hence, the U.S. Occupation – enforced by more than 200,000
U.S. troops and other foreign mercenaries – is the roots of
the violence and destruction in Iraq today.
The aim is to terrorise the population and force them into
ethnic or sectarian enclaves, suppress the anti-Occupation
voices and deprive the Iraqi Resistance of protection (by
the population) and resources. The campaign is based in part
on the U.S. previous terror campaigns in El Salvador in the
1980s and in the former Yugoslavia in 1990s, and on Israel’s
targeted assassinations of Palestinian unarmed men, women
and children. Thousands of innocent Iraqi professionals were
murdered in cold blood, including scientists, prominent
politicians, Iraqi intellectuals, military officers and
doctors. Even religious leaders and women opposing the
Occupation are not immune from U.S. terror. Remember, all of
this is known to Western mainstream media, journalists,
pundits and NGOs; however, they continue to propagate the
myths of “sectarian violence” and “civil war”. (See, Notes).
As resistance against the Occupation continues to grow, the
U.S. resorts to refocusing the violence on Iraqis in order
to deflect responsibility and justify ongoing Occupation,
the U.S. and Britain – supported by a racist and violent
media – instigating insurrection (Futna) amongst Iraqis
pushing one community against the other. Expatriate
collaborators and U.S. agents are infiltrating the
Resistance groups and anti-Occupation forces in order to
provoke intra-communal strife using the civilian population
as fodder for terrorism. At the same time they continue a
reign of terror against the population. The goal is to use
the violence as a pretext to continue the Occupation and at
the same time mislead the public that there is no Resistance
against the Occupation. Of course, nothing could be further
from the truth. There is a massive Iraqi national Resistance
movement.
Since the invasion, the aggressors have been responsible for
the death of approximately a million innocent Iraqi
civilians – whose names will never be published by Time
magazine – and the destruction of the entire Iraqi society
and country. Of course, unlike the American soldiers who
killed by the Resistance, the names of Iraqi victims will
never be published. In addition, tens of thousands of Iraqis
are enduring sadistic torture sexual abuses; rape and
humiliation at the hands of U.S.-British forces in hundreds
of U.S.-British run prisons throughout Iraq. The Iraqi
people must be asking the question: “why they hate us” so
much.
The case of the three Iraqi women (Wissam Talib, 31, Zainab
Fadhli, 25, and Liqa Omar Mohammed, 26) awaiting imminent
execution in a Baghdad’s prison after a fraud trial –
condemned even by Amnesty international as unfair – is the
most shameful and cowardly. The UN and the European
Parliament should be ashamed for remaining silent.
Before the invasion and long after the Occupation, there
were no bombs exploding in Iraq killing innocent civilians
on religious pilgrimages. There were no “suicide bombers”.
Resistance attacks were against U.S. force and their Iraqi
collaborators. It all started during the Occupation when the
Iraqi people refused to surrender to the Occupation and the
U.S. began the search for pretext to continue the
Occupation. Credible sources reveal that the U.S. and
British forces are behind these attacks. A case in point was
that in September 2005, Iraqi Police in Basra arrested two
British soldiers (the SAS) disguised as Arab “terrorists”
planting bombs in civilian centres. Further, most car bomb
attacks on civilians were detonated by remote control, but
propagated by the occupying forces and Western media as
“suicide car bombs”. The aim is to distort the images of
Muslims as having no value for human life, when the opposite
is true.
Aided by a new breed of native informers, such as the
Iranian Vali Reza Nasr (employed by the U.S. Defence
department) who has become a household name in the West to
confirm it to Westerners that the violence in Iraq is
between “two factions of Muslims” and the U.S. is on
benevolent “mission” with “good intentions”, Westerners have
reacted to the violence in Iraq by labelling Muslims as
“violent”. However, Westerners ignore that Iraqis have no
history of killing other Iraqis because of ethnic or
religious affiliations.
Despite all of this, and in addition to the daily suffering
inflicted upon them by US forces, the Iraqi people remain
strongly against the Occupation. An overwhelming majority of
Iraqis want the U.S. to end the Occupation of their country
and end the violence. The U.S. should take a lesson from
Iraq’s history that no matter how barbaric it’s Occupation,
the U.S. will fail to subject Iraqi to its Zionist agenda.
The Iraqi people, including small minorities, have lived
together for centuries without significant problems. Only
until Westerners (Americans and British) started to
interfere and foment civil strife, violence started to
occur. The current political infighting is the creation of
the Occupation. It is between the pro-Occupation expatriate
militias and the anti-Occupation forces, including the Iraqi
people. It is aimed at terrorising the population and
justifying ongoing Occupation.
Iraqis do not identify themselves according to ethnic and
religious backgrounds. A fact recently acknowledged by
George Bush himself when he admitted that he was not aware
of Iraq’s ethnic-religious mix. This is the West’s way of
discriminating and persecuting minorities. Religious sect
was never an issue in Iraq before the invasion. There is no
such thing as “Shi’ites majority” and “Sunnis minority”.
Iraqi censuses never included religion and ethnicity.
Saddam’s regime included all Iraqi minorities.
Few months after the invasion “the U.S. army issued a list
of 55 wanted top Iraqi officials, starting with President
Saddam Hussein; half of those senior officials were Shia
…The Committee of Debaathification issued a list of 100,000
senior Iraqi Ba'athists who would not be allowed to enjoy
governmental posts, 66,000 of them were Shia - so how is the
Ba'ath party a Sunni party?”, a prominent Iraqi politician
told the Arab media on December 19, 2006. I spent many long
years in Iraq, and at no time felt that I belonged to some
kind of religious sect.
Thanks to a campaign of distortion generated by the media,
the U.S. is succeeding brilliantly at convincing the world
that the violence in Iraq is “sectarian” and that the U.S.
is simply acting as a “saviour” protecting the Iraqi people.
Hence, the U.S. will end the Occupation when the puppet
government is able to provide security. It follows that the
U.S. will decide on security and withdrawal when the U.S.
sees fit. The longer the violence continues, the Occupation
will continue.
In fact according to the Pentagon own assessment (Pentagon's
latest quarterly report on security in Iraq), the violence
has increased dramatically “forcing as many as 9000
civilians to flee the country each month”. The report
reveals that; “Although most attacks continue to be directed
against coalition forces, with Iraqi civilians bearing the
brunt of the violence”. It adds; “Weekly attacks in Iraq
rose to more than 1000 during the period of late 2006 and
average daily casualties increased to more than 140”.
On 12 March 2007 Vice-President Dick Cheney told supporters
gathered at the pro-Israel Jewish lobby AIPAC's annual
policy conference (the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee Policy Conference) that withdrawal of U.S. troops
from Iraq would endanger Israel, confirming that one of the
motives of the illegal aggression against Iraq was to
support Israel’s terror and enhance Israel’s Zionist policy
in the Middle East.
Furthermore, the U.S. is also succeeding in using the
violence and Iraq’s current position to pass a new
“Hydrocarbons Law” (drafted by the U.S. and U.S. Oil
Corporations, in collaboration with the IMF) at the expense
of the Iraqi people, who were kept uninformed about the
theft of their resources. It gives large oil companies
(mostly U.S. Oil Corporations) control over Iraqi oil and
relegates Iraq to the old colonial dictatorship. The “Law”
not only deprives Iraqis of their resources, it infringes on
Iraq’s sovereignty. Hence, the violence is deliberate and it
is serving U.S. interest well.
Finally, The Anglo-American public (including the
Anglo-Australian public) have moral responsibility to hold
their leaders directly responsible for the mass murder of
innocent Iraqi civilians. Failure to do so, they stand
accused by many people around the world (Muslims and
non-Muslims) for complicity in war crimes.
It should be borne in mind that the U.S. is using the and
Iran’s non-existent weapon program and conflict in Dafur as
a diversion to manipulate and keep the public in a state of
fear, because it enhances the U.S. imperialist ideology
towards global domination, as if the mass murder of innocent
Iraqi civilians is not enough to satisfy Western elites’
thirst for blood. It is Paramount that the focus must be on
holding the perpetrators accountable for their crimes and
what happen to the Iraqi people in the last four years and
avoid the media obfuscation of reality in Iraq.
The Time magazine’s cover story is of course based on
Western distorted images of Muslims (and Islam) without any
real presence in the Iraqi society. Like its previous
stories on Iraq, the entire Time story is a distortion of
reality, a pack of concocted lies designed to mislead the
public and encourage greater violence against the Iraqi
people. With propaganda organs like Time and journalists
like Bobby Ghosh covering up terrorism, mass murder of
innocent civilians will continue to be blamed on the
victims.
Ghali Hassan is an independent writer living in Australia.
Notes:
1.
Max Fuller, Crying Wolf: Media Disinformation and Death
Squads in Occupied Iraq; Also,
Silence of the Lambs? Proof of US orchestration of Death
Squads Killings in Iraq.
2.
Ghali Hassan, Occupation and Sectarianism.
3.
Peter Mass, The Way of the Commandos.