The Truth
Sometimes Hurts!
ALLIANCE,
n. In international politics, the union of two thieves who
have their hands so deeply inserted in each other's pockets
that they cannot separately plunder a third.
Ambrose
Bierce
By Joseph M. Cachia
04/03/07 "ICH"
-- -- As the Western media turns its attention to and
prattles about the fate of the 15 Britons detained for
allegedly trespassing into Iranian waters, the status of the
five Iranian officials captured in a US military raid on a
liaison office in Northern Iraq on January 11, remains a
mystery.
Even though high-level Iraqi
officials called for their release, for all practical
purposes, the Iranians have disappeared into the
US-sanctioned 'coalition detention' system that has been
criticized as arbitrary and even illegal by many experts in
international law. The US forces had raided what has been
described as a diplomatic liaison office in the northern
city of Arbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, and detained
six Iranians (one of whom has since been released),
infuriating Kurdish officials in the process.
In response to the request by the
Iranian authorities to the US-led coalition to investigate
the circumstances involving their detention and to release
the five men, the US State Department replied that "the
investigation is not complete, and we don't comment publicly
with respect to ongoing investigations".
What a slap in the face! The
Iranians who are being held as 'security detainees' are not
being charged with anything and so are being held
unlawfully. On the other hand, the US administration has
already ruled out any possibility of prisoners exchange with
the 15 Britons held by the Iranians as, in the words of Sean
McCormick, spokesman for the State Department; "There is no
comparison between the two issues".
The UN secretary-general's office
has not commented on the detained Iranians or Iran's
detention of the 15 British sailors, describing both
incidents as "disputes between individual states". "We've
left it to the respective countries to work it out among
themselves", said Farhan Haq, a UN spokesman. In spite of
which, the UN had backed a watered-down version of a
resolution calling for Tehran to immediately release the
hostages, while there was stronger support from the European
Union. The EU statement demanded the unconditional release
of all the hostages and threatened 'appropriate action' if
Tehran failed to act.
The timing of this incident
couldn't have been more provocative if it had been planned
that way. And evidently it was! The question is, however,
who did the planning?
It happened on the eve of a vote
in the UN Security Council to impose stricter sanctions on
Iran. On top of that. one must include the kidnapping of the
Iranian consular officials in Irbil, covert US support for
terrorist attacks inside Iran, the 'disappearance' of a
high-ranking official in the elite Revolutionary Guards unit
and the strong suspicion that the Mossad had a hand in the
killing of a renowned Iranian nuclear scientist. Add it all
up, and there is little doubt as to who would have planned
such a brazen provocation.
Doesn't all this have the
likelihood of a Gulf of Tonkin-style incident in the Persian
Gulf? Well, predictions are proving too accurate! Is it
Western brinkmanship at its prime or a 'false flag'
operation? Anyway, it could well end up as a 'casus belli'!
On the US front, the Israel Lobby
is preparing the ground by softening up any possible
opposition and is pushing hard the US to go to war with
Iran.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair
is mad as hell. "It is cruel and callous to do this to
somebody in this position and playing this kind of game --
it is a disgrace", he said. He even labelled their seizure
as "blatant aggression". These are strong words. But maybe
that, in his phony outrage, he would contemplate on, at
least, two other words -- Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib. It
seems that even Chancellor Brown's memory is failing as he
too denounced Iran's treatment of the sailors as "cruel,
callous, inhuman and unacceptable". They (and the sailors)
are lucky they weren't detained by US forces! What Iran is
doing - allegedly coerced statements and ridiculous TV
interviews - to the British sailors is positively humane by
comparison.
Most Britons oppose immediate
military action to free the navy personnel and believe that
the government will resolve the crisis peacefully.
The only good thing that Blair
has done so far was to tell the Bush administration to stay
out of it. It's just the sort of support Britain doesn't
need!
And if this is Blair's idea of
"blatant aggression", what the hell was invading Iraq under
false pretenses? A picnic?
According to the British medical
journal, 'The Lancet', over 650,000 Iraqis and 130 British
personnel have been killed in Iraq.
What Blair should have viewed as
a "disgrace" was his failure to meet with the military
families of his own country, although he accepted to meet
the families of the Israeli soldiers kidnapped by the
Hezbollah.
And lastly; when is the British
media going to stop playing on the sentiments of its
gullible public?
Their immediate reaction to the
televising of the only captive woman sailor set them off
searching hysterically family albums to depict her as a
distressed sweet young mother. Quite rightly, although
seemingly stressed, she did look healthy, without any sign
of violence, not handcuffed, wearing civilian clothes,
smoking and smiling -- not in a lurid orange boiler suit,
like the other human beings paraded for a global television
audience. However, none could have missed her other photo
showing her in full battle uniform and cuddling a machine
gun. Oh, sweet mother, whose kids and toddlers would you be
killing in case these may be 'terrorists'? Isn't it a
charming contrast?
Maybe these comparisons sound
odious, but unfortunately truth sometimes hurts!
The noble art
of losing face
Will someday
save the human race
Hans Blix