The London bombs
also belong to the new Prime Minister
By John Pilger
07/06/07 "ICH"
-- -- Just as the London bombs in the summer of 2005
were Blair's bombs, the inevitable consequence of his
government's lawless attack on Iraq, so the potential bombs
in the summer of 2007 are Brown's bombs.
Gordon Brown, Blair's successor
as prime minister, has been an unerring supporter of the
unprovoked bloodbath whose victims now equal those of the
Rwandan genocide, according to the American scientist who
led the 2006 Johns Hopkins School of Public Health survey of
civilian dead in Iraq. While Tony Blair sought to discredit
this study, British government scientists secretly praised
it as "tried and tested" and an "underestimation of
mortality". The "underestimation" was 655,000 men, women and
children. That is now approaching a million. It is the crime
of the century.
In his first day's address outside 10 Downing Street and
subsequently to Parliament, Brown paid not even lip service
to those who would be alive today had his government – and
it was his government as much as Blair's – not joined Bush
in a slaughter justified with demonstrable lies. He said
nothing, not a word.
He said nothing about the added thousands of Iraqi children
whose deaths from preventable disease have doubled since the
invasion, caused by the wilful destruction of sanitation and
water purification plants. He said nothing about hospital
patients who die every day for want of equipment as basic as
a syringe. He said nothing about the greatest refugee flight
since the Palestinians' Naqba. He said nothing about his
government's defeat in Afghanistan, and how the British army
and its Nato allies are killing civilians, including whole
families. Typically, on 29 June, British forces called in
air strikes on a village, reportedly bombing to death 45
innocent people – almost as many as the number bombed to
death in London in July 2005. Compare the reaction, or
rather the silence. They were only Muslims. And Muslims are
the world's most numerous victims of a terrorism whose main
sources are Washington, Tel Aviv and London.
And he said nothing about his government's role in
Afghanistan's restoration as the world's biggest source of
opium, a direct result of the invasion of 2001. Any dealer
on the streets of Glasgow will have the stuff, straight from
warlords paid off by the CIA and in whose name British
soldiers are killing and dying pointlessly.
He said nothing about stopping any of this. Not a word. Not
a hint.
Do the dead laugh? In the new Prime Minister's little list
of priorities was "extend[ing] the British way of life".
The paymaster of the greatest British foreign policy
disaster of the modern era, Brown could not even speak its
name, let alone meet the military families that waited to
speak to him. Three British soldiers were killed on his
first day.
Has there been anything like the tsunami of unction that has
engulfed the departure of Blair and the elevation of Brown?
Yes, there has. Think back a decade. Blair, wrote Hugo Young
of the Guardian, "wants to create a world none of us has
known, where the laws of political gravity are overturned",
one where "ideology has surrendered entirely to 'values'".
The new chancellor, effused the Observer, would "announce
the most radical welfare Budget since the Second World war".
The "values" were fake and so was the new deal. One
media-managed stunt followed another as Brown delighted the
stock market and comforted the very rich and celebrated the
empire, and ignored the longing of the British electorate
for a restoration of public services so badly damaged by
Margaret Thatcher. One of
the first decisions by Harriet Harman, Blair's first social
security secretary and a declared feminist, was to abolish
the single parents' welfare premium and benefit, in spite of
her pledge to the House of Commons that Labour opposed these
impoverishing Tory-inspired cuts. Today, Harman is Brown's
deputy party leader and, like all of the "new faces" around
the cabinet table with "plans to heal old wounds" (the
Guardian), she voted for an invasion that has destroyed the
lives of tens of thousands of women.
Some feminism.
And when Blair finally left, those MPs who stood and gave
him a standing ovation finally certified parliament as a
place of minimal consequence to British democracy. The
courtiers who reported this disgrace with Richard Dimbleby
royal-occasion reverence are flecked with the blood spilled
by the second-rate actor and first-rate criminal. They now
scramble for the latest police press release. That the
profane absurdity of the going of Blair and the silence and
compliance of Brown – political twins regardless of their
schoolboy spats – may well have provoked the attacks on
London and Glasgow is of no interest. While the crime of the
century endures, there almost certainly will be others.
Shame.
This article was first
published at the New Statesman
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