How Britain
Wages War
John Pilger
describes
the
insidious
militarisng
of Britain
as the
effects of
two colonial
wars and the
cover-up
atrocities
come home.
By John
Pilger
11/07/08
"ICH" -- --
The military
has created
a wall of
silence
around its
frequent
resort to
barbaric
practices,
including
torture, and
goes out of
its way to
avoid legal
scrutiny.
Five
photographs
together
break a
silence. The
first is of
a former
Gurkha
regimental
sergeant
major, Tul
Bahadur Pun,
aged 87. He
sits in a
wheelchair
outside 10
Downing
Street. He
holds a
board full
of medals,
including
the Victoria
Cross, the
highest
award for
bravery,
which he won
serving in
the British
army.
He has been
refused
entry to
Britain and
treatment
for a
serious
heart
ailment by
the National
Health
Service:
outrages
rescinded
only after a
public
campaign. On
25 June, he
came to Down
ing Street
to hand his
Victoria
Cross back
to the Prime
Minister,
but Gordon
Brown
refused to
see him.
The second
photograph
is of a
12-year-old
boy, one of
three
children.
They are
Kuchis,
nomads of
Afghanistan.
They have
been hit by
Nato bombs,
American or
British, and
nurses are
trying to
peel away
their
roasted skin
with
tweezers. On
the night of
10 June,
Nato planes
struck
again,
killing at
least 30
civilians in
a single
village:
children,
women,
schoolteachers,
students. On
4 July,
another 22
civilians
died like
this. All,
including
the roasted
children,
are
described as
"militants"
or
"suspected
Taliban".
The Defence
Secretary,
Des Browne,
says the
invasion of
Afghan istan
is "the
noble cause
of the 21st
century".
The third
photograph
is of a
computer-generated
aircraft
carrier not
yet built,
one of two
of the
biggest
ships ever
ordered for
the Royal
Navy. The
£4bn
contract is
shared by
BAE Systems,
whose sale
of 72
fighter jets
to the
corrupt
tyranny in
Saudi Arabia
has made
Britain the
biggest arms
merchant on
earth,
selling
mostly to
oppressive
regimes in
poor
countries.
At a time of
economic
crisis,
Browne
describes
the carriers
as "an
affordable
expenditure".
The fourth
photograph
is of a
young
British
soldier,
Gavin
Williams,
who was "beasted"
to death by
three
non-commissioned
officers.
This
"informal
summary
punishment",
which sent
his body
temperature
to more than
41 degrees,
was intended
to
"humiliate,
push to the
limit and
hurt". The
torture was
described in
court as a
fact of army
life.
The final
photograph
is of an
Iraqi man,
Baha Mousa,
who was
tortured to
death by
British
soldiers.
Taken during
his
post-mortem,
it shows
some of the
93 horrific
injuries he
suffered at
the hands of
men of the
Queen's
Lancashire
Regiment who
beat and
abused him
for 36
hours,
including
double-hooding
him with
hessian
sacks in
stifling
heat. He was
a hotel
receptionist.
Although his
murder took
place almost
five years
ago, it was
only in May
this year
that the
Ministry of
Defence
responded to
the courts
and agreed
to an
independent
inquiry. A
judge has
described
this as a
"wall of
silence".
A court
martial
convicted
just one
soldier of
Mousa's
"inhumane
treatment",
and he has
since been
quietly
released.
Phil Shiner
of Public
Interest
Lawyers,
representing
the families
of Iraqis
who have
died in
British
custody,
says the
evidence is
clear -
abuse and
torture by
the British
army is
systemic.
Shiner and
his
colleagues
have witness
statements
and
corroborations
of prima
facie crimes
of an
especially
atrocious
kind usually
associated
with the
Americans.
"The more
cases I am
dealing
with, the
worse it
gets," he
says. These
include an
"incident"
near the
town of
Majar al-Kabir
in 2004,
when British
soldiers
executed as
many as 20
Iraqi
prisoners
after
mutilating
them. The
latest is
that of a
14-year-old
boy who was
forced to
simulate
anal and
oral sex
over a
prolonged
period.
"At the
heart of the
US and UK
project,"
says Shiner,
"is a desire
to avoid
accountability
for what
they want to
do.
Guantanamo
Bay and
extraordinary
renditions
are part of
the same
struggle to
avoid
accountability
through
jurisdiction."
British
soldiers, he
says, use
the same
torture
techniques
as the
Americans
and deny
that the
European
Convention
on Human
Rights, the
Human Rights
Act and the
UN
Convention
on Torture
apply to
them. And
British
torture is
"commonplace":
so much so,
that "the
routine
nature of
this
ill-treatment
helps to
explain why,
despite the
abuse of the
soldiers and
cries of the
detainees
being
clearly
audible,
nobody,
particularly
in
authority,
took any
notice".
Unbelievably,
says Shiner,
the Ministry
of Defence
under Tony
Blair
decided that
the 1972
Heath
government's
ban on
certain
torture
techniques
applied only
in the UK
and Northern
Ireland.
Consequently,
"many Iraqis
were killed
and tortured
in UK
detention
facilities".
Shiner is
working on
46 horrific
cases.
A wall of
silence has
always
surrounded
the British
military,
its arcane
rituals,
rites and
practices
and, above
all, its
contempt for
the law and
natural
justice in
its various
imperial
pursuits.
For 80
years, the
Ministry of
Defence and
compliant
ministers
refused to
countenance
posthumous
pardons for
terrified
boys shot at
dawn during
the
slaughter of
the First
World War.
British
soldiers
used as
guinea pigs
during the
testing of
nuclear
weapons in
the Indian
Ocean were
abandoned,
as were many
others who
suffered the
toxic
effects of
the 1991
Gulf War.
The
treatment of
Gurkha Tul
Bahadur Pun
is typical.
Having been
sent back to
Nepal, many
of these
"soldiers of
the Queen"
have no
pension, are
deeply
impoverished
and are
refused
residence or
medical help
in the
country for
which they
fought and
for which
43,000 of
them have
died or been
injured. The
Gurkhas have
won no fewer
than 26
Victoria
Crosses, yet
Browne's
"affordable
expenditure"
excludes
them.
An even more
imposing
wall of
silence
ensures that
the British
public
remains
largely
unaware of
the
industrial
killing of
civilians in
Britain's
modern
colonial
wars. In his
landmark
work
Unpeople:
Britain's
Secret Human
Rights
Abuses, the
historian
Mark Curtis
uses three
main
categories:
direct
responsibility,
indirect
responsibility
and active
inaction.
"The overall
figure
[since 1945]
is between
8.6 and 13.5
million,"
Curtis
writes. "Of
these,
Britain
bears direct
responsibility
for between
four million
and six
million
deaths. This
figure is,
if anything,
likely to be
an
underestimate.
Not all
British
interventions
have been
included,
because of
lack of
data." Since
his study
was
published,
the Iraq
death toll
has reached,
by reliable
measure, a
million men,
women and
children.
The
spiralling
rise of
militarism
within
Britain is
rarely
acknowledged,
even by
those
alerting the
public to
legislation
attacking
basic civil
liberties,
such as the
recently
drafted Data
Com muni
cations
Bill, which
will give
the
government
powers to
keep records
of all
electronic
communication.
Like the
plans for
identity
cards, this
is in
keeping what
the
Americans
call "the
national
security
state",
which seeks
the control
of domestic
dissent
while
pursuing
military
aggression
abroad. The
£4bn
aircraft
carriers are
to have a
"global
role". For
global read
colonial.
The Ministry
of Defence
and the
Foreign
Office
follow
Washington's
line almost
to the
letter, as
in Browne's
preposterous
description
of
Afghanistan
as a noble
cause. In
reality, the
US-inspired
Nato
invasion has
had two
effects: the
killing and
dispossession
of large
numbers of
Afghans, and
the return
of the opium
trade, which
the Taliban
had banned.
According to
Hamid
Karzai, the
west's
puppet
leader,
Britain's
role in
Helmand
Province has
led directly
to the
return of
the Taliban.
The
militarising
of how the
British
state
perceives
and treats
other
societies is
vividly
demonstrated
in Africa,
where ten
out of 14 of
the most
impoverished
and
conflict-ridden
countries
are seduced
into buying
British arms
and military
equipment
with "soft
loans". Like
the British
royal
family, the
British
Prime
Minister
simply
follows the
money.
Having
ritually
condemned a
despot in
Zimbabwe for
"human
rights
abuses" - in
truth, for
no longer
serving as
the west's
business
agent - and
having
obeyed the
latest US
dictum on
Iran and
Iraq, Brown
set off
recently for
Saudi
Arabia,
exporter of
Wahhabi
fundamentalism
and wheeler
of fabulous
arms deals.
To
complement
this, the
Brown
government
is spending
£11bn of
taxpayers'
money on a
huge, pri
vatised
military
academy in
Wales, which
will train
foreign
soldiers and
mercenaries
recruited to
the bogus
"war on
terror".
With arms
companies
such as
Raytheon
profiting,
this will
become
Britain's
"School of
the
Americas", a
centre for
counter-insurgency
(terrorist)
training and
the design
of future
colonial
adventures.
It has had
almost no
publicity.
Of course,
the image of
militarist
Britain
clashes with
a benign
national
regard
formed,
wrote
Tolstoy,
"from
infancy, by
every
possible
means -
class books,
church
services,
sermons,
speeches,
books,
papers,
songs,
poetry,
monuments
[leading to]
people
stupefied in
the one
direction".
Much has
changed
since he
wrote that.
Or has it?
The shabby,
destructive
colonial war
in
Afghanistan
is now
reported
almost
entirely
through the
British
army, with
squaddies
always doing
their
Kipling
best, and
with the
Afghan
resistance
routinely
dismissed as
"outsiders"
and
"invaders".
Pictures of
nomadic boys
with
Nato-roasted
skin almost
never appear
in the press
or on
television,
nor the
after-effects
of British
thermobaric
weapons, or
"vacuum
bombs",
designed to
suck the air
out of human
lungs.
Instead,
whole pages
mourn a
British
military
intelligence
agent in
Afghanis
tan, because
she happens
to have been
a
26-year-old
woman, the
first to die
in active
service
since the
2001
invasion.
Baha Mousa,
tortured to
death by
British
soldiers,
was also 26
years old.
But he was
different.
His father,
Daoud, says
that the way
the Ministry
of Defence
has behaved
over his
son's death
convinces
him that the
British
government
regards the
lives of
others as
"cheap". And
he is right.
www.johnpilger.com
First
published at
the New
Statesman
