Obama, The
Prince Of
Bait-And-Switch
John Pilger
describes
the
denigration
of the of
civilian
casualties
in colonial
wars, and
the
anointing of
Barack Obama,
as he tours
the
battlefields,
sounding
more and
more like
George W.
Bush.
By John
Pilger
24/07/08
"ICH" -- -
On 12 July,
The Times
devoted two
pages to
Afghanistan.
It was
mostly a
complaint
about the
heat. The
reporter,
Magnus
Linklater,
described in
detail his
discomfort
and how he
had needed
to be
sprayed with
iced water.
He also
described
the "high
drama" and
"meticulously
practised
routine" of
evacuating
another
overheated
journalist.
For her US
Marine
rescuers,
wrote
Linklater,
"saving a
life took
precedence
over [their]
security".
Alongside
this was a
report whose
final
paragraph
offered the
only mention
that "47
civilians,
most of them
women and
children,
were killed
when a US
aircraft
bombed a
wedding
party in
eastern
Afghanistan
on Sunday".
Slaughters
on this
scale are
common, and
mostly
unknown to
the British
public. I
interviewed
a woman who
had lost
eight
members of
her family,
including
six
children. A
500lb US
Mk82 bomb
was dropped
on her mud,
stone and
straw house.
There was no
"enemy"
nearby. I
interviewed
a headmaster
whose house
disappeared
in a
fireball
caused by
another
"precision"
bomb. Inside
were nine
people – his
wife, his
four sons,
his brother
and his
wife, and
his sister
and her
husband.
Neither of
these mass
murders was
news. As
Harold
Pinter wrote
of such
crimes:
"Nothing
ever
happened.
Even while
it was
happening it
wasn't
happening.
It didn't
matter. It
was of no
interest."
A total of
64 civilians
were bombed
to death
while The
Times man
was
discomforted.
Most were
guests at
the wedding
party.
Wedding
parties are
a
"coalition"
speciality.
At least
four of them
have been
obliterated
– at Mazar
and in Khost,
Uruzgan and
Nangarhar
provinces.
Many of the
details,
including
the names of
victims,
have been
compiled by
a New
Hampshire
professor,
Marc Herold,
whose Afghan
Victim
Memorial
Project is a
meticulous
work of
journalism
that shames
those who
are paid to
keep the
record
straight and
report
almost
everything
about the
Afghan War
through the
public
relations
facilities
of the
British and
American
military.
The US and
its allies
are dropping
record
numbers of
bombs on
Afghanistan.
This is not
news. In the
first half
of this
year, 1,853
bombs were
dropped:
more than
all the
bombs of
2006 and
most of
2007. "The
most
frequently
used bombs,"
the Air
Force Times
reports,
"are the
500lb and
2,000lb
satellite-guided..."
Without this
one-sided
onslaught,
the
resurgence
of the
Taliban, it
is clear,
might not
have
happened.
Even Hamid
Karzai,
America's
and
Britain's
puppet, has
said so. The
presence and
the
aggression
of
foreigners
have all but
united a
resistance
that now
includes
former
warlords
once on the
CIA's
payroll.
The scandal
of this
would be
headline
news, were
it not for
what George
W Bush's
former
spokesman
Scott
McClellan
has called
"complicit
enablers" –
journalists
who serve as
little more
than
official
amplifiers.
Having
declared
Afghanistan
a "good
war", the
complicit
enablers are
now
anointing
Barack Obama
as he tours
the
bloodfests
in
Afghanistan
and Iraq.
What they
never say is
that Obama
is a bomber.
In the New
York Times
on 14 July,
in an
article spun
to appear as
if he is
ending the
war in Iraq,
Obama
demanded
more war in
Afghanistan
and, in
effect, an
invasion of
Pakistan. He
wants more
combat
troops, more
helicopters,
more bombs.
Bush may be
on his way
out, but the
Republicans
have built
an
ideological
machine that
transcends
the loss of
electoral
power –
because
their
collaborators
are, as the
American
writer Mike
Whitney put
it
succinctly,
"bait-and-switch"
Democrats,
of whom
Obama is the
prince.
Those who
write of
Obama that
"when it
comes to
international
affairs, he
will be a
huge
improvement
on Bush"
demonstrate
the same
wilful
naivety that
backed the
bait-and-switch
of Bill
Clinton –
and Tony
Blair. Of
Blair, wrote
the late
Hugo Young
in 1997,
"ideology
has
surrendered
entirely to
'values'...
there are no
sacred cows
[and] no
fossilised
limits to
the ground
over which
the mind
might range
in search of
a better
Britain..."
Eleven years
and five
wars later,
at least a
million
people lie
dead. Barack
Obama is the
American
Blair. That
he is a
smooth
operator and
a black man
is
irrelevant.
He is of an
enduring,
rampant
system whose
drum majors
and cheer
squads never
see, or want
to see, the
consequences
of 500lb
bombs
dropped
unerringly
on mud,
stone and
straw
houses.
First published in the New Statesman
