.

How
British troops became a soft target
By Robert Fisk
06/27/03: (Daily Times) It could not have been more predictable or
better planned. The British were the soft underbelly of the American
occupation, the nice guys who didn’t wear helmets and patrolled on PC
Plod bicycles through the souks of Basra.
No one would hurt the Brits, with their friendly public relations
machine and all that experience from Northern Ireland which - when you
come to think of it - might have warned them of yesterday’s attack.
We, the British, always made a distinction between us and them - the
“them” being the Americans - but failed to grasp that in Baghdad,
the Iraqis did not recognise the difference. All the messages from the
embryo resistance - all the statements from the ex-Baathists and the
Shia clerics - talked about the “Anglo-American invasion” or about
the “American and British occupiers”.
It wasn’t difficult to guess how the ambush was designed. The
Americans are taking too many precautions now; they are surrounded by
their tanks and armour, protecting their marble occupation palace,
shooting down stone throwers with the abandon of Israeli troops. So why
not go for the Americans’ soft-target allies?
Of course, there are the equally predictable reactions of horror. It was
a “cowardly”, “despicable” attack, which is how we described all
those hundreds of ambushes on British soldiers in Belfast and Armagh. In
fact, that’s just how we described the attacks on British troops in
Aden and Cyprus and Malaya, in 1920 Ireland, in Kenya and Palestine.
Because, whether or not Tony Blair realises it, we are playing once more
the game of colonial occupiers - and now we are paying the price.
It was just the same in 1917. General Sir Stanley Maude proclaimed that
his British invasion force had come to “liberate” the people of Iraq
- not to conquer them - but within three years, his troops had been
gunned down every bit as cruelly as the young British soldiers
yesterday.
Hundreds of them still lie in the great North Gate military cemetery in
Baghdad. By an appalling irony of history, this first attack on the
British - the greatest against the occupation force since the invasion
of Iraq last March - occurred only a few miles from the scene of the
British First World War defeat at Kut al-Amara where an entire British
Army, wasted by diseases, surrendered to the Ottoman Turks and was
death-marched north to Anatolia.
How could they do this to us when we came to liberate them? That will
become an inevitable theme in the aftermath of this attack. Guerrilla
warfare, as the British know all too well, is a brutal form of conflict.
It does not distinguish between “good” occupiers and “bad”
occupiers, between Americans who shoot down the innocent and Tommy
Atkins in his soft beret and his knowledge - doesn’t it go back to our
own Bloody Sunday in 1972? - that when you kill the innocent, you will
suffer for it. It also, of course, raises two more questions. Weren’t
those British soldiers sent to Iraq to find the weapons of mass
destruction? And since there don’t appear to be any such weapons, why
did they have to die yesterday? —Courtesy Independent
© Copyright 2003 Daily Times
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