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Indybay Feature

Bay Area folks on way to Iraq as human shields!

by tillie t.
3 Bay Area locals are on their way to Iraq right now as part of the Human Shield Action. The Human Shield Flight to Baghdad is the latest phase of a strategy that aims to deploy large numbers of Western peace activists in Iraq in an attempt to forestall the rush to war. The initial convoy, now two double-decker buses, a taxi and several other vehicles, is currently driving overland to Iraq, its number swelling. The first of these vehicles are expected to arrive in Baghdad on 12th February.
Three Bay Area folks are currently on their way to Baghdad as part of the TJP Human Shield Action.

photos available here:
http://www.greenjon.com/shield/index.html

also see http://www.humanshields.org for more info.

press release below:

HUMAN SHIELDS PREPARE FOR FLIGHT TO BAGHDAD


TJP HUMAN SHIELD ACTION


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ; 11/2/03

On 17th February up to fifty human shield volunteers will board a plane and fly to Amman, Jordan. From there they will cross the Jordanian boarder and travel by bus to Baghdad where they meet up with the convoy of human shield volunteers who left London on 25th January. Hundreds more are expected to join them from around the world over the coming weeks.

The Human Shield Flight to Baghdad is the latest phase of a strategy that aims to deploy large numbers of Western peace activists in Iraq in an attempt to forestall the rush to war. The initial convoy, now two double-decker buses, a taxi and several other vehicles, is currently driving overland to Iraq, its number swelling. The first of these vehicles are expected to arrive in Baghdad on 12th February.

"Since the convoy's departure, we have been flooded with support. We have had over 50,000 hits on our website and received more than five hundred submissions from people wanting to be human shields"; a spokesperson, Stefan Simanowitz, said today.

Another flight will leave from London on 21st February, and further flights are planned. People around the world are being encouraged to organise their own flights to Amman where an office is being set up and transport organised to ensure that there is a steady flow of human shields joining the group in Baghdad.

"In response to our action, Human Shield groups are sprouting up around the world; in Spain, Slovenia, Italy, Australia, America";,said Simanowitz. "We are linking with these other human shield organisations. This has quickly become a truly global initiative."

The human shield volunteers leaving on the 17th are predominantly European, aged between twenty and seventy-six. Many intend to stay in Iraq until the imminent threat of war has passed. In the event of all-out war, they may deploy to strategic humanitarian sites, putting themselves in harm's way, in order to try and protect the ordinary people of Iraq.

"None of us are going to Iraq for the fun of it. We're going because we feel we cannot sit by while a criminal war is waged in our name" human shield volunteer Uzma Bashir said. "I don'want to die. I love life. But every life is precious, and we need to recognise that a war that will kill innocent Iraqis must be opposed with all our hearts. I am going to Iraq to try to stop this war, and so to preserve life"


Press Conference , 13th February, 2.30pm, Atlee Suite, Portcullis House, Westminster Speakers to include Tony Benn.

Delegation to Downing Street – 13th February, 4pm.

Farewell Party – for friends, family and the media. 16th February. Venue and time TBC.

Press Office :07732 728859
Carly Roberts - 07817 628282
Richard Scrase :07787 794250
Stefan Simanowitz - 07799 650791
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by .
>> "3 Bay Area locals are on their way to Iraq right now as part of the Human Shield Action"

1) As I see it, 3 more good reasons to start dropping bombs & I wouldn't shed a single tear if the first one landed on the "convoy". BOMBS AWAY!!

2) If the war with Iraq does start, these ignorant activists will be taken as the first US hostages and will be used for leverage against the US.
by tkat
Oh, you mean the CIA, US troops that were caught over there before that war began. It was not like they were some how innocent, you know.
by tkat
I wasn't sure what you were referring to. Odviously, you cannot be a dictator, without being a dick.
But if you are going to referrence things, you should be clear, either way the people in the shield project aren't over there for saddam. I think that is pretty clear.
I don't necessarily think that their tactic is best, but what they are doing is incredibly brave and honorable.

It is not something you can say about many people actiions these days. They are out there, maybe in more than one way, but that is praxis.
Just imagine if we could get a good portion of the hundreds of thousands of American peace activists against this war into Iraq, that would make this war practically Impossible.

One of the most ironic things that happened recently is the UN's covering up of the Guernica painting by Pablo Picasso during Powell's speech there. This painting more than anything else, signifies the horrors of war. Guernica was a Spanish town that was bombed by Hitler's Luftwafa in order to test their capability against real targets.

The painting of Guernica depicts a woman holding her dead child and crying along with other horrors from bombing of civilians.

Imagine if this had been the backdrop of Powell's speech urging bombing of the civilian urban city of Baghdad.

Guernica.JPG
by repost
"Here in Dunwoody, like Decatur a suburb of Atlanta, Lynn Smith was wheeling two cartons of plastic sheeting, four rolls of duct tape and a couple of containers of foam insulation toward the checkout line at a Home Depot. "I used to be a lot more cavalier about things when I was single, but now that I'm married with two small children, that's changed," she said.

Besides writing her 5-year-old son and 3-year-old daughter a letter to read in case she is killed in an attack, Ms. Smith said she and her husband had set up a safe room in their house with a bathroom, a battery-operated TV, food, radios and a box of toys and books for their children.

She also said she had explained to the children about the "bad men who flew the planes into the buildings," and that the country was likely to go to war soon to prevent that from happening again.

"They've asked me whether the bad guys are going to come to Atlanta," Ms. Smith said. "And I've told them I hope not. But my 5-year-old son says that even if they do, the G.I. Joe's and firemen and police will protect us from them."

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/02/13/national/13MOOD.html?pagewanted=2
by nbc
Byron Yeager, an Indianapolis maintenance worker who was outside a Lowe?s hardware store, told The Associated Press: ?There?s a lot more things to be scared of in the city of Indianapolis than terrorists. If you walk around the corner and somebody clubs you over the head, duct tape?s not going to protect you.?

Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., said Wednesday that the Bush administration had failed in its responsibility to protect Americans against attacks, saying that simply urging them to seal a designated room with duct tape was a mistake.

OTHERS HEED THE WARNING
Still, stores were ready to fill any demand. Jerry Ramasami, assistant general manager of a Home Depot in Hollywood, Fla., told The Miami Herald that he was carrying an ?excessive? amount of duct tape.
?We have been planning for this,? Ramasami said.

Paul and Melissa Jackson of Tulsa, Okla., bought two 1,000-square-foot rolls of plastic sheeting and 11 rolls of duct tape Tuesday at Home Depot.
The couple said they had also agreed to rendezvous with about 30 family members at their vacation house near Grand Lake, northeast of Tulsa, if there was an attack. Their families have secured satellite phones in case communications are disrupted.
?These people are crazy,? Melissa Jackson, 29, told the AP. ?You don?t know what they?re going to do. We don?t think anything?s going to happen, but it?s better to be safe than sorry.?

by tillie t.
the three from the bay area are:

Sean Logan, 22
Sam Seedorf, 45
Kenneth Webb, 32

They are all from 5lowershop, a collective of artists and musicians.

Right now they're in Jordan, I believe, on their way to Iraq.
by Mr. Toad
What about the woman crying, holding the baby in her arms that Saddam murdered? There are thousands of those.
I'll be sorry to hear when these "peace activists" are killed, despite the fact that I totally disagree with their view and their method. Unlike those who disagree with the CIA's mission and tactics, and celebrated the death of an agent on another thread. This human shield thing further jeopardizes our soldiers. They will have dozens more non-hostile targets to avoid. At least as long as the so-called "human shields" remain non-hostile and aren't simply going over there to take up arms against their own country. Judging from some comments I have read on other threads in SF-Indymedia forum, I wouldn't be the least surprised if THAT happened.
Too bad we make things so complicated when they can be so simple. Saddam is evil to the core. There is NOTHING good about this guy. He does nothing to help the suffering of his own people. He has vowed to attack and destroy the most benevolent country on the face of the earth. He is very close to developing the means of carrying out his promise, may already be nuke capable. We do know he is chemical and bio capable. Therefore, we know he is mass destruction capable.
Do we have to wait until he actually unleashes it, killing thousands or worse here in the US, before we act to stop him?? What will you say about our Administration if they know he is about to attack us somewhere with WMD, and they take the position that we cannot act until Saddam does?
If our intelligence is not sufficient to tell us he is ready now, how is it good enough to tell us just before he is ready?
Exactly when IS it appropriate to attack Saddam?
On inspections: could you find a specific cardboard box hidden somewhere in the state of California if you had 6 weeks to do it? How about 16 weeks? 52? How about if there were 1000 people charged with the task of making sure you didn't find it? Ever.
There's not the slightest chance that 200 or 2000 inspectors will ever find irrefutable proof of currently existing WMD in Iraq. It's just an utterly impossible task in a place the size of Iraq. Anyone who declares otherwise is being intellectually dishonest, and is forgetting upon whom the burden of proof lies.
Saddam Hussein has given the US and other nations no choice but to forceably disarm him for good.
Regrettably, there are times when we must take some lives of evil doers to preserve many more lives of innocents. Even more regrettably, the lives of some innocents will also be ended in the process. But better that than Saddam being allowed to continue to kill and maim indiscriminately. From a humanitarian standpoint, it is right for us to do this now just as it was in WWII, Korea, Vietnam, Grenada, Panama, Haiti, Somalia, and Kosovo/Serbia/Bosnia. If we stayed out of those little hellholes, what would the world be like now? More peaceful? I think not. Just one big hellhole.
My 2 cents.
Toad
by Randy of the Redwoods
>>>the three from the bay area are:

Sean Logan, 22
Sam Seedorf, 45
Kenneth Webb, 32

They are all from 5lowershop, a collective of artists and musicians.

Right now they're in Jordan, I believe, on their way to Iraq. <<<

So, in the case where they fail to effectively shield their objectives, who will be suing the US government in their stead ??





by Pik A so
Where is the Picaso that would portray the pain of the people of Halabje ?

Where is the Picaso that would portray the suffering of the thousand of syrian killed in Hamma ?

Where were the human shields when hammas bombed the senior citizen passover meal in Netanya ?
by Kenneth Webb (skwerley [at] 5lowershop.org)
Just to get a few things straight.
We dont accept war. Period. We are advanced enough to come up with more of a peaceful solution. Has this been thought about? No! We are coming in peace carrying love and solutions, they come with hate and weapons of mass destruction. We are not protecting the Iraqi government nor its army. i think theyre crazy as hell. We go to protect the beautiful people of Iraq...the citizens. When they bomb we will help them get out of harms way and if the US government REALLY cares they will not harm them. You believe this or not: Everything is not what it seems. Research your opinions alittle better than just believing what you read through corperate media and the wealthy....PLEASE!!! We are traveling with Iraqi people as well as others and we are being told stories and seeing first hand how the media and US government lies. There is a bigger picture here and it cant be distorted forever. Just two questions to ask yourself even though I dont condone any violence "Dont you think that if the US government wanted to take out JUST Hussain they could do it"? and how many innocent lives would be saved? PLEASE people watching this educate yourself. Theres bad things the governments are doing everywhere, just not here. Its time to take the blinders off and be real and find truth for yourself!!!!! Then and only then can we find the peaceful solution so that the future generations can be free of ALL regimes. Unconditional love to you all!!!!!!
by Linda of La-Honda
The best way to show your humanity and love for the world would be to meet with sadam Hussain and convince him to disarm - Do you think you can do that ?

The second best way to show your love and humanity for the world would be to come back to the US and convince people to stop using Oil - Do you think you can do that ?

Where would we be now if people like you would try to face Hitler ? We would all be shouting Zig Heil .

I think you have a serious problem not understanding what is love, what is peace and how to prevent Bush from destroying the planet.

By making Sadam resolve stronger - you only ensure that there will be war. If sadam would see that he faces a unite world maybe he will disarm but what you do make him stronger, make Bush stronger and ensure we will have war. You don't really think that because you are there Bush will NOT bomb ? So what you are doing is provocation that help bring war.
by Randy of the Redwoods
While I applaud your intentions, I would like to know more about what you are hinting at..you say that if the US wanted Sadaam out..then he would be out..but instead, we are spending billions and risking American lives to do it instead...What is your explanation of this ?? What advantages are there in ousting Sadaam by force than there would be by other means..Please explain..

And I also love the people of Iraq...as well as the peoples of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and even the Kurds in the border regions.Unfortunately, i think that the Iraqi people are in a position right now that has a negative outcome for them no matter what happens....If the US invades...many are likely to be killed....just a fact of war..

but, if the US chooses appeasement and the current regime continues to exist in power...then it will be only a matter of time before they perfect a biological or nuclear weapon ..and Sadaam would probably use it eventually...most likely against israel....but possibly against western targets.

In the case of Israel...Iraq would be turned into the biggest parking lot in the middle east..no Israeli human shields will be on hand to thwart the attack..The casualty rate among the Iraqi civilian population will be staggering...

And if not against israel, then they would probably use it against the US..prossibly thru Al Queda or another similar group...But, it won't be hard to trace the weapon back to it's source...and unless Hillary Clinton is in the White House at the time, the retaliation against Iraq will be equally as swift and lethal.

I do oppose this war and sending our troops into this conflict....But, I don't fear the battlefield casualties as much as the propaganda that this action will give the extremist factions...the Iraqi civilians are already lost...a terrible shame, much like the Germans in Dresdend. Their leader has sealed their fate.

The Iraqi government will screw itself eventually..and will be destroyed by those that it really threatens. ...Unfortunately, a lot of people will probably die first, but they don't have to be our people..(hopefully it will be the French..;-)


You wrote:
>>>>We go to protect the beautiful people of Iraq...the citizens. When they bomb we will help them get out of harms way and if the US government REALLY cares they will not harm them. You believe this or not: Everything is not what it seems. Research your opinions alittle better than just believing what you read through corperate media and the wealthy....PLEASE!!! We are traveling with Iraqi people as well as others and we are being told stories and seeing first hand how the media and US government lies. <<<<
by Veton Surroi
Veton Surroi, editor and publisher of Koha Ditore in Kosovo, was a leading player of the Kosovar resistance during the NATO bombing campaign against Serbia in 1999.


PRISTINA, Kosovo -- If I were a member of the Iraqi opposition to Saddam Hussein today, I would would feel as I did five years ago, when I listened to the arguments, mainly from Europeans, about why military force should not be used against Slobodan Milosevic’s Serbia.

The arguments, in both cases, are similar. In both cases they have become part of the pre-bombing stalling tactics. Here is the litany: ‘‘Give peace a chance.’’ ‘‘Bombs cannot bring democracy.’’ ‘‘A military attack will threaten regional stability.’’ ‘‘The United States is using its military muscle to establish domination.’’ Each of these arguments was proven wrong in the case of Kosovo.

In the case of Kosovo, European stalling did not hold much ground. After Milosevic failed to grasp his last option for a peace deal at the Rambouillet negotiations, France and Germany were compelled to join the strong-willed American-British partnership to stop genocide in Kosovo.

Though peace was given a chance through European-sponsored negotiations, Milosevic only used those talks to entrench his position in Kosovo. In the end, it was only the bombing of Milosevic’s Serbia that stopped genocide of Kosovars and reversed the pattern of ethnic cleansing and ultimately allowed the return of almost a million refugees to their homes.

Bombs alone, of course, did not bring democracy, but they were a precondition for it: Kosovo has had the opportunity for the first time in its history to build democratic institutions. The debacle that brought NATO bombs raining down on Serbia was the beginning of Milosevic’s end. Today, Serbia is painfully and patiently building a democratic state.

The United States has not established its domination; in fact, it has more or less left this area to the responsibility of the European Union and the United Nations through its protectorate in Kosovo.

How does this compare to the run-up to a possible war with Iraq?
The key reasons for opposing the war with Iraq have shifted over the weeks. First, key European powers stressed that they would oppose American unilateral action and called for U.N. blessing. Now that Security Council Resolution 1441, to which the Europeans agreed, authorizes (ital) de facto (unital) any necessary action against Saddam Hussein’s regime, they raise other arguments that range from ‘‘the case is not proven’’ to ‘‘you cannot bomb any regime that you dislike’’ to ‘‘this whole business is about America dominating Iraq’s oil fields.’’

My experience in Kosovo with Milosevic suggests that the argument ought to be the other way around: Does anyone realistically expect that Saddam Hussein will leave power through his own will or through a democratic electoral process? If he doesn’t relinquish power in one of these ways, is there any other way in which the damage he is inflicting, not least against his own people, can be stopped? Saddam Hussein, a tyrant, is as much a threat to international humanitarian law, regional stability and world peace as Milosevic was. Yet, while the Balkans’ butcher is on trial for crimes against humanity at The Hague, his fellow tyrant is being given the benefit of the doubt in Baghdad.

That’s where war enters. The most terrible of human activities, war, is about to unfold. If my experience is any guide, such a war will nevertheless depose Saddam’s regime and create conditions for democracy for the people of Iraq. Since Saddam is of the same ilk as Milosevic, we know something about them both: Only falling bombs will shake them from their hold on power.

Once this happens, though, a new set of questions will emerge. What will happen in a post-Saddam Iraq? What will be the nature of international rule? What kind of transition toward democracy can take place in a sovereign Iraq? And how will this kind of rule affect the regional order of surrounding states that are not democracies, a fallout from both the end of the Ottoman Empire as well as of Pax Britannica?

If I were a member of the Iraqi opposition, or for that matter an interested party from the West or the region, this is when I would start worrying. The past months have been spent on a debate whether to go to war against Saddam. That debate is now essentially over, as the number of forces in the operating theater have reached a point of no return.

I know from my experience in Kosovo that the day after comes far earlier than you expect. The opposition must be prepared to take up the cause for which the battle was won.

The world ought to remember how the war for Kosovo unfolded and how unfounded fears that so worried Europeans never materialized. They should remember from the case of Milosevic that it takes military might to topple tyrants, after everything, including negotiations or inspections, has failed. Change will only come when the bombs begin to fall.



(c) 2003, Global Viewpoint. Distributed by Tribune Media Services International.
For immediate release (Distributed 2/4/03)

by Mr. Toad
The minute you can rid the world of evil, your plan MIGHT have a chance of working. Until then, it's just an altogether totally unrealistic approach, and it's counter-productive. We are dealing with the real world here, not some hypothetical they cooked up in Sociology 320 at Columbia. You don't get do-overs. You can't hit the exit button and start the game over without penalties.
Real people like Saddam create real evil in their search for power. They leave millions of dead and maimed in their wake. We're just not willing to let some of those millions be Americans. When an evil dictator decides it is a fight to the death, you are inexorably bound to fight to the death....his or yours.
Your human shields are doing nothing more or less than potentially sacrificing their lives. I admire their commitment, but laugh at their stupidity at the same time.
The only thing Saddam respects is someone who is capable of killing him. And even then, he defiantly gives us the finger and continues to develop WMD so he can threaten and control an entire region (and beyond). As a benevolent superpower, it is our duty to deny evil dictators control of entire regions of the world. It is a threat to freedom everywhere when evil men gain power. Sometimes, we can achieve it peacefully, sometimes we can't. Deep down, I think you understand which one this is.
Toad
by Mr. Toad
By the way, for those who consider democracy and capitalism to be the real evil, just ask someone who once lived under dictatorial tyranny.
Don't take my word for it, take it from Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, Thomas Paine, George Mason, Ben Franklin, Sam Adams, James Madison, and other patriots who put their necks on the chopping block for freedom and democracy. Their thoughts are in black and white for your reading pleasure. And they didn't risk it all, empower the common citizenry, and limit our government out of their own quest for power and greed.
Instead of reading the memoirs of Stalin, Hitler, Mussolini, Kaiser Wilhelm, dozens of monarchs, and the rantings of power-hungry socialists, try those of our founding fathers for once. It will put it all in perspective for you.
Toad
by blah
I highly encourage the entire A.N.S.W.E.R. coalition vanguard and the NION elite to go to Baghdad as human shields.

In fact, I'll even pay for youur tickets as long as you promise to stand in the proximity of an anti-aircraft battery as the bombs start falling.
by Please Forward to ALL
 

A monument to hypocrisy

Every one of us must raise our voices, and march in protest, now and again and again, writes Edward Said

 

http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2003/625/op2.htm

 It has finally become intolerable to listen to or look at news in this country. I've told myself over and over again that one ought to leaf through the daily papers and turn on the TV for the national news every evening, just to find out what "the country" is thinking and planning, but patience and masochism have their limits. Colin Powell's UN speech, designed obviously to outrage the American people and bludgeon the UN into going to war, seems to me to have been a new low point in moral hypocrisy and political manipulation. But Donald Rumsfeld's lectures in Munich this past weekend went one step further than the bumbling Powell in unctuous sermonising and bullying derision. For the moment, I shall discount George Bush and his coterie of advisers, spiritual mentors, and political managers like Pat Robertson, Franklin Graham, and Karl Rove: they seem to me slaves of power perfectly embodied in the repetitive monotone of their collective spokesman Ari Fliescher (who I believe is also an Israeli citizen). Bush is, he has said, in direct contact with God, or if not God, then at least Providence. Perhaps only Israeli settlers can converse with him. But the secretaries of state and defence seem to have emanated from the secular world of real women and men, so it may be somewhat more opportune to linger for a time over their words and activities.

First, a few preliminaries. The US has clearly decided on war: there seem to be no two ways about it. Yet whether the war will actually take place or not (given all the activity started, not by the Arab states who, as usual, seem to dither and be paralysed at the same time, but by France, Russia and Germany) is something else again. Nevertheless to have transported 200,000 troops to Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, leaving aside smaller deployments in Jordan, Turkey and Israel can mean only one thing.

Second, the planners of this war, as Ralph Nader has forcefully said, are chicken hawks, that is, hawks who are too cowardly to do any fighting themselves. Wolfowitz, Perle, Bush, Cheney and others of that entirely civilian group were to a man in strong favour of the Vietnam War, yet each of them got a deferment based on privilege, and therefore never fought or so much as even served in the armed forces. Their belligerence is therefore morally repugnant and, in the literal sense, anti-democratic in the extreme. What this unrepresentative cabal seeks in a war with Iraq has nothing to do with actual military considerations. Iraq, whatever the disgusting qualities of its deplorable regime, is simply not an imminent and credible threat to neighbours like Turkey, or Israel, or even Jordan (each of which could easily handle it militarily) or certainly to the US. Any argument to the contrary is simply a preposterous, entirely frivolous proposition. With a few outdated Scuds, and a small amount of chemical and biological material, most of it supplied by the US in earlier days (as Nader has said, we know that because we have the receipts for what was sold to Iraq by US companies), Iraq is, and has easily been, containable, though at unconscionable cost to the long-suffering civilian population. For this terrible state of affairs I think it is absolutely true to say that there has been collusion between the Iraqi regime and the Western enforcers of the sanctions.

Third, once big powers start to dream of regime change --a process already begun by the Perles and Wolfowitzs of this country --there is simply no end in sight. Isn't it outrageous that people of such a dubious caliber actually go on blathering about bringing democracy, modernisation, and liberalisation to the Middle East? God knows that the area needs it, as so many Arab and Muslim intellectuals and ordinary people have said over and over. But who appointed these characters as agents of progress anyway? And what entitles them to pontificate in so shameless a way when there are already so many injustices and abuses in their own country to be remedied? It's particularly galling that Perle, about as unqualified a person as it is imaginable to be on any subject touching on democracy and justice, should have been an election adviser to Netanyahu's extreme right-wing government during the period 1996-9, in which he counseled the renegade Israeli to scrap any and all peace attempts, to annex the West Bank and Gaza, and try to get rid of as many Palestinians as possible. This man now talks about bringing democracy to the Middle East, and does so without provoking the slightest objection from any of the media pundits who politely (abjectly) quiz him on national television.

Fourth, Colin Powell's speech, despite its many weaknesses, its plagiarised and manufactured evidence, its confected audio-tapes and its doctored pictures, was correct in one thing. Saddam Hussein's regime has violated numerous human rights and UN resolutions. There can be no arguing with that and no excuses can be allowed. But what is so monumentally hypocritical about the official US position is that literally everything Powell has accused the Ba'athists of has been the stock in trade of every Israeli government since 1948, and at no time more flagrantly than since the occupation of 1967. Torture, illegal detention, assassination, assaults against civilians with missiles, helicopters and jet fighters, annexation of territory, transportation of civilians from one place to another for the purpose of imprisonment, mass killing (as in Qana, Jenin, Sabra and Shatilla to mention only the most obvious), denial of rights to free passage and unimpeded civilian movement, education, medical aid, use of civilians as human shields, humiliation, punishment of families, house demolitions on a mass scale, destruction of agricultural land, expropriation of water, illegal settlement, economic pauperisation, attacks on hospitals, medical workers and ambulances, killing of UN personnel, to name only the most outrageous abuses: all these, it should be noted with emphasis, have been carried on with the total, unconditional support of the United States which has not only supplied Israel with the weapons for such practices and every kind of military and intelligence aid, but also has given the country upwards of $135 billion in economic aid on a scale that beggars the relative amount per capita spent by the US government on its own citizens.

This is an unconscionable record to hold against the US, and Mr Powell as its human symbol in particular. As the person in charge of US foreign policy, it is his specific responsibility to uphold the laws of this country, and to make sure that the enforcement of human rights and the promotion of freedom --the proclaimed central plank in the US's foreign policy since at least 1976 --is applied uniformly, without exception or condition. How he and his bosses and co-workers can stand up before the world and righteously sermonise against Iraq while at the same time completely ignoring the ongoing American partnership in human rights abuses with Israel defies credibility. And yet no one, in all the justified critiques of the US position that have appeared since Powell made his great UN speech, has focused on this point, not even the ever-so-upright French and Germans. The Palestinian territories today are witnessing the onset of a mass famine; there is a health crisis of catastrophic proportions; there is a civilian death toll that totals at least a dozen to 20 people a week; the economy has collapsed; hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians are unable to work, study, or move about as curfews and at least 300 barricades impede their daily lives; houses are blown up or bulldozed on a mass basis (60 yesterday). And all of it with US equipment, US political support, US finances. Bush declares that Sharon, who is a war criminal by any standard, is a man of peace, as if to spit on the innocent Palestinians' lives that have been lost and ravaged by Sharon and his criminal army. And he has the gall to say that he acts in God's name, and that he (and his administration) act to serve "a just and faithful God". And, more astounding yet, he lectures the world on Saddam's flouting of UN resolutions even as he supports a country, Israel, that has flouted at least 64 of them on a daily basis for more than half a century.

But so craven and so ineffective are the Arab regimes today that they don't dare state any of these things publicly. Many of them need US economic aid. Many of them fear their own people and need US support to prop up their regimes. Many of them could be accused of some of the same crimes against humanity. So they say nothing, and just hope and pray that the war will pass, while in the end keeping them in power as they are.

But it is also a great and noble fact that for the first time since World War Two there are mass protests against the war taking place before rather than during the war itself. This is unprecedented and should become the central political fact of the new, globalised era into which our world has been thrust by the US and its super-power status. What this demonstrates is that despite the awesome power wielded by autocrats and tyrants like Saddam and his American antagonists, despite the complicity of a mass media that has (willingly or unwillingly) hastened the rush to war, despite the indifference and ignorance of a great many people, mass action and mass protest on the basis of human community and human sustainability are still formidable tools of human resistance. Call them weapons of the weak, if you wish. But that they have at least tampered with the plans of the Washington chicken hawks and their corporate backers, as well as the millions of religious monotheistic extremists (Christian, Jewish, Muslim) who believe in wars of religion, is a great beacon of hope for our time. Wherever I go to lecture or speak out against these injustices I haven't found anyone in support of the war. Our job as Arabs is to link our opposition to US action in Iraq to our support for human rights in Iraq, Palestine, Israel, Kurdistan and everywhere in the Arab world --and also ask others to force the same linkage on everyone, Arab, American, African, European, Australian and Asian. These are world issues, human issues, not simply strategic matters for the United States or the other major powers.

We cannot in any way lend our silence to a policy of war that the White House has openly announced will include three to five hundred cruise missiles a day (800 of them during the first 48 hours of the war) raining down on the civilian population of Baghdad in order to produce "Shock and Awe", or even a human cataclysm that will produce, as its boastful planner a certain Mr (or is it Dr?) Harlan Ullman has said, a Hiroshima-style effect on the Iraqi people. Note that during the 1991 Gulf War after 41 days of bombing Iraq this scale of human devastation was not even approached. And the US has 6000 "smart" missiles ready to do the job. What sort of God would want this to be a formulated and announced policy for His people? And what sort of God would claim that this was going to bring democracy and freedom to the people not only of Iraq but to the rest of the Middle East?

These are questions I won't even try to answer. But I do know that if anything like this is going to be visited on any population on earth it would be a criminal act, and its perpetrators and planners war criminals according to the Nuremberg Laws that the US itself was crucial in formulating. Not for nothing do General Sharon and Shaul Mofaz welcome the war and praise George Bush. Who knows what more evil will be done in the name of Good? Every one of us must raise our voices, and march in protest, now and again and again. We need creative thinking and bold action to stave off the nightmares planned by a docile, professionalised staff in places like Washington and Tel Aviv and Baghdad. For if what they have in mind is what they call "greater security" then words have no meaning at all in the ordinary sense. That Bush and Sharon have contempt for the non-white people of this world is clear. The question is, how long can they keep getting away with it?  

 

© Copyright Al-Ahram Weekly. All rights reserved

 

________________________
Raja G. Mattar
rgmattar@cyberia.net.lb
 
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