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Tarih: 28-03-2008 11:55
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Robert Fisk: The only lesson we ever learn is that we never learn
Five years on, and still we have not learnt. With each anniversary,
the steps crumble beneath our feet, the stones ever more cracked, the
sand ever finer. Five years of catastrophe in Iraq and I think of
Churchill, who in the end called Palestine a "hell-disaster".
But we have used these parallels before and they have drifted away
in the Tigris breeze. Iraq is swamped in blood. Yet what is the state
of our remorse? Why, we will have a public inquiry – but not yet! If
only inadequacy was our only sin.
Today, we are engaged in a
fruitless debate. What went wrong? How did the people – the senatus
populusque Romanus of our modern world – not rise up in rebellion when
told the lies about weapons of mass destruction, about Saddam's links
with Osama bin Laden and 11 September? How did we let it happen? And
how come we didn't plan for the aftermath of war?
Oh, the
British tried to get the Americans to listen, Downing Street now tells
us. We really, honestly did try, before we absolutely and completely
knew it was right to embark on this illegal war. There is now a vast
literature on the Iraq debacle and there are precedents for post-war
planning – of which more later – but this is not the point. Our
predicament in Iraq is on an infinitely more terrible scale.
As
the Americans came storming up Iraq in 2003, their cruise missiles
hissing through the sandstorm towards a hundred Iraqi towns and cities,
I would sit in my filthy room in the Baghdad Palestine Hotel, unable to
sleep for the thunder of explosions, and root through the books I'd
brought to fill the dark, dangerous hours. Tolstoy's War and Peace
reminded me how conflict can be described with sensitivity and grace
and horror – I recommend the Battle of Borodino – along with a file of
newspaper clippings. In this little folder, there was a long rant by
Pat Buchanan, written five months earlier; and still, today I feel its
power and its prescience and its absolute historical honesty: "With our
MacArthur Regency in Baghdad, Pax Americana will reach apogee. But then
the tide recedes, for the one endeavour at which Islamic people excel
is expelling imperial powers by terror or guerrilla war.
"They
drove the Brits out of Palestine and Aden, the French out of Algeria,
the Russians out of Afghanistan, the Americans out of Somalia and
Beirut, the Israelis out of Lebanon. We have started up the road to
empire and over the next hill we will meet those who went before. The
only lesson we learn from history is that we do not learn from
history."
How easily the little men took us into the inferno,
with no knowledge or, at least, interest in history. None of them read
of the 1920 Iraqi insurgency against British occupation, nor of
Churchill's brusque and brutal settlement of Iraq the following year.
On
our historical radars, not even Crassus appeared, the wealthiest Roman
general of all, who demanded an emperorship after conquering Macedonia
– "Mission Accomplished" – and vengefully set forth to destroy
Mesopotamia. At a spot in the desert near the Euphrates river, the
Parthians – ancestors of present day Iraqi insurgents – annihilated the
legions, chopped off Crassus's head and sent it back to Rome filled
with gold. Today, they would have videotaped his beheading.
To
their monumental hubris, these little men who took us to war five years
ago now prove that they have learnt nothing. Anthony Blair – as we
should always have called this small town lawyer – should be facing
trial for his mendacity. Instead, he now presumes to bring peace to an
Arab-Israeli conflict which he has done so much to exacerbate. And now
we have the man who changed his mind on the legality of war – and did
so on a single sheet of A4 paper – daring to suggest that we should
test immigrants for British citizenship. Question 1, I contend, should
be: Which blood-soaked British attorney general helped to send 176
British soldiers to their deaths for a lie? Question 2: How did he get
away with it?
But in a sense, the facile, dumbo nature of Lord
Goldsmith's proposal is a clue to the whole transitory, cardboard
structure of our decision-making. The great issues that face us – be
they Iraq or Afghanistan, the US economy or global warming, planned
invasions or "terrorism" – are discussed not according to serious
political timetables but around television schedules and press
conferences.
Will the first air raids on Iraq hit prime-time
television in the States? Mercifully, yes. Will the first US troops in
Baghdad appear on the breakfast shows? Of course. Will Saddam's capture
be announced by Bush and Blair simultaneously?.
But this is all
part of the problem. True, Churchill and Roosevelt argued about the
timing of the announcement that war in Europe had ended. And it was the
Russians who pipped them to the post. But we told the truth. When the
British were retreating to Dunkirk, Churchill announced that the
Germans had "penetrated deeply and spread alarm and confusion in their
tracks".
Why didn't Bush or Blair tell us this when the Iraqi
insurgents began to assault the Western occupation forces? Well, they
were too busy telling us that things were getting better, that the
rebels were mere "dead-enders".
On 17 June 1940, Churchill told
the people of Britain: "The news from France is very bad and I grieve
for the gallant French people who have fallen into this terrible
misfortune." Why didn't Blair or Bush tell us that the news from Iraq
was very bad and that they grieved – even just a few tears for a minute
or so – for the Iraqis?
For these were the men who had the
temerity, the sheer, unadulterated gall, to dress themselves up as
Churchill, heroes who would stage a rerun of the Second World War, the
BBC dutifully calling the invaders "the Allies" – they did, by the way
– and painting Saddam's regime as the Third Reich.
Of course,
when I was at school, our leaders – Attlee, Churchill, Eden, Macmillan,
or Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy in the United States – had real
experience of real war. Not a single Western leader today has any
first-hand experience of conflict. When the Anglo-American invasion of
Iraq began, the most prominent European opponent of the war was Jacques
Chirac, who fought in the Algerian conflict. But he has now gone. So
has Colin Powell, a Vietnam veteran but himself duped by Rumsfeld and
the CIA.
Yet one of the terrible ironies of our times is that
the most bloodthirsty of American statesmen – Bush and Cheney, Rumsfeld
and Wolfovitz – have either never heard a shot fired in anger or have
ensured they did not have to fight for their country when they had the
chance to do so. No wonder Hollywood titles like "Shock and Awe" appeal
to the White House. Movies are their only experience of human conflict;
the same goes for Blair and Brown.
Churchill had to account for
the loss of Singapore before a packed House. Brown won't even account
for Iraq until the war is over.
It is a grotesque truism that
today – after all the posturing of our political midgets five years ago
– we might at last be permitted a valid seance with the ghosts of the
Second World War. Statistics are the medium, and the room would have to
be dark. But it is a fact that the total of US dead in Iraq (3,978) is
well over the number of American casualties suffered in the initial
D-Day landings at Normandy (3,384 killed and missing) on 6 June, 1944,
or more than three times the total British casualties at Arnhem the
same year (1,200).
They count for just over a third of the total
fatalities (11,014) of the entire British Expeditionary Force from the
German invasion of Belgium to the final evacuation at Dunkirk in June
1940. The number of British dead in Iraq – 176 – is almost equal to the
total of UK forces lost at the Battle of the Bulge in 1944-45 (just
over 200). The number of US wounded in Iraq – 29,395 – is more than
nine times the number of Americans injured on 6 June (3,184) and more
than a quarter of the tally for US wounded in the entire 1950-53 Korean
war (103,284).
Iraqi casualties allow an even closer comparison
to the Second World War. Even if we accept the lowest of fatality
statistics for civilian dead – they range from 350,000 up to a million
– these long ago dwarfed the number of British civilian dead in the
flying-bomb blitz on London in 1944-45 (6,000) and now far outnumber
the total figure for civilians killed in bombing raids across the
United Kingdom – 60,595 dead, 86,182 seriously wounded – from 1940 to
1945.
Indeed, the Iraqi civilian death toll since our invasion
is now greater than the total number of British military fatalities in
the Second World War, which came to an astounding 265,000 dead (some
histories give this figure as 300,000) and 277,000 wounded. Minimum
estimates for Iraqi dead mean that the civilians of Mesopotamia have
suffered six or seven Dresdens or – more terrible still – two
Hiroshimas.
Yet in a sense, all this is a distraction from the
awful truth in Buchanan's warning. We have dispatched our armies into
the land of Islam. We have done so with the sole encouragement of
Israel, whose own false intelligence over Iraq has been discreetly
forgotten by our masters, while weeping crocodile tears for the
hundreds of thousands of Iraqis who have died.
America's massive
military prestige has been irreparably diminished. And if there are, as
I now calculate, 22 times as many Western troops in the Muslim world as
there were at the time of the 11th and 12th century Crusades, we must
ask what we are doing. Are we there for oil? For democracy? For Israel?
For fear of weapons of mass destruction? Or for fear of Islam?
We
blithely connect Afghanistan to Iraq. If only Washington had not become
distracted by Iraq, so the narrative now goes, the Taliban could not
have re-established themselves. But al-Qa'ida and the nebulous Osama
bin Laden were not distracted. Which is why they expanded their
operations into Iraq and then used this experience to assault the West
in Afghanistan with the hitherto – in Afghanistan – unheard of suicide
bomber.
And I will hazard a terrible guess: that we have lost
Afghanistan as surely as we have lost Iraq and as surely as we are
going to "lose" Pakistan. It is our presence, our power, our arrogance,
our refusal to learn from history and our terror – yes, our terror – of
Islam that is leading us into the abyss. And until we learn to leave
these Muslim peoples alone, our catastrophe in the Middle East will
only become graver. There is no connection between Islam and "terror".
But there is a connection between our occupation of Muslim lands and
"terror". It's not too complicated an equation. And we don't need a
public inquiry to get it right.
Son Güncelleme : 28-03-2008 12:06
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