This article originally provided by The New Statesman
November 15, 2004
Iraq: The Unthinkable Becomes
Normal
By John Pilger
The New Statesman
Monday 15 November
2004 Edition
Mainstream media speak as if Fallujah were populated
only by foreign "insurgents". In fact, women and
children are being slaughtered in our name.
Edward S Herman's landmark essay,
"The Banality of Evil", has never seemed more
apposite. "Doing terrible things in an organized and
systematic way rests on 'normalization'," wrote Herman.
"There is usually a division of labor in doing and
rationalizing the unthinkable, with the direct brutalizing
and killing done by one set of individuals . . . others
working on improving technology (a better crematory gas, a
longer burning and more adhesive napalm, bomb fragments that
penetrate flesh in hard-to-trace patterns). It is the
function of the experts, and the mainstream media, to
normalize the unthinkable for the general public."
On Radio 4's Today (6 November),
a BBC reporter in Baghdad referred to the coming attack on
the city of Fallujah as "dangerous" and "very
dangerous" for the Americans. When asked about
civilians, he said, reassuringly, that the US marines were
"going about with a Tannoy" telling people to get
out. He omitted to say that tens of thousands of people
would be left in the city. He mentioned in passing the
"most intense bombing" of the city with no
suggestion of what that meant for people beneath the bombs.
As for the defenders, those
Iraqis who resist in a city that heroically defied Saddam
Hussein; they were merely "insurgents holed up in the
city", as if they were an alien body, a lesser form of
life to be "flushed out" (the Guardian): a
suitable quarry for "rat-catchers", which is the
term another BBC reporter told us the Black Watch use.
According to a senior British officer, the Americans view
Iraqis as Untermenschen, a term that Hitler used in Mein
Kampf to describe Jews, Romanies and Slavs as sub-humans.
This is how the Nazi army laid siege to Russian cities,
slaughtering combatants and non-combatants alike.
Normalizing colonial crimes like
the attack on Fallujah requires such racism, linking our
imagination to "the other". The thrust of the
reporting is that the "insurgents" are led by
sinister foreigners of the kind that behead people: for
example, by Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian said to be
al-Qaeda's "top operative" in Iraq. This is what
the Americans say; it is also Blair's latest lie to
parliament. Count the times it is parroted at a camera, at
us. No irony is noted that the foreigners in Iraq are
overwhelmingly American and, by all indications, loathed.
These indications come from apparently credible polling
organizations, one of which estimates that of 2,700 attacks
every month by the resistance, six can be credited to the
infamous al-Zarqawi.
In a letter sent on 14 October to
Kofi Annan, the Fallujah Shura Council, which administers
the city, said: "In Fallujah, [the Americans] have
created a new vague target: al-Zarqawi. Almost a year has
elapsed since they created this new pretext and whenever
they destroy houses, mosques, restaurants, and kill children
and women, they said: 'We have launched a successful
operation against al-Zarqawi.' The people of Fallujah assure
you that this person, if he exists, is not in Fallujah . . .
and we have no links to any groups supporting such inhuman
behavior. We appeal to you to urge the UN [to prevent] the
new massacre which the Americans and the puppet government
are planning to start soon in Fallujah, as well as many
parts of the country."
Not a word of this was reported
in the mainstream media in Britain and America.
"What does it take to shock
them out of their baffling silence?" asked the
playwright Ronan Bennett in April after the US marines, in
an act of collective vengeance for the killing of four
American mercenaries, killed more than 600 people in
Fallujah, a figure that was never denied. Then, as now, they
used the ferocious firepower of AC-130 gunships and F-16
fighter-bombers and 500lb bombs against slums. They
incinerate children; their snipers boast of killing anyone,
as snipers did in Sarajevo.
Bennett was referring to the
legion of silent Labor backbenchers, with honorable
exceptions, and lobotomized junior ministers (remember Chris
Mullin?). He might have added those journalists who strain
every sinew to protect "our" side, who normalize
the unthinkable by not even gesturing at the demonstrable
immorality and criminality. Of course, to be shocked by what
"we" do is dangerous, because this can lead to a
wider understanding of why "we" are there in the
first place and of the grief "we" bring not only
to Iraq, but to so many parts of the world: that the
terrorism of al-Qaeda is puny by comparison with ours.
There is nothing illicit about
this cover-up; it happens in daylight. The most striking
recent example followed the announcement, on 29 October, by
the prestigious scientific journal, the Lancet, of a study
estimating that 100,000 Iraqis had died as a result of the
Anglo-American invasion. Eighty-four per cent of the deaths
were caused by the actions of the Americans and the British,
and 95 per cent of these were killed by air attacks and
artillery fire, most of whom were women and children.
The editors of the excellent
MediaLens observed the rush - no, stampede - to smother this
shocking news with "skepticism" and silence. They
reported that, by 2 November, the Lancet report had been
ignored by the Observer, the Telegraph, the Sunday
Telegraph, the Financial Times, the Star, the Sun and many
others. The BBC framed the report in terms of the
government's "doubts" and Channel 4 News delivered
a hatchet job, based on a Downing Street briefing. With one
exception, none of the scientists who compiled this
rigorously peer-reviewed report was asked to substantiate
their work until ten days later when the pro-war Observer
published an interview with the editor of the Lancet,
slanted so that it appeared he was "answering his
critics". David Edwards, a MediaLens editor, asked the
researchers to respond to the media criticism; their
meticulous demolition can be viewed on the alert for 2
November. None of this was published in the mainstream.
Thus, the unthinkable that "we" had engaged in
such a slaughter was suppressed - normalised. It is
reminiscent of the suppression of the death of more than a
million Iraqis, including half a million infants under five,
as a result of the Anglo-American-driven embargo.
In contrast, there is no media
questioning of the methodology of the Iraqi Special Tribune,
which has announced that mass graves contain 300,000 victims
of Saddam Hussein. The Special Tribune, a product of the
quisling regime in Baghdad, is run by the Americans;
respected scientists want nothing to do with it. There is no
questioning of what the BBC calls "Iraq's first
democratic elections". There is no reporting of how the
Americans have assumed control over the electoral process
with two decrees passed in June that allow an
"electoral commission" in effect to eliminate
parties Washington does not like. Time magazine reports that
the CIA is buying its preferred candidates, which is how the
agency has fixed elections over the world. When or if the
elections take place, we will be doused in cliches about the
nobility of voting, as America's puppets are
"democratically" chosen.
The model for this was the
"coverage" of the American presidential election,
a blizzard of platitudes normalizing the unthinkable: that
what happened on 2 November was not democracy in action.
With one exception, no one in the flock of pundits flown
from London described the circus of Bush and Kerry as the
contrivance of fewer than 1 per cent of the population, the
ultra-rich and powerful who control and manage a permanent
war economy. That the losers were not only the Democrats,
but the vast majority of Americans, regardless of whom they
voted for, was unmentionable.
No one reported that John Kerry,
by contrasting the "war on terror" with Bush's
disastrous attack on Iraq, merely exploited public distrust
of the invasion to build support for American dominance
throughout the world. "I'm not talking about leaving
[Iraq]," said Kerry. "I'm talking about
winning!" In this way, both he and Bush shifted the
agenda even further to the right, so that millions of
anti-war Democrats might be persuaded that the US has
"the responsibility to finish the job" lest there
be "chaos". The issue in the presidential campaign
was neither Bush nor Kerry, but a war economy aimed at
conquest abroad and economic division at home. The silence
on this was comprehensive, both in America and here.
Bush won by invoking, more
skillfully than Kerry, the fear of an ill-defined threat.
How was he able to normalize this paranoia? Let's look at
the recent past. Following the end of the cold war, the
American elite - Republican and Democrat - were having great
difficulty convincing the public that the billions of
dollars spent on the war economy should not be diverted to a
"peace dividend". A majority of Americans refused
to believe that there was still a "threat" as
potent as the red menace. This did not prevent Bill Clinton
sending to Congress the biggest "defense" bill in
history in support of a Pentagon strategy called
"full-spectrum dominance". On 11 September 2001,
the threat was given a name: Islam.
Flying into Philadelphia
recently, I spotted the Kean congressional report on 11
September from the 9/11 Commission on sale at the
bookstalls. "How many do you sell?" I asked.
"One or two," was the reply. "It'll disappear
soon." Yet, this modest, blue-covered book is a
revelation. Like the Butler report in the UK, which detailed
all the incriminating evidence of Blair's massaging of
intelligence before the invasion of Iraq, then pulled its
punches and concluded nobody was responsible, so the Kean
report makes excruciatingly clear what really happened, then
fails to draw the conclusions that stare it in the face. It
is a supreme act of normalizing the unthinkable. This is not
surprising, as the conclusions are volcanic.
The most important evidence to
the 9/11 Commission came from General Ralph Eberhart,
commander of the North American Aerospace Defense Command (Norad).
"Air force jet fighters could have intercepted hijacked
airliners roaring towards the World Trade Center and
Pentagon," he said, "if only air traffic
controllers had asked for help 13 minutes sooner . . . We
would have been able to shoot down all three . . . all four
of them."
Why did this not happen?
The Kean report makes clear that
"the defense of US aerospace on 9/11 was not conducted
in accord with pre-existing training and protocols . . . If
a hijack was confirmed, procedures called for the hijack
coordinator on duty to contact the Pentagon's National
Military Command Center (NMCC) . . . The NMCC would then
seek approval from the office of the Secretary of Defense to
provide military assistance . . . "
Uniquely, this did not happen.
The commission was told by the deputy administrator of the
Federal Aviation Authority that there was no reason the
procedure was not operating that morning. "For my 30
years of experience . . ." said Monte Belger, "the
NMCC was on the net and hearing everything real-time . . . I
can tell you I've lived through dozens of hijackings . . .
and they were always listening in with everybody else."
But on this occasion, they were
not. The Kean report says the NMCC was never informed. Why?
Again, uniquely, all lines of communication failed, the
commission was told, to America's top military brass. Donald
Rumsfeld, secretary of defense, could not be found; and when
he finally spoke to Bush an hour and a half later, it was,
says the Kean report, "a brief call in which the
subject of shoot-down authority was not discussed". As
a result, Norad's commanders were "left in the dark
about what their mission was".
The report reveals that the only
part of a previously fail-safe command system that worked
was in the White House where Vice-President Cheney was in
effective control that day, and in close touch with the NMCC.
Why did he do nothing about the first two hijacked planes?
Why was the NMCC, the vital link, silent for the first time
in its existence? Kean ostentatiously refuses to address
this. Of course, it could be due to the most extraordinary
combination of coincidences. Or it could not.
In July 2001, a top secret
briefing paper prepared for Bush read: "We [the CIA and
FBI] believe that OBL [Osama Bin Laden] will launch a
significant terrorist attack against US and/or Israeli
interests in the coming weeks. The attack will be
spectacular and designed to inflict mass casualties against
US facilities or interests. Attack preparations have been
made. Attack will occur with little or no warning."
On the afternoon of 11 September,
Donald Rumsfeld, having failed to act against those who had
just attacked the United States, told his aides to set in
motion an attack on Iraq - when the evidence was
non-existent. Eighteen months later, the invasion of Iraq,
unprovoked and based on lies now documented, took place.
This epic crime is the greatest political scandal of our
time, the latest chapter in the long 20th-century history of
the west's conquests of other lands and their resources. If
we allow it to be normalized, if we refuse to question and
probe the hidden agendas and unaccountable secret power
structures at the heart of "democratic"
governments and if we allow the people of Fallujah to be
crushed in our name, we surrender both democracy and
humanity.
John Pilger is currently
a visiting professor at Cornell University, New York. His
latest book, Tell Me No Lies: investigative journalism and
its triumphs, is published by Jonathan Cape
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