<<"We count every screwdriver," said an American colonel during the 
  first Gulf war, "but counting civilians who die along the way is just 
  not our policy.">>

"These sanctions represented ongoing warfare against the people of Iraq.
 They became, in my view, genocidal in their impact over the years, and the
 Security Council maintained them, despite its full knowledge of their impact,
 particularly on the children of Iraq. We disregarded our own charter,
 international law, and we probably killed over a million people."
--Dennis Halliday, former Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations



http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/allnews/content_objectid=13320863_method=full_siteid=50143_headline=-NOW-WE-ARE-THE-IRAQ-EXTREMISTS-name_page.html


Now we are the Iraq extremists

    By John Pilger,
    London Daily Mirror

The "liberation" of Iraq is a cruel joke on a stricken people. The 
Americans and British, partners in a great recognised crime, have 
brought down on the Middle East, and much of the rest of the world, 
the prospect of terrorism and suffering on a scale that al-Qaeda 
could only imagine.

That is what this week's bloody bombing of the United Nations 
headquarters in Baghdad tells us.

It is a "wake-up call", according to Mary Robinson, the former UN 
Humanitarian Commissioner.

She is right, of course, but it is a call that millions of people 
sounded on the streets of London and all over the world more than 
seven months ago - before the killing began.

And yet the Anglo-American spin machine, whose minor cogs are 
currently being exposed by the Hutton Inquiry, is still in production.

According to the Bush and Blair governments, those responsible for 
the UN outrage are "extremists from outside": Al-Qaeda terrorists or 
Iranian militants, or both.

Whether or not outsiders are involved, the aim of this propaganda is 
to distract from the truth that America and Britain are now immersed 
in a classic guerrilla war, a war of resistance and 
self-determination of the kind waged against foreign aggressors and 
colonial masters since history began.

For America, it is another Vietnam. For Britain it is another Kenya, 
or indeed another Iraq.

In 1921, Lieutenant-General Sir Stanley Maude said in Baghdad: "Our 
armies do not come as conquerors, but as liberators."

Within three years 10,000 had died in an uprising against the 
British, who gassed and bombed the "terrorists".

Nothing has changed, only the names and the fine print of the lies.

As for the "extremists from outside", simply turn the meaning around 
and you have a succinct description of the current occupiers who, 
unprovoked, attacked a defenceless sovereign country, defying the 
United Nations and the opposition of most of humanity.

Using weapons designed to cause the maximum human suffering - cluster 
bombs, uranium-tipped shells and firebombs (napalm) - these 
extremists from outside caused the deaths of at least 8,000 civilians 
and as many as 30,000 troops, most conscripted teenagers. Consider 
the waves of grief in any society from that carnage.

AT their moment of "victory", these extremists from outside - having 
already destroyed Iraq's infrastructure with a 12-year bombing 
campaign and embargo - murdered journalists, toppled statues and 
encouraged wholesale looting while refusing to make the most basic 
humanitarian repairs to the damage they had caused to the supply of 
power and clean water.

This means that today sick children are dying from thirst and 
gastro-enteritis, that hospitals frequently run out of oxygen and 
that those who might be saved can not be saved.

How many have died like this?

"We count every screwdriver," said an American colonel during the 
first Gulf war, "but counting civilians who die along the way is just 
not our policy."

The biggest military machine on earth, said to be spending up to 
$5billion-a-month on its occupation of Iraq, apparently can not find 
the resources and manpower to bring generators to a people enduring 
temperatures of well over the century - almost half of them children, 
of whom eight per cent, says UNICEF, are suffering extreme 
malnutrition. When Iraqis have protested about this, the extremists 
from outside have shot them dead.

They have shot them in crowds, or individually, and they boast about it.

The other day, Task Force 20, an "elite" American unit murdered at 
least five people as they drove down a street.

The next day they murdered a woman and her three children as they 
drove down a street.

They are no different from the death squads the Americans trained in 
Latin America.

These extremists from outside have been allowed to get away with much 
of this - partly because of the web of deceptions in London and 
Washington, and partly because of those who voluntarily echo and 
amplify their lies.

In the current brawl between the Blair government and the BBC a new 
myth has emerged: It is that the BBC was and is "anti-war".

This is what George Orwell called an "official truth". Again, just 
turn it around and you have the real truth; that the BBC supported 
Blair's war, that day after day it broadcast and "debated" and 
legitimised the charade of weapons of mass destruction, as well as 
nonsense such as that which cast Blair as a "moderating influence" on 
Bush - when, as we now know, they are almost identical warmongers.

Who can forget the BBC's exultant Chief Political Correspondent 
Andrew Marr, at the moment of "coalition" triumph. Tony Blair, he 
declared, "said that they would take Baghdad without a blood bath, 
and that in the end the Iraqis would be celebrating. And on both 
those points he has been conclusively proved right."

If you replace "right" with "wrong", you have the truth. To the BBC's 
man in Downing Street, up to 40,000 deaths apparently does not 
constitute a "blood bath".

According to the independent American survey organisation Media 
Tenor, the BBC allowed less dissent against the war than all the 
leading international broadcasters surveyed, including the American 
networks.

Andrew Gilligan, the BBC reporter who revealed Dr David Kelly's 
concerns about the government's "dodgy dossier" on Iraq, is one of 
the very few mavericks, an inconvenient breed who challenge official 
truth.

One of the most important lies was linking the regime of Saddam 
Hussein with al-Qaeda.

As we now know, both Bush and Blair ignored the advice of their 
intelligence agencies and made the connection public.

It worked. When the attack on Iraq began, polls showed that most 
Americans believed Saddam Hussein was behind September 11.

The opposite was true. Monstrous though it was, Saddam Hussein's 
regime was a veritable bastion against al-Qaeda and its Islamic 
fanaticism. Saddam was the West's man, who was armed to the teeth by 
America and Britain in the 1980s because he had oil and a lot of 
money and because he was an enemy of anti-Western mullahs in Iran and 
elsewhere in the region.

Saddam and Osama bin Laden loathed each other.

His grave mistake was invading Kuwait in 1990; Kuwait is an 
Anglo-American protectorate, part of the Western oil empire in the 
Middle East.

The killings in the UN compound in Baghdad this week, like the 
killing of thousands of others in Iraq, form a trail of blood that 
leads to Bush and Blair and their courtiers.

It was obvious to millions of people all over the world that if the 
Americans and British attacked Iraq, then the fictional link between 
Iraq and Islamic terrorism could well become fact.

The brutality of the occupation of Iraq - in which children are shot 
or arrested by the Americans, and countless people have "disappeared" 
in concentration camps - is an open invitation to those who now see 
Iraq as part of a holy jihad.

When I travelled the length of Iraq several years ago, I felt completely safe.

I was received everywhere with generosity and grace, even though I 
was from a country whose government was bombing and besieging my 
hosts.

Bush's and Blair's court suppressed the truth that most Iraqis both 
opposed Saddam Hussein and the invasion of their country.

The thousands of exiles, from Jordan to Britain, said this repeatedly.

But who listened to them? When did the BBC interrupt its anti-Christ 
drumbeat about Saddam Hussein and report this vital news?

Nor are the United Nations merely the "peacemakers" and 
"nationbuilders" that this week's headlines say they are.

There were dedicated humanitarians among the dead in Baghdad but for 
more than 12 years, the UN Security Council allowed itself to be 
manipulated so that Washington and London could impose on the people 
of Iraq, under a UN flag, an embargo that resembled a mediaeval siege.

It was this that crippled Iraq and, ironically, concentrated all 
domestic power in the hands of the regime, thus ending all hope of a 
successful uprising.

The other day I sat with Dennis Halliday, former Assistant Secretary 
General of the United Nations, and the UN in New York. Halliday was 
the senior UN official in Iraq in the mid-1990s, who resigned rather 
than administer the blockade.

"These sanctions," he said, "represented ongoing warfare against the 
people of Iraq. They became, in my view, genocidal in their impact 
over the years, and the Security Council maintained them, despite its 
full knowledge of their impact, particularly on the children of Iraq.

"We disregarded our own charter, international law, and we probably 
killed over a million people.

"It's a tragedy that will not be forgotten... I'm confident that the 
Iraqis will throw out the occupying forces. I don't know how long it 
will take, but they'll throw them out based on a nationalistic drive.

"They will not tolerate any foreign troops' presence in their 
country, dictating their lifestyle, their culture, their future, 
their politics.

"This is a very proud people, very conscious of a great history.

"It's grossly unacceptable. Every country that is now threatened by 
Mr Bush, which is his habit, presents an outrage to all of us.

"Should we stand by and merely watch while a man so dangerous he is 
willing to sacrifice Americans lives and, worse, the lives of others."


John Pilger's documentary on Iraq, Afghanistan and the war on terror 
will be shown on ITV on September 22.

Reprinted from The London Daily Mirror


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