CounterPunch Diary
Imperial Massacres
by ALEXANDER COCKBURN
Denied post mortem imagery of Osama bin Laden and Anwar al-Awlaki, the world 
now has at its disposal photographs of Muammar Qaddafi, dispatched with a 
bullet  to the head after being wounded by NATO’s ground troops outside Sirte. 
Did the terminal command, Finish Him Off, come via cell phone from the US State 
Department whose Secretary, Hillary Clinton,  had earlier called for his death, 
or by dint of local initiative?  At all events, since Qaddafi was a prisoner at 
the time of his execution, it was a war crime and I trust that  in the years of 
her retirement Mrs Clinton will be detained amid some foreign vacation and 
handed a subpoena.

My friend and neighbor in Petrolia,  Joe Paff, wrote a response to a dreadful 
story about Qaddafi’s killing on Yahoo’s site, commenting “This kind of 
gloating is bound to come back and bite your butt. Imagine how many people in 
the world would like to see Netanyahu or Obama dragged from their hiding holes 
and tortured.  It will take about six months for everyone to regret the ‘new’ 
Libyan ‘democrats.’”

Yahoo’s initial electronic response was to write to Joe,  “Oops! Try again”. So 
he checked “post” a second time. Yahoo then rewrote his comment, complete with 
misspellings, stripped of any  mention of Netanyahu or Obama, and “posted” it, 
as “This is the kind of gloating that comes back and bites you on the butt. 
Just imagine how many peopel in the world would like to see Americans dragged 
through the streets and tortured to death.” As Joe wrote me, “Just another 
small episode in artificial intelligence and the present taboos.”

I suppose the first triumphalist imperial post mortem photo of such an 
execution in my lifetime  I can recall is that of Che Guevara, killed on the 
CIA’s orders at La Higuera in Bolivia on October 9, 1967. Perhaps Che’s finest 
hour came with his leadership of the Cuban anti-imperial forces deployed in 
Africa, defeating South African and white mercenary forces in one of the 
greatest acts of revolutionary solidarity the world has ever seen.

Qaddafi, even in his latterday accomodationist phase, was always a bitter 
affront to Empire – a “devil” figure in a tradition stretching back to the 
Mahdi, whose men killed General Gordon in the Sudan in 1885. I remember fondly 
the leftists and Republicans who trekked to Tripoli in the 1960s to appeal to 
Qaddafi for funds for their causes, some of them returning amply supplied with 
money and detailed counsel.

Dollar for dollar I doubt Qaddafi has a rival in any assessment of the amount 
of oil revenues in his domain actually distributed for benign social purposes. 
Derision is heaped on his Green Book, but in intention it can surely stand 
favorable comparison with kindred Western texts. Anyone labeled by Ronald 
Reagan  “This mad dog of the Middle East” has an honored place in my personal 
pantheon.

Since we’re on the topic of imperial executions, let us not forget October 17, 
1961. Last week saw the fiftieth anniversary of the massacre in Paris of 
hundreds of Algerians by the French riot police. Called by the FLN, the 
Algerians had mustered from their neighborhoods andbidonvilles to central Paris 
in support of the Algerian war of liberation, then six years old. Algeria, 
remember, was, in formal terms, a French department.

Centering on the Charonne metro station, the French riot police attacked with 
lethal savagery, battering and shooting  peaceful demonstrators to death and 
throwing their bodies into the Seine. Corpses were later dragged from the river 
as far downstream as Le Havre. These days the death count is reckoned as at 
least 300, some of the victims murdered in detention centers around Paris.  The 
French Interior minister of the time in De Gaulle’s government was Maurice 
Papon. In 1981 , the French weekly newspaper Le Canard Enchaîné published an 
article accusing  Papon  of having collaborated with the Germans during World 
War II. Papon was officially charged with crimes against humanity in 1983. His 
trial for overseeing the deportation of 1,690 Jews to a detention camp in the 
Paris suburb of Drancy did not take place until 1997. Papon’s role in the 
massacre of October 17, 1961, and indeed details of the massacre itself – long 
suppressed in French public memory — surfaced during his trial.

In February 1962 there was a huge protest demonstration about the October 17 
massacre  in Paris. Joe Paff and his wife Karen were recently in Paris, staying 
in the 20th at a hotel owned by French Algerians. The owner pointed to a photo 
of himself in the vanguard of the demo, remembering how he was astonished at 
the number of photographers eager to  take his picture. Only years later did he 
realize that the man with whom had linked arms was Jean-Paul Sartre.

The massacre has now been reconstructed in a documentary by Yasmina Adi, Ici on 
noie les Algériens, “Here one drowns Algerians,” words painted in red on the 
parapet of one of the bridges over the Seine.


Sent from my iPad

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