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Fake Faith And Epic Crimes - By John
Pilger
"These are indeed extraordinary times"

http://www.johnpilger.com
1 April 2009
In his latest column for the New Statesman, John Pilger
describes a worldwide movement that is 'challenging the
once-sacrosanct notion that imperial politicians can
destroy countless lives and retain an immunity from
justice'. In Tony Blair's case, justice inches closer. |
These are extraordinary times. With
the United States and Britain on the verge of bankruptcy and
committing to an endless colonial war, pressure is building for
their crimes to be prosecuted at a tribunal similar to that
which tried the Nazis at Nuremberg. This defined rapacious
invasion as “the supreme international crime differing only from
other war crimes in that it contains within itself the
accumulated evil of the whole”. International law would be mere
farce, said the chief US chief prosecutor at Nuremberg, Supreme
Court justice Robert Jackson, “if, in future, we do not apply
its principles to ourselves”.
That is now happening. Spain, Germany, Belgium, France
and Britain have long had “universal jurisdiction” statutes,
which allow their national courts to pursue and prosecute prima
facie war criminals. What has changed is an unspoken rule never
to use international law against “ourselves”, or “our” allies or
clients. In 1998, Spain, supported by France, Switzerland and
Belgium, indicted the Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, client
and executioner of the West, and sought his extradition from
Britain, where he happened to be at the time. Had he been sent
for trial he almost certainly would have implicated at least one
British prime minister and two US presidents in crimes against
humanity. Home Secretary Jack Straw let him escape back to
Chile.
The Pinochet case was the ignition. On 19 January last, the
George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley
compared the status of George W. Bush with that of Pinochet.
“Outside [the United States] there is not the ambiguity about
what to do about a war crime,” he said. “So if you try to
travel, most people abroad are going to view you not as ‘former
President George Bush’ [but] as a current war criminal.” For
this reason, Bush’s former defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld,
who demanded an invasion of Iraq in 2001 and personally approved
torture techniques in Iraq and at Guantanamo Bay, no longer
travels. Rumsfeld has twice been indicted for war crimes in
Germany. On 26 January, the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture,
Manfred Nowak, said, “We have clear evidence that Mr. Rumsfeld
knew what he was doing but nevertheless he ordered torture.”
The Spanish high court is currently investigating a former
Israeli defence minister and six other top Israeli officials for
their role in the killing of civilians, mostly children, in
Gaza. Henry Kissinger, who was largely responsible for bombing
to death 600,000 peasants in Cambodia in 1969-73, is wanted for
questioning in France, Chile and Argentina. Yet, on 8 February,
as if demonstrating the continuity of American power, President
Barack Obama’s national security adviser, James Jones, said, “I
take my daily orders from Dr. Kissinger.”
Like them, Tony Blair may soon be a fugitive. The International
Criminal Court, to which Britain is a signatory, has received a
record number of petitions related to Blair’s wars. Spain’s
celebrated Judge Baltasar Garzon, who indicted Pinochet and the
leaders of the Argentinian military junta, has called for George
W. Bush, Blair and former Spanish prime minister Jose Maria
Aznar to be prosecuted for the invasion of Iraq - “one of the
most sordid and unjustifiable episodes in recent human history:
a devastating attack on the rule of law” that had left the UN
“in tatters”. He said, “There is enough of an argument in
650,000 deaths for this investigation to start without delay.”
This is not to say Blair is about to be collared and marched to
The Hague, where Serbs and Sudanese dictators are far more
likely to face a political court set up by the West. However, an
international agenda is forming and a process has begun which is
as much about legitimacy as the letter of the law, and a
reminder from history that the powerful lose wars and empires
when legitimacy evaporates. This can happen quickly, as in the
fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of apartheid South
Africa – the latter a spectre for apartheid Israel.
Today, the unreported “good news” is that a worldwide movement
is challenging the once sacrosanct notion that imperial
politicians can destroy countless lives in the cause of an
ancient piracy, often at remove in distance and culture, and
retain their respectability and immunity from justice. In his
masterly Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde R.L. Stevenson writes in the
character of Jekyll: “Men have before hired bravos to transact
their crimes, while their own person and reputation sat under
shelter ... I could thus plod in the public eye with a load of
genial respectability, and, in a moment, like a schoolboy, strip
off these lendings and spring headlong into the sea of liberty.
But for me, in my impenetrable mantle, the safety was complete.”
Blair, too, is safe – but for how long? He and his collaborators
face a new determination on the part of tenacious non-government
bodies that are amassing “an impressive documentary record as to
criminal charges”, according to international law authority
Richard Falk, who cites the World Tribunal on Iraq, held in
Istanbul in 2005, which heard evidence from 54 witnesses and
published rigorous indictments against Blair, Bush and others.
Currently, the Brussels War Crimes Tribunal and the newly
established Blair War Crimes Foundation are building a case for
Blair’s prosecution under the Nuremberg Principle and the 1949
Geneva Convention.
In a separate indictment, former Judge of
the New Zealand Supreme Court E.W. Thomas wrote: “My
pre-disposition was to believe that Mr. Blair was deluded, but
sincere in his belief. After considerable reading and much
reflection, however, my final conclusion is that Mr. Blair
deliberately and repeatedly misled Cabinet, the British Labour
Party and the people in a number of respects. It is not possible
to hold that he was simply deluded but sincere: a victim of his
own self-deception. His deception was deliberate.”
Protected by the fake sinecure of Middle East Envoy for the
Quartet (the US, EU, UN and Russia), Blair operates largely from
a small fortress in the American Colony Hotel in Jerusalem,
where he is an apologist for the US in the Middle East and
Israel, a difficult task following the bloodbath in Gaza. To
assist his mortgages, he recently received an Israeli “peace
prize” worth a million dollars. He, too, is careful where he
travels; and it is instructive to watch how he now uses the
media. Having concentrated his post-Downing Street apologetics
on a BBC series of obsequious interviews with David Aaronovitch,
Blair has all but slipped from view in Britain, where polls have
long revealed a remarkable loathing for a former prime minister
– a sentiment now shared by those in the liberal media elite
whose previous promotion of his “project” and crimes is an
embarrassment and preferably forgotten.
On 8 February, Andrew Rawnsley, the Observer’s former leading
Blair fan, declared that “this shameful period will not be so
smoothly and simply buried”. He demanded, “Did Blair never ask
what was going on?”. This is an excellent question made relevant
with a slight word change: “Did the Andrew Rawnsleys never ask
what was going on?”. In 2001, Rawnsley alerted his readers to
Iraq’s “contribution to international terrorism” and Saddam
Hussein’s “frightening appetite to possess weapons of mass
destruction”. Both assertions were false and echoed official
Anglo-American propaganda.
In 2003, when the destruction of Iraq was
launched, Rawnsley described it as a “point of principle” for
Blair who, he later wrote, was “fated to be right”. He lamented,
“Yes, too many people died in the war. Too many people always
die in war. War is nasty and brutish, but at least this conflict
was mercifully short.” In the subsequent six years at least a
million people have been killed. According to the Red Cross,
Iraq is now a country of widows and orphans. Yes, war is nasty
and brutish, but never for the Blairs and the Rawnsleys.
Far from the carping turncoats at home, Blair has lately found a
safe media harbour – in Australia, the original murdochracy. His
interviewers exude an unction reminiscent of the promoters of
the “mystical” Blair in the Guardian of than a decade ago,
though they also bring to mind Geoffrey Dawson, editor of The
Times during the 1930s, who wrote of his infamous groveling to
the Nazis: “I spend my nights taking out anything which will
hurt their susceptibilities and dropping in little things which
are intended to sooth them.”
With his words as a citation, the finalists for the Geoffrey
Dawson Prize for Journalism (Antipodes) are announced. On 8
February, in an interview on the Australian Broadcasting
Corporation, Geraldine Doogue described Blair as “a man who
brought religion into power and is now bringing power to
religion”. She asked him: “What would the perception be that
faith would bring towards a greater stability... [sic]?”. A
bemused and clearly delighted Blair was allowed to waffle about
“values”. Doogue said to him that “it was the bifurcation about
right and wrong that what I thought the British found really
hard” [sic], to which Blair replied that “in relation to Iraq I
tried every other option [to invasion] there was”. It was his
classic lie, which passed unchallenged.
However, the clear winner of the Geoffrey Dawson Prize is Ginny
Dougary of the Sydney Morning Herald and the Times. Dougary
recently accompanied Blair on what she described as his “James
Bondish-ish Gulfstream” where she was privy to his “bionic
energy levels”. She wrote, “I ask him the childlike question:
does he want to save the world?”. Blair replied, well, more or
less, aw shucks, yes. The murderous assault on Gaza, which was
under way during the interview, was mentioned in passing. “That
is war, I’m afraid,” said Blair, “and war is horrible”. No
counter came that Gaza was not a war but a massacre by any
measure. As for the Palestinians, noted Dougary, it was Blair’s
task to “prepare them for statehood”. The Palestinians will be
surprised to hear that. But enough gravitas; her man “has the
glow of the newly-in-love: in love with the world and, for the
most part, the feeling is reciprocated”. The evidence she
offered for this absurdity was that “women from both sides of
politics have confessed to me to having the hots for him”.
These are extraordinary times. Blair, a perpetrator of
the epic crime of the 21st century, shares a “prayer breakfast”
with President Obama, the yes-we-can-man now launching more war.
“We pray,” said Blair, “that in acting we do God’s work and
follow God’s will.” To decent people, such pronouncements about
Blair’s “faith” represent a contortion of morality and intellect
that is a profanation on the basic teachings of Christianity.
Those who aided and abetted his great crime and now wish the
rest of us to forget their part - or, like Alistair Campbell,
his “communications director”, offer their bloody notoriety for
the vicarious pleasure of some – might read the first indictment
proposed by the Blair War Crimes Foundation: “Deceit and
conspiracy for war, and providing false news to incite passions
for war, causing in the order of one million deaths, 4 million
refugees, countless maiming and traumas.”
These are indeed extraordinary times.
John Pilger

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