|
The Iraq War Has Been A Monstrous Crime
Seumas Milne - Guardian co uk - 1 May 2009
http://www.guardian.co.uk/...
Politicians crave a whitewash - but Britain must hold a
fully open public inquiry into the bloodbath it helped
to create |
It's hardly surprising that those
responsible for the human and social catastrophe unleashed by
the illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq, on both sides of
the Atlantic, should be desperate to rewrite its history - or
try to salvage the shattered reputation of those armies that
carried it out. In Britain, as the bulk of its troops withdraw
after a campaign that has already lasted longer than the second
world war, that propaganda offensive has now reached fever
pitch.
Gordon Brown claimed yesterday that the wreckage of
blood-drenched Iraq was a "success story". The defence
secretary John Hutton insisted Britain should be proud of its
"legacy" in the devastated cities of the south. Hilary Benn, the
environment secretary boasted of his support for the original
aggression on BBC's Question Time yesterday, declaring that " we
leave Iraq a better place" - a line repeated word for word by
the Sun today and echoed across much of the media.
But the politicians' craving for a whitewash is no reason for
anyone else to give house room to such an absurd travesty of the
truth. The Iraq war has been a monstrous crime. Based on a false
pretext, it has left hundreds of thousands dead, created more
than four million refugees, unleashed an orgy of ethnic
cleansing and laid waste to the broken infrastructure of a
country already on its knees from 12 years of sanctions and a
generation of war.
On the eve of the 2003 invasion, Tony Blair told parliament that
while there would be civilian casualties, Saddam Hussein would
be "responsible for many more deaths even in one year than we
will be in any conflict". Amnesty International reckoned annual
deaths in Iraq linked to repression at the time to be in the low
hundreds. Civilian deaths alone in the six years since the
US-British attack are now estimated anywhere between 150,000
(the Iraqi government's figure) and a million-plus.
But when paying tribute to the 179 British soldiers killed in
Iraq, ministers could not bring themselves to honour the victims
of the bloodbath they helped inflict - let alone to acknowledge
the tens of thousands of prisoners held without trial, the
massacres and rampant torture Britain shares responsibility for:
the very crimes of the former regime used to justify the war.
Yet to this day only one Briton has been found guilty of a war
crime in Iraq: Donald Payne, convicted of inhuman treatment of
detainees in Basra. No wonder a majority in Iraq and Britain
have long wanted all foreign troops withdrawn - or that
Iraqis find claims of a "burgeoning democracy", Britain's
"successful mission" and tales of "reconstruction" hard to take
remotely seriously. From Basra to Baquba, basic services,
power supplies, sewage treatment and clean water are in grimly
short supply, while a corrupt sectarian carve-up by a tightly
licensed political elite survives only with the protection of US
firepower.
That's why the prominent Basra-based president of the Iraqi oil
workers' federation Hassan Juma'a wrote this month that history
would not look kindly on Britain for its role in Iraq and that
its troops' retreat would be the occasion for a "festival".
Of course Britain's withdrawal is welcome in both countries. But
the occupation continues. The British army is handing over
control of Basra to the Americans, while 400 British troops are
to stay on as "advisers" and "trainers" - a reprise of the role
they had in Iraq before 1958. In an ominous marker for the
future, Brown yesterday declared he was anxious for Britain
to get involved in "protecting" Iraqi oil supplies - which of
course lay behind the invasion in the first place.
The British refusal to let go reflects the continuing slippage
on a much larger scale of Barack Obama's own staged withdrawal
plans. Not only does it seem all US combat troops will not after
all be pulling out of Iraqi cities by the end of June, but there
are persistent US hints that "agreement" may be reached with the
Iraqi government to stay on after the announced full withdrawal
by the end of 2011. The aggressors are clearly not going to
go quietly.
Meanwhile, all the extravagant claims about a post-surge
transformation of Iraq's security are once again looking
foolishly premature. The killing of three US soldiers in Anbar
province on Thursday confirmed a rising trend of resistance
attacks in April, combined with a string of horrific suicide
bombings and increasing civilian deaths, now running at over
400 a month.
There can only be a durable stabilisation of Iraq once the
occupation has ended and all representative political forces are
brought into a negotiated settlement. In the meantime, a
political accounting for what has been inflicted on Iraq -
which must include a fully open public inquiry - has yet to
begin in Britain. That is essential for Britain's own corroded
political culture – but also because the same blunders and
crimes are now being repeated in the escalation of another
US-led war: in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The above article is at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/may/01/iraq-britain-inquiry

World Gathering For Truth information:
The '9/11' Deception And False War On
Terror

'Shock & Awe' (Kill & Murder?), Baghdad -
2003
|