Yes, There Is An Effective Alternative
To The Bombing Of Afghanistan
Tariq Ali
The Independent UK
www.independent.co.uk
15 October 2001
'A lesson could have been learnt from
Israel's patient stalking, capture and trial of Adolf Eichmann'
Over the past decade or so, every war
fought by the West (in the Gulf, the Balkans and now South Asia) has been
accompanied by a well-orchestrated propaganda campaign. Politics is
conducted and presented in the style of intelligence agencies:
disinformation, exaggeration of enemy strength and capability, explanation
of a television image with a brazen lie and censorship. The aim is to
delude and disarm the citizenry. Everything is either over-simplified or
reduced to a wearisome incomprehensibility. The message is simple. There
is no alternative.
As the bombing of Afghanistan continues for
the second week, the Pentagon has admitted that some bombs went astray.
Two hundred Afghan civilians have been killed so far and more will die if
the bombs continue to fall. During the lull before the war, the US Defense
Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, mused in public as to whether Afghanistan had
any "assets worth bombing". He knew the answer. The fact is that
the Anglo-American bombing campaign is in clear breach of Articles 48 and
51 of the Geneva Convention as well as the Nuremberg Charter. Article 48
insists that: "In order to ensure respect for and protection of the
civilian population and civilian objects, the Parties to the conflict
shall at all times distinguish between the civilian population and
combatants and between civilian objects and military objectives and
accordingly shall direct their operations only against military
objectives."
Article 51 is equally clear in prohibiting
indiscriminate attacks and specifies these as attacks "which may be
expected to cause incidental loss of a civilian life, injury to civilians,
damage to civilian objects or a combination thereof, which would be
excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage
anticipated".
Was there ever an alternative to the
bombing? If the real intention was not a crude war of revenge, but to
seriously weaken and eliminate terrorism and bring to trial those who
ordered the crimes committed on 11 September, then the answer is yes. The disproportionality
of what is taking place speaks for itself. If the US
judiciary was convinced by the evidence of Mr bin Laden's guilt then a
warrant should have been issued for his extradition and a plan prepared to
bring him to trial.
A lesson could have been learnt from
Israel's patient stalking, capture and trial of Adolf Eichmann who was
accused of a far more serious crime. In going to war, Bush and Blair
resorted to a mixture of cowboy discourse and Old Testament imagery to
pre-empt any judicial inquiry or action. The model so far has been that of
the old lynch-mob, egged on by a populace fed on a regular diet of scare
stories. Anthrax today and, no doubt, nuclear briefcases tomorrow.
If the real aim is simply an old-fashioned
imperialist one, i.e. to topple the Taliban regime and replace it with a
protectorate considered closer to "Western values" (as the
Taliban once was), then and only then does the bombing make sense as the
Northern Alliance, waiting to commence the battle for Kabul, realise full
well. Its leaders boast they can do it alone, but US marines and British
commandos are standing by to help them just in case the Taliban defeat
them as they did once before.
Meanwhile, there is no news of the pretext
for this war. Where is Osama bin Laden? Is his capture part two of this
operation? And if he is caught will he be killed or brought to trial? And,
if so, will this entire exercise have helped to diminish the attraction
for, let alone help to defeat terrorism? I think the result will be the
exact opposite and especially in the Arab and Muslim world.
Neither George Bush nor Tony Blair appear
to appreciate that, like it or not, Mr bin Laden has become a hero in many
parts of the Third World. Young, middle-class graduates in Saudi Arabia,
Egypt and the Maghreb will make sure that his martyrdom will not be in
vain. Only last week, President Bush told journalists: "How do I
respond when I see that in some Islamic countries there is vitriolic
hatred for America? I'll tell you how I respond. I'm amazed. I just can't
believe it because I know how good we are."
Mr Blair, his military confederate, had
another solution: "One thing becoming increasingly clear to me is the
need to upgrade our media and public opinion operations in the Arab and
Muslim world." The simplicity on display is frightening. Surely the
mandarins in the State Department and Foreign Office are aware of the
realities. They must know that the medium-term solution is political and
economic, not military.
Unless the Palestinians are guaranteed a
viable, sovereign state, there will be no peace. Mr Arafat may be content
with the shrivelled little Bantustans at Israeli pleasure, but the
Palestinian population is not. The latest intifada is also a revolt
against the Oslo Accords and the corruption of the Palestinian leadership.
Then there is Iraq. Not a single one of the
standard arguments for the continuing bombardment and blockade of Iraq
stands up. The notion that Saddam's cruelties are unique is an abject
fiction. The Turkish Generals, valued members of Nato, have killed 30,000
Kurds over the past decade and denied them the use of their own language.
Responsible modernity? Saddam never attempted a cultural annihilation of
this order. The Saudi Kingdom makes not even a pretence of human rights,
its treatment of women would not pass muster in medieval Russia. As for
nuclear weapons, the hawkish Unscom inspector, Scott Ritter, insists they
cannot be countenanced. Israel, however, possesses nuclear weapons without
any sanctions whatsoever.
Double standards of this sort and on this
scale drive young people to despair. Here is an immediate solution. The
lifting of sanctions and a permanent halt to the bombing of Iraq would
have a positive impact throughout the world of Islam, reducing the number
of young men prepared to sacrifice their own lives for what they regard as
a holy cause. It would be a small step forward if, as US and British jets
are dispatched for yet another bombing raid on a the shattered and
famished remnant of Afghanistan, a few of our political leaders spoke up
in the name of reason.
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