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From Pol Pot to ISIS:
The Blood Never Dried for the Kissingers and the
Blairs
By John Pilger
December 16, 2015
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From Pol Pot to ISIS: The blood never dried
Following the ISIS outrages in Beirut and Paris, John Pilger updates
this prescient essay on the root causes of terrorism and what we can do
about it.
In transmitting President Richard Nixon's orders
for a "massive" bombing of Cambodia
in 1969, Henry Kissinger
said, "Anything that flies on everything that moves". As
Barack Obama wages
his seventh war against the Muslim world since he was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize, and Francois Hollande
promises a "merciless" attack on the rubble of Syria, the orchestrated
hysteria and lies make one almost nostalgic for Kissinger's murderous
honesty.
As a witness to the human consequences of aerial
savagery - including the beheading of victims, their parts festooning
trees and fields - I am not surprised by the disregard of memory and
history, yet again. A telling example is the rise to power of Pol Pot
and his Khmer Rouge, who had much in common with today's Islamic State
in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). They, too, were ruthless medievalists who
began as a small sect. They, too, were the product of an American-made
apocalypse, this time in Asia.
According to Pol Pot, his movement
had consisted of "fewer than 5,000 poorly armed guerrillas uncertain
about their strategy, tactics, loyalty and leaders". Once Nixon's and
Kissinger's B-52 bombers had gone to work as part of "Operation Menu",
the west's ultimate demon could not believe his luck. The Americans
dropped the equivalent of five Hiroshimas on rural Cambodia during
1969-73. They leveled village after village, returning to bomb the
rubble and corpses. The craters left giant necklaces of carnage, still
visible from the air. The terror was unimaginable. A former Khmer Rouge
official described how the survivors "froze up and they would wander
around mute for three or four days. Terrified and half-crazy, the people
were ready to believe what they were told... That was what made it so
easy for the Khmer Rouge to win the people over." A Finnish Government
Commission of Inquiry estimated that 600,000 Cambodians died in the
ensuing civil war and described the bombing as the "first stage in a
decade of genocide". What Nixon and Kissinger began, Pol Pot, their
beneficiary, completed. Under their bombs, the Khmer Rouge grew to a
formidable army of 200,000.
ISIS has a similar past and present.
By most scholarly measure, Bush and
Blair's invasion of Iraq in 2003
led to the deaths of at least 700,000
people - in a country that had no history of jihadism.
The Kurds had done territorial and political deals; Sunni and Shia had
class and sectarian differences, but they were at peace; intermarriage
was common. Three years before the invasion, I drove the length of Iraq
without fear. On the way I met people proud, above all, to be Iraqis,
the heirs of a civilization that seemed, for them, a presence.
Bush and Blair blew all this to bits. Iraq is now a nest of jihadism.
Al-Qaeda - like Pol Pot's "jihadists" - seized the opportunity provided
by the onslaught of 'Shock and Awe' and the civil war that followed.
"Rebel" Syria offered even greater rewards, with CIA and Gulf state
ratlines of weapons, logistics and money running through Turkey. The
arrival of foreign recruits was inevitable. A former British ambassador,
Oliver Miles, wrote, "The [Cameron] government seems to be following the
example of Tony Blair, who ignored consistent advice from the Foreign
Office, MI5 and MI6 that our Middle East policy - and in particular our
Middle East wars - had been a principal driver in the recruitment of
Muslims in Britain for terrorism here."
ISIS is the progeny of
those in Washington, London and Paris who, in conspiring to destroy
Iraq, Syria and Libya, committed an epic crime against humanity. Like
Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge, ISIS are the mutations of a western state
terror dispensed by a venal imperial elite undeterred by the
consequences of actions taken at great remove in distance and culture.
Their culpability is unmentionable in "our" societies, making
accomplices of those who suppress this critical truth.
It is 23
years since a holocaust enveloped Iraq, immediately after the first Gulf
War, when the US and Britain hijacked the United Nations Security
Council and imposed punitive "sanctions" on the Iraqi population -
ironically, reinforcing the domestic authority of Saddam Hussein. It was
like a medieval siege. Almost everything that sustained a modern state
was, in the jargon, "blocked" - from chlorine for making the water
supply safe to school pencils, parts for X-ray machines, common
painkillers and drugs to combat previously unknown cancers carried in
the dust from the southern battlefields contaminated with Depleted
Uranium. Just before Christmas 1999, the Department of Trade and
Industry in London restricted the export of vaccines meant to protect
Iraqi children against diphtheria and yellow fever. Kim Howells,
parliamentary Under-Secretary of State in the Blair government,
explained why. "The children's vaccines", he said, "were capable of
being used in weapons of mass destruction". The British Government could
get away with such an outrage because media reporting of Iraq - much of
it manipulated by the Foreign Office - blamed Saddam Hussein for
everything.
Under a bogus "humanitarian" Oil for Food Programme,
$100 was allotted for each Iraqi to live on for a year. This figure had
to pay for the entire society's infrastructure and essential services,
such as power and water. "Imagine," the UN Assistant Secretary General,
Hans Von Sponeck, told me, "setting that pittance against the lack of
clean water, and the fact that the majority of sick people cannot afford
treatment, and the sheer trauma of getting from day to day, and you have
a glimpse of the nightmare. And make no mistake, this is deliberate. I
have not in the past wanted to use the word genocide, but now it is
unavoidable." Disgusted, Von Sponeck resigned as UN Humanitarian Co-ordinator
in Iraq. His predecessor, Denis Halliday, an equally distinguished
senior UN official, had also resigned. "I was instructed," Halliday
said, "to implement a policy that satisfies the definition of genocide:
a deliberate policy that has effectively killed well over a million
individuals, children and adults."
A study by the United Nations
Children's Fund, Unicef, found that between 1991 and 1998, the height of
the blockade, there were 500,000 "excess" deaths of Iraqi infants under
the age of five. An American TV reporter put this to Madeleine Albright,
US Ambassador to the United Nations, asking her, "Is the price worth
it?" Albright replied, "We think the price is worth it."
In 2007,
the senior British official responsible for the sanctions, Carne Ross,
known as "Mr. Iraq", told a parliamentary selection committee, "[The US
and UK governments] effectively denied the entire population a means to
live." When I interviewed Carne Ross three years later, he was consumed
by regret and contrition. "I feel ashamed," he said. He is today a rare
truth-teller of how governments deceive and how a compliant media plays
a critical role in disseminating and maintaining the deception. "We
would feed [journalists] factoids of sanitised intelligence," he said,
"or we'd freeze them out." Last year, a not untypical headline in the
Guardian read: "Faced with the horror of Isis we must act." The "we must
act" is a ghost risen, a warning of the suppression of informed memory,
facts, lessons learned and regrets or shame. The author of the article
was Peter Hain, the former Foreign Office minister responsible for Iraq
under Blair. In 1998, when Denis Halliday revealed the extent of the
suffering in Iraq for which the Blair Government shared primary
responsibility, Hain abused him on the BBC's Newsnight as an "apologist
for Saddam". In 2003, Hain backed Blair's invasion of stricken Iraq on
the basis of transparent lies. At a subsequent Labour Party conference,
he dismissed the invasion as a "fringe issue".
Here was Hain
demanding "air strikes, drones, military equipment and other support"
for those "facing genocide" in Iraq and Syria. This will further "the
imperative of a political solution". The day Hain's article appeared,
Denis Halliday and Hans Von Sponeck happened to be in London and came to
visit me. They were not shocked by the lethal hypocrisy of a politician,
but lamented the enduring, almost inexplicable absence of intelligent
diplomacy in negotiating a semblance of truce. Across the world, from
Northern Ireland to Nepal, those regarding each other as terrorists and
heretics have faced each other across a table. Why not now in Iraq and
Syria? Instead, there is a vapid, almost sociopathic verboseness from
Cameron, Hollande, Obama and their "coalition of the willing" as they
prescribe more violence delivered from 30,000 feet on places where the
blood of previous adventures never dried. They seem to relish their own
violence and stupidityso much they want it to overthrow their one
potentially valuable ally, the government in Syria.
This is
nothing new, as the following leaked UK-US intelligence file
illustrates:
"In order to facilitate the action of liberative
[sic] forces... a special effort should be made to eliminate certain key
individuals [and] to proceed with internal disturbances in Syria. CIA is
prepared, and SIS (MI6) will attempt to mount minor sabotage and coup de
main [sic] incidents within Syria, working through contacts with
individuals... a necessary degree of fear... frontier and [staged]
border clashes [will] provide a pretext for intervention... the CIA and
SIS should use... capabilities in both psychological and action fields
to augment tension."
That was written in 1957, although it could
have been written yesterday. In the imperial world, nothing essentially
changes. In 2013, the former French Foreign Minister Roland Dumas
revealed that "two years before the Arab spring", he was told in London
that a war on Syria was planned. "I am going to tell you something," he
said in an interview with the French TV channel LPC, "I was in England
two years before the violence in Syria on other business. I met top
British officials, who confessed to me that they were preparing
something in Syria... Britain was organising an invasion of rebels into
Syria. They even asked me, although I was no longer Minister for Foreign
Affairs, if I would like to participate... This operation goes way back.
It was prepared, preconceived and planned."
The only effective
opponents of ISIS are accredited demons of the west - Syria, Iran,
Hezbollah and now Russia. The obstacle is Turkey, an "ally" and a member
of Nato, which has conspired with the CIA, MI6 and the Gulf medievalists
to channel support to the Syrian "rebels", including those now calling
themselves ISIS. Supporting Turkey in its long-held ambition for
regional dominance by overthrowing the Assad government beckons a major
conventional war and the horrific dismemberment of the most ethnically
diverse state in the Middle East.
A truce - however difficult to
negotiate and achieve - is the only way out of this maze; otherwise, the
atrocities in Paris and Beirut will be repeated. Together with a truce,
the leading perpetrators and overseers of violence in the Middle East -
the Americans and Europeans - must themselves "de-radicalise" and
demonstrate a good faith to alienated Muslim communities everywhere,
including those at home. There should be an immediate cessation of all
shipments of war materials to Israel and recognition of the State of
Palestine. The issue of Palestine is the region's most festering open
wound, and the oft-stated justification for the rise of Islamic
extremism. Osama bin Laden made that clear. Palestine also offers hope.
Give justice to the Palestinians and you begin to change the world
around them.
More than 40 years ago, the Nixon-Kissinger bombing
of Cambodia unleashed a torrent of suffering from which that country has
never recovered. The same is true of the Blair-Bush crime in Iraq, and
the Nato and "coalition" crimes in Libya and Syria. With impeccable
timing, Henry Kissinger's latest self-serving tome has been released
with its satirical title, "World Order". In one fawning review,
Kissinger is described as a "key shaper of a world order that remained
stable for a quarter of a century". Tell that to the people of Cambodia,
Vietnam, Laos, Chile, East Timor and all the other victims of his
"statecraft". Only when "we" recognise the war criminals in our midst
and stop denying ourselves the truth will the blood begin to dry.
http://johnpilger.com/articles/from-pol-pot-to-isis-the-blood-never-dried
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