HOW CAN THE US BOMB THIS TRAGIC PEOPLE?
By Robert Fisk
Independent on Sunday (London)
September 23, 2001, Sunday
We are witnessing this weekend one of the most epic events since the
Second World War, certainly since Vietnam. I am not talking about
the ruins of the World Trade Centre in New York and the grotesque
physical scenes which we watched on 11 September, an atrocity which
I described last week as a crime against humanity (of which more
later). No, I am referring to the extraordinary, almost unbelievable
preparations now under way for the most powerful nation ever to have
existed on God's Earth to bomb the most devastated, ravaged,
starvation-haunted and tragic country in the world. Afghanistan,
raped and eviscerated by the Russian army for 10 years, abandoned by
its friends - us, of course - once the Russians had fled, is about
to be attacked by the surviving superpower. I watch these events
with incredulity, not least because I was a witness to the Russian
invasion and occupation. How they fought for us, those Afghans, how
they believed our word. How they trusted President Carter when he
promised the West's support. I even met the CIA spook in Peshawar,
brandishing the identity papers of a Soviet pilot, shot down with
one of our missiles - which had been scooped from the wreckage of
his Mig. "Poor guy," the CIA man said, before showing us a movie
about GIs zapping the Vietcong in his private cinema. And yes, I
remember what the Soviet officers told me after arresting me at
Salang. They were performing their international duty in
Afghanistan, they told me. They were "punishing the terrorists" who
wished to overthrow the (communist) Afghan government and destroy
its people. Sound familiar?
I was working for The Times in 1980, and just south of Kabul I
picked up a very disturbing story. A group of religious mujahedin
fighters had attacked a school because the communist regime had
forced girls to be educated alongside boys. So they had bombed the
school, murdered the head teacher's wife and cut off her husband's
head. It was all true. But when The Times ran the story, the Foreign
Office complained to the foreign desk that my report gave support to
the Russians. Of course. Because the Afghan fighters were the good
guys. Because Osama bin Laden was a good guy. Charles Douglas-Home,
then editor of The Times would always insist that Afghan guerrillas
were called "freedom fighters" in the headline. There was nothing
you couldn't do with words.
And so it is today. President Bush now threatens the obscurantist,
ignorant, super-conservative Taliban with the same punishment as he
intends to mete out to bin Laden. Bush originally talked about
"justice and punishment" and about "bringing to justice" the
perpetrators of the atrocities. But he's not sending policemen to
the Middle East; he's sending B-52s. And F-16s and AWACS planes and
Apache helicopters. We are not going to arrest bin Laden. We are
going to destroy him. And that's fine if he's the guilty man. But
B-52s don't discriminate between men wearing turbans, or between men
and women or women and children.
I wrote last week about the culture of censorship which is now to
smother us, and of the personal attacks which any journalist
questioning the roots of this crisis endures. Last week, in a
national European newspaper, I got a new and revealing example of
what this means. I was accused of being anti-American and then
informed that anti-Americanism was akin to anti-Semitism. You get
the point, of course. I'm not really sure what anti-Americanism is.
But criticising the United States is now to be the moral equivalent
of Jew-hating. It's OK to write headlines about "Islamic terror" or
my favourite French example "God's madmen", but it's definitely out
of bounds to ask why the United States is loathed by so many Arab
Muslims in the Middle East. We can give the murderers a Muslim
identity: we can finger the Middle East for the crime - but we may
not suggest any reasons for the crime.
But let's go back to that word justice. Re-watching that pornography
of mass -murder in New York, there must be many people who share my
view that this was a crime against humanity. More than 6,000 dead;
that's a Srebrenica of a slaughter. Even the Serbs spared most of
the women and children when they killed their menfolk. The dead of
Srebrenica deserve - and are getting - international justice at the
Hague. So surely what we need is an International Criminal Court to
deal with the sorts of killer who devastated New York on 11
September. Yet "crime against humanity" is not a phrase we are
hearing from the Americans. They prefer "terrorist atrocity", which
is slightly less powerful. Why, I wonder? Because to speak of a
terrorist crime against humanity would be a tautology. Or because
the US is against international justice. Or because it specifically
opposed the creation of an international court on the grounds that
its own citizens may one day be arraigned in front of it.
The problem is that America wants its own version of justice, a
concept rooted, it seems, in the Wild West and Hollywood's version
of the Second World War. President Bush speaks of smoking them out,
of the old posters that once graced Dodge City: "Wanted, Dead or
Alive". Tony Blair now tells us that we must stand by America as
America stood by us in the Second World War. Yes, it's true that
America helped us liberate Western Europe. But in both world wars,
the US chose to intervene after only a long and - in the case of the
Second World War - very profitable period of neutrality.
Don't the dead of Manhattan deserve better than this? It's less than
three years since we launched a 200-Cruise missile attack on Iraq
for throwing out the UN arms inspectors. Needless to say, nothing
was achieved. More Iraqis were killed, and the UN inspectors never
got back, and sanctions continued, and Iraqi children continued to
die. No policy, no perspective. Action, not words.
And that's where we are today. Instead of helping Afghanistan,
instead of pouring our aid into that country 10 years ago,
rebuilding its cities and culture and creating a new political
centre that would go beyond tribalism, we left it to rot. Sarajevo
would be rebuilt. Not Kabul. Democracy, of a kind, could be set up
in Bosnia. Not in Afghanistan. Schools could be reopened in Tuzla
and Travnik. Not in Jaladabad. When the Taliban arrived, stringing
up every opponent, chopping off the arms of thieves, stoning women
for adultery, the United States regarded this dreadful outfit as a
force for stability after the years of anarchy.
Bush's threats have effectively forced the evacuation of every
Western aid worker. Already, Afghans are dying because of their
absence. Drought and starvation go on killing millions - I mean
millions - and between 20 and 25 Afghans are blown up every day by
the 10 million mines the Russians left behind. Of course, the
Russians never went back to clear the mines. I suppose those B-52
bombs will explode a few of them. But that'll be the only
humanitarian work we're likely to see in the near future.
Look at the most startling image of all this past week. Pakistan has
closed its border with Afghanistan. So has Iran. The Afghans are to
stay in their prison. Unless they make it through Pakistan and wash
up on the beaches of France or the waters of Australia or climb
through the Channel Tunnel or hijack a plane to Britain to face the
wrath of our Home Secretary. In which case, they must be sent back,
returned, refused entry. It's a truly terrible irony that the only
man we would be interested in receiving from Afghanistan is the man
we are told is the evil genius behind the greatest mass-murder in
American history: bin Laden. The others can stay at home and die.
|