ROSS COULTHART: So do I take from that that you believe that the
fight against the Americans is a good fight?
SHEIKH ABDULLAH AL-JANABI: In my opinion, it's only natural that you would want to
fight invaders and drive them out of your country.
ROSS COULTHART: When the Americans liberated, as they say, Iraq from Saddam Hussein,
were you not a supporter of that?
SHEIKH ABDULLAH AL-JANABI: Not only me, but most Iraqis initially gave credence to what
they were saying, but after the Americans occupied Iraq, they changed the tune, and
instead of hunting Saddam Hussein, they were here fighting terrorism. They ruined our
country, committed human rights abuses, violated our cultures and traditions. All these
things negated any credibility they once had.
Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, admits that it could be
months before the U.S. and its Iraqi sock-puppets would even attempt to take the rebel
cities:
"Part of that strategy is that Iraqi security forces must be properly equipped,
trained and led to participate in these security operations, and then once it's over, can
sustain the peace in a given city."
Myers is full of it. As the Seattle P-I tartly observed: "That appeared to
be a tacit acknowledgment that even if the Americans regained the cities by force, the
Iraqis would not be able to control them." When Sheik Abdullah's boys carried out a
sentence of death against the local Iraqi National Guard commander, the PI reports
that "the entire National Guard contingent, estimated to number several hundred, fled
the city." The much-touted
"Fallujah Brigade," which, the Wall Street Journal assured us,
was supposed to eventually
have responsibility for ensuring security in the city, blew away like so
much vaporware. Their commander
claims sabotage by the U.S. military, as extended negotiations between the de facto
government of Fallujah and the U.S.-backed regime of Prime Minister Ayad "Shoot 'Em Up" Allawi
drag on.
The "transition" is in tatters. No sooner had the U.S. military handed over
the Fallujah administrative center to the Iraqi police when 23 were killed in a guerrilla
assault, and Sheik Abdullah stepped up to the plate, ready to take a swing at the American
occupiers:
COULTHART: What if, even under a new Iraqi government, the Americans are still here
in two, three, five years' time?
SHEIKH ABDULLAH: Well, the new government will be slaughtered first, then the
Americans.
His words ought to send a chill down the spine of every American parent with a son or
daughter in the military, because this is the future if we "stay the course."
In the Shi'ite south, the movement led by Muqtada Sadr is down,
but not out: if not for the intervention of Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the Sadrists would still be fighting the Americans
and the holy city of Najaf, along with its sacred mosques, would have been destroyed,
along with all hopes of reining in the growing radical Shi'ite movement. But the way in
which violence was averted a political settlement sponsored by the Ayatollah
only underscored the impotence of the Allawi clique and signaled a power shift in Iraqi
politics that may doom the "interim" government to permanent impotence.
The bad boys of Shi'ite politics, Muqtada and his fellow Sadrists, have made noises
about joining the political process, but have so far chosen to remain outside the
"democratic" framework set up by the occupiers: The Sadrists and the Sunni
rebels know that when the Americans leave as they one day will the patriotic
bona fides of Iraqis who collaborated with the invaders will be called into question: that
is, if the collaborators are still breathing
In any case, the Americans are even having trouble with their sock-puppets, who have
gotten into the annoying habit of talking back: not only the once-favored
Ahmed Chalabi, but also Iraq's current Vice President, Ibrahim Al-Jaafari, who complains
that the U.S. "does not understand Arab culture or customs" and that it
"came into Iraq like an elephant astride its war machine."
The elephant is stumbling, though, and is ill-suited to warfare in the mountainous
terrain of Afghanistan, where our alleged "victory," like that in Iraq, is being
reversed or, rather, revealed as a complete fraud.
President Hamid "Fashion Plate"
Karzai rules only in Kabul, and is confronted with a mounting resurgence of the Taliban in
a war that many speculate is being masterminded
by Osama bin Laden & Co. Herat
is in turmoil as crowds riot, and dozens are killed, in response to the removal of the
local governor by the central government. All large gatherings are banned: this is
distinctly odd occurring as it does in the run-up to Afghanistan's much-touted national
elections. That tells us all we need to know about the fate of the Bush administration
project to implant Western-style democracy in Afghan soil.
The southern areas of the country remain under the control of the Taliban, and other
radical jihadist groups, which have been energized and united by the
upcoming elections. While the Bushies burble on about the war in Iraq as the "central
front" of the worldwide war on terrorism, the Taliban attacks the U.S. and its Afghan
allies with
impunity, and Al Qaeda openly mocks us, predicting that the country which neither the
British nor the Russians could successfully conquer would prove to be the Americans'
"burial ground." In an audiotape played by Al Jazeera, Ayman
al-Zawahiri, bin Laden's deputy, hailed a string of Muslim victories against the
invading infidels:
"The Americans are hiding in their trenches and refuse to come out to face the
mujahideen, as the mujahideen shell and fire on them, and cut roads off around them. Their
defense is only to bomb by air, wasting U.S. money as they kick up dust."
It's heartwarming to see that someone cares about wasting the American
taxpayers' money, since neither of our two major presidential candidates, nor the
Congress, seems to give a hoot. So that's
where all the fiscal conservatives have gone off to Al Qaeda!
To heck with fighting a jihad: My advice to Mr. al-Zawahri is to put down the scimitar
and join the Republican party, where he could carve out a niche for himself as a
right-wing opponent of the Republican "Big Government Conservative"
Establishment and deficit hawk. He could succeed where Pat Buchanan failed and,
speaking of Pat
He was on Wolf Blitzer's Sunday news program, better than ever, knocking down the
neocon talking points one by one, an expert shot, as his interviewer dutifully reiterated
the party line with what seemed like a permanently painted-on sneer: Echoing Slate
writer Timothy Noah's contention that Buchanan owes Richard Perle an apology for comparing
him to Fagin, the character in Charles
Dickens' classic novel, Oliver Twist.
Pat's reply no is absolutely correct. Noah's outrageous demand is a form
of political correctness designed to kill any discussion of the neoconservatives'
responsibility for dragging us into a war that looks more and more like a trap, a killing
ground for our children and a training ground for al-Qaeda.
Noah writes:
"Let's turn to page 42 of Where
the Right Went Wrong. In a passage introducing the group of Iraq hawks who called
themselves "the Vulcans," Buchanan observes that the best known members
were Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle. Perle's depiction of his delight at
first meeting the future president reads like Fagin relating his initial encounter with
the young Oliver Twist.
"Buchanan is trying to evoke, humorously, the con artist's delight at finding
an innocent to corrupt. But Fagin is second only to Shylock as the most famously
anti-Semitic portrayal of a Jew to be found in English literature. Scholars often argue
that, as characters in The Merchant of Venice and Oliver Twist,
respectively, Shylock and Fagin possess human qualities that transcend the ugly stereotype
of the grasping Jew. But nobody would dispute that any comparison between Fagin and an
actual, living Jew particularly one made by a writer (Buchanan) who has more
than once been called anti-Semitic
is, well, anti-Semitic."
So, if this analogy had been made by anyone other than Buchanan, would it still be
"anti-Semitic"? If the answer is no, then this is just another attempt to
tar a man who has been standing up to the War Party longer, more consistently, and far
more eloquently and effectively than any of the war's left-wing critics. The neocons hate
him for it, and have been trying to smear him ever since he almost alone
rose to oppose Gulf War I, accurately predicting that it would be but the first in a
series of Middle Eastern wars that would lead us, ineluctably, down the road to Empire,
and ruin.
If the answer is yes, then what we are in for is the policing of the language by
self-appointed Grand Inquisitors of political correctness, neocon-style. Much of the
neoconservative discourse has been about the alleged indoctrination of college students
into the left-wing mentality and politics of their teachers, who have imposed "speech
codes" and other impediments to the free and open discussion of ideas. The
conservative or, more accurately, neoconservative alternative is banned as
"hate speech," and leftist hegemony over the academy is effectively
unchallenged. But now the neocons are trying to impose a speech code of their own, clearly
designed to squelch their critics for even identifying them because we all know that
"neocon" really means "Jew."
Blitzer flung this canard at Buchanan, who protested that there are plenty of
neoconservatives who are not Jewish, naming Bill Bennett, Jeanne Kirkpatrick, and
others. The disdainfully knowing look on Blitzer's face was just begging to be wiped off,
and if it had been me, I would have included in the list one Larry
Franklin, the neocon ideologue, devout Catholic, and upper echelon Pentagon official
recently identified as a spy for
Israel. Blitzer, a former employee of
AIPAC, which has been directly
implicated in the spy imbroglio, would probably have imploded onscreen and what
a pretty sight that would have been.
Noah's attempt to police American political discourse in order to purge it of
"anti-Semitism" would impose a self-censoring code of journalistic ethics that
would forbid the honest discussion of who
lied us into war, and why.
It would eliminate all reporting of the AIPAC spy scandal, and silence anyone who points
to the obvious: that the propaganda campaign leading up to the Iraq war was the work of Israel's
fifth column in the Pentagon. By aligning itself with a powerful faction within the
Republican party, Israel gained access not only to key decision-makers and the highest
councils of state, but also to America's
secrets.
It's true, but we aren't allowed to say it, at least according to the strictures set
down by Noah, Blitzer & Co. Ooops! Now I'm in trouble! I mean, isn't the
mercantile trope "& Co." a sly stereotypical reference, especially when
coupled with two Jewish names? Oy vey! Somebody call the Thought Police! (That's
911-PURGE).
Finally, what of Dickens and Shakespeare? Are they, too, to be condemned as bigots?
They get a free pass because "some scholars," as Noah puts it, have given them
the okay: "Shylock and Fagin possess human qualities that transcend the ugly
stereotype of the grasping Jew." But who is to say Buchanan doesn't believe Perle has
these same transcending qualities? In the context in which it was written, the reference
to Fagin and Oliver Twist is directed, not at Perle, but at Bush disdained
as a credulous child, who, when served up a portion of lies, holds up his plate and humbly
asks for more.
The neocons would rather die than honestly debate the issues at hand: they would rather
smear than face the fact that one of their own has been "outed" and is
busy implicating them and their
ilk to law enforcement officials. They would rather talk about "anti-Semitism"
than the problem of what to do about the traitors who lured us into Iraq and left our sons
and daughters torn and bleeding on the battlefield, more than 1,000 of them and for
what? So that Ariel Sharon could expand
the settlements and extend
Israel's influence into Kurdistan?
What I hope and pray is that the patriotic Americans in our intelligence services, law
enforcement, and the military, who have been on to the Great Neo Con since the very
beginning, do not lose heart, and continue the fight. What heartens me above all else
about the Franklin affair is the news that this was just part of an investigation into
Israel's underground espionage operation that has been going on since before 9/11 and
that Bush's top officials were briefed on it when they first came to Washington during the
transition. The sheer scope of such a probe, its longevity and breadth, means that
America's natural defenses are healthy in spite of the opportunistic infection that has
set in at the very top.
We can win this one yet and, God willing, we will.
Justin Raimondo is Editorial Director
of AntiWar.Com.
He is a regular columnist for Ether Zone.
Justin Raimondo may be contacted at egarris@antiwar.com
Published in the September 13, 2004 issue of Ether Zone
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