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Who
is to Blame for the Collapse in Morality that Followed the Liberation?
by
Robert Fisk
in
Baghdad
Let's
talk war crimes. Yes, I know about the war crimes of Saddam. He slaughtered the
innocent, gassed the Kurds, tortured his people and though it is true we
remained good friends with this butcher for more than half of his horrible
career could be held responsible for killing up to a million people, the
death toll of the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war. But while we are congratulating
ourselves on the "liberation" of Baghdad, an event that is fast
turning into a nightmare for many of its residents, it is as good a time as any
to recall how we've been conducting this ideological war.
So
let's start with the end with the Gone With The Wind epic of looting and
anarchy with which the Iraqi population have chosen to celebrate our gift to
them of "liberation" and "democracy". It started in Basra,
of course, with our own shameful British response to the orgy of theft that
took hold of the city. Our defence minister, Geoff Hoon, made some especially
childish remarks about this disgraceful state of affairs, suggesting in the
House of Commons that the people of Basra were merely "liberating"
that word again their property from the Baath party. And the British Army
enthusiastically endorsed this nonsense.
Even
as tape of the pillage in Basra was being beamed around the world, there was
Lieutenant Colonel Hugh Blackman of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards cheerfully
telling the BBC that "it' s absolutely not my business to get in the
way." But of course it is Colonel Blackman's business to "get in the
way". Pillage merits a specific prevention clause in the Geneva
Conventions, just as it did in the 1907 Hague Convention upon which the Geneva
delegates based their "rules of war". "Pillage is
prohibited," the 1949 Geneva Conventions say, and Colonel Blackman and Mr
Hoon should glance at Crimes of War, published in conjunction with the City
University Journalism Department page 276 is the most dramatic to
understand what this means.
When
an occupying power takes over another country' s territory, it automatically
becomes responsible for the protection of its civilians, their property and
institutions. Thus the American troops in Nasiriyah became automatically
responsible for the driver who was murdered for his car in the first day of
that city's "liberation". The Americans in Baghdad were responsible
for the German and Slovak embassies that were looted by hundreds of Iraqis on
Thursday, and for the French Cultural Centre, which was attacked, and for the
Central Bank of Iraq, which was torched yesterday afternoon.
But
the British and Americans have simply discarded this notion, based though it is
upon conventions and international law. And we journalists have allowed them to
do so. We clapped our hands like children when the Americans
"assisted" the Iraqis in bringing down the statue of Saddam Hussein
in front of the television cameras this week, and yet we went on talking about
the "liberation" of Baghdad as if the majority of civilians there
were garlanding the soldiers with flowers instead of queuing with anxiety at
checkpoints and watching the looting of their capital.
We
journalists have been co-operating, too, with a further collapse of morality in
this war. Take, for example, the ruthless bombing of the residential Mansur
area of Baghdad last week. The Anglo-American armies or the
"coalition", as the BBC still stubbornly and mendaciously calls the
invaders claimed they believed that Saddam and his two evil sons Qusay and
Uday were present there. So they bombed the civilians of Mansur and killed at
least 14 decent, innocent people, almost all of them and this would obviously
be of interest to the religious feelings of Messrs Bush and Blair Christians.
Now
one might have expected the BBC World Service Radio next morning to question
whether the bombing of civilians did not constitute a bit of an immoral act, a
war crime perhaps, however much we wanted to kill Saddam. Forget it. The
presenter in London described the slaughter of these innocent civilians as
"a new twist" in the war to target Saddam as if it was quite in
order to kill civilians, knowingly and in cold blood, in order to murder our
most hated tyrant. The BBC's correspondent in Qatar where the Centcom boys
pompously boasted that they had "real-time" intelligence
(subsequently proved to be untrue) that Saddam was present used all the usual
military jargon to justify the unjustifiable. The "coalition", he
announced, knew it had "time-sensitive material" ie that they
wouldn't have time to know whether they were killing innocent human beings in
the furtherance of their cause or not and that this "actionable
material" (again I quote this revolting BBC dispatch) was not
"risk-free".
And
then he went on to describe, without a moment of reflection, on the moral
issues involved, how the Americans had used four 2,000lb "bunker-buster
bombs to level the civilian homes". These are, of course, the very same
pieces of ordnance that the same US air force used in their vain effort to kill
Osama bin Laden in the Tora Bora mountains. So now we use them, knowingly, on
the flimsy homes of civilians of Baghdad folk who would otherwise be worthy
of the "liberation" we wished to bestow upon them in the hope that
a gamble, a bit of faulty "intelligence" about Saddam, will pay off.
The
Geneva Conventions have a lot to say about all this. They specifically refer to
civilians as protected persons, as persons who must have the protection of a
warring power even if they find themselves in the presence of armed
antagonists. The same protection was demanded for southern Lebanese civilians
when Israel launched its brutal "Grapes of Wrath" operation in 1996.
When an Israeli pilot, for example, fired a US-made Hellfire missile into an
ambulance, killing three children and two women, the Israelis claimed that a
Hezbollah fighter had been in the same vehicle. The statement proved to be
totally untrue. But Israel was rightly condemned for killing civilians in the
hope of killing an enemy combatant. Now we are doing exactly the same. And
Ariel Sharon must be pleased. No more namby-pamby western criticism of Israel
after the bunker-busters have been dropped on Mansur.
More
and more, we are committing these crimes. The mass slaughter of more than 400
civilians in the Amariyah air raid shelter in Baghdad in the 1991 Gulf War was
carried out in the hope that it would kill Saddam. Why? Why cannot we abide by
the rules of war we rightly demand that others should obey? Why do we
journalists yet again, war after war connive in this immorality by turning
a ruthless and cruel and illegal act into a "new twist" or into
"time-sensitive material"?
Wars
have a habit of turning normally sane people into cheerleaders, of transforming
rational journalists into nasty little puffed-up fantasy colonels. But surely
we should all carry the Geneva Conventions into war with us, along with that
little book from the City University. For the only people to benefit from our
own war crimes will be the next generation of Saddam Husseins.