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So
What Was It All For?
by
Robert Fisk
May
20, 2003
More
than 70 dead in a week. Thanks for the Iraq war. Thank you, Mr Bush and Mr
Blair, for making our world safer by ridding us of the one tyrant Saddam
Hussein who never had any connection with 11 September 2001, or with the
Riyadh bombings or with the bombings in Casablanca. The “liberation” of Iraq
was supposed to free us from the bombers of Al Qaeda.
So
said Mr Blair. So said Mr Straw. Could you talk to us, please, Messrs Blair and
Straw? What was Iraq for? No, we don’t have any “claim of responsibility” for
the Casablanca massacre, but the nature of the cold calculation behind the
Casablanca bombings is sufficient. One suicide bomber kills himself by blowing
open the doors of the Jewish community centre. Then his surviving comrade blows
himself up inside.
Weren’t
the Jews like the Christians “people of the Book”, honoured by Islam? But
then and there’s always a “but then” wasn’t Morocco a “friend” of the West,
a country that has resorted to torture again over the past year in its
pro-American battle against “terrorism”, yet another country in which human
rights have taken second place to President Bush’s war on terror? Osama bin Laden
always said that his intention was to overthrow “the corrupt monarchies of the
Arab world”. It was Saudi Arabia at the beginning of the week, Morocco at the
end.
So,
back to the point. Ten suicide bombers killed the innocent of Casablanca
that’s more than half the total killers of 11 September 2001. And only five
days after Al Qaeda struck Riyadh.
Was
it not President Bush who boasted to us of how America had struck a devastating
blow in the “war on terror” in Iraq? Was it not Vice-President Cheney who
informed us that Al Qaeda was reeling from America’s bombardment of
Afghanistan? Was it not Defence Secretary Rumsfeld who would have us believe
that half of Al Qaeda’s leadership was eliminated either through capture or
murder (let us speak frankly) at America’s hands? So take a look at the
terrain.
Afghanistan
is in a state of anarchy, its pathetic government scarcely ruling over Kabul.
Iraq is in an even more incipient state of anarchy, largely without
electricity, money or petrol. And this is a war of good against evil?
Casablanca is a sorry and pertinent page in the history of America’s folly in
the Arab world. So what comes next? More boasts by President Bush that he is
winning the “war against terror” or more claims yes, he told you so that
the “war on terror” is eternal? Heaven spare us all.
Robert Fisk is an award winning foreign
correspondent for The Independent
(UK), where this article first appeared. He is the author of Pity Thy
Nation: The Abduction of Lebanon (The Nation Books, 2002 edition). Posted
with author’s permission.