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UN
Attack Underlines America's Crumbling Authority And Shows It Can Not Guarantee
The Safety Of Anyone
by
Robert Fisk
August
23, 2003
August
20: What UN member would ever contemplate sending peace-keeping troops to Iraq
now? The men who are attacking America's occupation army are ruthless, but they
are not stupid. They know that President George Bush is getting desperate, that
he will do anything - that he may even go to the dreaded Security Council for
help - to reduce US military losses in Iraq. But yesterday's attack on the UN
headquarters in Baghdad has slammed shut the door to that escape route.
Within
hours of the explosion, we were being told that this was an attack on a
"soft target", a blow against the UN itself. True, it was a
"soft" target, although the machine-gun nest on the roof of the UN
building might have suggested that even the international body was militarising
itself. True, too, it was a shattering assault on the UN as an institution. But
in reality, yesterday's attack was against the United States.
For
it proves that no foreign organisation - no NGO, no humanitarian organisation,
no investor, no businessman - can expect to be safe under America's occupation
rule. Paul Bremer, the US pro-consul, was meant to be an
"anti-terrorism" expert. Yet since he arrived in Iraq, he has seen
more "terrorism" than he can have dreamt of in his worst nightmares -
and has been able to do nothing about it. Pipeline sabotage, electricity
sabotage, water sabotage, attacks on US troops and British troops and Iraqi
policemen and now the bombing of the UN.
What comes next? The Americans can reconstruct the dead faces of
Saddam's two sons, but they can't reconstruct Iraq.
Of
course, this is not the first indication that the "internationals"
are in the sights of Iraq's fast-growing resistance movement. Last month, a UN
employee was shot dead south of Baghdad. Two International Red Cross workers
were murdered, the second of them a Sri Lankan employee killed in his clearly
marked Red Cross car on Highway 8 just north of Hilla. When he was found, his
blood was still pouring from the door of his vehicle. The Red Cross chief
delegate, who signed out the doomed man on his mission to the south of Baghdad,
is now leaving Iraq. Already, the Red Cross itself is confined to its regional
offices and cannot travel across Iraq by road.
An
American contractor was killed in Tikrit a week ago. A British journalist was
murdered in Baghdad last month. Who is safe now? Who will now feel safe at a
Baghdad hotel when one of the most famous of them all - the old Canal Hotel,
which housed the UN arms inspectors before the invasion - has been blown up?
Will the next "spectacular" be against occupation troops? Against the
occupation leadership? Against the so-called Iraqi "Interim Council"?
Against journalists?
The
reaction to yesterday's tragedy could have been written in advance. The
Americans will tell us that this proves how "desperate" Saddam's
"dead-enders" have become - as if the attackers are more likely to
give up as they become more successful in destroying US rule in Iraq. The truth
- however many of Saddam's old regime hands are involved - is that the Iraqi
resistance organisation now involves hundreds, if not thousands, of Sunni
Muslims, many of them with no loyalty to the old regime. Increasingly, the
Shias are becoming involved in anti-American actions.
Future
reaction is equally predictable. Unable to blame their daily cup of bitterness
upon Saddam's former retinue, the Americans will have to conjure up foreign
intervention. Saudi "terrorists", al-Qa'ida "terrorists",
pro-Syrian "terrorists", pro-Iranian "terrorists" - any
mysterious "terrorists" will do if their supposed existence covers up
the painful reality: that our occupation has spawned a real home-grown Iraqi
guerrilla army capable of humbling the greatest power on Earth.
With
the Americans still trying to bring other nations on board for their Iraqi
adventure - even the Indians have had the good sense to decline the invitation
- yesterday's bombing was therefore aimed at the jugular of any future
"peace-keeping" mission. The UN flag was supposed to guarantee
security. But in the past, a UN presence was always contingent upon the
acquiescence of the sovereign power. With no sovereign power in existence in
Iraq, the UN's legitimacy was bound to be locked on to the occupation
authority. Thus could it be seen - by America's detractors - as no more than an
extension of US power. President Bush was happy to show his scorn for the UN
when its inspectors failed to find any weapons of mass destruction and when its
Security Council would not agree to the Anglo-American invasion. Now he cannot
even protect UN lives in Iraq. Does anyone want to invest in Iraq now? Does
anyone want to put their money on a future "democracy" in Iraq?
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.
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