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UN
Bombing: Terrorism or National Liberation?
by
Kurt Nimmo
August
21, 2003
Is
it a surprise unknown persons have bombed the United Nations building in
Baghdad? No, the bombing was inevitable, considering the United Nation’s role
in the occupation of Iraq. It is surprising, however, that the bombers were
able to so easily drive a cement truck filled with explosives into the lobby of
the hotel converted into an office building.
Considering
the UN imposed various resolutions on Iraq after Bush the Elder's brutal
invasion (specifically, resolutions 661 and 687) – which eventually resulted in
600,000 children under the age of five dying of entirely preventable diarrhea,
pneumonia, and respiratory and malnutrition-related diseases -- is it any
wonder more than a few Iraqis are motivated to kill UN employees?
Moreover,
the UN building in Baghdad also housed the World Bank. Back in May, the World
Bank sent "a senior Bank official" along with Sergio Vieira de Mello
(who died in the bombing), UN Special Representative in Iraq, "to assess
reconstruction and development needs on the ground," according to the
World Bank's website. The IMF and the World Bank "stand ready to play
their normal role in Iraq's re-development at the appropriate time," the
said the IMF and World Bank in a press statementafter their Spring Meetings,
held April 12-13 in Washington, D.C.
So,
what is the "normal role" played by the World Bank and IMF?
Imposing
poverty, that's what.
"Structural
adjustment programs are a set of economic policies required by the World Bank
and the IMF as a condition of loans these institutions make to developing
countries," explains CorpWatch. "These programs often include
austerity measures such as high interest rates and reduced access to credit,
which result in slower economic growth as well as increased poverty and
unemployment. Other adjustment policies include cuts in government spending on
health care and education, increases in the cost of food, health care and other
basic necessities, mandates to open markets to foreign trade and investment,
and privatization of state-run enterprises... structural adjustment has
exacerbated poverty in most countries where it has been applied, contributing
to the suffering of millions and causing widespread environmental degradation.
And since the 1980s, adjustment has helped create a net outflow of wealth from
the developing world, which has paid out five times as much capital to the
industrialized countries of the North as it has received."
In
other words, the IMF and World Bank are rackets designed by immoral bankers and
loan sharks to rape the Third World.
The
United Nations is essentially a handmaiden of the IMF, World Bank, and the United
States. So, from the point of view of many Iraqis, the lightly protected UN
complex in Baghdad was an appropriate target, as were the main northern oil
export pipeline into Turkey and warehouses scattered around Baghdad.
Undoubtedly, the idea is to make Iraq so dangerous, violent, and unprofitable
that the parasites on Wall Street and in Washington will think twice about
implementing and supporting an occupation engineered to steal its oil and
"privatize" its ravaged economy.
The
murder of a Kellogg, Brown and Root (a subsidiary of Cheney's Halliburton)
employee north of Tikrit on August 5 served as a warning of things to come for
these corporate looters and profiteers.
Increasingly,
Iraqis involved in the resistance are targeting "civilians," who are
in fact working for military contractors and organized theft operations such as
the World Bank. The Kellog, Brown, and Root employee killed by an anti-tank
mine was working on something call Material Command Logcap III. According to a
CNBC business snapshot, Logcap III's purpose is to "deliver Combat Support
and Combat Service Support (CS/CSS)" to the US Army. In other words, this
anonymous employee was providing support to the occupation forces and was
undoubtedly regarded as a legitimate military target by Iraqi guerilla forces.
No doubt these same guerilla forces, if they are indeed responsible for the
United Nations compound bombing, also considered Sergio Vieira de Mello a
legitimate military target. Not only US soldiers are targets in Iraq, but so are
the corporate enablers of the occupation.
Once
again, the corporate media has shifted into speculative overdrive: is it
possible this was the handiwork of al-Qaeda? "There was no immediate claim
of responsibility for the attack," reports the Bush Ministry of Propaganda
(read: Fox News). "But its careful orchestration and very public,
Western-world target immediately evoked past strikes by Usama bin Laden's
terrorist network."
It's
as if the entire history of "terrorism" -- the title given to all
national liberation movements directed against US hegemony – has disappeared
since 9/11. Predictably, Fox trots out the same old shopworn
"experts" to pin the blame on al-Qaeda. According to one such expert,
Dia'a Rashwan, an expert on radical Islam at Egypt's Al-Ahram Center for
Political and Strategic Studies, the UN bombing fits "the ideology of Al
Qaeda... They consider the U.N. one of the international actors who helped the
Americans to occupy Palestine and, later, Iraq."
Of
course, the US does not "occupy" Palestine, Israel does, admittedly
with much assistance -- both financial and military -- from the United States.
It's true al-Qaeda's "ideology" (or, rather, the pronouncements of
its apparent titular head, bin Laden) is directed against US imperialism, but
this ideology is not significantly different from that of other national
liberation movements over the last fifty years, especially those in the Middle
East. Fox and its experts assume we suffer from both amnesia and stupidity. In
fact, unfortunately, many of us do.
At
the time of the bombing, Dubya was on a golf course in Waco, Texas. "The
terrorists that struck today again showed their contempt for the
innocent," said Bush later. "They showed their fear of progress and their
hatred of peace. They're the enemies of the Iraqi people. They're the enemies
of every nation that seeks to help the Iraqi people... The civilized world will
not be intimidated and these terrorists will not determine the future of Iraq …
they are testing our will, it will not be shaken."
It's
ironic, if not criminally insane, of Bush to so disingenuously express his
concern for "innocent" Iraqis when he is responsible for slaughtering
nearly eight thousand of them (according to the Iraq Body Count Project).
Bremer
and Bush may consider the growing Iraqi resistance as consisting of little more
than "terrorists," but the fact of the matter is Iraq did not invade
the United States or Britain -- or, for that matter, it did not attack Poland,
Italy, Spain, Ukraine, Denmark, the Netherlands, Bulgaria, and Albania,
countries that have sent or will send "stabilization" forces to Iraq
-- nor did Iraq ask for the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund,
Halliburton, Bechtel Group, Fluor Corp., Parsons Group, Stevedoring Services of
America, and other corporate leeches to elbow their way into Iraq against the
will of the Iraq people and line up to make a killing (literally) off oil,
water, roads, trains, phones, ports, drugs, and anything else they can get
their avaricious paws on.
So,
who are the terrorists here -- average Iraqis fighting a war of national
liberation or the stockholders of Halliburton and Bechtel?
"Entirely
absent from this ["reconstruction"] debate are the Iraqi people, who
might -- who knows? -- want to hold on to a few of their assets," writes
Naomi Klein of the Nation. "Iraq will be owed massive reparations after
the bombing stops, but without any real democratic process, what is being
planned is not reparations, reconstruction or rehabilitation. It is robbery:
mass theft disguised as charity; privatization without representation."
Mass
theft backed up the world’s most homicidal war machine.
The
IMF and World Bank have done likewise for decades in Latin America. But Iraq is
not Argentina or Uruguay -- in Iraq there are hundreds of thousands of weapons
in the hands of ordinary people, many of them with years of experience in
Saddam's military. In Latin America, US-trained thugs and death squads have
made sure there is no serious opposition to what the swindlers on Wall Street
and in Washington have done and continue to do. That’s not the case in Iraq.
Bush
had his chance to hire the Ba’athists to do what they have done since the early
60s -- terrorize and keep the Iraqi people in check -- but thanks to the neocon
aversion of anything even remotely Arab or Muslim, that opportunity has
vanished. The Bushites have “de-nazified” their way into a completely untenable
situation.
"We're
still, needless to say, much closer to the beginning than the end," said
Rumsfeld of the situation in Iraq back in March. Needless to say, that
situation is far worse now. It gets worse every day. It will be worse next week
and even worse next month.
Like
Vietnam, the "beginning" will stretch out forever, consuming an
undetermined number of human lives and billions of dollars. There will be no
"light at the end of the tunnel," as General Westmoreland would have
liked to have it. In the months ahead, as the psychopathic Bushites attempt to
redouble their efforts to eliminate the "bitter enders" and “Saddam
remnants” in Iraq, support for an immediate and unconditional end of the
occupation will grow in the United States. The Bushites know this and that’s
why they devised and rushed through the Patriot Act. Patriot II waits in the
wings.
In
fact, since nearly the whole of the federal government and Congress is
"Bush territory," the only political solution to the murderous
insanity currently on tap in Iraq will likely come from the people, as it did
during the Vietnam War.
Civil
disobedience and direct may be required -- again. But this time around the
stakes will be much higher. In fact, considering the severity of the mental
illness afflicting the Bushites, it may be cataclysmic.
Kurt Nimmo is a
photographer, multimedia artist and writer living in New Mexico. To see his
photo work and read more of his essays, visit his excellent “Another Day in the
Empire” weblog: http://www.drmenlo.com/nimmo/
* Saddam
Hussein: Taking Out the CIA's Trash
* The Bug
Exterminator Goes to Jerusalem
* Bread,
Circuses, Uday and Qusay