"I Don't Think We Westerners
Care About Muslims"
Robert Fisk Delivers Keynote Address
at MPAC Convention
http://www.democracynow.org/,
December 20th, 2006
Veteran war correspondent Robert Fisk
of the London Independent recently delivered the keynote address
at the sixth annual convention of the Muslim Public Affairs Council.
Fisk says, "Do we in fact really understand the extent of
injustice in the Middle East? When I finished writing my new book,
I realized how amazed I was that after the past 90 years of injustice,
betrayal, slaughter, terror, torture, secret policeman and dictators
how restrained Muslims have been towards the West." [includes
rush transcript]
Hundreds of Muslim Americans recently
gathered in Long Beach, California for the sixth annual convention
of the Muslim Public Affairs Council. The convention was titled
"Reform, Relevance and Renewal: Understanding Islam for the
Future." With more than thirty years experience covering
almost every major event in the Middle East, veteran war correspondent
Robert Fisk was invited to deliver the keynote address. He has
reported on the civil wars in Algeria and Lebanon, the Iranian
revolution, the Russian invasion of Afghanistan and the Iran-Iraq
war. He was one of the first journalists to report on the massacres
at Sabra and Shatila. He reported on the 1991 Persian Gulf War
and the invasion and ongoing occupation of Iraq. His latest book
is "The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle
East."
Robert Fisk, chief Middle East correspondent
for the London Independent. He is the author of several books,
his latest is "The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest
of the Middle East."
AMY GOODMAN: With more than 30 years of
experience covering almost every major event in the Middle East,
Robert Fisk was asked to give the keynote address in the evening.
Robert Fisk's latest book is called The Great War for Civilisation:
The Conquest of the Middle East. He began his address by recalling
one of his first experiences in the Middle East.
ROBERT FISK: Ladies and gentlemen, when
I first went to the Middle East -- on holiday from Belfast, of
all places -- 1972, I went to Egypt, and anxious to try and pick
up a few first words of Arabic, I had the misfortune of purchasing
a very old book produced by the British army in Egypt in the 19th
century. I still recall the three principal clauses which you
were advised to learn if you were an Englishman: "We shall
board the steamship, for there is talk of war," "Help,"
and "Where is the British embassy?" And I can tell you,
I never believed I would actually watch people say these things,
as I had to in Lebanon this last summer. There were all the refugees,
all the foreigners, boarding the steamships because there was
a real war, all wanting help and all demanding to know the way
to their national embassies. "So it has come to this,"
I thought to myself.
You know, in the last 30 years that I
have been in the Middle East, there has been one -- no, two major
changes. The first is that Muslims are no longer afraid. When
I first went to Lebanon, if the Israelis crossed the border, for
example, many, many, many Palestinians who were in the south would
be rushing to Beirut. People would flee the south, run away. Whether
it was the siege of Beirut in 1982 or not, I don't know. But now,
they do not run away. Muslims do not run away when they're attacked,
when they're under air attack.
One of the most extraordinary events was
the siege of '82, when over and over again leaflets would fall
from the sky. "If you value your loved ones, run away and
take them with you." An attempt to depopulate West Beirut.
And I always remember my landlord -- I live on the seafront --
I met him at front door one day, and he was holding a little net
full of fish. He had been fishing on the sea. He said, "We
don't have to do as we're told and leave our homes. We can live,
you see, Mr. Robert. We can stay here."
The other big change that has happened
in the past 30 years is that when I first went to the Middle East,
all the forces which were in conflict with the West were nationalist
or socialist or pro-Soviet. Today, without exception, in Afghanistan,
in Gaza, in the West Bank, in Iraq, in South Lebanon, all the
forces which are in conflict with the West or with Israel are
Islamist. That is a change that I don't think we westerners really
understand.
Do we in fact really understand the extent
of injustice in the Middle East? When I finished writing my new
book, I realized how amazed I was that after the past 90 years
of injustice, betrayal, slaughter, terror, torture, secret policemen
and dictators, how restrained Muslims had been, I realized, towards
the West, because I don't think we Westerners care about Muslims.
I don't think we care about Muslim Arabs. You only have to look
at the reporting of Iraq. Every time an American or British soldier
is killed, we know his name, his age, whether he was married,
the names of his children. But 500,000-600,000 Iraqis, how many
of their names have found their way onto our television programs,
our radio shows, our newspapers? They are just numbers, and we
don't even know the statistic.
Do you remember the time when George Bush
was pushed and pushed: what were the figures of the Iraqi dead?
At that stage, it was less, and he said, "Oh, 30,000. More
or less." Can you imagine if he had been asked how many Americans
had died, and he said "3,000, more or less"? Those words,
"more or less," somehow said it all.
I said earlier on today -- and I'm going
to give you the example this time -- that actually, I don't think
the Iraq report is going to have any effect, but I think what
is meant to have an effect in the United States is the gradual
drip-drip idea that the Iraqis are unworthy of us Westerners.
This is why and this is how we're going to get out.
Let me give you an example of what I mean.
Here is Ralph Peters, former American Army officer, writing in
USA Today. I'm not advising you to read USA Today, but I sometimes
get trapped into airplanes for hours and hours and hours coming
to talk to people like you. So, here is Ralph Peters writing --
remember this is quoting a mainstream newspaper. He was originally
for the invasion. Obviously he needs a get-out clause now. "Our
extensive investment in Iraqi law enforcement only produced death
squads. Government ministers loot the country to strengthen their
own factions. In reality, only a military coup could hold this
artificial country together." You see? We're already planning.
I remember back even in 2003, Daniel Pipes
had a long article in which he said that what Iraq needed -- and
please do not laugh at this -- what Iraq needed was a democratically
minded strongman. Think about that for a moment.
But let me carry on with Ralph Peters.
"For all our errors, we did give the Iraqis a unique chance
to build a rule-of-law democracy. They preferred to indulge in
old hatreds, confessional violence, ethnic bigotry and a culture
of corruption." You see what we're doing. We're denigrating
and bestializing the people we came allegedly to save. It's their
tragedy, not ours, he writes. Iraq -- listen to this, "Iraq
was the Arab world's last chance to board the train to modernity,
to give the region a future, not just a bitter past. But now,
the violence staining Baghdad's streets with gore isn't only a
symptom of the Iraqi government's incompetence," he says.
"It is symbolic of the comprehensive inability of the Arab
world to progress in any sphere of organized human endeavor."
Yes, that's what I thought when I read it. No letters to the editor
about this. "If they continue to revel" -- revel, get
that word -- "to revel in fratricidal slaughter, we must
leave." You see, the ground is being prepared.
Take David Brooks, now, this is the New
York Times. This is really mainstream. He's been reading some
history books, remembering how the British occupation of Iraq
came to grief in 1920. Pity he didn't read the history books before
he supported the invasion of Iraq. But anyway, he's getting 'round
to reading history now. "Today," he says, "Iraq
is in much worse shape than when the British were there. The most
perceptive reports," he says, "talk not of a civil war,
but of complete social disintegration." We're already rubbing
Iraq like this and turning it to dust, so there's nothing left
to leave. "This latest descent," he says, "was
initiated by American blunders but is exacerbated by" --
wait for it -- "the same old Iraqi demons: greed, bloodlust
and a mind-boggling unwillingness to compromise for the common
good, even in the face of self-immolation." This is similar
to the Thomas Friedman line of the child-sacrificing Palestinians.
"Iraq," says Brooks, "is teetering on the edge
of futility." What does that mean? "It will be time
to effectively end Iraq. It will be time soon," he says,
"to radically diffuse authority down to the only communities
that are viable in Iraq: the clan, the tribe or sect."
This, ladies and gentlemen, is the way
in which we are being prepared for what is to happen. This is
the grit, which will be laid on the desert floor to help our tanks
move. Don't say there were never predictions about the future
in the Middle East.
I'm going to make a quick request here.
These lights are dazzling me. Is it possibly to have all the lights
up like they were before, so you're all human beings, like I'm
trying to be? Can we have all the lights up?
So, but don't say there were no predictions
of the future in the Middle East. The record of that 1920 insurgency
against the British occupation is a fingerprint-perfect copy of
the insurgency against the Americans and the British today. But
on the other hand, don't say that no one warned many, many years
before here now, before even the Second World War, of what was
to happen in Palestine.
I'm going to read you a very brief paragraph
by Winston Churchill, not about the Battle of Britain. It is Churchill
prophesying the future from 1937, eleven years before the Nakba.
This is Winston Churchill writing in a totally forgotten essay.
He reflected upon the future and wrote of the impossibility of
a partitioned Palestine. And he talked of how, I quote -- this
is Winston Churchill in 1937 -- "The wealthy, crowded, progressive
Jewish state" -- see, it doesn't exist yet, but he's already
getting it right -- "lies in the plains and on the sea coast
of Palestine. Around it, in the hills and the uplands, stretching
far and wide into the illimitable deserts, the warlike Arabs of
Syria of Transjordania, of Arabia, backed by the armed forces
of Iraq, offer the ceaseless menace of war. To maintain itself,"
-- 1937, remember, -- "To maintain itself, the Jewish state
will have to be armed to the teeth and must bring in every able-bodied
man to strengthen its army. But how long will this process be
allowed to continue by the great Arab populations in Iraq and
Palestine? Can it be expected that the Arabs would stand by impassively
and watch the building up, with Jewish world capital and resources,
of a Jewish army, equipped with the most deadly weapons of war
until it was strong enough not to be afraid of them? And if ever
the Jewish army reached that point, who can be sure," Churchill
asked, "that, cramped within their narrow limits, they would
not plunge out into the new undeveloped lands that lay around
them?"
"Ouch," I said when I read that.
1937.
AMY GOODMAN: We return to Robert Fisk,
longtime war correspondent with the Independent of London, speaking
at the Muslim Public Affairs Council in Long Beach, California.
He has been a longtime critic of the Western media's coverage
of the Middle East in the so-called war on terror.
ROBERT FISK: Today, you know, we journalists
are complicit with governments in creating what I call the ministry
of fear. This is not just a question of phone taps, racial profiling,
secret tortures, it's also a way of making you and me constantly
frightened. I happened to be in Toronto when the famous terror
plot was uncovered, the 11 Canadian Muslims, or Muslim Canadians,
who were arrested and allegedly were plotting to take over the
Parliament Building in Ottawa, hold all the members of parliament
hostage, and then to chop off the head of Stephen Harper, the
prime minister of Canada. Harper himself wisely made a little
bit of a joke about this, because he saw that this was getting
a little bit too much.
But what struck me was the next morning,
the Toronto Globe and Mail, mainstream press in Canada, had an
eyewitness report -- and I use the quotation -- of the arrest
of the "brown-skinned Muslims." I kid thee not. That's
what it said. The next morning on the CTV, which owned and owns
the Toronto Globe and Mail, I was on a live radio program. Live
is good. You can't be edited. So I said, "Can you tell me
why the Toronto Globe and Mail referred to these Muslims as 'brown-skinned'?
I mean, why didn't it refer to the white-skinned police chief
of Toronto, for I am sure he is white, is he not?" He is,
of course. You see, I was told, by the way, by the interviewer
that it was a generic matter. Indeed, I'm sure it was. But this,
remember, is mainstream journalism.
What is going on in our society? You know,
after 9/11, I was flying around the world, and I wasn't allowed
to have a knife to eat my food with. Now I can have a knife, but
I can't have toothpaste. This is the ministry of fear in action.
The reality behind this nonsense?
You know, whenever I hear British policemen
announcing they foiled another terror plot in the -- it's now
red, gold, standard, green, yellow warning signs, you know, the
famous colors; we have colors, like they do in the United States,
to warn us of the horrors to come -- I think of the real horrors
in Iraq. If only there were a few policemen to go there. But they
don't have the spittle for it. They're going to frighten you.
I'm thinking of some real terror in Baghdad, the terror that comes
through the letterbox or is stuck onto walls. Now, here are real
terror plots for the ministry of fear, plots to cleanse and massacre
whole communities from their homes and cities on the grounds of
their religious sect.
So let's take a look at some really ferocious
terror, collected on the streets of Baghdad and from the front
doors of those who are indeed facing a generation of threats,
many of them scrupulously collected, these documents, by local
UN officials, given to some of my Italian colleagues, who handed
them to me. And this is the first time they've been detailed in
this country. They are printed, not hand-written, and they are
poisonous.
"To the ignoble rejectionists who
sold their religion and community for worldly rewards," begins
one note from a Sunni group about their Shiite Muslim countrymen,
"it is clear that you must be classified among those who
have betrayed the covenant of Allah and his prophet and are intellectually
and actively involved in fighting against the Mujahideen. Therefore,
we grant you 24 hours to vacate this righteous district. Otherwise,
punishment and retribution shall be your fate. Allah is greater.
Praise and grace be to Allah."
There are dozens and dozens of these documents,
and they're not put there by people who are joking. Some of them,
I suspect, may not be put there by groups at all, because I have
a suspicion that there are people who want a civil war in Iraq,
and they are not necessarily Iraqi. There are many of these documents
which I suspect were not written by Iraqis. They're very neatly
printed, some of them.
Here's a literary work of the Allahu Akbar
Brigades, who are probably Sunnis and which specifically target
schoolgirls. "Death, crucifixion, amputation of hands and
feet will be the retribution against those who defy Allah, to
all women, who due to their mode of dress encourage titillation,
because this will lead to worldly damnation. Bullets and the cudgel
will be the punishment for those who have no morals. We are fully
aware" -- listen to this -- "We are fully aware of what
takes place after noontime in the school hall on Museum Road.
We are present among you and know all there is to know."
Ouch. This is real terror, not the kind that our governments are
trying to push us into believing is there waiting for us.
And I'll show you another kind of terror,
and it is a kind that journalism permits. I'm going back to January
this year, on a military trial. It's an Associated Press report.
See if you can spot what's wrong with it. "A military jury
on Monday ordered a reprimand but no jail time for an army interrogator
convicted of killing an Iraqi general by stuffing him headfirst
into a sleeping bag and sitting on his chest. His wife" --
this is the wife of Lewis Welshofer, Jr., the American officer
-- "testified that she was worried about providing for their
three children if her American husband was sentenced to prison,
but she said she was proud of him for contesting the case. 'I
love him more for fighting this,' she said, tears welling up in
her eyes. 'He has always said that you need to do the right thing,
and sometimes the right thing is hardest thing to do.'"
Torture is tough, ladies and gentlemen.
Torturing people is very hard. But, by the way, it's only halfway
through this story that we're told that the major general is called
Abed Hamed Mowhoush. His identity, as usual, is not as important
as that of the American who murdered him, killed him, sat on top
of his sleeping bag, into which he had been stuffed upside-down.
Incredible! And we're not told whether General Mowhoush has a
wife and children. That is absent from this report. The defense,
by the way, had argued that Mowhoush's death was caused by a heart
condition. Well, it would have been, wouldn't it, if he was stuffed
upside-down inside a sleeping bag and had someone sitting on top
of him.
"Officials believe" -- there's
always officials being quoted. "Officials believe that Mowhoush
had information that would break the back of the whole insurgency."
One man, he knows about 20,000 others. So they sit on him upside-down
in a sleeping bag. Incredible!
Later on, we actually have the case of
the soldier himself, who was reprimanded, being close to tears.
Everyone's close to tears in this court case. And then he says,
now listen to this, "I deeply apologize if my actions caused
suffering in Iraq." Sacrifice for the family of the general?
No. He said, "I deeply apologize if my actions tarnished
the soldiers serving in Iraq." Not quite the same thing.
AP didn't quite spot there was a problem there.
Now, take this one. This is the Associated
Press doing its job. It uses the Freedom of Information Act to
get official documents out of Guantanamo Bay and managed in a
long story, but buried deep within it, not at the top, to uncover
the following. It's the official account of a court case inside
Guantanamo of Feroz Ali Abbasi. He's actually a British citizen.
He has since been released and is now at home.
He's on trial, and he pleads and pleads
to the American colonel, Air Force colonel, in charge of the trial,
"Give me the evidence against me." He's not allowed
to have the evidence. And the AP has this official document --
and this is the official American document I'm quoting, but I
have to add it is paragraphs, paragraphs, into the story, not
at the top. "An Air Force colonel would have none of it.
'Mr. Abbasi, your conduct is unacceptable. And this is your absolute
final warning' the colonel said. 'I do not care about international
law. I do not want to hear the words "international law"
again. We are not concerned about international law.'" Pretty
much the George W. Bush policy, isn't it, in the world?
And this, however, was not the headline.
The headline was that the American papers, the documents, tell
the Guantanamo stories. It's way down here that we have the actual
evidence. How about a headline that says, "American courts
say they don't care about international law"?
So let us be frank, in Abu Ghraib, in
Bagram, in Afghanistan, in US military bases across Iraq, prisoners,
almost all Muslims, have been tortured by American men and women,
who in some cases appear to be sadists.
How do I account in my work for the illiterate
old man who tells me how American forces pushed a broomstick up
his anus in Bagram and watched other prisoners endure the same
treatment? How do I account for the murder under torture of prisoners
in Bagram, in Afghanistan, something already admitted to by the
US authorities? How do we account for the activities of US Unit
626, which has cruelly beaten its prisoners on the face, torso
and sexual parts? How are we to react to those two incidents,
both now officially investigated, in which US forces, under attack
by Iraqi insurgents, apparently took their revenge by lining up
local Iraqi civilian villagers, including women and children and
shooting them?
At the Baghdad Airport detention camp,
we now know highly trained US Special Forces officers -- there
were 1,000 present at any one time -- have for years been beating
prisoners before and during interrogation. Lieutenant General
William Boykin -- this is the same weird general who disparaged
the Muslim faith without being disciplined -- later claimed, totally
wrongly, that there was no pattern of misconduct in the camp.
There was, in many parts of Iraq and Afghanistan. It does continue
to this day. My colleagues are still tracking these events.
AMY GOODMAN: Robert Fisk, the veteran
war correspondent for the Independent of London. He was speaking
this weekend in Long Beach, California, at the Muslim Public Affairs
Council. Tonight, on December 20, he will be speaking at the University
of Michigan, Dearborn at 5:30 at Kochoff Hall at University Center.
Robert
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