From El Salvador To Iraq:
Death Squads Come In Waves
ZNet, 1/10/05
Remember the heady, idealistic days of
early 2005? You know, like, January 1st through to, say, the 7th
or 8th? After the three-hundred-and-sixty-six day bloodbath that
was 2004, and once the Are-the-Tourists-Okay? angle of the Tsunami
story was driven into the ground - because apparently middle-aged
sex tourists are still a more compelling image of Thai suffering
than orphaned locals - it really seemed as though, this year,
mourning brown-skinned folks as though they were real people would
be en vogue.
News agencies started turning away, slowly,
from the fates of small, exclusive sea-side resorts, and started
talking about the indigenous human toll of the South East Asian
catastrophe; news that's not, it should be pointed out, without
it's relevance to the goings-on of American capitalism: the post-traumatic
suffering of those lucky children who survived the waves raises
relevant commercial questions, like how many Asian kids is Nike's
Philip Knight going to have to fire as absenteeism skyrockets
whilst they look for their parents' bodies? (A quick aside: Remember
how nobody wanted to give up wearing Nikes despite the devastation
the company wrought on South-East Asia? Seriously, though, that
Tsunami was positively Shakespearean.)
Despite their status as walking contradictions
in terms, "Television Journalists" waxed poetic about
the devastation. Suddenly bereft of their go-to metaphor - "Huge
waves of refugees," "Market ebbs and flows," and
so on - reporters struggled to find the proper timbre for such
chilling, desperate news. We started talking about debt relief,
and aid packages, and we were all so swept up in the profoundly
humanitarian moment that it didn't even seem to bother anybody
that American helicopters weren't readily available to help, bogged
down as they were in a Quagmire.
And it was that very Quagmire, in Babylon,
that snapped us back into the realpolitik of our current post-January
10th paradigm. Shifty, far-out, conspiratorially anti-government
sources like Newsweek began to report on a raging debate in the
Pentagon that has definitively put to rest any Tsunami-mirage
hopes that in 2005, the white North might assign even mildly human-like
values to non-white lives: The debate over the "Salvador
Option," a term in an of itself so chilling and inhuman as
to recall the moral fitness of another first-world regime that
weighed the "option" of Madagascar against Zyklon B.
What's that? You're not familiar with
the 'Salvador Option'? Well, remember in the 1980s, when all those
fiery, irrationally passionate Latinos and their wacky hippy allies
advanced the unsubstantiated conspiracy theory that the CIA was
orchestrating bands of marauding assassins and torturers in El
Salvador against the left-wing FMLN guerrillas, as well as Catholic
clergy and innocent civilians? Well - and we don't really need
to dwell on this- essentially, every accusation they made was
true, and we're tacitly admitting it now, only because we're hoping
to do the exact same thing (except openly this time) in Iraq.
So while you thought the question to ask new Bush appointees like
Gonzales was 'Do you condone torture', it turns out that the more
germane question might be 'Do you condone mutilating nuns' genitalia
and leaving bishops dead in ditches?' And the answer you'll get,
at this point, is: We'll let you know. Also, according to Newsweek,
"The interim government of Prime Minister Ayad Allawi is
said to be among the most forthright proponents of the Salvador
option." Thank God that the tyrant Hussein is in U.S. custody,
so that dedicated democrats like Allawi can set themselves to
the difficult task of building a free and thriving political expression
for Iraqi civil society.
The U.S. government's open consideration
of the use of Death Squads in Iraq raises a number of interesting
questions: How long before Bush starts freely using winks and
air quotations in his halting deliberations on Iraqi democracy?
How long before Christopher Hitchens pulls himself out of a bottle
long enough to tell us again the one about the threat posed by
the Islamo-fascists to human civility? And, on a personal note:
As a shrill, leftist rhetorician, how am I expected to ply my
trade so long as reality keeps hijacking the most hysterical reaches
of available hyperbole?
Of course, with the torture and war crimes
of Bush's illegal war against Iraq condoned by a majority of U.S.
voters last November, the administration isn't bound by any moral
checks nor, would it seem, are they bound by the limits imposed
by shame - so long as they stop short of drowning Iraqis with
a tidal wave, we're unlikely to see any sort of outpouring of
grief or rage from up here in fortress North America. And who
knows even then; if Rumsfeld starts looking into seismological
warfare, I'm sure that the pundits and the apologists will have
an ideological cushion for him to land on then, too.
US and Third World
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