Saturday, 27-Oct-2001 11:17 AM
Publisher:
The Guardian (London, UK)
Thursday, 4
October 2001
JOHN PILGER
This week saw
the end of an exhibition I helped put on at the Barbican
in London, devoted to photo-journalism that makes sense of
terrible events. Brilliant, subversive pictures from Vietnam show
the systematic rape of a country with weapons designed to spread
terror. The exhibition ranged from Hiroshima to two final,
haunting images of sisters, aged 10 and 12, their bodies engraved
in the rubble of the Iraqi city of Basra, where American
missiles destroyed their street two years ago: part of a
current Anglo-American bombing campaign that is almost never reported.
Since the outrages
in America on September 11, the exhibition has
been packed, mostly with young people. Many accused the media
and politicians of misrepresenting public opinion and of obscuring
the reasons behind the fanaticism of the attackers.
For them, the
most telling pictures are of "unworthy victims". Let
me explain. The 6,000 people who died in America on September
11 are worthy victims: that is, they are worthy of our honour
and a relentless pursuit of justice, which is right. In contrast,
the 6,000 people who die every month in Iraq, the victims
of a medieval siege devised and imposed by Washington and
Whitehall, are, like the little sisters bombed to death in their
sleep in Basra, unworthy victims - unworthy of even acknowledgement
in the "civilised" West.
Ten years ago,
when 200,000 Iraqis died during and immediately after
the slaughter known as the Gulf war, the scale of this massacre
was never allowed to enter public consciousness in the West.
Many were buried alive at night by armoured American snowploughs
and murdered while retreating. Colin Powell, then U.S.
military chief, who 22 years earlier was assigned to cover up
the My Lai massacre in Vietnam and is currently being elevated
to hero status in the Western media, said: "It's really not
numbers I'm terribly interested in."
An American
letter writer to the Guardian last week, in admonishing
the writer Arundhati Roy for producing a "laundry list"
of American terror around the world, revealed how the blinkered
think. The lives of millions of people extinguished as a
consequence of American policies, be they Iraqis or Palestinians,
Timorese or Congolese, belong not in our living memory,
but on a "list". Apply that dismissive abstraction to the
Holocaust, and imagine the profanity.
The job of
disassociating the September 11 atrocities from the source
of half a century of American crusades, economic wars and homicidal
adventures, is understandably urgent. For Bush and Blair
to "wage war against terrorism", assaulting countries, killing
innocents and creating famine, international law must be set
aside and a monomania must take over politics and the "free" media.
Fortunately public opinion is not yet fully Murdochised and
is already uneasy and suspicious; 60% oppose massive bombing,
says an Observer poll. And the more Blair, our little Lord
Palmerston, opens his mouth on the subject the more suspicions
will grow and the crusaders' contortions of intellect and
morality will show. When Blair tells David Frost that his war
plans are aimed at "the people who gave [the terrorists] the weapons",
can he mean we are about to attack America? For it was mostly
America that destroyed a moderate regime in Afghanistan and
created a fanatical one.
On the day
of the twin towers attack, an arms fair, selling weapons
of terror to assorted tyrants and human rights abusers, opened
in London's Docklands with the backing of the Blair government.
Now Bush and Blair have created what the UN calls "the
world's worst humanitarian crisis", with up to 7m people facing
starvation. The initial American reaction was to demand that
Pakistan stop supplying food to the starving who, of course,
fail to qualify as worthy victims.
The bombing
intelligentsia (the New Humanitarians, as Edward Herman
calls them) are doing their bit, blaming September 11 on "an
evil hatred of modernity" and something called "apocalyptic nihilism".
There are no reasons why; the Barbican pictures are fake.
Aside from a few "errors", Anglo-American actions are redeemed,
and those who produce the "laundry list" of a blood-soaked
historical record are "anti American", which apparently
is similar to the "anti-semitism" of those who dare to
point out the atrocious activities of the Israeli state. Phyllis
and Orlando Rodriguez lost their son Greg in the World Trade
Centre. They said this: "We read enough of the news to sense
that our government is heading in the direction of violent revenge,
with the prospect of sons, daughters, parents, friends in
distant lands dying, suffering and nursing further grievances against
us. It is not the way to go... not in our son's name."
[Guardian
Unlimited (c) Guardian Newspapers Limited 2001]
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