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The British Withdrawal Is Only Our Latest Shameful Exit Following an Unjust Invasion Of Iraq

By Robert Fisk, Independent UK. Posted May 1, 2009.


179,000 dead Iraqis? Or closer to a million? The British never cared about the Iraqis. That's why we don't know the figure. That's why we left Basra.
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One hundred and seventy-nine dead soldiers. For what? 179,000 dead Iraqis? Or is the real figure closer to a million? We don't know. And we don't care. We never cared about the Iraqis. That's why we don't know the figure. That's why we left Basra yesterday.

I remember going to the famous Basra air base to ask how a poor Iraqi boy, a hotel receptionist called Bahr Moussa, had died. He was kicked to death in British military custody. His father was an Iraqi policeman. I talked to him in the company of a young Muslim woman. The British public relations man at the airport was laughing. "I don't believe this," my Muslim companion said. "He doesn't care." She did. So did I. I had reported from Northern Ireland. I had heard this laughter before. Which is why yesterday's departure should have been called the Day of Bahr Moussa. Yesterday, his country was set free from his murderer. At last.

History is a hard taskmaster. In my library, I have an original copy of General Angus Maude's statement to the people of Baghdad -- $2,000, it cost me, at a telephone auction a few days before we invaded Iraq in 2003, but it is worth every cent. "Our military operations have as their object," Maude announced, "the defeat of the enemy … our armies do not come into your cities and lands as conquerors or enemies, but as liberators." And so it goes on. Maude, I should add, expired shortly afterwards because he declined to boil his milk in Baghdad and died of cholera.

There followed a familiar story. The British occupation force was opposed by an Iraqi resistance -- "terrorists," of course -- and the British destroyed a town called Fallujah and demanded the surrender of a Shiite cleric and British intelligence in Baghdad claimed that "terrorists" were crossing the border from Syria, and Lloyd George -- the Blair-Brown of his age -- then stood up in the House of Commons and said that there would be "anarchy" in Iraq if British troops left. Oh dear.

Even repeating these words is deeply embarrassing. Here, for example, is a letter written by Nijris ibn Qu'ud to a British intelligence agent in 1920: "You cannot treat us like sheep … it is we Iraqi who are the brains of the Arab nation… You are given a short time to clear out of Mesopotamia. If you don't go you will be driven out."

So let us turn at last to T E Lawrence. Yes, Lawrence of Arabia. In The Sunday Times on 22 August 1920, he wrote of Iraq that the people of England "had been led in Mesopotamia into a trap from which it will be hard to escape with dignity and honor. They have been tricked into it by a steady withholding of information … Things have been far worse than we have been told, our administration more bloody and inefficient than the public knows." Even more presciently, Lawrence had written that the Iraqis had not risked their lives in battle to become British subjects. "Whether they are fit for independence or not remains to be tried. Merit is no justification for freedom."

Alas not. Iraq, begging around Europe now that its oil wealth has run out, is a pitiful figure. But it is a little bit freer than it was. We have destroyed its master and our friend (a certain Saddam) and now, with our own dead clanking around our heels, we are getting out yet again. Till next time …


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See more stories tagged with: iraq, iraq occupation, basra, british military, general angus maude, lloyd george, lawrence of arabia

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Iraq story fallen out of our consciousnesses
Posted by: CJC on May 1, 2009 2:54 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sadly, the Brits are no better than the Americans. Did Blair imagine he could make it up for the earlier British occupation of Iraq? Bush, we can guess, knew nothing of the earlier history. He didn't seem to know much of anything.

Poor Iraq. The cradle of western civilization - early agriculture, the first cities etc etc. And now military officers from the UK and the US oversee death and destruction without much conscience. And the public has mostly forgotten the story.

About a million Iraqi deaths, one way or another. That's the best scientific estimate. So what if it's +/- 200,000? And in the US it's justified because, after all, 3000 Americans died and two buildings destroyed by Arabic speakers from other countries. Oh, never mind. Saddam was a brute so devastating Iraq will do.

Shame, shame, shame.

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The Methods of Predatory Imperialism
Posted by: Robert K. MacDonald on May 1, 2009 5:41 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The British are better than the Americans in at least one way. They are leaving the scene of their devastation sooner that our own unfortunate occupiers.

As Robert Fisk brings out in his lectures and his scholarship, ugly Jingoist ethnic chauvinism, haplessly devoid of compassion for its hundreds of thousands of innocent, tortured, bombed and humiliated victims, is one of the dominant methods by which the masters of Grand Theft global imperialism gain support and/or ominous silence from their indoctrinated home populations.

Everyone in the Middle Eastern and Central Asian Nations knows that the Anglo-American Colossus is destroying all those who get in the way of the long Christian imperialist drive (1953-2009) to seize control of the Muslim half of the world's oil and natural gas reserves.
Educated majorities in the UK and the USA know that "blood for oil" and militaristic corporate profiteering are the shameful games that the mainstream mass media and the corrupted politicians in London and Washington have been playing since they conspired to overthrow Dr. Mossadeg in 1952-1953.

The USA, with 5% of the world's population, ultra-wastefully consumes 25% of the world's energy.
The pro-imperialist Americans and British shamefully argue that they are "liberating" the populations of the Muslim nations they are torturing, terrorizing and plundering.

Those of us who know how dangerously racist, genocidal and ecocidal our nations have become have an urgent and imperative obligation to educate the "silenced majority" of our citizens and their predatory leaders about the dishonesty and recklessness of their global imperialism.
Robert K. MacDonald:
www.psycho-imperialism.com

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