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The real 'weapon of mass
destruction'
Rime Allaf, October 2002
Of
the many sociopolitical expressions that have worked themselves into
our language and our fears, practically all come from American
interpretations of phenomena in parts of the Islamic world. Terms
ranging from “fundamentalism” to “terrorism” have come to be
effectively equated with Muslim countries, or with dubious movements
in them. Some are invariably used in tandem (“Islamic fundamentalism”)
to essentially imply a third term (“terrorism”).
The
latest term to conquer even the most mundane conversations is “weapons
of mass destruction” (or its abbreviation WMD), which everyone now
understands as being synonymous with Iraq’s supposed threat to
civilization, courtesy of the convenient panic-spreading, tailor-made
descriptions of the US government and its understudies. The American
president has now described Saddam Hussein as a “homicidal dictator
addicted to weapons of mass destruction,” but he failed to elaborate
on how such obsessions originate.
The
Middle East is a dangerous region indeed, but laying the blame solely
at Iraq’s feet is forgetting that the world’s most lethal weapons are
made by America and its allies, distributed at their discretion only
to those deemed truly worthy of their technology (like Israel) or
foolish enough to become their temporary mercenaries (like Saddam
Hussein).
The
end result is the same: whether through Israel or Saddam, through
conventional or other weapons, the US and its allies have not only
caused tremendous hardship to innocent people (especially in Palestine
and Iraq), but have also introduced weapons of mass destruction to the
region. Using the concept of WMDs as a sudden validation for military
intervention is thus not only irresponsible but also adds to the
acrimony that is swelling dangerously in an Arab world that
understands only too well the real issues at hand.
Saddam’s madness is not new. It was apparent two decades ago, when he
agreed to become the West’s proxy in the region, an opportune new pawn
to supplant the deposed Iranian shah.
Saddam’s brutality increased throughout his hugely popular years with
Western powers as he fought (for them) today’s other Middle Eastern
“axis of evil” component, Iran. Arming him to the teeth, the West used
Saddam to wage war on Iran with chemical and other weapons - although
the US handled some jobs itself, namely when it downed a civilian
Iranian aircraft with 290 people on board shortly before the Lockerbie
bombing.
Unsure of how to achieve control of the oil-rich region and showing
typical lack of foresight before eventually settling on a policy of
“dual containment,” America had initially fueled the conflict by
arming the two opponents simultaneously (as was revealed by the
Iran-Contra affair) before focusing on helping Saddam. One result of
this deception was a prolongation of both Iraqi and Iranian peoples’
suffering and a toll of well over a million victims on both sides.
As
the US (with its allies) molded Saddam, it was also training and
arming its future public enemy No. 1, the then-obscure Osama bin
Laden, rationalizing that the supposed Soviet threat justified the
espousal of an organized resistance, even an Islamic one. With such
precedents, one can only recoil in fear at the identity of America’s
“terrorists” of tomorrow, probably being trained at this very moment
by CIA operatives.
America and Britain’s sudden pretense of horror at the use of gas, war
on Iran or supposed weapons of mass destruction is appalling, if only
because the WMDs in the region were implanted by them long before
Saddam’s own crimes. American weapons of every kind have already
killed, maimed and wounded countless people from Lebanon to the Gulf,
leaving true destruction in their wake and having since long reduced
to ashes the illusion that the US could ever be an honest broker.
The
US has bombed over 20 countries since the end of World War II, and it
has intervened and led operations changing the destinies of people in
many others, but nowhere have American hypocrisy and duplicity been so
blatant and so dangerous as in the Middle East. For every UN
resolution that Iraq has ignored, Israel has flouted 10, and for every
resolution condemning Iraq to more sanctions, countless others
attempting to rein in Israel have been vetoed by the sole superpower.
More Iraqis and Palestinians have died pointlessly under the patronage
of the US and its Security Council allies.
Still, most people fail to appreciate the impact of such biased
actions on the populations they touch. In view of the interminable
Israeli occupation of Arab land and people, the latter are not only
upset by the flagrant double standards applied to Israel and to Arabs,
but also by having been reduced to seemingly defend the hated Saddam
while an attack on Iraq is being prepared.
Some
experts consider that long-term repercussions to such belligerence are
overestimated, playing down the invisible Arab street’s power or even
willingness to object to military interference in the region, let
alone to Arab regimes’ acquiescence thereto. This is a grave mistake,
as the Arab world has been simmering for a long time, with regional
leaders and superpowers alternating the intensity of the provocative
flames at their fancy, oblivious to the nearing boiling point. With
each additional injustice, units are ticking off the time bomb.
The
Iraqi predicament cannot be judged within limited parameters or be
separated from other issues in the region, foremost of which being the
Palestinian question. As they mark two years of the most violent
period in the history of their lone struggle against Israeli
occupation, many Palestinians have affected fervor and put on a brave
front, pretending to welcome “martyrdom” and encouraging sacrifices of
all sorts. In reality, however, most remain desperate people
frantically calling for help and urging the supposed defenders of
human rights to come to their rescue, only to see their dignity
smashed over and over again. This constant humiliation has bred bitter
frustration, precariously stirring emotions of resentment that dig
deeply into the Arab psyche.
With
autocratic regimes and de facto US collaborators in practically all
their countries imposing severe consequences on those daring to
challenge them, Arabs are fully aware of their own limitations.
Therefore, many are trying to convince the West that its support of
Israel is immoral, its disregard of Palestinians unjust and its
harassment of Iraq baseless, wondering why they even have to explain
that these issues are related to supposedly rational people living in
a freedom and democracy for which they yearn.
The
Bush-Blair duo’s marketed Iraqi WMDs are not the real threat in the
region. Israel has and is itself a far greater WMD. Ultimately, the
supreme WMD is the facilitation of tormentors’ enduring destruction of
potential, of dreams of a better life, and of entire peoples’ hopes.
Nothing provokes revolt and extremism like despair, and nothing has
created despair in the Arab world like the actions of the US and its
allies. The only question mark that remains is assessing which
injustice, be it in Palestine, Iraq or elsewhere, will finally tip the
balance and turn mass despair into mass response - and true mass
destruction. |