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Post by POA on Apr 8, 2004 15:32:42 GMT -5
Let's Make Enemiesby Naomi Klein April 03, 2004 Do you have any rooms?" we ask the hotelier. She looks us over, dwelling on my travel partner's bald, white head. "No," she replies. We try not to notice that there are sixty room keys in pigeonholes behind her desk--the place is empty. "Will you have a room soon? Maybe next week?" She hesitates. "Ahh... No." We return to our current hotel--the one we want to leave because there are bets on when it is going to get hit--and flick on the TV: The BBC is showing footage of Richard Clarke's testimony before the September 11 Commission, and a couple of pundits are arguing about whether invading Iraq has made America safer. They should try finding a hotel room in this city, where the US occupation has unleashed a wave of anti-American rage so intense that it now extends not only to US troops, occupation officials and their contractors but also to foreign journalists, aid workers, their translators and pretty much anyone else associated with the Americans. Which is why we couldn't begrudge the hotelier her decision: If you want to survive in Iraq, it's wise to stay the hell away from people who look like us. (We thought about explaining that we were Canadians, but all the American reporters are sporting the maple leaf--that is, when they aren't trying to disappear behind their newly purchased headscarves.) US occupation chief Paul Bremer hasn't started wearing a hijab yet, and is instead tackling the rise of anti-Americanism with his usual foresight. Baghdad is blanketed with inept psy-ops organs like Baghdad Now, filled with fawning articles about how Americans are teaching Iraqis about press freedom. "I never thought before that the Coalition could do a great thing for the Iraqi people," one trainee is quoted saying. "Now I can see it on my eyes what they are doing good things for my country and the accomplishment they made. I wish my people can see that, the way I see it." Unfortunately, the Iraqi people recently saw another version of press freedom when Bremer ordered US troops to shut down a newspaper run by supporters of Muqtada al-Sadr. The militant Shiite cleric has been preaching that Americans are behind the attacks on Iraqi civilians and condemning the interim constitution as a "terrorist law." So far, al-Sadr has refrained from calling on his supporters to join the armed resistance, but many here are predicting that the closing down of the newspaper--a nonviolent means of resisting the occupation--was just the push he needed. But then, recruiting for the resistance has always been a specialty of the Presidential Envoy to Iraq: Bremer's first act after being tapped by Bush was to fire 400,000 Iraqi soldiers, refuse to give them their rightful pensions but allow them to hold on to their weapons--in case they needed them later. While US soldiers were padlocking the door of the newspaper's office, I found myself at what I thought would be an oasis of pro-Americanism, the Baghdad Soft Drinks Company. On May 1 this bottling plant will start producing one of the most powerful icons of American culture: Pepsi-Cola. I figured that if there was anyone left in Baghdad willing to defend the Americans, it would be Hamid Jassim Khamis, the Baghdad Soft Drinks Company's managing director. I was wrong. "All the trouble in Iraq is because of Bremer," Khamis told me, flanked by a line-up of thirty Pepsi and 7-Up bottles. "He didn't listen to Iraqis. He doesn't know anything about Iraq. He destroyed the country and tried to rebuild it again, and now we are in chaos." These are words you would expect to hear from religious extremists or Saddam loyalists, but hardly from the likes of Khamis. It's not just that his Pepsi deal is the highest-profile investment by a US multinational in Iraq's new "free market." It's also that few Iraqis supported the war more staunchly than Khamis. And no wonder: Saddam executed both of his brothers and Khamis was forced to resign as managing director of the bottling plant in 1999 after Saddam's son Uday threatened his life. When the Americans overthrew Saddam, "You can't imagine how much relief we felt," he says. After the Baathist plant manager was forced out, Khamis returned to his old job. "There is a risk doing business with the Americans," he says. Several months ago, two detonators were discovered in front of the factory gates. And Khamis is still shaken from an attempted assassination three weeks ago. He was on his way to work when he was carjacked and shot at, and there was no doubt that this was a targeted attack; one of the assailants was heard asking another, "Did you kill the manager?" Khamis used to be happy to defend his pro-US position, even if it meant arguing with friends. But one year after the invasion, many of his neighbors in the industrial park have gone out of business. "I don't know what to say to my friends anymore," he says. "It's chaos." His list of grievances against the occupation is long: corruption in the awarding of reconstruction contracts, the failure to stop the looting, the failure to secure Iraq's borders--both from foreign terrorists and from unregulated foreign imports. Iraqi companies, still suffering from the sanctions and the looting, have been unable to compete. Most of all, Khamis is worried about how these policies have fed the country's unemployment crisis, creating far too many desperate people. He also notes that Iraqi police officers are paid less than half what he pays his assembly line workers, "which is not enough to survive." The normally soft-spoken Khamis becomes enraged when talking about the man in charge of "rebuilding" Iraq. "Paul Bremer has caused more damage than the war, because the bombs can damage a building but if you damage people there is no hope." [continued in followup]
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Post by POA on Apr 8, 2004 15:33:11 GMT -5
I have gone to the mosques and street demonstrations and listened to Muqtada al-Sadr's supporters shout "Death to America, Death to the Jews," and it is indeed chilling. But it is the profound sense of betrayal expressed by a pro-US businessman running a Pepsi plant that attests to the depths of the US-created disaster here. "I'm disappointed, not because I hate the Americans," Khamis tells me, "but because I like them. And when you love someone and they hurt you, it hurts even more."
When we leave the bottling plant in late afternoon, the streets of US-occupied Baghdad are filled with al-Sadr supporters vowing bloody revenge for the attack on their newspaper. A spokesperson for Bremer is defending the decision on the grounds that the paper "was making people think we were out to get them."
A growing number of Iraqis are certainly under that impression, but it has far less to do with an inflammatory newspaper than with the inflammatory actions of the US occupation authority. As the June 30 "handover" approaches, Paul Bremer has unveiled a slew of new tricks to hold on to power long after "sovereignty" has been declared.
Some recent highlights: At the end of March, building on his Order 39 of last September, Bremer passed yet another law further opening up Iraq's economy to foreign ownership, a law that Iraq's next government is prohibited from changing under the terms of the interim constitution. Bremer also announced the establishment of several independent regulators, which will drastically reduce the power of Iraqi government ministries. For instance, the Financial Times reports that "officials of the Coalition Provisional Authority said the regulator would prevent communications minister Haider al-Abadi, a thorn in the side of the coalition, from carrying out his threat to cancel licenses the coalition awarded to foreign-managed consortia to operate three mobile networks and the national broadcaster."
The CPA has also confirmed that after June 30, the $18.4 billion the US government is spending on reconstruction will be administered by the US Embassy in Iraq. The money will be spent over five years and will fundamentally redesign Iraq's most basic infrastructure, including its electricity, water, oil and communications sectors, as well as its courts and police. Iraq's future governments will have no say in the construction of these core sectors of Iraqi society. Retired Rear Adm. David Nash, who heads the Project Management Office, which administers the funds, describes the $18.4 billion as "a gift from the American people to the people of Iraq." He appears to have forgotten the part about gifts being something you actually give up. And in the same eventful week, US engineers began construction on fourteen "enduring bases" in Iraq, capable of housing the 110,000 soldiers who will be posted here for at least two more years. Even though the bases are being built with no mandate from an Iraqi government, Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt, deputy chief of operations in Iraq, called them "a blueprint for how we could operate in the Middle East."
The US occupation authority has also found a sneaky way to maintain control over Iraq's armed forces. Bremer has issued an executive order stating that even after the interim Iraqi government has been established, the Iraqi army will answer to US commander Lieut. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez. In order to pull this off, Washington is relying on a legalistic reading of a clause in UN Security Council Resolution 1511, which puts US forces in charge of Iraq's security until "the completion of the political process" in Iraq. Since the "political process" in Iraq is never-ending, so, it seems, is US military control.
In the same flurry of activity, the CPA announced that it would put further constraints on the Iraqi military by appointing a national security adviser for Iraq. This US appointee would have powers equivalent to those held by Condoleezza Rice and will stay in office for a five-year term, long after Iraq is scheduled to have made the transition to a democratically elected government.
There is one piece of this country, though, that the US government is happy to cede to the people of Iraq: the hospitals. On March 27 Bremer announced that he had withdrawn the senior US advisers from Iraq's Health Ministry, making it the first sector to achieve "full authority" in the US occupation.
Taken together, these latest measures paint a telling picture of what a "free Iraq" will look like: The United States will maintain its military and corporate presence through fourteen enduring military bases and the largest US Embassy in the world. It will hold on to authority over Iraq's armed forces, its security and economic policy and the design of its core infrastructure--but the Iraqis can deal with their decrepit hospitals all by themselves, complete with their chronic drug shortages and lack of the most basic sanitation capacity. (US Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson revealed just how low a priority this was when he commented that Iraq's hospitals would be fixed if the Iraqis "just washed their hands and cleaned the crap off the walls.")
On nights when there are no nearby explosions, we hang out at the hotel, jumping at the sound of car doors slamming. Sometimes we flick on the news and eavesdrop on a faraway debate about whether invading Iraq has made Americans safer. Few seem interested in the question of whether the invasion has made Iraqis feel safer, which is too bad because the questions are intimately related. As Khamis says, "It's not the war that caused the hatred. It's what they did after. What they are doing now."
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Post by Moses on Apr 8, 2004 18:34:51 GMT -5
Do the American people really support this conduct by their country?
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Post by POA on Apr 8, 2004 18:51:34 GMT -5
Do the American people really support this conduct by their country? That's a disturbing question that needed to be asked. From what I've seen of Americans living here, I have to say that some percentage of them really are cruel enough to agree with this kind of abuse and hypocrisy. Out of the rest, I think that a good portion don't know because our media deliberately miseducates them, and that there are a lot of people who do know what's going on, but have had 'pragmatism' and the tyranny of the American political system drummed into them for so long that either they're without hope (but hide it), or they don't really think that anything can be done except changing the person holding the whip and want political advantage from such a change, but no real improvement.
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Post by Moses on Apr 8, 2004 19:09:42 GMT -5
"Out of the rest, I think that a good portion don't know because our media deliberately miseducates them"
Yes -- the media is just the same bunch devising (pro-Israeli) psy-ops in the Middle East.
This must change.
Without a responsible media democracy cannot work.
I think we need to systematically challenge our representatives to do something about this.
Clearly, a case for war crimes can be built against most of the major media, who was in on GWB's promise before the election to start a war in Iraq.
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Post by calabi-yau on Apr 8, 2004 19:29:56 GMT -5
Do the American people really support this conduct by their country? Until I see anti-war Americans out there every day protesting their government's actions, I'll continue thinking they do support it. One voice and the streets. That's all it takes. Day after day. But to fill the streets, you need numbers. To speak in one voice, you want single-minded determination. I don't see it happening now and I wouldn't expect it soon.
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Post by Moses on Apr 10, 2004 10:45:35 GMT -5
I don't know about the streets but I am frantic about the soldiers/marines over there. Where is the public concern for them?
I remember reading a warning about how this was going to point up the true horror of the American public.
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Post by karpomrx on Apr 10, 2004 20:09:51 GMT -5
I know that I a preaching to the choir here, but I must persist. When I am able to find someone who will discuss the war, (usually out behind the barn, where we used to hide and smoke ciggaretes), they have a sense of unease about it. Now I am pretty much labelled as a "crank" in my neck of the woods,having recently gone beyond merely eccentric. Few people are willing to talk in public about the war, and the most vocal are, of course, the jingoes. The passivity of most is based upon a faith that somebody knows what they are doing, and that really smart people will figure it all out. This country is too good to be involved in anything really shady, and aren't we a free country? To engage almost any of these attitudes and ask about them will bring fear. The next stage after fear is the attack-mode.It is very difficult to reason with people that don't have the power to examine their own values. I LOVE THIS SITE!
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Post by Moses on Apr 10, 2004 23:36:21 GMT -5
"The next stage after fear is the attack-mode.It is very difficult to reason with people that don't have the power to examine their own values."
-- Yes I was wondering about that too-- it seems like a rubber band situation with people-- some are willing to consider that it is about oil and greed and that Bush just wanted to get his pipelines going -- polls show that they do perceive him as being corporate-friendly.
But to a large extent, it seems the demonization of Saddam and others-- the designate enemy thing, has worked.
But many of the real military people have been against this war from the beginning, and the jingoistic American civilians seem to want to feel superior to other races creeds and ethnicities more than they care about the lives of their fellow citizens or military personnel.
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Post by POA on Apr 11, 2004 0:14:41 GMT -5
So, as a general question, what can we do to change this?
How can we either convince more people that the course we're on is wrong, or identify those people who can be convinced so we could work together to solve our problems?
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Post by Moses on Apr 11, 2004 1:29:07 GMT -5
I don't know the effect of the right wing brainwashing -- they say Julius Streicher alone poisoned an entire country. We have thousands of them here, with lots of money behind them and they own a much more powerful media than Streicher had.
Shame on Kerry and the rest of the Democrats for promoting media consolidation in the hands of these beasts.
Now it eats politicians for breakfast, and is gobbling up our country and our future.
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Post by calabi-yau on Apr 11, 2004 17:59:35 GMT -5
So, as a general question, what can we do to change this? How can we either convince more people that the course we're on is wrong, or identify those people who can be convinced so we could work together to solve our problems? Maybe you've just answered my questions from another post in regards to Americans' general apathy concerning their governments' actions both at home and abroad. If the apathy was borne of frustration and helplessness before a system that has become too big, I would respond to your question by saying that more outspoken and visionary leaders would be needed to help them get their voices and hope back. But if this apathy stems from a general sense of "national superiority" towards the rest of the world, then it may be best to go back to grassroot politics and slowly build your bases from there. Patience, faith and dedication would be the key here.
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Post by Moses on Apr 13, 2004 11:27:12 GMT -5
One of the horrendous aspects of the neo-con take-over of the US and its political, financial, media , and educational institutions is that they deliberately play on the worst aspects of American history and character -- racism and jingoism, whereas I think many were hopeful that this would be addressed in a positive manner through the issue of reparations and the like.
The Democratic Party now also run by neo-cons, has on its agenda eradicating civil liberties for blacks and others.
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Post by calabi-yau on Apr 13, 2004 19:08:13 GMT -5
The Democratic Party now also run by neo-cons, has on its agenda eradicating civil liberties for blacks and others. If the apathy is as rampant as it seems, it will have to get a lot worse before the masses awake. Who knows if it doesn't give rise to another civil rights movement ?
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Post by Moses on Apr 16, 2004 20:00:13 GMT -5
I think we have to face the horror that we are now Nazi Germany, and those of us who object are either in the minority or powerless because the take-over has been complete.
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