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Blame the Iraqis
As the people who talked the United States into the Iraq war try
to talk their way out of the blame for the mess they made, one dominant
theme has emerged: blame the Iraqis. Our intentions were good; we
did our best to help; but the Iraqis are vicious, incompetent ingrates
who would prefer to kill one another than seize the freedom we brought
them. It's not our fault that it turned out so badly.
It has turned out rather badly, hasn't it? President George
W. Bush will go no further than to say that he is "disappointed
by the pace of success," and his British sidekick, Prime Minister
Tony Blair, still insists that "We will beat them (the Iraqi resistance)
when we realise that it's not our fault that they're doing this."
But practically everybody else in the US and Britain knows that
the invasion of Iraq was a huge disaster.
Somebody must be to blame, and it cannot be us, so it must
be those brutal, stupid Iraqis. This comforting myth started on
the right, among those who had been eager supporters of "a war of
choice to instill some democracy in the heart of the Middle East,"
as New York Times columnist Tom Friedman put it in his column four
years ago. So fast is the myth taking root in America, however,
that it is has now even infected that icon of liberal irony, the
"Doonesbury" comic strip. There was no surprise last November when
arch neo-conservative Richard Perle, ex-chairman of the Pentagon's
Defense Policy Board Advisory Committee, said that he had "underestimated
the depravity" in Iraq. He has a lot of blame to shift, so he would
say that, wouldn't he?
It was no surprise, either, when right-wing columnist Charles
Krauthammer, once an eager supporter of the war, elaborated on the
same theme less than a month ago: "Thousands of brave American soldiers
have died trying to counter, put down and prevent civil strife.
But when Arabs kill Arabs and Shias kill Shias and Sunnis kill all
in a spasm of violence that is blind and furious and has roots in
hatreds born long before America was even a republic, to place the
blame on (America) is simply perverse....Iraq is their country.
We midwifed their freedom. They chose civil war."
Brazen, self-serving distortions of the truth by people who
have a lot of explaining to do, and not in the least surprising,
because if the ghastly mess in Iraq wasn't the fault of Iraqis,
then it would have to be the fault of Americans. Perle and Krauthammer
would figure quite prominently among the Americans in question.
But what is one to make of Gary Trudeau peddling the same
line in his comic strip "Doonesbury"? The strip runs daily in 1,400
newspapers around the world, and often serves as the vehicle for
political or social commentary from a liberal perspective. It never
supported the invasion of Iraq, but this Monday's strip was a classic
exercise in stereotyping and blame-shifting.
An American colonel, planning the day's operation in the streets
of Baghdad, notices that his Iraq army opposite number has not shown
up yet, and sends a soldier to find him. Cut to the Iraqi army officer:
still behind his desk, coffee-cup in hand, ashtray full of cigarettes.
He says to the young American soldier: "It's not in my book. Are
you sure it's today?" US solder wearily replies "Yes, sir. You'll
recall we fight every day."
Unraveling the message doesn't take a Marshall MacLuhan:
US troops are carrying the burden of the war while lazy, cowardly
Iraqis shun their duty. They don't deserve us. The strip the weekend
before last was even more blatant in blaming the failure on the
Iraqis. An American soldier gets behind the wheel of a Humvee and
says "Ready to do this, partner?" to the same Iraqi officer, sitting
beside him in the front seat. But the Iraqi officer is asleep.
As they approach the target house, the Iraqi officer, now
awake, says "I know this house. The owner is Sunni scum." "Well,
intel wants us to capture the guy alive," says the American. "That
will not be possible. I am sworn to revenge," replies the Iraqi.
"Why," asks the American. "What'd he ever do to you.?"
"A member of his family killed a member of mine," replies
the Iraqi officer, cigarette dangling from his lips. "What? When
did this happen?" asks the shocked American.
"1387," replies the Iraqi officer. "What is the MATTER with
you people?" screams the American.
Get the message? These Ay-rabs are not only lazy, they are
so savage that they harbour murderous grudges over six centuries.
Even Americans cannot bring these people to their senses. Let's
get the hell out of here. It isn't our fault that it all went wrong.
Getting out of Iraq is the least bad thing the United States
can do now, and the sooner the better. If Americans must manufacture
racist fantasies about the victims in order to salve their pride
on the way out, then so be it. But it is a shameful, childish lie.*
(Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose articles
are published in 45 countries.)
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