October 3, 2005
How the world was duped: the race to invade Iraq.
When Colin Powell made his notorious final pitch for war at the UN
Security Council, Robert Fisk was there. In the latest extract from his
explosive new book, he recalls a tragi-comic occasion
By Robert Fisk
10/03/05 "The
Independent"
-- -- The 5th of February 2003 was a snow-blasted day in New York, the
steam whirling out of the road covers, the US secret servicemen -
helpfully wearing jackets with "Secret Service" printed on them -
hugging themselves outside the fustian, asbestos-packed UN headquarters
on the East River. Exhausted though I was after travelling thousands of
miles around the United States, the idea of watching Secretary of State
Colin Powell - or General Powell, as he was now being reverently
redubbed in some American newspapers - make his last pitch for war
before the Security Council was an experience not to be missed.
In a few days, I would be in Baghdad to watch the start of this
frivolous, demented conflict. Powell's appearance at the Security
Council was the essential prologue to the tragedy - or tragicomedy if
one could contain one's anger - the appearance of the Attendant Lord
who would explain the story of the drama, the Horatio to the
increasingly unstable Hamlet in the White House.
There was an almost macabre opening to the play when General Powell
arrived at the Security Council, cheek-kissing the delegates and
winding his great arms around them. CIA director George Tenet stood
behind Powell, chunky, aggressive but obedient, just a little bit
lip-biting, an Edward G Robinson who must have convinced himself that
the more dubious of his information was buried beneath an adequate
depth of moral fury and fear to be safely concealed. Just like Bush's
appearance at the General Assembly the previous September, you needed
to be in the Security Council to see what the television cameras
missed. There was a wonderful moment when the little British home
secretary Jack Straw entered the chamber through the far right-hand
door in a massive power suit, his double-breasted jacket apparently
wrapping itself twice around Britain's most famous ex-Trot. He stood
for a moment with a kind of semi-benign smile on his uplifted face, his
nose in the air as if sniffing for power. Then he saw Powell and his
smile opened like an umbrella as his small feet, scuttling beneath him,
propelled him across the stage and into the arms of Powell for his big
American hug.
You might have thought that the whole chamber, with its toothy smiles
and constant handshakes, contained a room full of men celebrating peace
rather than war. Alas, not so. These elegantly dressed statesmen were
constructing the framework that would allow them to kill quite a lot of
people - some of them Saddam's little monsters no doubt, but most of
them innocent. When Powell rose to give his terror-talk, he did so with
a slow athleticism, the world-weary warrior whose patience had at last
reached its end.
But it was an old movie. I should have guessed. Sources, foreign
intelligence sources, "our sources", defectors, sources, sources,
sources. Ah, to be so well-sourced when you have already taken the
decision to go to war. The Powell presentation sounded like one of
those government-inspired reports on the front page of The New York
Times - where it was, of course, treated with due reverence next day.
It was a bit like heating up old soup. Hadn't we heard most of this
stuff before? Should one trust the man? General Powell, I mean, not
Saddam. Certainly we didn't trust Saddam, but Powell's speech was a
mixture of awesomely funny recordings of Iraqi Republican Guard
telephone intercepts à la Samuel Beckett that just might have been some
terrifying proof that Saddam really was conning the UN inspectors
again, and ancient material on the Monster of Baghdad's all too well
known record of beastliness.
If only we could have heard the Arabic for the State Department's
translation of "OK, buddy" - "Consider it done, sir" - this from the
Republican Guard's "Captain Ibrahim", for heaven's sake. The dinky
illustrations of mobile Iraqi bio-labs whose lorries and railway trucks
were in such perfect condition suggested the Pentagon didn't have much
idea of the dilapidated state of Saddam's railway system, let alone his
army. It was when we went back to Halabja and human rights abuses and
all Saddam's indubitable sins, as recorded by the discredited Unscom
team, that we started eating the old soup again. Jack Straw may have
thought all this "the most powerful and authoritative case" for war -
his ill-considered opinion afterwards - but when we were forced to
listen to the Iraqi officer corps communicating by phone "Yeah", "Yeah"
, "Yeah?", "Yeah . . ." - it was impossible not to ask oneself if Colin
Powell had really considered the effect this would have on the outside
world.
From time to time, the words "Iraq: Failing to Disarm - Denial and
Deception" appeared on the giant video screen behind General Powell.
Was this a CNN logo? some of us wondered. But no, it was the work of
CNN's sister channel, the US Department of State.
Because Colin Powell was supposed to be the good cop to the Bush-
Rumsfeld bad cop routine, one wanted to believe him. The Iraqi
officer's telephone-tapped order to his subordinate - "Remove 'nerve
agents' whenever it comes up in the wireless instructions" - seemed to
indicate that the Americans had indeed spotted a nasty new line in
Iraqi deception. But a dramatic picture of a pilotless Iraqi aircraft
capable of spraying poison chemicals turned out to be the imaginative
work of a Pentagon artist. And when Secretary Powell started talking
about "decades" of contact between Saddam and al-Qa'ida, things went
wrong for the " General ". Al-Qa'ida only came into existence in 2000,
since bin Laden - " decades" ago - was working against the Russians for
the CIA, whose present-day director was sitting grave-faced behind Mr
Powell. It was the United States which had enjoyed at least a "decade"
of contacts with Saddam.
Powell's new version of his President's State of the Union lie - that
the " scientists" interviewed by UN inspectors had been Iraqi
intelligence agents in disguise - was singularly unimpressive. The UN
talked to Iraqi scientists during their inspection tours, the new
version went, but the Iraqis were posing for the real nuclear and bio
boys whom the UN wanted to talk to.
General Powell said America was sharing its information with the UN
inspectors, but it was clear already that much of what he had to say
about alleged new weapons development - the decontamination truck at
the Taji chemical munitions factory, for example, the "cleaning" of the
Ibn al- Haythem ballistic missile factory on 25 November - had not been
given to the UN at the time. Why wasn't this intelligence information
given to the inspectors months ago? Didn't General Powell's beloved UN
Resolution demand that all such intelligence information should be
given to Hans Blix and his lads immediately? Were the Americans,
perhaps, not being "proactive" enough? Or did they realise that if the
UN inspectors had chased these particular hares, they would have turned
out to be as bogus as indeed they later proved to be?
The worst moment came when General Powell discussed anthrax and the
2001 anthrax attacks in Washington and New York, pathetically holding
up a teaspoon of the imaginary spores and - while not precisely saying
so - fraudulently suggesting a connection between Saddam Hussein and
the anthrax scare. But when the Secretary of State held up Iraq's
support for the Palestinian Hamas organisation, which has an office in
Baghdad, as proof of Saddam's support for "terror" - he of course made
no mention of America's support for Israel and its occupation of
Palestinian land - the whole theatre began to collapse. There were
Hamas offices in Beirut, Damascus and Tehran. Was the 82nd Airborne
supposed to grind on to Lebanon, Syria and Iran?
How many lies had been told in this auditorium? How many British
excuses for the Suez invasion, or Russian excuses - the same year - for
the suppression of the Hungarian uprising? One recalled, of course,
this same room four decades earlier when General Powell's predecessor
Adlai Stevenson showed photographs of the ships carrying Soviet
missiles to Cuba. Alas, Powell's pictures carried no such authority.
And Colin Powell was no Adlai Stevenson.
If Powell's address merited front-page treatment, the American media
had never chosen to give the same attention to the men driving Bush to
war, most of whom were former or still active pro-Israeli lobbyists.
For years they had advocated destroying the most powerful Arab nation.
Richard Perle, one of Bush's most influential advisers, Douglas Feith,
Paul Wolfowitz, John Bolton and Donald Rumsfeld were all campaigning
for the overthrow of Iraq long before George W Bush was elected US
president. And they weren't doing so for the benefit of Americans or
Britons. A 1996 report, A
Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm,
called for war on Iraq. It was written not for the US but for the
incoming Israeli Likud prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and produced
by a group headed by Perle. The destruction of Iraq would, of course,
protect Israel's monopoly of nuclear weapons - always supposing Saddam
also possessed them - and allow it to defeat the Palestinians and
impose whatever colonial settlement Sharon had in store for them.
Although Bush and Blair dared not discuss this aspect of the coming war
- a conflict for Israel was not going to have Americans or Britons
lining up at recruiting offices - Jewish-American leaders talked about
the advantages of an Iraqi war with enthusiasm. Indeed, those very
courageous Jewish-American groups who opposed this madness were the
first to point out how pro-Israeli organisations foresaw Iraq not only
as a new source of oil but of water, too; why should canals not link
the Tigris river to the parched Levant? No wonder, then, that any
discussion of this topic had to be censored, as Professor Eliot Cohen
of Johns Hopkins University tried to do in The Wall Street Journal the
day after Powell's UN speech. Cohen suggested that European nations'
objections to the war might - yet again - be ascribed to "
anti-Semitism of a type long thought dead in the West, a loathing that
ascribes to Jews a malignant intent". This nonsense was opposed by many
Israeli intellectuals who, like Uri Avnery, argued that an Iraq war
would leave Israel with even more Arab enemies.
The slur of "anti-Semitism" also lay behind Rumsfeld's insulting
remarks about "old Europe". He was talking about the "old" Germany of
Nazism and the "old" France of collaboration. But the France and
Germany that opposed this war were the "new" Europe, the continent that
refused, ever again, to slaughter the innocent. It was Rumsfeld and
Bush who represented the "old" America; not the " new" America of
freedom, the America of F D Roosevelt.
Rumsfeld and Bush symbolised the old America that killed its native
inhabitants and embarked on imperial adventures. It was "old" America
we were being asked to fight for - linked to a new form of colonialism
- an America that first threatened the United Nations with irrelevancy
and then did the same to Nato. This was not the last chance for the UN,
nor for Nato. But it might well have been the last chance for America
to be taken seriously by her friends as well as her enemies.
Israeli and US ambitions in the region were now entwined, almost
synonymous. This war, about oil and regional control, was being
cheer-led by a president who was treacherously telling us that this was
part of an eternal war against "terror". The British and most Europeans
didn't believe him. It's not that Britons wouldn't fight for America.
They just didn't want to fight for Bush or his friends. And if that
included the prime minister, they didn't want to fight for Blair
either. Still less did they wish to embark on endless wars with a Texas
governor-executioner who dodged the Vietnam draft and who, with his oil
buddies, was now sending America's poor to destroy a Muslim nation that
had nothing at all to do with the crimes against humanity of 11
September 2001.
Those who opposed the war were not cowards. Brits rather like fighting;
they've biffed Arabs, Afghans, Muslims, Nazis, Italian Fascists and
Japanese imperialists for generations, Iraqis included. But when the
British are asked to go to war, patriotism is not enough. Faced with
the horror stories, Britons and many Americans were a lot braver than
Blair and Bush. They do not like, as Thomas More told Cromwell in A Man
for All Seasons, tales to frighten children. Perhaps Henry VIII's
exasperation in that play better expresses the British view of Blair
and Bush: "Do they take me for a simpleton?" The British, like other
Europeans, are an educated people. Ironically, their opposition to this
war might ultimately have made them feel more, not less, European.
* Extracted from 'The Great War for Civilisation: the Conquest of the
Middle East' by Robert Fisk, published by 4th Estate on 3 October, £25.
To buy the book at the special price of £22.50, including p&p, call
Independent Books Direct on 08700 798897, or visit www.independent
booksdirect.co.uk
© 2005 Independent News & Media (UK) Ltd.
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