Welcome to the Violent World of Mr. Hopey Changey
by
John Pilger
Recently
by John Pilger: Behind
the Arab Revolt Is a Word We Dare Not Speak
When
Britain lost control of Egypt in 1956, Prime Minister Anthony Eden
said he wanted the nationalist president Gamal Abdel Nasser "destroyed
… murdered … I don’t give a damn if there’s anarchy and chaos in
Egypt." Those insolent Arabs, Winston Churchill had urged in
1951, should be driven "into the gutter from which they should
never have emerged."
The
language of colonialism may have been modified; the spirit and the
hypocrisy are unchanged. A new imperial phase is unfolding in direct
response to the Arab uprising that began in January and has shocked
Washington and Europe, causing an Eden-style panic. The loss of
the Egyptian tyrant Mubarak was grievous, though not irretrievable;
an American-backed counterrevolution is under way as the military
regime in Cairo is seduced with new bribes and power shifting from
the street to political groups that did not initiate the revolution.
The western aim, as ever, is to stop authentic democracy and reclaim
control.
Libya
is the immediate opportunity. The NATO attack on Libya, with the
UN Security Council assigned to mandate a bogus "no fly zone"
to "protect civilians," is strikingly similar to the final
destruction of Yugoslavia in 1999. There was no UN cover for the
bombing of Serbia and the "rescue" of Kosovo, yet the
propaganda echoes today. Like Slobodan Milosevic, Muammar Gaddafi
is a "new Hitler," plotting "genocide" against
his people. There is no evidence of this, as there was no genocide
in Kosovo. In Libya there is a tribal civil war; and the armed uprising
against Gaddafi has long been appropriated by the Americans, French
and British, their planes attacking residential Tripoli with uranium-tipped
missiles and the submarine HMS Triumph firing Tomahawk missiles,
a repeat of the "shock and awe" in Iraq that left thousands
of civilians dead and maimed. As in Iraq, the victims, which include
countless incinerated Libyan army conscripts, are media unpeople.
In
the "rebel" east, the terrorizing and killing of black
African immigrants is not news. On 22 May, a rare piece in the Washington
Post described the repression, lawlessness and death squads
in the "liberated zones" just as visiting EU foreign policy
chief, Catherine Ashton, declared she had found only "great
aspirations" and "leadership qualities." In demonstrating
these qualities, Mustafa Abdel Jalil, the "rebel leader"
and Gaddafi’s justice minister until February, pledged, "Our
friends … will have the best opportunity in future contracts with
Libya." The east holds most of Libya’s oil, the greatest reserves
in Africa. In March the rebels, with expert foreign guidance, "transferred"
to Benghazi the Libyan Central Bank, a wholly owned state institution.
This is unprecedented. Meanwhile, the US and the EU "froze"
almost US$100 billion in Libyan funds, "the largest sum ever
blocked," according to official statements. It is the biggest
bank robbery in history.
The
French elite are enthusiastic robbers and bombers. Nicholas Sarkozy’s
imperial design is for a French-dominated Mediterranean Union (UM),
which would allow France to "return" to its former colonies
in North Africa and profit from privileged investment and cheap
labor. Gaddafi described the Sarkozy plan as "an insult"
that was "taking us for fools." The Merkel government
in Berlin agreed, fearing its old foe would diminish Germany in
the EU, and abstained in the Security Council vote on Libya.
Like
the attack on Yugoslavia and the charade of Milosevic’s trial, the
International Criminal Court is being used by the US, France and
Britain to prosecute Gaddafi while his repeated offers of a ceasefire
are ignored. Gaddafi is a Bad Arab. David Cameron’s government and
its verbose top general want to eliminate this Bad Arab, like the
Obama administration killed a famously Bad Arab in Pakistan recently.
The crown prince of Bahrain, on the other hand, is a Good Arab.
On 19 May, he was warmly welcomed to Britain by Cameron with a photo-call
on the steps of 10 Downing Street. In March, the same crown prince
slaughtered unarmed protesters and allowed Saudi forces to crush
his country’s democracy movement. The Obama administration has rewarded
Saudi Arabia, one of the most repressive regimes on earth, with
a $US60 billion arms deal, the biggest in US history. The Saudis
have the most oil. They are the Best Arabs.
The
assault on Libya, a crime under the Nuremberg standard, is Britain’s
46th military "intervention" in the Middle
East since 1945. Like its imperial partners, Britain’s goal is to
control Africa’s oil. Cameron is not Anthony Eden, but almost. Same
school. Same values. In the media-pack, the words colonialism and
imperialism are no longer used, so that the cynical and the credulous
can celebrate state violence in its more palatable form.
And
as "Mr. Hopey Changey" (the name that Ted Rall, the great
American cartoonist, gives Barack Obama), is fawned upon by the
British elite and launches another insufferable presidential campaign,
the Anglo-American reign of terror proceeds in Afghanistan and elsewhere,
with the murder of people by unmanned drones – a US/Israel innovation,
embraced by Obama. For the record, on a scorecard of imposed misery,
from secret trials and prisons and the hounding of whistleblowers
and the criminalizing of dissent to the incarceration and impoverishment
of his own people, mostly black people, Obama is as bad as George
W. Bush.
The
Palestinians understand all this. As their young people courageously
face the violence of Israel’s blood-racism, carrying the keys of
their grandparents’ stolen homes, they are not even included in
Mr. Hopey Changey’s list of peoples in the Middle East whose liberation
is long overdue. What the oppressed need, he said on 19 May, is
a dose of "America’s interests [that] are essential to them."
He insults us all.
John
Pilger was born and educated in Sydney, Australia. He has been
a war correspondent, filmmaker and playwright. Based in London,
he has written from many countries and has twice won British journalism's
highest award, that of "Journalist of the Year," for his
work in Vietnam and Cambodia. His latest book is Freedom
Next Time: Resisting the Empire.
Copyright
© John Pilger 2011
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