The Iraq War Has Become a Disaster That We Have Chosen to Forget
With the media subdued, governments have not been held to account for the biggest political calamity of our time
'You think you are innocent, but you're not," said the British Muslim suicide bomber in the Channel 4 television drama Britz last week. As the compelling actor Manjinder Virk recited her suicide statement to camera, she went on: thousands of women and children are dying every day in Iraq and Afghanistan, and yet the governments responsible have been returned to power.
Her assertion sticks in the mind because it goes straight to the heart of how we choose to forget, choose not to understand; and how from such choices it becomes possible to imagine our innocence.
That's not to say that her own moral choices were defensible - she blew up herself, her beloved brother, fellow Muslims and plenty of women in the crowd - but the challenge even from such a morally flawed character persists. Can we claim innocence of the chaotic violence of Iraq now normalised into the background of our lives? Suicide bombs have long since become routine radio noise. We're numbed to the atrocities; except for some stalwarts, the initial anti-war activism has been crowded out by other responsibilities. Life goes on, even if in Baghdad it frequently doesn't.
And to accompany the indifference is the creeping denial of responsibility. Government ministers now talk of Iraq as a tragedy, as if it was a natural disaster and they had no hand in its making. There's a public revulsion at the violent sectarian struggles best summed up as "a plague on all their houses", as even the horror gives way to exhaustion.
The irony is that in this great age of communications and saturation media, this is perhaps the most important war to become nigh on impossible to report. Unless the reporter is embedded with the occupation forces, it takes either terrifying courage or extraordinary ingenuity to bring images to our screens of those caught up in the awful maelstrom of this imploded country. Without the human stories that bring people and their suffering so vividly to life, there is little chance of public opinion re-engaging with the biggest political calamity of our time.
The Iraq war represents the end of the media as a major actor in war. In Bosnia journalists stirred western Europe's conscience with their vivid accounts; these were people we came to understand, recognise and empathise with, and public opinion forced recalcitrant governments to take note and act. It was a lesson not lost on the Kosovans: they ensured the media saw every atrocity, and the coverage was used to secure a comparable outcome to Bosnia - western governments were forced to act. But in Iraq the number of journalists killed (now at least 138) means that this war is near private - the images and people who might make the horror of this war real don't reach our screens. It's no longer a war that is accessible to public scrutiny or to democratic engagement.
It may have been Iraqi suspicion of western media that ensured this outcome, but it's one that serves US interests nicely. The indifference, the exhaustion and the difficulty of reporting leaves the US forces with arguably a freer hand than they have had in any field of operations for decades. While the Americans and the British keep trying to persuade their public that the war is over - a habit initiated by George Bush himself when he announced his pyrrhic victory on an aircraft carrier in the Gulf in May 2003 - they can carry on fighting it. And there are plenty of people only too eager to hope their political leaders are right and that the whole problem of a country they never knew much about just goes away.
All of which makes the achievement of the few who do break through this news blackout all the more remarkable - Ghaith Abdul-Ahad on this paper, and the Guardian's Emmy-winning film made by an Iraqi doctor on his Baghdad hospital, for example. This week a book is published by another: Dahr Jamail was a mountain guide in Alaska in 2003 who began to take an interest in US foreign policy and ended up picking up his backpack and swapping American mountains for Baghdad and Falluja, driven by a fierce moral imperative that "as a US citizen he was complicit in the devastation of Iraq". After more than three years of reporting he has post-traumatic stress disorder, but has not lost his conviction that "if the people of the United States had the real story about what their government has done in Iraq, the occupation would already have ended".
What is chilling about Jamail's accounts is the routine destructiveness of the US forces; how they demolish nearby homes after a roadside bomb, leave unexploded munitions in the fields of farmers who don't give information, bulldoze orchards. Livelihoods destroyed, families displaced every day, incubating hatred. One of the worst episodes occurred when Jamail's friend was caught by chance at prayer time in a mosque when worshippers were shot dead, with children trapped in the mayhem: a holy place desecrated in a US operation. We may know nothing of such routine details of the prosecution of this war, but these are the stories filling the Arabic media. Across the Muslim world they are taken as irrefutable evidence of the humiliation and persecution of their Islamic faith. We can only pretend we don't understand.
In the meantime, the biggest human displacement crisis in the Middle East for 60 years is unfolding, the fastest growing refugee crisis in the world. One in six Iraqis has now been displaced, 60,000 a month are leaving the country, spilling into Syria (1.4 million) and Jordan (750,000). In an uncanny magnification of our own anxieties about migration and the strain on public services, the capacities of these two Middle Eastern countries to educate thousands of traumatised children or provide basic healthcare have been swamped. The UN's budget for refugees in Syria for 2007 is $700,000 - less than a dollar per person. But this crisis offers no telegenic vistas - people are crammed into the apartments of friends rather than tents on a windy African plain. So it gets even less attention.
Of these millions, Britain confirmed last week that it will take just 500 refugees with a record of having worked for British forces. It drags its feet over offering any more assistance for dispersal, despite requests from the UN; of 123 from Jordan whom the UN have allocated to Britain on tight criteria of having relatives in this country to provide for them, we have so far accepted only three. Britain washes its hands of the consequences of its invasion with the US. There's a horrible contradiction here: those in power accept no responsibility. Those who might have a sense of responsibility feel utterly powerless.
It can take a generation or more for people to grasp the significance and magnitude of historical events. Facts that are infinitely more bizarre and awful than fiction - as Naomi Klein's book The Shock Doctrine documents - take a long time to be fully absorbed. The Iraq war has been about the abject failure of democracy: governments have not been held to account for a war that has squandered lives, billions in public money and the stability of an entire region with reckless criminality.
-- m.bunting@guardian.co.uk
© 2007 The Guardian
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11 Comments so far
Show AllDear C-D editors,
-thanks for including this illuminating article.
Madeline Bunting writes:
"The irony is that in this great age of communications and saturation media, this is perhaps the most important war to become nigh on impossible to report.
"Unless the reporter is embedded with the occupation forces, it takes either terrifying courage or extraordinary ingenuity to bring images to our screens of those caught up in the awful maelstrom of this imploded country.
"Without the human stories that bring people and their suffering so vividly to life, there is little chance of public opinion re-engaging with the biggest political calamity of our time."
~ How very true Madeline's words are!
'Saturation media' -but it is now *saturated with garbage* - rather than that which *urgently* needs to be divulged; -and this is: REALITY! - the *Reality* of terrible crimes, which, -unless the 'average Joe' is graphicly shown, he /she will never get to realise just what a bunch of despicable, murdering crooks and liars his / her government really is...
________________________________
The widespread, international protests about the US government's (previous) madness in Vietnam kicked off for three main reasons:
1. The horrible truth was frequently shown on TV.
2. The body bags and returning coffins were also screened.
3. There was a compulsory draft to enlist the unwilling to go do unnecessary murders, -as ordered by the nutters at the top of the dunghill.
...These days, -come the 21st century, -being diabolical and scheming devils, the maniacs at the top got wise: They chopped out those three elements which gave rise to widespread protest.
So we now get:
1. Few pics of the grisly, bloodied mess that the war in Iraq makes of human beings, once it has been unleashed by government lunatics.
2. No photos of returning dead bodies / soldiers.
3. No 'Draft' conscription, and thence the angry public burning of US flags / draft cards, etc.
Clever huh?
Madeline concludes her article with the words:
"The Iraq war has been about the abject failure of democracy: governments have not been held to account for a war that has squandered lives, billions in public money and the stability of an entire region with reckless criminality."
How would a 'God' sort of figure comment on all of that I wonder?
I can't help but think that any 'god' (worthy of the name) would damn for all eternity, the likes of George WW3 Bush and his disgusting, truly EVIL crew...
'Hell and eternal damnation' for the Gray House morons?
To quote the Nutter-in-Chief: "Bring it on!"
...
Everyone working in the Bush administration, and every media mogul, superstar anchorperson and pundit who is on record as having supported and shilled for this criminal invasion/occupation/desecration/ destruction of Iraq, should be rounded up like common criminals, arrested and made to stand for war crimes before an international court of justice. The US should be shunned by the world community for at least a generation, isolated and subjected to trade sanctions. There will never be any peace without justice first, and we are so far from encountering justice that we should expunge the word peace from the dictionaries.
Dr. Eidelson-Thanks for the insightful video. I like the way you've broken down the core concerns that these fascist warmongers consistently try and manipulate.
BillfromSaginaw-Good point for militant liberal, I hope he is listening...
I think we all need to realize our responsibility for what has taken place in Iraq. For as Prof. Chomsky has stated several times, "In a democracy we get the gov't. that we deserve." So let us not give up hope, but try and atone for our grave sins by making America a country in which the gov't. truly is of, for, and by the PEOPLE!
What about al Jazeera? Courageous print journalists like Hersh and Cockburn, video documentary sources like Michael Moore and Kristina Amanpour, or cyber resources like Juan Cole or even Common Dreams?
Sorry, I don't buy the notion that "The Iraq War represents the end of the media as a major actor in war." The mainstream media remains a major, highly effective actor in the Iraq War - when it comes to presenting the occupation forces' spin and propaganda.
The contemporary problem from the professional journalist's standpoint is that to be embedded is almost inevitably to be co-opted, but to try to report to Western television outlets from Iraq without being embedded is very, very likely to get oneself kidnapped or killed. But that's just one type of media. Who could deny that the Abu Ghraib torture videos, for instance, didn't play a major role in turning world and US opinion against Bush's GWOT torture policies? If the atrocity is grotesque enough, if the picture can leak out at all, even the mainstream media has to acknowledge the story.
militantliberal - If you're true to your screen name, I assume you reserve a variation on this theme to reply to American air war strategists who've set up the rules of engagement for occupation forces in Iraq.
Bill from Saginaw
My reply to Muslim suicide bombers who kill civilians would be, "You think you are a hero, but you're not. You're just a damned murderer and coward." I say a coward because suicide bombers kill themselves to avoid facing the music.
Dichterfreund November 5th, 2007 2:46 pm... and commander_n_chimp
"If the choice is between recognizing moral responsibility and thrilling to national glory, to massacres & super secret police torturing terrorists, the majority will always choose the latter...."
Well said...
Never forget that the media was not silenced by the Whitehouse. It silenced itself in complicency with the Whitehouse as advised by its corporate sponsors. These criminals could not have accomplished anything without a press willing to run interference for them and silence the critics as much as possible.
The unpleasant truth about fascism is: people like it. When they aren't on the receiving end of course.
The ohter night Turner Classics ran "The Secret of Santa Vittoria" from 1969. In the opening scene an enthusiastic young man announces to the town that Mussolini has fallen; the townspeople remain silent & sullen, until one of the older citizens rouses them & directs their ire towards the local Fascist boss & it takes them a few moments to realize that they're up against one lone fat man, and they go to kick & beat him. "First the kiss his a**, then they kick it" --
If the choice is between recognizing moral responsibility and thrilling to national glory, to massacres & supersecret police torturing terrorists, the majority will always choose the latter.
Just watched the documentary No End in Sight, from which it was easy for me to conclude that the consistency and scale of the " incompetence" which characterized this invasion and occupation had to be somethng much more sinister. It had to be exactly what was intended to bring about the utter chaos and mayhem that is Iraq today. BushCo may fit the profile of a "lunatic" cabal but they are simply the public face of a much deeper and darker power center which knows no geographic or political boundaries. Absolute power is what is being sought, and calling these forces crazy gives the illusion that in some sense, they are victims of their own delusions. They know exactly what they are doing, and we should not kid ourselves about what they are capable of and to what ends they will go to achieve their goals.
Great video, Dr. Eidelson!
The Bush administration collectively is afflicted with narcissistic personality disorder. Or rather, they afflict us with it!
Just look at the criteria for NPD and it reads as a record of daily Bush White House activity for the past seven years:
1. has a grandiose sense of self-importance
2. is preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love
3. believes that he or she is "special" and unique and can only be understood by other special people (therefore, the Geneva Conventions don't apply in Guantanamo, the world's opinion doesn't count, the Supreme Court's rulings on Guantanamo don't matter, millions of anti-war protesters are "focus groups", etc.)
4. requires excessive admiration (people at Bush rallies must sign loyalties oaths)
5. strong sense of entitlement
6. takes advantage of others to achieve his or her own ends
7. lacks empathy
8. is often envious or believes others are envious of him or her ("The terrorists hate us for our freedoms" uttered even after America has been turned into a de facto police state. Our airports are police mini states unto themselves. Virtually, they are Guantanamos with Starbucks)
9. arrogant behavior (Bush's mission accomplished show on the USS Abraham Lincoln)
And don't forget the "silencing" that accompanies NPD types: putting people into "free speech corrals" miles away from GOP/Bushco events, not reporting on the MSM that Gore won the Nobel Peace Prize, dismissing critics of the administration such as Valerie Plame and Joseph Wilson, etc.
The USA (United States of Atrocities) is being run by psychotics. We should just change our national anthem to "The Lunatics Have Taken Over the Asylum" by Funboy Three.
The obstruction and silencing of independent media have played a central role in the manipulation of public sentiment that lies at the very heart of the White House's entire Iraq war enterprise--and it will likely have a similar role in any military attack on Iran. For those interested in a psychological analysis of this warmongering, I have recently completed a 10-minute online video entitled "Resisting the Drums of War." It examines how the Bush administration's messaging targets five core concerns that often govern our lives--concerns about vulnerability, injustice, distrust, superiority, and helplessness. The video examines their warmongering appeals and offers suggestions for how to counter them. It's available for viewing HERE.