Sometimes we are reminded that the Olympics can serve as an
international platform not only for flag waving and truck
commercials, but also resistance.
In an incredible piece by Grant Wahl on Sports Illustrated.com, the
Iraqi Olympic Soccer team has issued a stinging rebuke to George
W. Bush's attempt to use them as election year symbols.
Iraq's soccer squad is perhaps the surprise of the entire Olympics,
advancing to this weekend's quarterfinals despite the war and
occupation that has gripped their country for the last 17 months.
Yet amidst cheers and triumph, they were infuriated to learn that
Bush's brain, Karl Rove, had launched campaign ads featuring
their Olympic glory as a brilliant by-product of the war on terror.
The commercial, subtle as a blowtorch, begins with an image of
the Afghani and Iraqi flags with a voice over saying, "At this
Olympics there will be two more free nations -- and two fewer
terrorist regimes."
Bush has also been exploiting their exploits in stump speeches.
Much more comfortable talking sports than foreign policy or
stem-cell research, Bush brayed with bravado in Oregon, "The
image of the Iraqi soccer team playing in this Olympics, it's
fantastic, isn't it? It wouldn't have been free if the United States had
not acted."
This has compelled the Iraqi soccer team, at great personal risk,
to respond. Mid-fielder and team leader Salih Sadir told Sports
Illustrated,
"Iraq as a team does not want Mr. Bush to use us for the
presidential campaign. He can find another way to advertise
himself."
Sadir has reason to be upset. He was the star player for the
professional soccer team in Najaf. Najaf has in recent weeks
been swamped by US troops and the new Iraqi army in an attempt
to uproot rebel cleric Moqtada Al-Sadr. Thousands have died, each
death close to Sadir's heart.
"I want the violence and the war to go away from the city," said
Sadir, "We don't wish for the presence of Americans in our country.
We want them to go away."
Sadir's teammates were less diplomatic.
Midfielder Ahmed Manajid, told Wahl angrily, "How will [Bush] meet
his god having slaughtered so many men and women? He has
committed so many crimes."
Manajid understands Sadir's pain because he is from another
Iraqi city that has been in a state of siege, Fallujah.
Manajid told Wahl that his cousin Omar Jabbar al-Aziz, who was a
resistance fighter, was killed by the US, as were several of his
friends. Manajid even said that if he were not playing soccer he
would "for sure" be fighting as part of the resistance.
"I want to defend my home. If a stranger invades America and the
people resist, does that mean they are terrorists? Everyone [in
Fallujah] has been labeled a terrorist. These are all lies. Fallujah
people are some of the best people in Iraq."
Usually when there is political unrest on Olympic teams, the coach
tries to be a mitigating force with the media. But not here and not
now. Iraqi soccer coach Adnan Hamad also went public to Sports
Illustrated saying, "My problems are not with the American people,
They are with what America has done in Iraq: destroy everything.
The American army has killed so many people in Iraq."
To be clear, Iraq's team is not pining for former Olympic head Uday
Hussein, notorious for torturing athletes that under performed. Yet
they don't feel their choice has to be between Uday's way and the
bloodbath that has been visited upon their country.
As Hamad said," What is freedom when I go to the [national]
stadium and there are shootings on the road?
The ideas expressed by the Iraqi soccer team are by all counts
commonplace in Iraq yet find little expression in the mainstream
media here at home. It is critical that their words find ears.
Without WMDs, Al-Qaeda connections, and with an Iraqi populace
that overwhelmingly views the U.S. as occupiers and not
liberators, what possible justification does Bush - and Kerry - have
for supporting this invasion that has cost hundreds of billions of
dollars and countless lives?
Take time this weekend to root for the Iraqi soccer team. Their
ascent will accompany a platform for ideas that demand to be
heard.
Dave Zirin can be reached at editor@pgpost.com. His book
"What's My Name Fool": Sports and Resistance in the United
States (Haymarket Books) comes out spring 2005.
To get his column every week, e-mail
edgeofsports-subscribe@zirin.com
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