|
KurdistanObserver.com
The Empire Strikes Out: Big Trouble in 'Little Baghdad'
ADE - Kurt Nimmo - As expected, the British and the corporate press
are blaming Moqtada al-Sadr and his Mahdi army for the recent troubles in
Basra, obscuring the fact two SAS undercover troublemakers were caught
red-handed readying a terrorist attack against Iraqi Shi’ites.
www.kurtnimmo.com
Big Trouble for
British Occupation of Southern Iraq
Kurt Nimmo
Another Day in the Empire
September 23rd, 2005
Adrian Blomfield, writing for the UK Telegraph, characterizes the arrest
of the British terrorists as “two SAS soldiers [held] hostage in Basra” and
the allegations that the two were plotting murder and mayhem a “smear
campaign” that translates into “another blow to the British Army’s hopes of
restoring its affection among locals,” as if Iraqis are fond of the idea of
occupation and foreign troops stationed in their country.
Basra’s governor, Mohammed al-Wa’eli, accused Britain of “imperial
arrogance,” a shoe that fits and the Brits (and Americans) should wear it. The
average UK Telegraph reader may not know it—as many Americans do not know
their own checkered history—but “imperialism” is precisely what the Brits
imposed on Iraq for decades, beginning after the Ottoman Empire collapsed in
1914.
Britain, in standard arrogant and back-stabbing fashion, promised the Arabs of
what they would later call Iraq independence, only to betray them. Instead of
independence, Iraq became a “mandate” territory under the League of Nations
and British “supervision.” Outraged Iraqis revolted in 1920 and the British
put down the rebellion with aerial bombardment.
It was Winston
Churchill, as colonial secretary, who remarked, “I do not understand this
squeamishness about the use of gas. I am strongly in favor of using poison gas
against uncivilized tribes,” for instance the Kurds in northern Iraq.
Churchill was also responsible in part for drawing the current borders of
Iraq, carved out three Ottoman districts—the northern mostly Kurdish district
administered from Mosul, the middle predominately Sunni Arab district,
including Baghdad; and the southern largely Shiite district, whose major city
is Basra.
It was indeed the “imperial arrogance” of the British that angered the Arabs
(and Kurds) of what is now Iraq and motivated them to revolt.
“The governing council has decided to stop all co-operation with the
British until they meet three demands,” declared al-Wa’eli. “To apologize for
what happened, to guarantee that it does not happen again, and third, to
provide some compensation for all the damage they did during the operation,”
demands that prompted a British embassy spokesman in Basra to remark that the
conditions put forward “shouldn’t be a problem,” even as the “Foreign Office
described the demand for an apology as a local issue and not a reflection of
the feelings of the Iraqi prime minister, who met the UK defense secretary on
Wednesday in London,” according to
the Financial Times.
In short, nobody should get too concerned about a few riled up Shi’ites.
“Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari said the incident would not harm his
government’s relations with Britain, while [John Reid, UK Defense Minister]
said the subsequent street unrest in Basra would not deter the 8,500 British
troops stationed in southern Iraq from continuing their mission.”
In other words, the Brits believe it is business as usual with the same degree
of “imperial arrogance,” and no doubt a green light for future undercover
operations designed to keep the Shi’a and Sunni at each others throats and
eventually splinter Iraq into three religious and ethnic pieces, as long
envisioned and proposed by the Israelis and, more recently, their neocon
fellow travelers in America.
Iraqis, characterized as “uncivilized tribes” by revered British politicians,
understand this plot well. “Everyone knows the occupiers’ agenda,” declared
Abdel Hadi al-Daraji, one of al-Sadr’s officials in Basra. “They are in bed
with Mossad and their intention is to keep Iraq an unstable battlefield so
they can exploit their interests in Iraq…. We have to take the moral high
ground and resist this provocation by the British. This is a very dangerous,
very sensitive time in Iraq but we must calm our supporters or we will fall
into the British trap.”
In other words, a Shi’a uprising against the Brits (and Americans) will not
occur until the time is right. Since many Shi’ites consider the SAS plot and
the subsequent “rescue” (flattening buildings and killing Shi’ites in the
process) a “second Abu Ghraib,” a newfound resistance against occupation may
not be far off.
Last year Rumsfeld said the fighting in Iraq was simply the work of “thugs,
gangs and terrorists” and General Myers added that there was “not a Shiite
uprising” in southern Iraq and “Mr. Sadr has a very small following,” as the
Sydney
Morning Herald reported at the time. However, as Ghassan al-Attiyah,
executive director of the Iraq Foundation for Development and Democracy in
Baghdad, explained, there was “a general mood of anti-Americanism among the
people in the streets” that went far beyond al-Sadr’s followers. In the wake
of the SAS blunder and the British response, no doubt this antipathy has
grown, not only against the Americans but the Brits as well.
The British, as characterized by the comments of John Reid, may believe Basra
is “returning progressively to a level of normality” (that is to say,
occupation as usual), but it appears the Shi’a have other ideas. As a primary
example of how just out of touch the corporate media in Britain is, consider
the comment in the Telegraph that the “locals” have “affection” for British
administered occupation, demonstrating that the legacy of “imperial arrogance”
has not subsided—not in Tony Blair’s government or in the ranks his good
friends at the right-wing Telegraph, a newspaper “group” (conglomerate) once
owned by the “The Right Honorable”
Conrad Moffat Black, Baron Black of Crossharbour, a scurrilous neocon who
once “appropriated” (i.e., he stole) over $62 million from a workers’ pension
fund.
|
|