Mr. Kiesling’s Warnings
John Brady Kiesling came to the
limelight with his courageous resignation from the State Department just
before the war had begun in Iraq. He was a career diplomat. Colleagues and
superiors had warned him that he would be throwing away his lifelong
career for “nothing”. But Mr. Kiesling took the step beyond remaining
ordinary, collecting the steady paychecks, and counting for his rewarding
retiring days. After struggling through sleepless nights pondering on
various aspects of the war issue, Mr. Kiesling came to the conclusion that
a unilateral, "preemptive" strike against Iraq would simply not only be
wrong, but harmful to the United States as well.
In his widely circulated resignation
letter Mr. Kiesling wrote, "The policies we are now asked to advance are
incompatible not only with American values but also with American
interests. Our fervent pursuit of war with Iraq is driving us to squander
the international legitimacy that has been America's most potent weapon of
both offense and defense since the days of Woodrow Wilson." The path we
were on would lead to "instability and danger, not security."
Many of Mr. Kiesling’s warnings have
materialized since then. Our world has not become a more stable and
peaceful place after this unjustified war contrary to the endless
propagations of voluminous attributions by the American Enterprise
Institute and its surrogates in various clothes. Like the thousand years
old barbaric tradition, they have displayed and replayed through the long
tentacle of cable news media the prized grotesque photos of dead
“brothers” of Baghdad, while the memory is still fresh for most of the
world population on American rightful protests in displaying of dead and
imprisoned soldiers by the fallen Iraqi regimes during the heights of the
war breeching the Geneva Convention which is applicable to all the world
citizens, Arabs and Non-Arabs, Americans and non-Americans.
This type of hypocrisy, double standards
that irritates many, even the truest friends of America cannot but wonder
what’s really going on behind these seemingly errant policies.
Mounting Attacks
The major battles of Iraq war ended more
than three months ago. Bush’s spectacular landing over American ship,
proclaiming the victory in grandiose fashion were widely televised. But
since then, there are mounting attacks on the American occupying forces in
Iraq. On the average, 12 attacks per day are reportedly been committed
”including assaults by mortar, sniper fire, hand grenades, land mines,
RPGs, and, most chillingly, close-range shots to the back of the head in
the midst of the noonday crowds in central Baghdad. Moreover, reports from
Iraq suggest that the pool of "resistance" recruits and sympathizers is
growing larger. Coalition troops now face not just renegade fedayeen, but
tribesmen bent on vengeance, disgruntled ex-officials and soldiers,
Islamist mujahideen, and simple criminals.”
These attacks are termed as the
desperate acts of old Baathist remnants.
In his recently published article in The
New York Review of Books, Max Rodenbeck observes that after more than a
hundred days of Iraq’s “liberation”, “the occupying power has still not
revealed what it plans to do with wanted Baathists, although it has posted
an almost comically large reward, $25 million, for the bigger fish.
America has still not explained, to general Iraqi satisfaction, what the
goals of its occupation are. It has not set a time limit for its presence.
Nor has it restored public services to the meager standard Iraqis have
long had to suffer, let alone improved them. The world’s most powerful
military machine has not even provided basic security”.
When Rumsfeld and others high in the
Defense Department say that the defeated Baathists are solely responsible
for the attacks on American troops, there might be partial truths in it.
Yes, Saddam’s collapsed regime may have become vengeful, but perhaps there
are other seething elements in action as well in Iraq.
The oppressed, bombarded and the decade
old sanctioned Iraqis are glad to see Saddam’s regime is overthrown, but
their pure distrust, anger and frustration toward the occupying forces,
who are running their nation without any efficient coordination and long
term management plan, who are not providing the basic amenities and
securities to the mass, are equally condemned in every suppressed roar in
the chaotic streets of Baghdad, and also in other cities and rural places.
Manipulation of Public Fears
Till now, the Bush Administration, at
least the hawkish elements are able to manipulate public fears from
September 11 catastrophe to further their aggressive agendas, “they
adopted "the power politics of the schoolyard as their model of human
interaction" and reduced a complex moral universe to a permanent face-off
between "the forces of light and the forces of darkness." They used "lies
and half-truths" to build a case for invading Iraq as "a step toward a
more complete power grab." As the neo-conservatives began to drive
American policy, old-school internationalists tried to come to terms with
them, hoping to retain influence. But accommodation has proved no easy
task.”
Mr. Kiesling sums up this
neo-conservative infested administration as the following: “This is an
administration at war, and you are with them or you are against them”. And
in the process, the rational paths toward reconciliation and peace are
replaced by the irrational divine guidance and a thousand eyes for eye
kinds of vengeance mood.
Misconceptions, Miscalculations and
Misrule
In Iraq, the American Proconsul Paul
Bremer has indeed taken a few positive steps, like his initiative of a
budget that surpassed Saddam’s old budget by two folds. There are also
reports of “new goods and fresh opinions” beginning to give Iraqis a taste
of the potential rewards of freedom.
But Max Rodenbeck points out that amid
these few positive steps, there are countless failures those were
avoidable, and those would have caused less sufferings of the Iraqis who
have already suffered much from Saddam’s brutal regime and American leaded
economic sanctions and rogue war.
It is true that Americans do not have
any ill wills towards Iraq. Most Americans truly wish to see a prospering
Iraq where the ordinary Iraqis live in their peaceful life. The recent
chaotic mess in every parts of Iraq is mostly due to “prewar
misconceptions, wartime miscalculations, and postwar misrule.” There are
no surprises here.
The “prewar misconceptions” was based on
the neo-conservative’s drum rolling portrayal of a quick victory in Iraq
following by a red carpet treatment of the “liberators” that has simply
not been materialized.
The “wartime miscalculations” was based
on Chalabi and Makiya types of expatriate Iraqis who had advised Pentagon
that the “shock and awe” would obliterate all forms of resistance quickly,
with minimal casualties for the Iraqis and Americans alike.
Well, things did not turn this way as
well. The latest conservative estimate of Iraqi civilian casualties has
exceeded the range of 5000-7000; that is “even assuming the number is half
the lower figure, this represents ten times the human toll of September
11, relative to Iraq's population.” Also, uncounted deaths of many
thousands of Iraqi soldiers have hundreds of thousands of grieving family
members alive, fuming in tears-full rage.
During the war, Rumsfeld was gloating in
his neatly ironed suit on how precise American bombardments were, and in
two-thirds of these cases, he was right about it. But there were still
1200 cluster bombs “dropped from the air, and many thousands more lobbed
by artillery. (The effect of this was particularly devastating at
Baghdad's airport, where US troops feinted, withdrew, and then crushed six
battalions of counterattacking Iraqis.) Each of the aerial bombs contained
200–300 bomblets, of which, on average, some 5 percent failed to explode.
The dud rate for artillery-fired munitions was triple that figure. In
other words, an absolute minimum of 15,000 such deadly objects are now
scattered across Iraq, not to mention all the other forms of lethal
discarded ordnance.”
Back in November of 2002, an expert
panel opined that disbanding the Iraqi army swiftly would cause tremendous
resentments in the 400,000 strong Iraqi army, but the Bush Administration
ordered Bremer to do this anyway, creating untoward angers in a defeated
and now unemployed army and among their famished families.
Shifting Public Sentiment
Before and during the war in Iraq, the
peace activists around the globe were united, coordinated with each other
from across the oceans and mountains; borders and thousand miles distance
didn’t matter; language barriers were forgotten. Their goal was the
unified stance against the war, against the killing of children, men,
women and elderly Iraqis. There were millions poured into the streets,
lighting the candlelight vigils. The Priests, Rabbis, Imams and Pundits
marched in unison forgetting the mundane theological crackpot differences.
The atheists, agnostics, believers and communists and capitalists were
under the same umbrella. A Muslim woman cried loudly hearing Pope John
Paul’s last moment plea from the Vatican podium; Devoted Hindus raised
their hands in prayers along with praying Imams in New Delhi’s interfaith
march; this world of ours were overwhelmingly against this war and it
remains so.
After the major bloodshed ended, the
muscles of might and bombardment fright had incinerated the despised
Saddam regime, thousands were buried and mourned for, the peace activists
lost their steam, they felt stupefied finding that their heart-felt
protests could not stop the war, could not bring a peaceful resolution
that could have saved thousands of those who are now decaying in unmarked
graves, or the wounded Iraqis living their miserable lives, amputees, and
blind, feeling burden to their overburdened family.
With the soaring quagmire like
environment existing in Iraq, where all the prewar premonitions, warnings
from the anti-war activists are coming to float around Bush
Administration’s forceful Merry-Go-Round depiction of the real events,
anti-war peace activists are getting motivated once again, their days of
slumber are getting replaced with the vitalized new goals for achieving a
non-violent world.
United Nations in the Shadow
Paul Rogat Loeb writes in his recent
Znet article, “To most Iraqis, US troops have become symbols of
colonialism and chaos. The longer they stay, the more they become targets,
and the more Iraqis will resent the US for imposing our will and grabbing
for oil while failing to secure basic needs like electricity, clean water,
and physical safety. Because the UN represents the entire international
community, including eighteen Arab states, a UN administration, in
contrast, would be far less likely to be seen as a foreign military
occupation. Although the new forces would probably still face some
opposition, both armed and unarmed, they won't be tarred with the same
neocolonial agenda. Iraqis wouldn't view them as simply in it to dominate
their country or project American power. Without the disruption of a
growing armed insurgency, efforts at restoring basic services, maintaining
stability, and setting up a democratic and representative Iraqi government
would be far easier. A UN Mandate might even allow a similar transition to
when UN forces finally ended Indonesia's bloody occupation of East Timor
and supervised that country's return to democracy.”
One may ask: why is the Bush
Administration so opposed to the ideas of giving United Nations the upper
hand in this messy transition period in Iraq? It is perhaps the powerful
capital interests of the neo-conservatives, and the profit-seeking
corporations combined who are behind this administration’s opposition to
the United Nation’s leading role idea.
Paul Wolfowitz was blunt in
his remark this week that he would not like to see UN taking the
leadership role in Iraq because he believes UN to be painfully slow in its
execution of plans. There is no surprise here either. This is the same man
who before the war was promulgating the fabricated ideas of tons and tons
of WMDs scattered around in Iraq, who was forceful in his global agenda of
seeing neo-conservative’s imperial dream come true.
A few decades before, in another blunder
filled American adventure, many thousands of American soldiers gave their
life for a battle that seem quite senseless in today’s light. The same
arrogance, similar fervent pursuance of divine ideology based goals were
in play in those blood ravaged Vietnam war era, killing hundreds of
thousands of Vietnamese civilians along with lost lives of American
soldiers in the jungle of Southeast Asia.
Yes, Iraq is not Vietnam. America has
acquired vastly more sophisticated killer machines and its technological
and economic superiority is unsurpassed. But in the guerilla war, where
the rage and resentment arising from witnessing beloveds’ torn up bodies,
suffering through bleak and frustrating agonies of lawlessness, Saddam’s
strong military boots are replaced by American military boots with no
clear goal and exit strategy of the occupying forces in sight, the
increasing likelihood is there of a more stronger resistance warfare
spreading all over Iraq.
Only the international communities
united under the established international laws abide by the UN, can save
the miseries and sufferings of Iraqis, it can also put international peace
keeping forces who will be less target to the guerilla warfare thus saving
young American soldiers’ lives from bullets and hand grenades.
“Chas. Freeman, the retired ambassador,
is more direct. "We have a national mentality now that says, if you see a
problem, shoot it! Because we know that we're very, very good at shooting
things."
But shooting the problem will not bring
peace in Iraq.
The World Health Organization (WHO) calls it the “biggest
mass poisoning of a population in history”. There are millions of
Bangladeshis exposed to poisonous arsenic from drinking water. Even rice
and other crops irrigated with toxic water are in question. The rise of
cancer, ulcers, gangrene, and painful warts are reported from various
corners of Bangladesh those are directly linked to arsenic poisoning. WHO
says that within the next decade one-tenth of all deaths in southern
Bangladesh will be due to this arsenic crisis. That is about 20,000 deaths
per year.
Will anyone be held responsible for this?
Arsenic, Microbes and Tragedy of Turtle
Pace
Scientists observe that the arsenic poisoning in water is
a natural phenomenon. Many of them believe that arsenic has been eroded
naturally from the Himalayas by the Ganges over thousands of years and
deposited amid silt in the river’s delta region.
Many believe that
arsenic used to be attached with the silt on iron hydroxide particles. And
now, either “as bacteria break down the iron compounds, “ or “due to
changes caused by pumping”
of millions of wells, arsenic is coming
loose from the silt and seeping into the water. Most wells in Bangladesh
get their water from the depth zone of 65 to 260 feet below the surface
level, and this is the same zone that arsenic is poisoning water as well.
A few MIT scientists put emphasis on the microbe’s
involvement; they believe that “arsenic-breathing bacteria may be playing
a role in the arsenic contamination of water wells in Bangladesh.”
This research may provide valuable insights on the ongoing efforts by the
researchers on this tragic issue.
There are lots to learn on these arsenic-breathing
microbes. In an article published in the Science journal, two of the
researchers wrote, “It's possible that they are environmentally
significant. For instance, they may play a role in arsenic contamination
of water wells by converting arsenic from a largely inert form into a
toxic, water-soluble form.”
Many calls it a great tragedy for the poor people of
Bangladesh who are already suffering from devastating yearly floods,
immense poverty, corruption and other misfortunes associated with any
other poor nations.
The Bangladeshi government and other international
organizations have taken a few good steps. The World Bank is currently
funding a project to survey and replace wells in 4000 villages of
Bangladesh. But due to the sheer bureaucracy since the inception of this
project in 1998, “so far, only about 15 percent of the country’s wells
have been tested”.
That’s called the turtle pace and is not acceptable
in this increasingly alarming arsenic crisis.
Noble Goal of UNICEF and Bangladesh
Government?
Drinking water is becoming more and more a scarce resource
around the globe. On June 5, the World’s “Environment Day”, U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan provided a stark gloomy picture of this
priceless commodity, he said, “Water-related diseases kill a child every
eight seconds. One person in six lives without regular access to safe
drinking water. Over twice that number -- 2.4 billion -- lack access to
adequate sanitation."
In the beginning, a few decades ago, due to the pollution
on the surface water in Bangladesh, due to the rising cholera and typhoid
and other water born diseases among the populace, especially the children,
it was UNICEF that led the mass wells digging effort in Bangladesh. About
10 million or more wells now exist in Bangladesh from this massive effort.
UNICEF’s original goal and intention were noble. They wanted to replace
the polluted water sources, rivers and ponds that caused diseases and
deaths among the populace.
In the time of distress, and arsenic is nothing but a
full-blown catastrophe that is still materializing, one cannot stop
wondering, is their any responsibilities that UNICEF should assume? Does
the past and previous Bangladeshi government have any dubious roles in
this tragedy? No saner person can accuse any purposeful, intentional
maligns regarding arsenic crisis in Bangladesh, but is there any criminal
negligence involved?
From the very beginning when this crisis came out to the
public, UNICEF kept their points of opinion straight regarding their
inability of identifying arsenic in any possible testing before
undertaking the massive well-digging operations in Bangladesh. They
maintain that at the time, standard procedures for testing the safety of
groundwater did not include tests for arsenic [which] had never before
been found in the kind of geological formations that exist in Bangladesh.
But there are critics who do not buy into UNICEF’s
official hand-wash version of responsibility. Many believes that it was
religion like dogma held by the public health officials at the time
without the knowledge of local geology, who maintained that ground water
was safe without initiating a thorough scientific tests that would include
arsenic test as well. Even in late 1980, before the arsenic news finally
came out from its slumber, a British engineer named Peter Ravenscroft blew
the alarm whistle on arsenic in ground water from his testing in
Bangladesh. He said that he first found arsenic in groundwater in the late
1980s and published his findings in 1990.
Though there were alarming number of arsenic poisoning
cases being reported across Bangladesh, as far as 1985 when ill
Bangladeshis were crossing border to India for medical treatment, but the
Government of Bangladesh maintains that it knew about the crisis from
1993. It took another two precious years before acknowledging the
widespread arsenic problem. And it took a few more years for the
international organizations before offering their monetary help in the
battle against arsenic.
The British Geological Survey Saga
The British Geological Survey is in trouble. In May 2003,
a British judge ruled that 750 Bangladeshi arsenic victims should be able
to sue the British Geological Survey, or BGS, a British government-owned
research body, for failing to spot the poison in wells sunk across
Bangladesh over the past 20 years.
In 1992, BGS conducted a “reconnaissance survey” in
Bangladesh to find out water quality in 150 wells “in central and
northeastern Bangladesh”.
Though the World Health Organization had set
international standards for testing arsenic in water supplies
eight
years prior to BGS’ survey in Bangladesh, BGS for seemingly unexplainable
“ignorant” reasons did not include arsenic as the trace elements in their
tests.
Geochemistry professor John McArthur at London’s
University College firmly believe that BGS should have looked for arsenic
in their tests since “the BGS should have known about a series of studies
linking an epidemic of arsenic poisoning just over the border in western
India to contaminated water pumped up from the Ganges delta. They included
a report by the World Health Organization published four years before.”
The British judge was quite right that there is indeed a case that BGS
must explain about its inability to conduct the arsenic test that could
have detected the crisis years earlier.
Statistics of Deaths of the Poor
For the vast majority of poor Bangladeshis, who have
limited access to clean water, their ponds, rivers are polluted, who had
depended on the deep-wells for so long, now are facing dilemma.
Water is the most essential element of life. And now they
have the choice of drinking either the polluted water from the surface
sources or poisoned water from deep-wells.
Arsenic is a slow killer. There are already high rises of
malicious diseases among the Bangladeshi populace, and in this
impoverished nation, who keeps the meticulous statistics of deaths of the
poor on the countryside?
Bottled Water: Are They Safe?
Like sprouted mushrooms, there are plentiful of bottled
water industries already doing good business, taking this lucrative
water-crisis as a profit making opportunity. It is not to say that there
is anything wrong in this type of business if they really can provide safe
drinking water for the mass. In a recent two-year research studies
conducted by the international researchers
, it was found that most
bottled water on sale in Bangladesh is unsafe for drinking. These
researchers claimed that the bottled water does not conform to
international standards for safe drinking water.
Here are their findings: “More than half the bottles
carried information about minerals and other constituents, which were not
well founded. The researchers, however, didn't disclose the brand names of
the bottled water, certified mostly by the Bangladesh Standard and Testing
Institute, the official authority to certify safety of these products.
Plasma Plus, an application research laboratory, carried out the water
sample analysis on 58 brands of drinking water including four imported
brands labeled as mineral water. The study also showed 80 percent of the
manufacturers didn't mention the address or location of their plants as
required by the regulation. Some addresses were also found to be false.”
Even if with strict government policies and regulations,
safer water can be purchased through these bottled water companies, it
cannot be the solution for the millions of poor Bangladeshis who won’t be
able to afford the relatively exorbitant price associated with these
bottle water that only well-to-do folks can afford in Bangladesh.
Promising Developments
There are some promising developments in tackling the
arsenic problem are starting to coming out for the public. “Procter &
Gamble is developing a flocculant agent to remove arsenic and heavy metals
from water — a procedure that is being field tested in Bangladesh” last
winter.
There are positive developments on harvesting rainwater as the
possible solution to this crisis; many Bangladeshi villages have already
adopted this technique. Other manufacturers, researchers are developing
new water purification equipments, methods. The major obstacle is to
developing and marketing the water purification equipments that can be
affordable for all Bangladeshis.
The World Bank and UNICEF are jointly working on this
aspect, lending their essential monetary help for various projects. And
why shouldn’t they? It’s their gone awry “good” project is the cause of
arsenic crisis in Bangladesh. They should open their coffers more
leniently in finding the permanent solutions of this dreadful crisis.