by Robert Jensen
One of the hardest jobs in the world
has to be "Pentagon spokesperson," the fellow
who gets stuck explaining that up is down and black is white.
For example, when the United States and
Great Britain last week violated international
law once again with another bombing raid on Iraqi air
defense sites, a Pentagon spokesperson had to explain why U.S.
aggression is necessary to keep the peace.
"The main aim of the strike was to
protect our aircraft and our pilots," the spokes-colonel
said, "and obviously the way you do that is to degrade
[Iraq's] ability to target and hit us."
The aircraft and pilots in question
have for the past decade been patrolling the so-called "no-fly zones" in
northern and southern Iraq, in which Iraq is
forbidden to launch aircraft. The United States and
Britain claim that a 1991 U.N. Security Council resolution
authorizes them to bomb at will.
The only problem is that the resolution
cited clearly does not set up the
zones or authorize any nation to
unilaterally carry out such actions. In short:
The U.S. and U.K. are perpetrating acts of aggression that
violate international law.
The rest of the world understands this,
but no challenge is mounted simply
because the United States is the biggest
bully on the block, and in this case the law is
what bully says.
So, the hard-working Pentagon
spokesperson has to make sure that no one notices the obvious: If the
United States truly wanted to protect aircraft
and pilots, it would stop flying illegal and provocative military
missions over another sovereign nation.
The spokesperson's problem is all made
more difficult, and sordid, by the hypocritical
rationale given: The no-fly zones, we are told, are there
to protect the Kurds in the north and the Shi'a Muslims in the
south from Iraqi repression. That repression is real enough, but I doubt
that the Shi'a, who attempted to rise up in 1991 after the war and were
slaughtered by Saddam Hussein's army under the watchful eye of U.S.
forces, are reassured to know the United States is now their protector.
Nor are the Kurds, who have been used as a political ping-pong ball by
Washington for decades, likely to be bolstered
by the news.
Admittedly, the spokesperson's bosses
have a difficult job, too. U.S. policy toward Iraq has for a decade been a
combination of sadism and ineptitude. The cornerstone of the policy has
been the harshest economic embargo in modern
history, which U.N. studies indicate are directly responsible for the
death of 1 million Iraqi civilians. These deaths are
not accidental; recent revelations show that U.S. officials knew
that sanctions would disable the Iraqi water system and cause massive
civilian death.
Perhaps U.S. officials once thought the
sanctions would force Saddam Hussein from power, but after 11 years it is
clear the embargo has actually strengthened his
regime. So, the United States stumbles around looking
for a way out of the corner it has painted itself into. Congress
votes money to support ineffectual and exiled
Iraqi resistance groups, and national security officials talk tough about
military action.
Although Bush administration officials
seem even more eager to escalate the level of
violence, this illegal U.S. conduct is a bipartisan affair; the
attacks went on throughout the Clinton administration as well.
Republicans and Democrats alike seem perfectly happy to violate
international law and reject the overwhelming
international consensus to end the sanctions. On
both sides of the aisle, it is agreed that the U.S. upholds the rule of
law by violating the law and presses forward with diplomacy by
trashing diplomacy.
No matter which party is in power, nary
a mention of these unpleasant facts shows up in
the mainstream press or on television news. The fault lies
not with individual journalists but with the ideological framework
for reporting on U.S. policy, which takes as a given that the United
States has the power, and hence the right, to
impose its will on the world, with extreme violence if necessary.
So, while this sadistic incompetence
continues, the rest of the world waits for the
global bully to back down. These other nations are well aware
that Hussein is a thug in charge of a gangster regime, but they
also know that the welfare of Iraqi civilians
and the hope of real peace in the region requires bringing Iraq back into
the family of nations.
Mr. Robert
Jensen is a professor of journalism at the University of
Texas at Austin.
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