Skip Navigation | HOME | UK Indymedia | Editorial Guidelines | Mission Statement | About Us | Contact | Help | Support Us

West Country Features | UK Features | West Country Newswire | UK Newswire |

pro-war journalist admits he is wrong

Andy | 07.05.2004 10:05 | Anti-militarism

This is one of those articles that you have to pay to get on-line, so I have posted it here becasue no-one should miss loathsome pro-war liberal Johann Hari squirming

How I misjudged the Americans
I wish these pictures were the result of a bad night-shift in Abu Ghraib.
Johann Hari
07 May 2004


A GI with a lacerating grin and empty eyes drags a collapsed, naked Iraqi on a leash like a dog. A cellophane-and-ice-packed Iraqi corpse with a broken nose and empty expression lies on a slab. "So this is the freedom and democracy you have been cheer-leading for," an anti-war friend says, as she waves the pictures in my direction.

Part of me wants to explain that under Saddam, torturers were rewarded, promoted, venerated. At least these torturers will be shamed and punished. But it feels like a hollow, debased excuse. It's not as though overthrowing Saddam gives the allies a certain amount of moral credit in the bank for it to draw on. They can't do everything short of gassing the Kurds, all the while protesting that - hey! - we're not as bad as Saddam. Every fresh human rights abuse - from the day of the liberation on - is unnecessary and savage.

And these pictures are only a small part of the story. I wish they were the result of negligible "rogue elements" within the US army, a bad night-shift in Abu Ghraib. They are not. Amnesty International said yesterday, "Our extensive research in Iraq suggests that this is not an isolated incident... [We have] received frequent reports of torture or other ill-treatment by coalition forces during the past year. Detainees have reported being routinely subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment during arrest and detention ... Virtually none of the allegations of torture or ill-treatment has been adequately investigated by the authorities."

"So," my friend said, "are you finally prepared to admit you were naive to think we can ride the beast of US power for human rights ends?" Back in 2002, when an invasion first loomed, we were looking at a three-piece jigsaw - Iraq, Britain and America - and I still think I judged two of the pieces right. On Iraq, it was correct to say two things that ran against the received wisdom of the anti-war majority. There would be no "peace" for Iraqis with Saddam left in power, and a majority of Iraqis wanted the invasion to proceed. (Even Hayder Sabbar Abd, the torture victim who has spoken out over the past few days, wanted the invasion to proceed.)

On Britain, it was right to say that Blair was motivated partly by a genuine desire to help Iraqis, despite his nonsense about WMD. Look at his 1999 intervention in Sierra Leone to see his sincere - and accurate - belief that sometimes military power can be used for humanitarian ends.

But I misjudged - badly, terribly, offensively - the biggest piece: the Bush administration. What I should have realised was that there was a passing coincidence between the interests of Iraqis and the interests of US state power. Nothing more. It was right to exploit that coincidence to get rid of Saddam; however bad things are today, the Iraqi future looks better now than if Saddam was still in power and Uday and Qusay were lined up to take over. But I implied that the Americans were doing this, in large part, for humanitarian reasons. That was wrong.

To see George Bush, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld as the praetorian guard of Amnesty International - as American propaganda would like us to believe - is lunacy. They arm, fund and support some hideous dictatorships. For example, several recent books have extensively documented the relationship between the House of Saud - one of the most stinking tyrannies on earth - and the House of Bush, reaching back for decades. If they were motivated primarily (or even incidentally) to spread human rights, their policies towards - to name a few - Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan, the IMF and Venezuela would be very different.

Any humanitarian gain as a result of the invasion of Iraq was - in the US-held territories - a collateral benefit. The US government mounted this invasion for geo-strategic reasons of its own. It may be that one of those reasons was to burst the bubble of tyranny in the Middle East that they have created and fostered for more than 50 years - not because they have had a Damascene conversion, but because it backfired horribly on 11 September. But that has yet to be proven. The interests of Iraqis and the US government converged for a moment. I always said that when they parted, we should keep siding with Iraqis. That parting has now happened: a majority (57 per cent) of Iraqis in the latest poll want - for the first time - the US troops to leave within two months. If the left-wingers who backed the war for human rights reasons do not now side with the Iraqis, then all the accusations against us - that we were simply shallow apologists for US power - will be vindicated.

So where do we go from here? Bush has the power to stop the torture immediately. The solution is not for the President to warble barely coherent semi-apologies to Arab reporters. It is to address the US troops and private contractors directly. He should say: "This is your Commander-in-Chief. I am going to give you a binding order. If you think you are being told by your superiors to commit acts of torture, ignore them. Disobey. I am your ultimate boss, and I am telling you now - torture is not the policy of the US Army. If you are caught breaking this rule - and you will be - you won't just be sacked from the army. You will be jailed for a very, very long time."

Anything less than this should be mocked as insincere, incomplete or incompetent. But to say it, Bush would have to decide that the dubious benefits the US accrues from using semi-torture, extra-judicial detentions and deliberate "heavy handedness" are far outweighed by the damage to America's reputation when these techniques are exposed. This is a clear political choice.

The best long-term solution - as ever - lies with backing a majority of the Iraqi people. They wanted the invasion and, for a year, they wanted the troops to stay. (I am using the opinion polls here. Do you have a better way to find out what Iraqis want?) Now Iraqi opinion has turned in favour of an imminent withdrawal. If the Americans had done as many of us urged and opted for elections on 30 June, their clear will could have been realised.

It's not too late: a constitution and election could still be organised quite quickly. Sure, international troops might still be needed to protect a democratic Iraq from being overthrown by internal totalitarians - but that is a judgement call for a democratic Iraqi government.

Of course what the Bush administration anticipated was that it would establish a neat client state in Iraq that would provide a steady supply of oil and a location for US bases in the region. It needs to admit now that it is engaged in damage limitation. The situation in Iraq has not and will not unfold as Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz anticipated.

Iraq cannot wait until January for an election, as the United States proposes. Nine months of ruling a population that no longer wants the allied forces there - including a long, hot summer - will be disastrous. They must set a date for elections - full, free, open elections - very soon. Give up on the hope of US bases, and bank on a democratic Iraqi government trading its oil. The allies have a choice now between a democratic withdrawal and quagmire. If there are more photos of KKK-style humiliations and frozen corpses - with no end to the occupation within months - then Iraq will burn.

 j.hari@independent.co.uk

Andy

Download this article in pdf format >>

Email this article to someone >>

Submit an addition or make a quick comment on this article >>

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

Yawn

07.05.2004 15:56

So the evidence is finally so enormous that even the pro-war morons have to say so out loud, to show how manly they are to admit that they were wrong.

Since Hari and the rest of the corporate columnists are mostly wrong about everything they write about, why should we give a fuck about them and their paid weekly ignorant spoutings?

This ain't news.

Ian


Why all this fuss about interrogating prisoners?

07.05.2004 17:43

It's not as if it's ever been much fun to get taken prisoner by soldiers in a war zone. And if they think you might have information that could save them getting killed, then they are going to interrogate you, using whatever technique is most likely to get you to talk. Hell, that's how soldiers are trained. They're *supposed* to do that. When I were a nipper, even the army cadets (under 16s) were being taught to be nasty to their prisoners. The hypocrisy of ministers and pundits, wringing their hands and promising to punish the culprits, is just nauseating.
These things happen in war-zones. No one should be surprised, except those so naive as to believe that a war can be 'gentlemanly' or 'honourable' (which doesn't include ministers, and especially not ministers at the Ministry of War).
If people find these things shocking, but they didn't oppose the war at the outset, they should try to memorise these images, and the sense of shock they engendered, so that they can recall them the next time the government tries to lead us into an overseas 'policing action'.
All wars are like this.

Mr. Demeanour


Torture - This is the American way....

08.05.2004 08:10

Falluja massacre - child corpses
Falluja massacre - child corpses

Just consider their violent TV, films and gun culture based on mindless, insecure machismo, exported and now much ingrained also in English-speaking UK and Australia.
It is a natural consequence - the brutalisation of individuals who have taken part in an illegal attack often against defenceless populations and the USUK use of illegal WMD of cluster bombs and DU, the killing of thousands of civilians and some one million deaths, some very slow, from the prior 12 years of sanctions.
Such actions, lacking any rationale or regard for the Geneva Convention, make the current media fuss over the torture and a relatively few interrogation deaths seem a bit misplaced or surprising in light of the human slaughter recently carried out by the same foces, and often censored or "sanatised" by the same media.

The illegal attack is based on an imperialist and racist mentality of assumed superiority which is masked by a dangerous religious fundamentalism, although with overt expression of this is being suppressed in Blair and Bush.
There is serious need for a real democracy with PR in USUK as a means to eliminate unintelligent government.

As Kurt Vonnegut wondered .......... "How many Tim Mcveaghs will come home this time?"

These pictures have more power than afadavits from those families whose relatives have been murdered by USUK forces and mercenaries.
The primary issue must focus on the denial still in place over the millions killed and maimed by the US arms/oil cartel-driven sanctions and the USUK illegal invasion.
The primary objective must be to initiate real democracies in USUK with PR and avoid christian fundamentalists loonies like Bliar and Bush getting into power ever again.

Hari is not deserving of his unexplained presence in The Independant, which normally engages reasonably informed and intelligent writers. I must admit I haven't read the item in detail because I have found his writing so stupid in the past. Any that supported the illegal attack are more than morally liable for the consequences.





Verite Sparks


Standard CIA torture

09.05.2004 14:26

There is nothing unusual about the torture in Iran. This is standard CIA-directed torture, along with throwing bodies of interrogated people out of helicoters into the sea. This has been done all over Africa, Asia and Central/ South America through centuries of European colonialism and post-Second World War neo-colonialism. The difference is we are seeing it more graphically this time. It is a good lesson to question everything any journalist writes and not be lulled into false security thinking they are left or right-wing. It is always easier for countries to look at the atrocities committed by others in order to distance themselves and feel morally superior which is why we have so much news of what US soldiers are doing and less about what UK soldiers are doing. Time for the mainstream media to finally bury the delusion of 'decency' in British neo-colonialism.....The people at the TOP must pay for this, as that is where the orders come from.

Megan


Publish

Publish your news

Do you need help with publishing?

Kollektives

Birmingham
Cambridge
Liverpool
London
Oxford
Sheffield
South Coast
Wales
World

Other UK IMCs
Bristol/South West
London
Northern Indymedia
Scotland

Server Appeal

West Country Topics

Analysis
Animal Liberation
Anti-militarism
Anti-racism
Bio-technology
Climate Chaos
Culture
Ecology
Education
Free Spaces
Gender
Globalisation
Health
Indymedia
Migration
Repression
Social Struggles
Technology
Workers' Movements
Zapatista

West Country Actions 2007

West Country Actions 2006

April 2006 No Borders Days of Action
Art and Activism Caravan 2006
Climate Camp 2006
French CPE uprising 2006
G8 Russia 2006
Lebanon War 2006
March 18 Anti War Protest
Mayday 2006
Oaxaca Uprising
Refugee Week 2006
Rossport Solidarity
Transnational Day of Action Against Migration Controls
WSF 2006

West Country Actions 2005

DSEi 2005
G8 2005
WTO Hong Kong 2005

West Country Actions 2004

European Social Forum
FBI Server Seizure
May Day 2004
Venezuela

West Country Actions 2003

Bush 2003
DSEi 2003
Evian G8
May Day 2003
No War F15
Saloniki Prisoner Support
Thessaloniki EU
WSIS 2003

Languages

english

IMCs


www.indymedia.org

Projects
print
radio
satellite tv
video

Africa

Europe
antwerpen
armenia
athens
austria
barcelona
belarus
belgium
belgrade
brussels
bulgaria
calabria
croatia
cyprus
emilia-romagna
estrecho / madiaq
galiza
germany
grenoble
hungary
ireland
istanbul
italy
la plana
liege
liguria
lille
linksunten
lombardia
madrid
malta
marseille
nantes
napoli
netherlands
northern england
nottingham imc
paris/île-de-france
patras
piemonte
poland
portugal
roma
romania
russia
sardegna
scotland
sverige
switzerland
torun
toscana
ukraine
united kingdom
valencia

Latin America
argentina
bolivia
chiapas
chile
chile sur
cmi brasil
cmi sucre
colombia
ecuador
mexico
peru
puerto rico
qollasuyu
rosario
santiago
tijuana
uruguay
valparaiso
venezuela

Oceania
aotearoa
brisbane
burma
darwin
jakarta
manila
melbourne
perth
qc
sydney

South Asia
india


United States
arizona
arkansas
asheville
atlanta
Austin
binghamton
boston
buffalo
chicago
cleveland
colorado
columbus
dc
hawaii
houston
hudson mohawk
kansas city
la
madison
maine
miami
michigan
milwaukee
minneapolis/st. paul
new hampshire
new jersey
new mexico
new orleans
north carolina
north texas
nyc
oklahoma
philadelphia
pittsburgh
portland
richmond
rochester
rogue valley
saint louis
san diego
san francisco
san francisco bay area
santa barbara
santa cruz, ca
sarasota
seattle
tampa bay
united states
urbana-champaign
vermont
western mass
worcester

West Asia
Armenia
Beirut
Israel
Palestine

Topics
biotech

Process
fbi/legal updates
mailing lists
process & imc docs
tech