After a long hiatus..
Bread, Circuses, Uday and
Qusay
Gruesome. There's no other way to describe the
pictures of Uday and Qusay Hussein that appeared in the media. But what's more
appalling than these badly photographed death portraits is the response to this
double murder by the corporate media, the American people, and above all else
George Bush and Donald Rumsfeld. It would seem we have become a nation of
voyeuristic sadists. It wasn't enough to simply hear about these grisly murders
-- millions of us had to see the bloodstained result. The Pentagon more than
obliged. It gleefully passed out CD-ROMs containing the
photographs.
"This is an unusual situation," said Donald Rumsfeld when
asked by he media why the photos were released. "This regime has been in power
for decades. These two individuals were particularly vicious individuals... They
are now dead... The Iraqi people have been waiting for confirmation of that and
they in my view deserve having confirmation of that."
But more than the
Iraqi people, the photos are intended for US public consumption.
Bush must
realize that killing the two Hussein brothers -- if, in fact, they are truly
dead and these are not the legendary doubles of Uday and Qusay -- will not put
an end to the guerilla war brewing in Iraq, or will it stifle the calls by
millions of Iraqis for the prompt departure of US troops. No, if indeed Uday and
Qusay were rubbed out -- it is more than appropriate to use mafia terminology
for what Bush and Crew are doing -- it was intended to feed the American
public's desire for "results" in the so-called war on terrorism. After all, if
numerous polls mean anything, millions of Americans believe Saddam Hussein is
personally responsible for the horrors of September 11, 2001. Apparently, Uday
and Qusay were also guilty of crimes against the American people. Of course,
there is absolutely no evidence Saddam or his sons ever did anything to one
single American -- sure, they tortured and killed plenty of Iraqis, but never
touched a single American.
I wonder, does George Bush feel better now
about the alleged assassination attempt on his father? For Bush Junior, killing
people in Iraq is personal. "There's no doubt (that Saddam) can't stand us,"
Bush said at a Republican fund-raising event in Houston in September of 2002.
"After all, this is the guy that tried to kill my Dad at one time."
In
response to this inconclusively validated assassination attempt, newly elected
Clinton fired over 20 cruise missiles into Baghdad without UN approval, killing
dozens of civilians, including the internationally known Layla al-Altar, artist
and Director General of Iraq's National Center for Arts. But then Clinton was
simply following the pattern established by Dubya's daddy who, as a sort of
sadistic farewell as he prepared to depart office, ordered hundreds of cruise
missiles and air strikes to be launched against Iraq. These illegal attacks
resulted in scores of civilian deaths. One cruise missile hit the Al Rashid
Hotel and killed two hotel service employees. Bush was told Saddam was attending
an international Islamic meeting in the Al Rashid at the time. As usual, in the
long-standing Bush vendetta against Saddam Hussein, innocents are almost always
the ones to suffer and die. Meanwhile, the perps get to go fishing at
Kennebunkport.
"As the one who made the decision to [release the Uday and
Qusay photographs], I can say it was not a snap decision," Rumsfeld argued.
"This is not a practice the United States engages in on a normal basis." He's
right -- the US usually doesn't hand out proof of its murderous deeds
willy-nilly; many such "operations" remain covert and hidden away from the press
and the American people for decades.
As Tommy Franks admitted during
Bush's invasion, the Pentagon is not in the business of counting dead people.
But according to the Iraq Body Count project, between 6,000 and nearly 8,000
civilians have died so far, not counting the 1.6 million people who have died as
a result of the sanctions put in place by Bush Senior and the United Nations and
stringently -- and sadistically -- maintained by Clinton and Bush Junior. Prior
to the depredations of these war criminals, Iraq was widely regarded as having
the finest health care system in the Middle East. After Gulf Invasion I,
however, between 4,500 to 6,000 children died from preventable disease and
malnutrition every month. Some say the death rate is even worse now after Bush
II's vendetta against Saddam Hussein.
The American people were by and
large ignorant -- or if aware, querulously refuse to accept responsiblity -- of
these massive war crimes conducted against the children of Iraq. Fox News, CNN,
CBS, NBC, ABC, the whole of the corporate media, mostly ignored the crimes
perpetuated against innocent Iraqis, as they ignored those committed against the
people of Afghanistan. "It seems too perverse to focus too much on the
casualties or hardship in Afghanistan," wrote CNN Chairman Walter Isaacson in a
memo back in October, 2001. "DO NOT USE photos on Page 1A showing civilian
casualties from the U.S. war on Afghanistan," Ray Glenn, copy desk chief of the
News Herald in Panama City, Florida, warned his employees on October 31, 2001.
"Our sister paper in Fort Walton Beach has done so and received hundreds and
hundreds of threatening emails and the like. AlsoÖ DO NOT USE wire stories that
lead with civilian casualties from the U.S. war in AfghanistanÖ Failure to
follow any of these or other standing rules could put your job in jeopardy." In
other words, in Bush's America, telling the truth can cost you your job and put
your family at risk. It can result in threatening emails sent by enraged
flag-wavers and armchair sadists.
"There is a distinct change in
journalism since the September 11 terrorist attacks. The press has failed to
perform its crucial role of government watchdog and instead become the
American-flag waving, jingoistic press of the First World War," wrote Victoria
E. Sama, former CNN International producer, to Eason Jordan of CNN on March 24,
2003. "Reporting the number of Iraqi civilian casualties may damage support for
the president's war. Or maybe it won't. That's for American viewers to decide.
It is not CNN's job to report only what is popular. It is not CNN's job to
become a cog in the president's propaganda machine. It is CNN's job to report
the truth, and to find facts that help citizens make an informed decision about
the war in Iraq. Please don't fail the American public, and yourselves,
again."
Only politically correct murders will be reported -- and shown in
hideous detail. The corporate media and Bush stand-ups wasted precious little
time enumerating the brutish crimes of the Hussein brothers. "Odai kills people
for fun, and Qusai kills people in a very businesslike fashion," remarked Bush
neocon and former CIA chief James Woolsey. "These particular two people were the
head of the regime, which was not just a security threat because of its weapons
program but was responsible for the torture and killing of thousands and
thousands of innocent Iraqis," chimed Bush poodle Tony Blair. "I don't want to
overstate that, but psychologically it's a huge step forward," said another Bush
fellow traveler, Australian Prime Minister John Howard.
In other words,
for the people of Australia, Britain, and the United States these horrid murders
are a welcome relief from the reality of what's actually going on in Iraq -- an
unfolding quagmire with no end in sight and Saddam still on the loose and
apparently thumbing his nose at Bush and Crew in regularly released audio
recordings.
Bush, continuing his now well-established "smoke 'em out,
bring in dead or alive" cowboy rhetoric, has done little more than serve up two
dead Arabs, and like frontier sheriffs of yore has placed their bullet-riddled
bodies on boards in the town square for all to see. Now that one or two
Americans are dying each day in occupied Iraq, and Saddam has apparently gone
the way of Osama, the vengeful American public -- or at least a considerable
chunk of its flag-waving constituency -- wants blood like the Roman masses
wanted the blood of slaves and Christians in the Colosseum. Our Emperor Caligula
is more than willing to give them what they demand.
It hardly matters
that the admittedly sadistic sons of Saddam Hussein had nothing to do with
al-Qaeda or weapons of mass destruction. If Bush and Rumsfeld can't get at
Saddam Hussein directly, they will settle for massacring his family instead --
or at least those who pretend to be his family. According to Robert Fisk, a
14-year-old killed by the Bush posse may be one of Saddam's grandsons. This
detail, of course, made it in few corporate owned newspapers or was it repeated
by Sean Hannity over at the Bush Ministry of Propaganda.
Meanwhile, oil
executives are confident the murders in Mosul will be good for business, as
murders in Third World counties often are for transnational corporations. Now
that Uday and Qusay are dead, they believe, the attacks on the main pipeline
from Kirkuk to Turkey will cease. An Oil Ministry official told the Associated
Press the murders could have a "positive impact" on the security of oil
operations.
This is, of course, wishful thinking -- the attacks will not
abate until the US leaves Iraq.
As if to send the message loud and clear
to viceroy Bremer and the Bushites that the potential murder of Uday and Qusay
is all but meaningless, three American soldiers from the 101st Airborne -- the
same unit that carried out the assault on Uday and Qusay -- were killed by
gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades as they moved in a convoy toward Qayyarah,
north of Baghdad, on June 25. "We want to say to the occupation forces, they
said last night that killing Odai and Qusai will diminish (resistance) attacks
but we want to say to them that their death will increase attacks against them,"
declared a masked man in a tape aired by satellite broadcaster
al-Arabiya.
Bush and his arrogant coterie of neocons have seriously
underestimated the will of the Iraqi people to resist occupation. Macabrely
offering up the mutilated bodies of Uday and Qusay will buy them no time, even
if it does satiate for the moment the blood lust of millions of Americans who
believe Dubya's tenuous lies about the non-existent relationship between
al-Qaeda and Saddam and his unaccounted for weapons of mass
destruction.
Like Johnson and Nixon before him, Bush will soon realize
his futile war against popular resistance opposed to occupation and brazen
colonialism -- be it in Vietnam or Iraq -- will either end in disgrace and
retreat or will go on for decades without any appreciable "light at the end of
the tunnel."