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Analysis : Middle
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BBC and Guardian cover up US role in Iraq looting
By Ann Talbot
14 June 2003
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Looting of archaeological sites and regional museums is continuing
in Iraq despite the responsibility under international law of
the US as the occupying power to protect cultural sites.
The journal Archaeology is documenting the extent of
looting. Journalist Roger Atwood, who specialises in the antiquities
trade and is in Mosul, reports that 30 bronze panels that once
hung on a gate leading into the Assyrian city of Balawat have
been stolen from the museum there along with numerous cuneiform
tablets and 20 valuable books. At Hatra, a first century B.C.
world heritage site to the south of Mosul, looters have hacked
out a carved face from the apex of a stone archway.
Meanwhile in Baghdad some of the artefacts stored offsite for
safety have been recovered and some of the stolen items have been
returned to the city museum. Among those returned is the famous
Warka vase, a 5,000-year-old ceremonial vessel from the city of
Ur. According to the British Museum, which has two members of
staff working in the Baghdad Museum, at least 28 items from the
exhibition halls remain missing along with numerous less spectacular
objects that have an important research value.
The major pieces that have been recovered are some of the artefacts
from the Assyrian city of Nimrud and some material from the royal
burials at Ur, which were stored in the vaults of the Central
Bank at the time of the first Gulf War. The presence of this material
in the bank vaults is not a revelation. A visiting Unesco delegation
was told about it in May, but it was inaccessible because the
vaults were flooded. Moreover, the recovery of these artefacts
does not minimise the damage that has been done and is still being
done by organised looting.
Despite the devastating losses that have been suffered and
the continued looting, however, certain journalists have made
it their business to assert that the extent of the problem has
been exaggerated and even to claim that Iraqi archaeologists are
responsible for stealing whatever is missing. This campaign of
denial and disinformation can only compound the damage already
done to Iraqs cultural heritage. Not only will it distract
from the task of tracking down the artefacts that are flooding
onto the antiquities market, but it is also being used to discredit
Iraqi archaeologists and to take control of the countrys
history out of their hands.
The BBC is leading the way in this scurrilous campaign. In
a prime-time documentary screened June 9, art and architectural
historian Dan Cruikshank made a number of unsubstantiated claims.
He suggested that the Baghdad Museum was a legitimate military
target, that the looting was an inside job and that
the staff were unsuitable to be left in charge of Iraqs
cultural heritage because they had been members of the Baath
Party.
Cruickshanks claims were immediately taken up by Guardian
correspondent David Aaronovitch, who declared that the staff of
the Baghdad Museum were apparatchiks of a fascist regime.
He poured scorn on the worlds journalists and academics
for believing the stories about looting.
In an April 15 column Aaronovitch had already asked, Is
this plundering really so bad? There is a lot of sentimentality
attached to archaeology by outsiders, he went on. He belittled
the importance of cultural history in giving the Iraqi people
a sense of their identity when compared to the evidence of mass
murder in Abu Ghurayb prison. It did not really matter if archaeological
artefacts were looted and ended up in western museums which were
already full of material from all over the world.
Aaronovitch was, therefore, understandably enthused by Cruickshanks
documentary. In a June 10 article, he accused Dr. Dony George
of Baghdad Museum and archaeologists internationally of deliberately
creating a false picture of 100,000-plus priceless items
looted either under the very noses of the Yanks, or by the Yanks
themselves. And the only problem with it is that its nonsense.
It isnt true. Its made up. Its bollocks.
It is, he claims, an indictment of world journalism
that anyone believed this story. Only Dan Cruickshanks remarkable
programme has exposed it as a lie.
Cruickshanks programme was indeed remarkable. But this
was mainly for the contrast between what it showed and what it
claimed. Cruikshank could not bring to bear a single fact to substantiate
his allegations.
Some aspects of the programme might be dismissed as merely
bad journalism and a pathological desire for self-dramatisation.
Clad in a combat jacket and keffiyeh, Cruikshank insisted on being
filmed camping out on the doorstep of the museum with his primus
stove because it was too dangerous to move about the city. This
impression of an intrepid reporter braving a threatening city
was belied by the crowds of smiling Iraqis who cheerfully waved
at the camera as he drove through Baghdad ostentatiously wearing
a flak jacket the next day.
To watch Cruikshank you would believe that he was the only
Westerner in Baghdad apart from the US Marines. He breathlessly
entered the vaults of the Central Bank as though he alone had
made this discovery. The presence of a team from the television
series National Geographic Ultimate Explorer, who had paid
to have the vault pumped out, was not mentioned. National Geographic
magazine report that the vault had been flooded by bank staff
in an attempt to protect the stored artefacts from looting.
Far from the world being ignorant about the fate of Iraqi archaeology
until Cruikshank arrived, a number of international teams have
been present in Baghdad and elsewhere advising on conservation,
reporting on looting and attempting to itemise what has been lost.
Few of them have been accorded the assistance that Cruikshank
seems to have received from the US authorities. A team of international
experts assembled by Unesco met with considerable obstruction
in their mission to Baghdad. British Museum director Neil MacGregor
told the Art Newspaper that negotiations with the US authorities
were tortuous and that the size of the delegation
had to be reduced.
That Cruikshank seems to have met with every assistance from
the US authorities is hardly surprising since it was their story
that he told.
He interviewed marines who told him that the museum had been
fortified and a centre of Iraqi resistance. Had that really been
the case it would have been reasonable to expect US forces to
have occupied the museum and not left it unguarded as they did.
The only evidence of fortification Cruikshank offered was a crude
dugout roofed with corrugated iron and earth on the lines of a
World War II Anderson shelter. This, Dr. Dony George told him,
the museum staff had made for themselves to shelter in during
the air raids. There was some evidence that Iraqi soldiers had
used rooms in the museum, which in a city that had been the scene
of a running battle for several days was hardly surprising.
Cruickshanks aim was to implicate the staff in the looting
of the museum. He criticised them for not clearing up the looted
galleries, ignoring the fact that international experts had advised
them to leave the debris. The whole scene will have to be treated
as an archaeological excavation so that broken material and scattered
pieces can be retrieved scientifically and forensic evidence gathered
for a future war crimes trial.
The fact that the staff were reluctant to talk to him and refused
to open store rooms Cruikshank took as evidence that they were
guilty of looting. He ignored the obvious explanation that they
were unwilling to reveal the whereabouts of hidden artefacts with
Baghdad under armed occupation by a hostile power. They were,
he claimed, all members of the Baath party as though this
were damning evidence of guilt. In a one-party state, membership
of the ruling party is almost inevitable for people who want to
hold official posts in museums or universities. It does not implicate
them in the crimes of the regime.
Aaronovitch was quick to take up Cruickshanks allegations
and to amplify them, going so far as to accuse Dr. Dony George
of being a fascist. By throwing such emotive language about he
is attempting to create the atmosphere of a witch-hunt against
Iraqi intellectuals.
There is a serious agenda behind this vicious journalism. Wealthy
collectors in the West are casting avaricious eyes on the museums
of archaeologically rich countries like Iraq. The American Council
for Cultural Policy (ACCP), which advised the US government in
the run-up to the Iraq war, has led the way in calling for legislation
restricting the export of art objects and archaeological artefacts
to be ignored in the US courts.
The ACCP has evoked a storm of opposition in the US, where
even the robber barons saw the wisdom of putting their money into
public museums and libraries and the selfish acquisitiveness of
the ACCP runs counter to a strong sense of the importance of such
public institutions.
The Archaeological Institute of America (AIA) has vociferously
opposed the ACCP and is campaigning for legislation that will
prevent plundered artefacts being brought into the country. So
strong has opposition been that the Wall Street Journala
paper that could be expected to warm to the ACCPs free market
attitudeshas carried an article calling on them to
put their money into restitution and reconstruction within that
country [Iraq]. It would, the article points out, be tax
deductible.
For the obscenely wealthy and criminal clique that surrounds
the Bush administration, however, the benefits of tax deductible
charity are no longer enough. They may have been warned off in
the US, but it is their attitude to the history of semi-colonial
countries that finds an echo in Cruickshanks film and Aaronovitchs
article.
A former student radical from the Euro-wing of the Communist
Party of Great Britain, Aaronovitch has cultivated a particular
brand of educated philistinism that mixes a passing acquaintance
with culture and ugly right-wing rhetoric. It is to the credit
of Guardian readers that they have found Aaronovitchs
articles thoroughly repugnant. His defence of looting elicited
a response from the Assistant Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum,
Oxford, who criticised his flippancy in sniggering over
the genitalia of Greek gods. His latest article accusing
the staff of the Baghdad Museum of being fascists produced a defence
of these internationally respected scholars from chairman of the
British School of Archaeology in Iraq, Doctor Harriet Crawford;
Doctor Eleanor Robson of All Souls College, Oxford; and Doctor
Jane Moon of the Centre for the Study of Global Ethics.
Doctors Crawford and Robson write, Our high opinion of
the character of Dr. George and his colleagues has been formed
over two decades of working with them throughout an era of extraordinarily
difficult circumstancesfrom the Iran-Iraq war to the few
months leading up to the most recent conflict. George deserves
the worlds praise, not its condemnation, for saving so many
of Iraqs treasures, and strong practical support in restoring
the museum to functionality.
Cruickshank and Aaronovitchs unfounded and ignorant comments
lend themselves to a deliberate campaign of vilification against
Iraqi intellectuals that aims to dismantle the entire system of
laws and institutions that has been built up in Iraq to protect
the countrys archaeology and to further research into its
history. This is looting on a grand scale. The intention is not
merely to acquire this or that artefact, but with regime change
to declare open season on the Middle Easts great museums.
See Also:
US government implicated in
planned theft of Iraqi artistic treasures
[19 April 2003]
The sacking of Iraqs
museums: US wages war against culture and history
[16 April 2003]
How and why the US encouraged
looting in Iraq
[15 April 2003]
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