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Blairs press conference: lies and self-delusion
By Julie Hyland
27 March 2003
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Prime Minister Tony Blairs monthly press conference,
held Tuesday, March 25, was a distasteful spectacle.
For months a sycophantic British media has attempted to excuse
the governments support for a US-led war against Iraq, in
defiance of popular opposition, with reference to the prime ministers
sincerely held beliefs. Whereas President George W. Bush may be
an arrogant bully and an idiot, motivated by naked American self-interest,
most media pundits have insisted that Blair is animated by the
highest moral and ethical standardswhich even his opponents
are supposed to take on good faith
Tuesdays display again confirmed that the British prime
minister is just as much at ease with lies, distortions and self-delusion
as his US counterpart. If he is sincere in anything it is in his
determination to aggressively assert the interests of British
imperialism against those of the poor and oppressed masses of
the world.
Blair addressed his first press conference of this war as the
political representative of a ruling class with a long and brutal
history of colonial oppression against Iraquntil it was
finally chased out in 1958and as the premier ally of the
Bush administration. If he sought to shroud the revival of British
colonialism in the guise of its civilising mission,
he was simply continuing another well-worn traditionone
no less venal and fraudulent for the passage of time.
Iraq used to be one of the most sophisticated countries
in the whole of the Middle East ... now Baghdad and other cities
have actually become like Third World countries, he said.
Under Saddam Husseins rule, much of the population has been
reduced to conditions of virtual starvation, with some 60 percent
of the Iraqi people currently dependent on the government for
food aid. The mortality rates for under fives in Baghdad
is higher than in Mozambique and around nearly one
million children died because of malnutrition and because of leukaemia,
he continued.
Consequently, The most important humanitarian priority
is to restore the operations of the Oil for Food Program,
Blair pronounced.
Blair could present this tissue of lies and half-truths without
fear of contradiction from the massed ranks of the British press,
who are well aware that the conditions he outlined are the direct
result of the military and economic actions undertaken by the
US, the UK and the United Nations.
The UNs own studies have shown that Iraqs descent
from being one of the wealthiest countries in the Middle East,
with a relatively developed system of welfare and high standards
of literacy and skills, to one of the more impoverished is the
direct result of sanctions.
From the first Gulf war in 1991, through 12 years of UN sanctions,
to the present-day offensive involving tons of bombs and missiles
and hundreds of thousands of occupying troops, the US, with British
backing, has sought to destroy a civilisation and bring the Iraqi
people to their knees so as to seize the countrys resources
and establish Americas domination over the Middle East.
Moreover, as journalist John Pilger has pointed out, as of July
2002 the US, again with British backing, has blocked $5.4 billion
worth of humanitarian supplies to Iraqdespite it being approved
by the UN and paid for by Iraq. Denis Halliday, former coordinator
of the oil for food program who resigned in protest
at the embargo, described its effects as nothing less than
genocide.
Blairs references to the growing incidence of cancer
in Iraq are equally cynical, as this is directly attributable
to the tons of depleted uranium-tipped shells and missiles unleashed
on Iraqs towns and cities during the last Gulf war.
Given that the US/UK coalition is continuing to pound Iraq
with the same type of munitions, only in even greater quantities,
it can be expected that the rates of such terrible and often fatal
diseases will skyrocket.
Blairs claim that restoring humanitarian aid is a priority
of the US/UK forces is no less of a gross falsification. Not only
is the US/UK military offensive wholly responsible for stopping
food and medical supplies reaching much of the population, it
has made a dire situation even worse. Once it became clear that
the US intended to press ahead with its war plans regardless of
international opinion, humanitarian aid agencies were forced to
withdraw from the country.
Not only have food and medical supplies been halted, but in
the city of Basra, for example, most of the 600,000 population
have been without water and electricity for almost one week due
to the bombing.
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan has warned of an impending
humanitarian disaster, and has called on the US/UK forces to urgently
begin dispatching food supplies. But the US and the UK insist
that these can only be resumed once they have obtained their military
objectives.
It should be noted that in the $76 billion (£50 billion)
war budget presented by Bush to US Congress, just $1.7 billion
is targeted for reconstruction and $500 million for humanitarian
aid.
It is hardly surprising that the US/UK invasion has not been
greeted by masses of cheering people in the streets, as Blair
and others had claimed would be the case, but with determined
resistance and popular hostility. Even the highly censored dispatches
coming from Iraq have been forced to mention widespread resistance
to the coalition of the willing, including reports
that thousands of Iraqi exilesoutraged at seeing their country
overrun once again by imperialist forcesare returning home
to fight the American and British aggressors.
One journalist was moved to ask Blair whether there was the
real danger that ... many Iraqis regard western forces as
invaders and occupiers.
Blair dismissed the very idea. People were simply too afraid
of the regime to do anything at the moment, he said. Until the
Iraqi people know for sure that the regime that they despise
is on the way out, they will hold back, he maintained.
Blairs contention is that the main reason why the invasion
has not provoked a popular uprising against Saddam is that many
Iraqis feel let down by refusal of the western powers to support
their attempted uprising against Hussein in 1991 following the
last Gulf war. Even if this were the case, such reticence would
be hardly surprising, and Blair makes no attempt to account for
why this stand was taken at the time and why anyone should trust
the US and Britain now. But most importantly, he cannot even conceive
of legitimate issues of national sovereignty and self-determination
motivating popular resistance to imperialist invasion. Yet even
as he spoke, crowds of thousands filled Baghdads central
market square, waving their fists and denouncing the American
and British forces.
Tellingly, Blair pointed to Umm Qasr, where British troops
are now patrolling the streets, as a sign of Britain making
it clear to people that we are there to help them, and we are
there genuinely to liberate their country.
In the topsy-turvy world of official war propaganda, the sight
of armed soldiers patrolling the streets at the behest of an aggressive
foreign power is meant to reassure the Iraqi people of Britains
good intent.
Blairs specious logic will ultimately be used to provide
the justification for horrific atrocities. For if, as he asserts,
opposition to Hussein equals de facto support for the US and Britain
then, conversely, anyone who opposes the invasion supports Hussein.
This absurd bit of logical reductionism is everywhere applied
to international opponents of the US/UK war policy, whether it
is the French or German governments or the millions of protestors
around the world.
In the case of Iraq, then, any resistance must by definition
come from agents of Saddam Hussein. And consequently any action
taken to eliminate them is a legitimate and justified war measure.
Such claims will be used to sanction the wanton bombing of
civilian areas, as well as the murderous actions of special operations
forces and others on the ground. The designation of Basras
capture as a military objective and the open targeting
of civilian infrastructure such as television broadcasting stations
show that this is already under way.
See Also:
Antiwar demonstrations throughout the
UK
[24 March 2003]
Britain: Blair suffers second parliamentary
rebellion over war vs. Iraq
[20 March 2003]
Britain: Blair government called to order
by Washington
[14 March 2003]
Britain: Blairs warmongering denounced
by MTV audience
[11 March 2003]
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