"Is
it going to be an attack for the sake of attacking?
Is there an alternative?" --Masud Barzani,
leader of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, on American
preparations
against Iraq.
Mainstream
media portrayals of the climaxing Anglo-American
threat to wage war and ìget rid ofî Saddam
Hussein have revealed a pitiful incapability of
looking beyond the bromide of regional Arab reaction.
The US Fourth Estate, which rarely discusses the
legality of American foreign military moves, is
focussing narrowly on how Washington's allies in
the Persian Gulf might turn hostile if a massive
bombing operation were carried out against Iraq.
For instance, Vice President Dick Cheney's trip
to West Asia in March this year received headline
coverage in leading American dailies, radio and
television channels because he was seen as preparing
the ground for attacking Iraq by winning over uneasy
Arab allies to the cause. In other words, he was
laying the carpet for carpet bombing Iraq and ousting "the
most evil man since Hitler," a Madeleine Albright
spiel for Saddam that conveniently obfuscates the
time when the Iraqi dictator was a hero in the
Reagan White House. Bruce Jentleson's book, "With
Friends Like These: Reagan, Bush and Saddam 1982-90," captures
the spirit of a decade when today's Lucifers were
kissed as Archangels.
How
inflaming an all-out
attack on Iraq can
be in Egypt, Saudi
Arabia, Jordan, Syria,
Lebanon and Qatar,
not to mention "the
whole Muslim world," is
the only major botheration
that is currently prying
on the minds of CNN
presenters and Wall
Street Journal columnists.
A secondary consideration
is whether George W.
Bush will manage to
carry along Europe
on the bandwagon of
his "total war" on
terrorism. Some geo-strategic
Pentagon planners have
aired supplementary
worries like oil boycotts
by Middle Eastern suppliers
(as proposed by Iran)
and the danger of a
fuel crisis that will
plunge the recessing
American economy into
depression. Another
not-so-far fetched
anxiety among pro-Republican
quarters is that the
attack on Iraq must
be postponed in order
that the Bush re-election
campaign maximises
the windfalls of war
hysteria in late 2003,
and does not botch
up the timing of the
assault. A few are
still arguing that
the casus belli is
proliferation of weapons
of mass destruction
and that things can
be brought back from
the brink if Iraq agrees
to allow UNSCOM arms
inspectors back into
the country.
Where
is the human being
in this superabundance
of ëexpertí opinions
and think-tank outputs?
Currently,
the United Nations
High Commissioner
for Refugees is moving
thousands of tents
and blankets to western
Iran (from eastern
Iran, where the Afghan
operations are being
wound up) in anticipation
of large-scale Iraqi
civilian exodus if
American-led forces
do the inevitable and
flag off Operation "Desert
Something" (succeeding
Desert Shield, Desert
Storm and Desert Fox).
Present readiness in
the UNHCR is for accommodating
and succouring 40,000
refugees, but The Guardian
has reported, "some
diplomats believe refugee
outflows could reach
150,000." Considering
that UNHCR under-calculated
the rate and speed
of Afghan refugee return
from Pakistan in the
last 6 months, it is
better if the organisation
is prepared logistically
for receiving at least
100,000 in western
Iran. Saddam forced
out nearly 350,000
southern Shias for "disloyalty" during
the Iran-Iraq war and
they are still languishing
as ìold caseloadî in
Iran. Another 150,000
Shias were expelled
from the southern marshlands
into Iran during Desert
Storm, using tactics
like damming rivers,
destroying homes and
burning crops of Shia
minorities suspected
of being hostile to
Saddamís regime.
Besides
Shias in the south,
the Kurds in
the north, who have
been enjoying a rare
spell of freedom and
economic progress since
1995, are also vulnerable
to en masse coerced
movement into Turkey
and Iran in the event
of an US attack. During
and after Desert Storm,
Kurdish uprisings in
the north were ruthlessly
mowed down by the Iraqi
army, allegedly employing
chemical weapons (a
la 1988). This caused
a gigantic outflow
of 2 million Iraqi
Kurd refugees into
the mountain regions
of Turkey and Iran.
Since Turkey was unwilling
to host all Iraqi Kurds,
a UN Security Council
resolution launched "Operation
Provide Comfort" and
set up safe havens
and a no-fly-zone within
northern Iraq to house
those internally displaced
Iraqi Kurds who did
not manage to cross
international boundaries.
The generous development
space created by UN
Resolution 986, which
apportioned 13 percent
of oil-for-food money
to Kurdish self-ruled
territories, is going
to be torn to shreds
if the US attacks.
For the umpteenth time
in history, the perennially
oppressed Kurds will
be thrown to the merciless
vagaries of Turkish
and Iranian border
guards and troops.
Repressed
Iraqi minorities
like Shias and Kurds
are especially vulnerable
to dislocation in the
event of US war on
Iraq, since the NATO
game-plan is said to
be based on the ìAfghan
modelî, i.e.
weaning away and arming
anti-Saddam groups,
just as the Northern
Alliance, composed
of Tajik, Uzbek and
Hazara minority rebels,
was bolstered against
the Taliban. Needless
to say, the majority
of Shia or Kurdish
civilians are not foot
soldiers of rebel militias
that claim to be their
sole spokesmen, but
Saddam is not known
for making such fine
distinctions. His track
record of punishing
minorities during conflict
is well proven. UNHCR
should be therefore
prepared for large-scale
inflows into both Iran
and Turkey, should
full-scale military
bombing by America
begin. The example
of NATOís Kosovo
war in 1999 is a good
parallel here, because
Milosevic's forces
began forcibly driving
out hundreds of thousands
of Kosovo Albanians
into neighbouring countries
once the bombing of
Serbia intensified.
The
prospect of myriad
internally displaced
persons (IDP) fleeing
villages and towns
inside Iraq cannot
also be discounted.
During past wars, Saddam
has shown mastery in
sealing borders and
disallowing Iraqis
from becoming refugees
and potential "dissidents" for
western exploitation.
If war is imminent,
UNHCR should strengthen
early warning systems
for IDP situations
inside Iraq and be
in constant communication
with the Red Cross
and the UN Inter-Agency
Standing Committee
(IASC) to bring instant
relief and respite
to humans who would
lose every belonging
and hit the road to
an unknown destination.
Again, the comparison
with the Kosovo campaign
is informative. The
number of Serbs and
Roma people who were
internally displaced
as a result of UN-unauthorised
NATO strikes ranged
between 200 and 300,000.
We are living in an
era when artificial
distinctions between ërefugeeí and ëIDPí are
melting and the human
rights of all forcibly
displaced people are
crying to be recognised.
Though the visible
consequence of America's
war will be snaking
lines of refugees inching
their way to the nearest
international border,
the humanitarian world
cannot sit back and
allow depopulation
inside Iraq to go unnoticed,
be it in the form of
evasion from raining
western bombs or due
to orders of the Iraqi
army.
To
conclude, the warped
projections and conjectures
on the "coming
war" on Iraq that
are being relayed by
American mass communication
media completely exclude
the humanitarian angle.
US decision-makers
have a new-found spring
in their step after
the miraculous "victory" in
Afghanistan and the
freeing of Kabul from
the reactionary Taliban.
The poltergeists of
Vietnam and Somalia
have given way to a
swagger and arrogance
that all future American
military missions will
be ëliberatingí in
nature and involve
minimum military and
civilian casualties.
Objective history begs
to disagree. CNN never
discussed the final
count of Afghan people
killed and displaced
in the recent Afghan
war. Let it not be
a case that the terrible
human consequences
of war on Iraq also
remain under wraps.
Highlighting them would
be the only credible
way to counter the
dominant discourses
of "patriot act" and "total
war."
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