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2003 AD not too different from 2003 BC [LONG READ BARF ALERT]
Japan Today ^ | 4-18-03 | Uri Avnery, Wanker

Posted on 04/17/2003 3:53:39 PM PDT by Oldeconomybuyer

A depressing thought: the Iraq war proves that in the year 2003 AD, the world has not essentially changed since 2003 BC. A military power can attack a weak nation, conquer its territory and plunder its resources. There is no world law, no world moral order. Might is right.

The weapons are of the 21st century, but they serve 19th century aims. This is a classical colonial war. Iraq is becoming an American colony, to remain so for a long time.

The pretexts come from the old colonialist phrase-book. A country is conquered in order to "liberate" the natives from their cruel tyrants. Their resources are stolen, in order to raise their standard of living, give an elementary education to their children, keep a colonial administration that will teach them democracy.

This is also a divine mission. The missionaries always come with the army, and sometimes even precede it. The cross and the canon, religion and oppression, the church and the plunder of resources go very well together.

For the poet laureate of the era, Rudyard Kipling, that was the "white man's burden". But when colonialism retreated, it left behind a social, cultural and economic desert, which persists in the "third world" to this day.

The triumphalism of America, Britain and Israel is a little misplaced.

The only superpower in the world has attacked a little country of 26 million people, starved for years by sanctions. A mighty and well-fed army, equipped with the most sophisticated arms the world has ever seen, confronted an army that has been largely disarmed before the fighting even started. The powerful air force that controls the skies without opposition was sent against a country whose air defenses have been bombed for years beforehand.

In a modern war, control of the air is the decisive factor. Sixty years ago, when the air force and its weapons were much more primitive, Field Marshal Rommel told Hitler that the Allies' domination of the skies made it impossible for the German army to maneuver and bring in reinforcements. Therefore, he said, his army would be unable to defeat the Anglo-American forces once they succeeded in securing a bridgehead on the French coast. If we don't destroy them in the first few hours, he told Hitler, the battle is lost. The Fuehrer did not listen to his advice, and the results are well known.

If this was true then for the mighty Wehrmacht, it was true now a thousand times for the battered Iraqi forces. From the first minute on, no Iraqi tank could appear in the open without being destroyed from the air. No division and no company could occupy a position, let alone move, without the missiles and bombs pounding it to dust. Decent hunters do not shoot at sitting ducks. But that is exactly what happened in Iraq.

There is nothing for the Americans to boast about. Tommy Franks will not go down in history as one of the great leaders of armies, next to Alexander and Napoleon. If the Iraqis held on for 21 days, that itself was an achievement.

Saddam Hussein can take no credit for that achievement. As it turns out, he was not only a brutal and cruel dictator, but a stupid one to boot. Clearly, he had never read a serious book about strategy, and did not receive good advice from his generals. That is one of the troubles of dictators, dating back to biblical times, when Absalom, King David's rebellious son, rejected the good advice of Ahithophel: generally the dictator does not listen to advice, and the advisors tend to tell the dictator only what he wants to hear.

From the Iraqi point of view, it would have been right to avoid battle in the open desert, where a modern army has an immense advantage, and to draw the invaders into the cities. But for that purpose, Saddam had to dispose his army inside the cities and prepare for a Stalingrad-like defense.

Instead, he exposed his elite Republican Guard outside Baghdad, in the open, where they were systematically destroyed by the U.S. air force. Inside the city itself nothing was prepared, no plan, no command structure, no adequate arms. It fell like a rotten apple. Neither the American generals nor the commentators expected this. Neither did I.

Saddam had his chance to go down in history as the leader of a glorious, if hopeless, last stand. But now his appropriate memorial is the decapitated bronze statue that starred on television.

This war was waged simultaneously in two arenas: in the field and on television. There was hardly any resemblance between the two.

Television was an accompaniment to previous wars. But in this war, television has become an integral part of the war itself, one of its major battlefields, if not the most important one.

From now on, TV is a component of the armed forces, along with the army, the navy and the airforce. Like them, it is directed by the command structure.

Much thought and effort was devoted to this arm. General Myers, the No. 1 soldier in Washington, and General Franks, the commander of the actual campaign, personally took part in the action. (It was a stroke of genius to put a black general into the center of the picture.)

The aim is to engender in the mind of the home audience, world public opinion and perhaps even in the mind of the enemy a picture of the war that has no connection with reality. That is easy, because there is no more mendacious instrument than television. He who controls it, controls the picture of reality, and thereby the mind of the viewer.

For example: in order to support the claim that the aim of the war was to "liberate" the Iraqi people, it was essential to show the Iraqi population welcoming the liberators with joy. Television delivered the goods.

Nothing easier: simply fill the frame with a hundred jumping and shouting people, in order to create the impression the a whole country is jumping and shouting. Nobody will ask: Who the hell are they? Where did they come from? Who called them together? Did they get anything in return? Aren't they, by chance, the same people who jumped and shouted a few days ago "with our soul and blood we will redeem you, Saddam?" And where are the other 5 million inhabitants of Baghdad? What do they think and feel?

During five very long hours all Western TV stations (and Al Jazeera as well) concentrated on showing a crowd of Iraqis trying to bring down a giant statue of Saddam in the center of Baghdad. A discerning eye could notice that the crowd was no more than a hundred people, certainly half of them journalists. The statue-smashers acted manifestly for the camera. But television-wise, that was "the Iraqi people." This picture will remain fixed in the mind of the world as the defining image of the "liberation."

Only Thomas Friedman, a very arrogant and very patriotic observer, independently interviewed Iraqis and reported that they indeed were glad to be rid of Saddam, but that they viewed the Americans as foreign invaders who should leave at once. Nothing of this kind was seen on CNN.

In the Iraqi campaign, every Western (and, of course, Israeli) journalist was a soldier with a job to do under the command structure. The point was reached that Donald Rumsfeld, in a Washington briefing, directly ordered the American journalists in Iraq to interview Iraqis and get stories from them about Saddam's atrocities. Sure enough, within hours such stories came pouring in.

Joseph Goebbels would be bursting with envy. George Orwell would not be surprised.

How will things develop from here on? It has been said that it is hard to prophesy, especially about the future.

One thing is certain: the Americans did not conquer Iraq in order to leave. They intend to remain there for a long time, even if they succeed in setting up a puppet government. They came to control the oil sources and the Arab region, and for these purposes they will stay on.

But even if they should wish to leave, they would not be able to do so. Without an American dictatorship taking the place of Saddam's, Iraq would fall apart. The old ethnic, religious, regional and tribal divisions would only deepen if an American-appointed puppet government were to establish "democracy."

Western democracy developed over centuries in organized communities with solid community values. Only a fool would think that it could be imposed from above, by force, on a society organized on quite different lines, by family and clan, and with quite different values. A real Arab democracy, when it comes about, will surely be different in nature and appearance from the Western kind.

The mob-rule that found its expression in the orgy of violence and looting under the auspices of the U.S. Army, including the looting of hospitals, is a bad omen indeed. It is the height of chutzpah, when the U.S. commanders, who have destroyed the civilian infra-structure, say that law and order must be restored by the Iraqis themselves. Thus, millions are abandoned to anarchy.

The animosity between the Kurds and the Turks in the north, as well as the connection between the Shiites and nearby Shiite Iran in the south, will cause the occupiers many headaches. After some months of quiet (if at all), they may be faced with a Hezbollah-style guerilla war.

Will that prevent an American invasion of Syria and/or Iran? Perhaps it will, perhaps, on the contrary, it will push the Americans towards new adventures, in order to distract attention from the results of the this one.

In order to foresee what's coming, I ask myself: what would I have thought and felt, if I had been an Arab? If I were, for example, Ahmad, a young Arab student at Cairo University, what would I feel at this moment?

First of all, humiliation. Once more a magnificent Arab hero has turned out to be a toy soldier, talking big and failing the first test. Once more an Arab army has mostly given up without a fight. By comparison, a growing admiration for the Palestinians, who have been standing up to the mighty Israeli military machine for more than two years, who have sacrificed more than 2000 people and whose youth stand in line to sacrifice their lives.

On top of the humiliation on the field of battle, the humiliation in the political field. A foreign invader has marched into the center of the Arab world and taken control of its resources, and the great Arab nation is paralyzed, unable to react. Its cowardly leaders hold on to their seats and accept handouts from the occupier. Who will save us?

There is no nationalist Arab force able to offer a solution to the millions of young people from Casablanca to Kuwait city. No new Nasser enflames their imagination. But there is a religious Muslim force that provides comfort, answers, identity and self-respect. It also provides a weapon for removing the invaders and compelling the West to listen to Arab aspirations: terrorism.

And now, Ahmad thinks, after the last of the Arab armies has shown its impotence in the face of American might, there remains only the alternative of guerilla war and terror attacks. (Outlook India)

April 18, 2003


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; Japan; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; United Kingdom; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: ancienthistory; iraqifreedom; wanker; worldopinion
Uri nal Avnery is my nominee for Wanker of the Day.
1 posted on 04/17/2003 3:53:40 PM PDT by Oldeconomybuyer
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
Thank you for adding the proper honorific to his byline.

:)

2 posted on 04/17/2003 3:58:53 PM PDT by Redcloak (All work and no FReep makes Jack a dull boy. All work and no FReep make s Jack a dul boy. Allwork an)
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
I like the part where sticking a soldier who happened to be black (incidentally, also an alumnus of my high school- Go JHS, Sacramento!) was racism, rather than just him doing his job.
3 posted on 04/17/2003 3:59:16 PM PDT by TheAngryClam (Victory over Iraq - God go with our soldiers.)
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
Western democracy developed over centuries in organized communities with solid community values.

Just noticed this part too. Nice to see that the left is admitting that Democracy comes from solid community values that they just happen to be undermining.
4 posted on 04/17/2003 4:01:24 PM PDT by TheAngryClam (Victory over Iraq - God go with our soldiers.)
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
I take it Japan Today is a joke paper. Kind of like the Weekly World News or the New York Times.
5 posted on 04/17/2003 4:07:36 PM PDT by The Hon. Galahad Threepwood
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
... and there are still really, really stupid people walking around, only now we call them liberals.
6 posted on 04/17/2003 4:09:04 PM PDT by Bubba_Leroy
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To: TheAngryClam
Western democracy developed over centuries in organized communities with solid community values.

What? When did democracy "develop" in western europe? More gradualist BS from the left. This is worse than the gradualist crap spouted by slavery supporters and gradualist abolitionsists before the civil war. Also, the author of this article must be Russian, because there's no way a Japanese man could call us colonialist with a straight face.
7 posted on 04/17/2003 4:09:33 PM PDT by Blackyce (President Jacques Chirac: "As far as I'm concerned, war always means failure.")
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
But when colonialism retreated, it left behind a social, cultural and economic desert, which persists in the "third world" to this day.

Hmmm...like the 13 colonies of the US? Or a more modern example - India?

8 posted on 04/17/2003 4:11:52 PM PDT by dark_lord
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
Long-time writer and peace activist, Uri Avnery is a founding member of Gush Shalom and the Israeli-Palestinian Peace Council.

He pushes for Ariel Sharon to be tried as a war criminal after Sharon's term as Israeli prime minister ends.

Leni

9 posted on 04/17/2003 4:12:25 PM PDT by MinuteGal (THIS JUST IN ! Astonishing fare reduction for FReeps Ahoy Cruise! Check it out, pronto!)
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To: Blackyce
I was wrong, he's not Russian, just another Jewish Uncle Tom:

Uri Avnery is a journalist, peace activist, former member of the Knesset, and leader of Gush Shalom, the most militant part of the Israeli peace movement.
http://www.israelinsider.com/views/authors/avnery.htm
10 posted on 04/17/2003 4:16:30 PM PDT by Blackyce (President Jacques Chirac: "As far as I'm concerned, war always means failure.")
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
This entire article is based on a false premise: that the purpose of this little war was to liberate and colonize Iraq. That's pure BS - the main purpose was to ferret out terrorist cells, destroy the bastards and remove a government that supported them. The liberation of the Iraqi people was only a secondary goal. If 9/11 hadn't happened, the Iraq War wouldn't have happened, either. The most important outcome is the message it sends to the rest of the "glorious" Arab world: don't harbor terrorists.
11 posted on 04/17/2003 4:28:58 PM PDT by 45Auto (Big holes are (almost) always better.)
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To: Blackyce
No, he's a self-hating Jew. He would have made excuses for Hitler right up to the time he was led into the gas chamber. The mantel of moral superiority some of my brethren adorn themselves with is most unbecoming and most undeserved. They are the prototypical "useful idiots" that Lenin is reputed to have found, well so useful.
12 posted on 04/17/2003 4:32:02 PM PDT by Pharlap
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
But there is a religious Muslim force that provides comfort, answers, identity and self-respect. It also provides a weapon for removing the invaders and compelling the West to listen to Arab aspirations: terrorism

What a fool! The Saddam types are the ones giving aid, materiel, comfort, and means to the terrorists. Removing the "secularists" is one and the same as hindering/destroying the terrorists islamicists.

Fools like this writer are so clueless about islam and the false dichotomy between the Arab/Truk/etc secularists and jihadists.

13 posted on 04/17/2003 4:36:58 PM PDT by eleni121
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
But when colonialism retreated, it left behind a social, cultural and economic desert, which persists in the "third world" to this day.

Guess the colonialismists should have stayed....What a maroon.

FMCDH

14 posted on 04/17/2003 4:59:20 PM PDT by nothingnew
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
"A depressing thought: the Iraq war proves that in the year 2003 AD, the world has not essentially changed since 2003 BC"

I didn't read a 2003 BC comparison to 2003AD.

My understanding to that period in time would have been like this.

George Bush has shown mercy to the world of ISLAM in 2003 BC. For if he was a leader the Hittites of 2003 BC with 2003 AD weapons:

1: Every Islamic capitol city would have been destroyed by some type nuclear weapons depending on his mood of the hour.

2: Islam would now be a footnote in history.

3: The war on terror is complete.

This writer of this article is in dreamland.

Anyway, more real conquest below.

HITTITE EMPIRE

MUSLIM EXPANSION IN THE WEST

MAPS ABOUT THE EXPANSION, but their map about expansion into The United State will be included soon, later or close your eye and imagine it today.

This map looks to me like the "French" THE FRANKS held the line. Today Spain is free, however France is under conquest.


15 posted on 04/17/2003 5:41:25 PM PDT by Major_Risktaker ("No Risk, No Reward")
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
Seconded. Especially the part that Avenal thinks that 2000 dead Palis lends an aura of holiness to the lawless intifada.
16 posted on 04/17/2003 5:59:52 PM PDT by sauropod (If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy...)
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To: sauropod
Pardon. Avnery.
17 posted on 04/17/2003 6:00:33 PM PDT by sauropod (If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy...)
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To: Major_Risktaker
This map looks to me like the "French" THE FRANKS held the line.

The Myth of the French Franks. The Franks spoke German. Charlemagne (King of the Franks and Holy Roman Emperor) went by Karl, and was known as Karl der gross. In American we would call him Big Chuck. The University system he started had many ancient texts translated into German, (he liked to read.) His capitol was Achen, Germany. Guess where Frankfurt gets its name. I could go on, but I've blathered enough.

What I really wanted to say, is the most people define peace as the absence of war. A more historically correct definition might be that peace is the interval between wars. Just an obsevation.

18 posted on 04/17/2003 6:08:20 PM PDT by D Rider
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To: D Rider
In all fairness, I should have mentioned that the German tribe known as the Franks, the German tribe that ruled Europe for centuries, the German tribe of the first Reich....became the French Yuk! All their glory was while they were still Germans. Why would anyone choose to become so... french, anyway?
19 posted on 04/17/2003 6:29:59 PM PDT by D Rider
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
Lord Haw Haw speaketh. He's the Dean Of Israeli Anti-Zionism and advocated Oslo for decades long before it took over the Labor Party. I guess from the looks of it, he's awfully depressed an Arab dictatorship was removed from power so swiftly. Its not a good day for the Israeli Extreme Left, and if Avineri's gloomy, just imagine how the Pelosis and Daschles must be feeling in America.
20 posted on 04/17/2003 9:50:18 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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