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The missing pictures from the Arab world
townhall.com ^ | 5/19/04 | Walid Phares, Ph.D.

Posted on 05/18/2004 11:20:22 PM PDT by kattracks

Torture Existed Before Abu Gharib, But Why No Coverage?

When the Abu Ghraib prison abuse crisis exploded, I analyzed the reactions coming from the Arab World. In an election year, the stakes are high for all parties involved. Each side wants a convenient "truth". The Bush Administration talked about "bad apples." While on the offensive, the opposition talks of a "systemic problem."

President Bush went on Arab TV, while his opponents rushed to speak on behalf of the "humiliated Arab world." But as General Abuzeid put it since Day One, it sounds as if "the issue is making more noise in the U.S. than in Iraq." In fact, the Arab-speaking General got it somewhat right. We in America, were more concerned about "our" image than about the actual incidents themselves. The Arab World obviously reacted, but not exactly as many politicians fantasized.

When I asked individuals from different Arab countries what would they think about Bush's outreach, answers varied. Everybody was sickened by the ugliness of the pictures, but beyond the graphics there were two types of reactions.

The anti-Americans were not difficult to guess. With al Jazeera's incitement, natural anger mutated into hysteria. Suddenly, religion was cited heavily. Very few made a distinction between the psychological illness at Abu Ghraib and the future of Iraq. Actually, the Jihadist networks found a lethal political weapon and exploited this all the way. They think they caught America by its mentally weakest soldiers. More than sanctions against the guards, they want to flush the American-led Coalition out of Iraq, and Bush out of the Oval office. In this Jihad "home run," the architects of the Abu Ghraib crusade against "U.S. immorality" enlisted European elites too. The oil chained establishment from Paris to Berlin is wailing. Manhattan's U.N. is mourning.

But there are other people in the region who see the crisis through a different lens. In Beirut, amazement was mostly about George W. Bush addressing Arab TV. Lebanese were certainly disgusted by the aired images but they were stunned by the fact that a U.S. President was "talking" to Arab citizens. The region is infested with worse ugliness than the prison scandal, yet no one can remember any Arab leader addressing his people about abuse.

"Our dictators never showed up on any media, at anytime, for any picture" said many Syrians, "despite 28 years of horrors in their detention centers." Thousands of citizens were tortured in al Mazza, the Syrian equivalent of Abu Ghraib, yet no one lifted a finger. Many in the region have their own horror pictures, but who will publish them as long as no Americans were involved?

From Iraq, other voices blasted the media: "What was happening in the same cells of Abu Ghraib under the Baath defies human logic. The awful photos of today would be only appetizers," said Saddam's survivors. "We have pictures, we have documents, but that won't please your elites."

These survivors invited the world to visit the mass graves, to see piles of corpses, but to to avail. Shiites are cheap, unless they join the anti-American chorus. Their pictures won't make it to BBC, let alone the Arab networks. Southern Sudanese repeated that one million blacks were decimated. They have pictures of naked African men, women and children taken into slavery. Their problem is that were not taken to Abu Ghraib

The list is long, but the pattern is one. Deep down, Mideast underdogs know that the pornographic scandal in the U.S. manned prison was hijacked by the bullies of the region.
Under their dark skin, the victims of the region's systemic horrors know very well that, with few exceptions, America's political culture is the anti-thesis of all the political ideologies of the region. Despite the ugliness of Abu Ghraib pictures, the Arab World needs to send those uglier pictures from the region's concentration camps. It needs to uncover the truth, all the truth and nothing but the truth, everywhere in the region.

Maybe the evil done to prisoners in Iraq, will uncover the wider evil in the whole region?

Walid Phares is a professor of Middle East Studies and an expert on the Arab World. For more information, visit www.walidphares.com.

©2004 Walid Phares, Ph.D.



TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 2004electionbias; antiamericanism; antiwesternism; ccrm; doublestandard; fakephotos; humanrights; hypocrisy; hypocrites; iraq; iraqaftermath; iraqipowphotos; mediabias; murder; policestate; prodictator; torture; walidphares

1 posted on 05/18/2004 11:20:23 PM PDT by kattracks
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To: kattracks
But there are other people in the region who see the crisis through a different lens. In Beirut, amazement was mostly about George W. Bush addressing Arab TV. Lebanese were certainly disgusted by the aired images but they were stunned by the fact that a U.S. President was "talking" to Arab citizens. The region is infested with worse ugliness than the prison scandal, yet no one can remember any Arab leader addressing his people about abuse.

"Our dictators never showed up on any media, at anytime, for any picture" said many Syrians, "despite 28 years of horrors in their detention centers." Thousands of citizens were tortured in al Mazza, the Syrian equivalent of Abu Ghraib, yet no one lifted a finger. Many in the region have their own horror pictures, but who will publish them as long as no Americans were involved?

From Iraq, other voices blasted the media: "What was happening in the same cells of Abu Ghraib under the Baath defies human logic. The awful photos of today would be only appetizers," said Saddam's survivors. "We have pictures, we have documents, but that won't please your elites."

These survivors invited the world to visit the mass graves, to see piles of corpses, but to to avail. Shiites are cheap, unless they join the anti-American chorus.

These are amazing quotes!
2 posted on 05/18/2004 11:33:56 PM PDT by jennyp (http://crevo.bestmessageboard.com)
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To: jennyp

Great post, Other Jenny!


3 posted on 05/18/2004 11:45:32 PM PDT by JennysCool
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To: JennysCool

Well, err, great post Kat as well, of course!


4 posted on 05/18/2004 11:46:33 PM PDT by JennysCool
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To: kattracks
Maybe the evil done to prisoners in Iraq, will uncover the wider evil in the whole region?

God is just and mysterious.

5 posted on 05/18/2004 11:55:05 PM PDT by SkyPilot
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To: JennysCool

yep, excellent post...and what we now get are the seeds of change planted by Bush in iraq...its slow, painful, sometimes will reverse..but small acts like the 3 million kids innoculated in iraq....will send a slow but powerful message...


sowing seeds...


6 posted on 05/19/2004 12:42:01 AM PDT by Irishguy (League of Nations (version 1.1 BETA) currently in user testing...problems reported)
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To: Timesink; *CCRM; martin_fierro; reformed_democrat; Loyalist; =Intervention=; PianoMan; GOPJ; ...
Media Schadenfreude and Media Shenanigans PING list

Torture Existed Before Abu Gharib, But Why No Coverage?

7 posted on 05/19/2004 2:52:27 AM PDT by weegee (NO BLOOD FOR RATINGS. CNN ignored torture & murder in Saddam's Iraq to keep their Baghdad Bureau.)
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To: weegee
shenanigans bump

Thanks for the ping, weegee - great article!

8 posted on 05/19/2004 4:36:48 AM PDT by an amused spectator (The SeeBS of 2004 would have revealed the precise date and location of the Normandy Invasion)
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