This image will be forever etched in the minds of every Iraqi |
Richard Mellor
Afscme Local 444, retired
I took a train from Istanbul or Ankara (Can’t remember now) to Baghdad in 1971. I remember going through Nineveh, and Babylon and being fascinated with the fact that I was passing through towns I read about in the Bible. We would stop in these places and Iraqi’s selling water and candy and other wares would come to the carriage windows.
I passed through Mosul as well. I remember it with great fondness and am so
happy I took that opportunity. The Iraqi’s were kind to me I remember, despite
the nasty role British imperialism has played there even in the country’s
creation. After staying in Baghdad for a while I left with my friends and we
headed by bus down to Basra. I remember being in this small room in some
lodging place sitting eating watermelon with these traders from Goa. My recollection
of them was that they had on these white pants and coverings that Indians wear
and they had long braided pony tails. My buddy and best friend Jimmy Hall, or JB
Hall was with me as well as another friend from the UK and two Frenchmen.
Where I stayed in Baghdad in 1971 |
If I experienced nothing else in my life I am so grateful I experienced that, although I did a lot of traveling in those days. I eventually ran out of money, was not successful finding somewhere I trusted to sell blood and ended up going to the British Consul and was repatriated for the second time. This is when they give you some money to get back and papers that allow you to pass through different countries.
We took the bus and train back to Istanbul and from there we
met a Canadian who had a van and he took us a little further up through Greece,
Yugoslavia and in to Italy. I can’t remember when or where it was we parted
with him but we did reconnect back in the UK. He was an interesting man to say
the least. I do recall us picking up an American and as we approached the Turkish/Greek border someone said that if anyone had any hash they should throw it out now as the penalty is severe. The US guy pulled out a big slab of it and had to chuck it. He had been to Pakistan apparently.
Jimmy and I then headed north, hitchhiking as far as Udine in Northern Italy and then in to a small town called Tarvisio where we took a train across the Alps in to Salzburg. The Alps were so beautiful and Austria was so clean. I loved it.
I am heading in to a story I didn’t anticipate here so I will halt the travel commentary and say that what made me get out of bed this morning and write this, is reading about the Iraq war and the horrific, murderous slaughter the US government waged against these people.
I read a few articles and was at the demonstration against the US assault in London in 2003 with my young nephew. It was amazing, some 1 million, even more marched to Hyde Park in protest. Some 40 million worldwide demonstrated by some accounts.
This
article gives some details about the death toll in Iraq but even this is the
tip of the iceberg. After the first Iraq war, the US imposed sanctions on Iraq
that led to the deaths of some 500,000 Iraqi’s, predominantly women and
children. When asked about this figure on US television, the US war criminal Madeline
Albright said the deaths were “worth it”.
The US war machine through its use of chemical weaponry in Iraq also led to
hundreds of thousands of Iraq children being born with deformities even today.
This continued when the US laid siege to Fallujah after Iraqi’s killed four USmercenaries and dragged their bodies through the streets. Fallujah will forever
be a shrine to Middle Eastern Muslims and the people of Iraq where so many were slaughtered resisting the
invaders of their land.
There were also reports of US soldiers dying of
diseases related to the use of depleted uranium by US forces. Wives of US veterans
complained of their husband’s sperm burning them and veterans suffered other debilitating
respiratory problems. We may never know the extent of suffering for Iraqis
due to the US invasion.
How quickly people forget when it comes to the suffering one’s
government inflicts on others. This memory loss is aided by the US mass media
that reminds us endlessly about the attacks of September 2001 with military
bands and flyovers at sporting events. “They
hate us because we’re free” was the rallying cry. Iraq, of course had nothing
to do with that attack. Before the onset of the 20-year war against Iraq under
the lie that it was a response to “terrorism”, most Americans couldn’t point to
the country on a map.We learn geography and where countries are when we see them on CNN after they have been bombed some say.
At work, I remember walking through the machine shop and seeing a poster of Saddam Hussein with a target on him and just shaking my head. Some folks that took that position were conservatives that distrusted the US government and were indeed anti-government, or so they claimed, yet when the war cry went out, they all blindly followed the pied piper. Patriotism is indeed the last refuge of a scoundrel.
The US presence in the Middle East, like their British hangers on before them, has been the most destabilizing factor in the region. The nation state of Iraq was created by the British and the French through the Sykes Picot agreement, a secret agreement at which the British and French carved up the region between them, a region of various tribes with the same language and generally the same religion. They were created not in the interest of the people living there but of the colonial powers that entered the region en masse after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.
Up until the US invasion and when I was there, Iraq was one
of the more secular countries in the Middle East bar Lebanon perhaps. As I
walked through the streets of Baghdad or Basra, I felt no fear. The people were
courteous and friendly. I sat by the river Tigris that I knew only through the
Christian Bible, and smoked hookahs with old Iraqi guys one time. This is not
to say there weren’t problems though I was not as political at that time that
I would be aware of them or the history of the region. I learned later and
after talking with Iraqi exiles I met in London who were fighting for democratic
reforms, that Hussein was the US’s man and they were fighting a superpower. But
in the main, things were normal as long as you weren’t involved in politics I
guess. They certainly had electricity and water something they cannot be sure they have now.
What the US invasion has done is destroy a nation state.
There are now three nations in one. The Kurds of the north, the Sunni’s in the
center and the Shia in the South. The Turks will never support an independent
Kurdistan on their border with some 22 million Kurds within it, and the US
chooses to blame any resistance to its occupation in general on Iran. British colonialism purposefully installed a minority regime as its always important for an occupying power to foster social divisions of one sort or another as long as they can contain and manipulate it; much like racism in the US.
What US capitalism has done to Iraq, Yemen and indeed the entire
region, is a crime against humanity. It has cost the US taxpayer priceless resources
that could improve life for workers at home; it has increased hatred for us abroad and is a recruiting tool for terrorism. The guilty, the war criminals, all
the presidents, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, George W Bush, Blair, the mass media and
so on; they are all complicit and they are all relatively safe when they travel rather than the average US citizen.
There is no solution to these problems within the framework of capitalism. The sooner we recognize this, workers that is, the sooner we can embark on the path to a genuinely free world and a relationship with others and nature based not on exploitation but on cooperation and harmony. For thousands of years before class society, this is how humanity lived and progressed.
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