LETTER FROM THE ROAD, #9
ELIAS AMIDON AND ELIZABETH ROBERTS
BAGHDAD
6 FEBRUARY 2003
IN IRAQ WITH COLIN POWELL
We arrived in Baghdad three days ago. It is good to be back, though
it seems strange to say that. There is something about being here now
that is extraordinarily heartfelt.
“Baghdad
is a realistic city,” said Khaled, the Yemeni doctoral student
we visited yesterday. “It is a city of real sadness. I will miss
it. I don’t want to leave.” Khaled was packing his family’s
belongings to leave next week for Syria, and then back to Yemen. He
doesn’t want his four young children to experience the trauma
of bombing and an American attack. Khaled is writing his doctoral thesis
on the American writer William Faulkner. He has no savings. On Saturday
he will sell his old car to try to raise enough cash for the trip.
Indeed it is a city of real sadness. Between the policies of our president
and theirs, the people here are trapped and their lives robbed of the
dreams of their youth. But as Khaled says, at least the sadness is real,
“not like the unreal smiles of the Emirates and Saudi Arabia.”
How is it that tragedy has this effect?
Last night several of us from the Peace Team huddled around our short-wave
radio to listen to Colin Powell’s speech to the U.N. Security
Council. It was an effective presentation, especially effective in stimulating
fear in the U.S. public of being the target of weapons of mass destruction.
We can identify with that fear from our vantage point in Baghdad, a
city and country surrounded by a massive U.S. arsenal of weaponry ready
to inflict, by U.N. estimates, up to 500,000 Iraqi civilian casualties.
Today “mass destruction” is not a very discriminating term.
As you can imagine, the conversations here over late night glasses
of Iraqi tea and early morning cups of coffee are busy responding to
Powell’s accusations and the assumptions they rest upon. Here
is a brief summary of some of those conversations:
- Mr. Powell did not demonstrate the government of Iraq has
a clear intent to use any weapons it may posses against the United States.
A war against Iraq would be aggression, not self-defense.
- Yes, the government of Iraq has missed opportunities to show
complete compliance with the weapons inspection process. However, the
inspections are wide scale and definitely force Iraq into ever greater
compliance. They are in no position to continue producing or to use
any weapons they might still have. The policy of containment works.
- An Iraqi told us, “Any third-rate intelligence agency
could fabricate the recorded phone conversations Powell used as “evidence”.
You have to understand, Iraqis would never discuss such things on the
telephone. We are used to being listened to.”
- Mr. Powell neglected to mention that many countries possess
weapons of mass destruction, including countries in the Middle East,
and that the U.S. has actively helped these countries obtain such weapons.
Indeed, the U.S., along with Germany and Britain, helped design and
equip chemical weapons plants for Iraq during the 1980’s. As for
biological weapons, a 1994 investigation of the Senate Banking Committee
turned up dozens of biological agents shipped to Iraq under license
of the Commerce Department, including various strains of anthrax.
- The point is, the U.S. is not really serious about eradicating
weapons of mass destruction since it actively engages in their sale.
The U.S. is using this cause as a pretext for establishing a central
and stable “police station” and “gas station”
in the region.
- The links to al-Qaeda are flimsy. The area in northern Iraq
where the terrorist group Ansar al-Islam has camps and purportedly interacts
with al-Qaeda is outside of the government of Iraq’s control in
the Kurdish autonomous region. In any case, Saddam Hussein would be
loath to give such dangerous weapons to a group who could turn these
weapons against him. In addition, if the U.S. is so concerned about
keeping nuclear weapons out of al-Qaeda’s hands, why did Congress
stop funding the program to decommission nuclear weapons and weapons-grade
material held by former states of the Soviet Union, forcing Ted Turner
and others to try to fund these efforts privately?
As we engage in conversations such as these filled with historical
references and stories of intrigue and deception, we realize how difficult
it is to surface the truth. The current confrontation with Iraq is a
“signifier” that, if we look deeply, implicates all sides
and many generations in conflict.
Mr. Powell and the U.S. administration appeal to a moral code that
is commendable – a revulsion against the making and use of terrible
weapons, and the call for nonviolent and truthful behavior on the part
of a nation state. Yes, by all means, let us stand for this moral code.
And let us be consistent. Let us insist on this code in all the dealings
of the U.S. Departments of State and Defence and in all our trade practices.
How can we expect the world to exhibit nonviolent and truthful behavior
if we continue to flood it with weapons of all kinds while we pose as
the moral “good guys”?
This
world of politics, accusations and counter-accusations has a strange
unreality to it, as if we are walking on foam. No wonder there is something
reassuring about being here in Baghdad, in the streets, in the eye of
the storm, where we can at least take refuge in something real, like
sadness.