COMMUNITIES AGAINST CAPITALISM
 


What Happens When Africa is Attacked Next
 by Ed Whitfield

 December 2, 2001 - Greensboro, NC

   Two of the next three targets on the USA's short
 list for the war on terrorism are in Africa.
   Somalia, Sudan and Yemen are said to be the next
 areas where the USA will exercise its "right to self
 defense" and go after al Qaeda cells.
   There is a question how the now acquiesent US black
 population will respond to an attack on Africa, where
 the collateral damage will be little black children
and their families who are already impovished by years
 of hunger due to the legacy of colonialism, recent
super-power contention and current international
financial policies.
   Several years ago, a friend of mine told me that
for  the USA to send troops in support of the white
minority government in South Africa, they would have
to simultaneously deploy them in Detroit and
 Los Angeles and Newark.
   It was clear that in some communities, Malcolm's
message of the link between the struggles in Africa
and the struggles in the USA was important part of the
 social fabric and popular consciousness.

   Both Sudan and Somalia have been sites of US
 military activity in recent years.
   The cruise missle attack on a pharmaceudical
 factory in Sudan in 1996 destroyed 50% of Sudan's
capacity to produce malaria drugs.
   This factory was innitially claimed to be producing
 chemical weapons for the al Qaeda network.
   But the German engineers who built it were
surprised
 and insisted that it was only capable of producing
the  medicines it was designed to produce.
   The US has all but admitted that the attack was in
 error, but has still failed to respond to Sudan's
demands to be compensated for the destruction.

   Already, internet access has been shut off to
 Somalia, and all international monetary transfers
have  been blocked.
   The attack there may be imminent.
   Even without the coming military attack, these
economic and communication attacks will seriously
dammage the fragile recovering economy of this war
torn area.

   Somalia was the scene in 1992 of a major US
military
 embarassment.
   Eighteen US rangers were killed when they came
under  attack while searching for one of Somalia's
 "War Lords" who had lost favor with the USA.
   Some people are saying that the coming attacks on
Somalia are payback for the 18 American lives.
   What is seldom mentioned is the tens of thousands
of
 Somalis who were killed in that conflict.
   The idea that the US might want to avenge the 18
rangers in spite of the existing Somali death toll
from that conflict that is likely 1000 times higher is
 the height of racism.
   How many Somalis is a US citizen worth?

   Since the US black communities displayed passivity
 following the intervention in Grenada in 1983 and in
 Panama in 1989, it may be felt that there is no real
 worry, but no one is really sure.
   Both Grenada and Panama slipped by because by and
large, the black community here did not know what was
going on.

   In Grenada, in particular, the confusion caused by
 anti-communism and the cold war rhetoric left most
people bewildered as to what was really going on.
   The overthrow of Maurice Bishop's government by
 "ultra-leftist" forces precipitating a US mission to
 rescue endangered medical students formed the
 backdrop of the US intervention actually designed to
 destroy the nationalist independence movement in that
 country.
   In its place was installed another puppet
government  connected to the US to do its bidding, and
finish   rooting out the ideological sentiments that
had   Grenadans thinking that they had a right to be
respected on the world stage.

   The US black community falling more and more into
 the grip of 501-c3 non-profit agencies was too busy
dividing up federal monies and applying for new grants
 to be actively involved in foreign affairs that
required an analysis that went beyond the race
analysis that kept South Africa in the center of our
attention.

   Six years later, when the US decided to stop the
 growing nationalist movement in Panama that would
have  been key to deciding the new policies after the
end
 of the lease of the Canal Zone, most black Americans
 didn't have a clue what was going on.
   Few people fell for the Noriega story.
   It was too clear to too many, that the US itself
was  implicated in drug running to seriously believe
that  drugs were the reason for going after Noriega.
   But at the same time, the level of press censorship
 kept most black from even knowing that as many as
 5,000 Panamanian blacks were killed in a 36 hour
 period and the homes of 20,000 black Panamanians
destroyed in attacks that spared the white sections
 of Panama all together.
   As word finally trickled in about the mass graves,
 and the level of the carnage, everything was over,
 and a disorganized black community here never got
riled up.

   The situation with the war on terrorism has a
chance
 to be different.
   The attack on civil liberties here already come at
a
 time where there is a growing movement against police
 repression and police brutality.
   It doesn't take much to link the general
demonization of black youth (especially males) in the
US to the demonization of opponents of US policies
outside the country.
   It doesn't take much to tie the persecution of US
dissidents, people like Mumia Abu Jamal and
 Imam Jamil al Amin formerly known as Rap Brown, both
 now facing murder charges in Philadelphia and Atlanta
 respectively, and the call for secret military
tribunals and summary executions.

   The Million Man March has proven that blacks are
 still capable of mobilizing in large numbers, even
when the agenda is not clear.
   There is no serious evidence that either Somalia or
 Sudan are bases for the al Qaeda network.
   There is no reason why they should be attacked.
   We would hope that US agression against innocent
people in Africa would be a sufficient clarion call to
 move our community and other justice minded people
into action.