Lost in the rhetorical fog of war
Robert Fisk
'The Taliban have kept reporters out; does that mean
we have to balance this distorted picture with our own half-truths?'
09 October 2001
A few months ago, my old
friend Tom Friedman set off for the small Gulf emirate of Qatar, from where, in one of his messianic columns for The
New York Times, he informed us that the tiny state's Al-Jazeera
satellite channel was a welcome sign that democracy might be coming to the Middle East. Al-Jazeera had been upsetting some of the
local Arab dictators - President Mubarak of Egypt for one - and Tom thought this a good idea. So do I. But hold everything. The story is being rewritten. Last
week, US Secretary of State Colin Powell rapped the Emir of Qatar over the
knuckles because - so he claimed - Al-Jazeera was
"inciting anti-Americanism''.
So, goodbye
democracy. The Americans want the
emir to close down the channel's office in Kabul, which is scooping the world with tape of the US bombardments and - more to the point - with televised
statements by Osama bin Laden. The most wanted man in the whole world has been
suggesting that he's angry about the deaths of Iraqi children under sanctions,
about the corruption of pro-western Arab regimes, about Israel's attacks on the Palestinian territory, about the
need for US forces to leave the Middle
East. And after insisting that
bin Laden is a "mindless terrorist'' - that there is no connection between
US policy in the Middle East and the crimes against humanity in New York and Washington - the Americans need to close down Al-Jazeera's coverage.
Needless to say, this
tomfoolery by Colin Powell has not been given much coverage in the Western
media, who know that they do not have a single correspondent in the Taliban
area of Afghanistan. Al-Jazeera does.
But why are we journalists
falling back on the same sheep-like conformity that we adopted in the 1991 Gulf
War and the 1999 Kosovo war? For here we go again. The BBC was yesterday
broadcasting an American officer talking about the dangers of "collateral
damage'' - without the slightest hint of the immorality of this phrase. Tony Blair
boasts of Britain's involvement in the US bombardment by talking about our
"assets'', and by yesterday morning the BBC were using the same
soldier-speak. Is there some kind of rhetorical fog that envelops us every time
we bomb someone?
As usual, the first reports
of the US missile attacks were covered without the slightest
suggestion that innocents were about to die in the country we plan to
"save''. Whether the Taliban are lying or telling the truth about 30 dead
in Kabul, do we reporters really think that all our bombs fall
on the guilty and not the innocent? Do we think that all the food we are
reported to be dropping is going to fall around the innocent and not the
Taliban? I am beginning to wonder whether we have not convinced ourselves that
wars - our wars - are movies. The only Hollywood film ever made about Afghanistan was a Rambo epic in which Sylvester Stallone taught
the Afghan mujahedin how to fight the Russian
occupation, help to defeat Soviet troops and won the admiration of an Afghan
boy. Are the Americans, I wonder, somehow trying to actualise the movie?
But look at the questions
we're not asking. Back in 1991 we dumped the cost of the Gulf War - billions of
dollars of it - on Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. But the Saudis and Kuwaitis are not going to fund our
bombing this time round. So who's going to pay? When? How much will it cost us
- and I mean us? The first night of bombbing cost, so we are told, at least $2m,
I suspect much more. Let us not ask how many Afghans that would have fed - but
do let's ask how much of our money is going towards the war and how much
towards humanitarian aid.
Bin Laden's
propaganda is pretty basic. He films his own statements and sends one of his
henchmen off to the Al-Jazeera office in Kabul. No vigorous questioning of course, just a sermon. So
far we've not seen any video clips of destroyed Taliban equipment, the ancient Migs and even older Warsaw Pact tanks that have been
rusting across Afghanistan for years. Only a sequence of pictures
- apparently real - of bomb damage in a civilian area of Kabul. The Taliban have kept reporters out. But does that
mean we have to balance this distorted picture with our own half-truths?
So hard did a colleague of
mine try, in a radio interview the other day, to unlink the bin Laden
phenomenon from the West's baleful history in the Middle East that he seriously
suggested that the attacks were timed to fall on the anniversary of the defeat
of Muslim forces at the gates of Vienna in 1683. Unfortunately, the Poles won their
battle against the Turks on 12, not 11, September. But when the terrifying
details of the hijacker Mohamed Atta's will were
published last week, dated April 1996, no one could think of any event that month
that might have propelled Atta to his murderous
behaviour.
Not the Israeli bombardment
of southern Lebanon, nor the Qana massacre by Israeli
artillery of 106 Lebanese civilians in a UN base, more than half of them
children. For that's what happened in April, 1996. No, of course that slaughter
is not excuse for the crimes against humanity in the United States last month. But isn't it worth just a little mention,
just a tiny observation, that an Egyptian mass-murderer-to-be wrote a will of
chilling suicidal finality in the month when the massacre in Lebanon enraged Arabs across the Middle East?
Instead of that, we're
getting Second World War commentaries about western military morale. On the BBC
we had to listen to how it was "a perfect moonless night for the air
armada'' to bomb Afghanistan. Pardon me? Are the Germans back at Cap Gris Nez? Are our fighter squadrons back in the skies of Kent, fighting off the Dorniers
and Heinkels? Yesterday, we were told on one satellite
channel of the "air combat'' over Afghanistan. A lie, of course. The
Taliban had none of their ageing Migs aloft. There
was no combat.
Of course, I know the moral
question. After the atrocities in New York, we can't "play fair" between the ruthless
bin Laden and the West; we can't make an equivalence
between the mass-murderer's innocence and the American and British forces who
are trying to destroy the Taliban.
But that's not the point.
It's our viewers and readers we've got to "play fair" with. Must we,
because of our rage at the massacre of the innocents in America, because of our desire to cowtow
to the elderly "terrorism experts", must we lose all our critical
faculties? Why at least not tell us how these "terrorism experts"
came to be so expert? And what are their connections with dubious intelligence
services?
In some cases, in America, the men giving us their advice on screen are the
very same operatives who steered the CIA and the FBI into the greatest
intelligence failure in modern history: the inability to uncover the plot, four
years in the making, to destroy the lives of almost 6,000 people. President
Bush says this is a war between good and evil. You are either with us or
against us. But that's exactly what bin Laden says. Isn't it worth pointing
this out and asking where it leads?
© 2001 Independent Digital
(UK) Ltd
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