Forums › Life › Politics, Media & Current Events › How can ‘terrorism’ be condemned while war crimes go without rebuke?
How can ‘terrorism’ be condemned while war crimes go without rebuke?
Washington’s partners in this hypocritical war on terror are given free rein to wreak their own brutal, illegal violence
David Clark
Monday July 31, 2006
The Guardian
As if we didn’t know it already, the conflict in Lebanon shows that truth and war don’t mix. All parties to the tragedy of the Middle East resort to disinformation and historical falsification to bolster their case, but rarely has an attempt to rewrite the past occurred so soon after the fact. Israeli ministers and their supporters have justified the bombardment of Lebanon as “a matter of survival”. Total war has been declared on Israel, so Israel is entitled to use the methods of total war in self-defence. This would be reasonable if it were true, but it isn’t. It’s completely false.
The conflict was triggered by a Hizbullah operation in which two Israeli soldiers were captured and three killed. Let’s be frank, this wasn’t exactly the Tet offensive. It certainly didn’t justify Israel’s ferocious onslaught against the very fabric of Lebanese society. Yes, the rocket attacks on Haifa are an appalling crime, but they followed rather than preceded Israel’s decision to escalate the fighting. They cannot provide retrospective justification for Israeli strategy.
The crisis has also been accompanied by the selective and often inappropriate use of the term “terrorism”. Following the Israeli government, George Bush and Tony Blair were at it again on Friday, blaming “terrorists” for sparking the conflict. The purpose behind this is obvious enough. In the context of America’s war on terror, anyone claiming to be engaged in the fight against this most contested of notions gets carte blanche to do as they please. But the result has been to politicise the term in ways that render it effectively useless as a category of moral judgment or policy analysis.
It is certainly true that Hizbullah has been linked to a string of classic terrorist attacks going back more than 20 years, including suicide bombings against civilian targets, hostage-taking and the hijacking of a TWA flight. A particularly vile example was the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community centre in Buenos Aires in which 85 people were murdered. Hizbullah strongly denies involvement, but the truth is probably murkier than either side pretends. Responsibility for these attacks has often been attributed to Hizbullah’s External Security Organisation (ESO), a unit believed to be under the operational control of Iranian intelligence rather than the Hizbullah’s Lebanese leadership. Britain is one country that draws this distinction, proscribing ESO, but not Hizbullah itself, under the Terrorism Act.
Interestingly, some of the earliest suicide bombings commonly attributed to Hizbullah, such as the 1983 attacks on the US embassy and marine barracks in Beirut, were believed by American intelligence sources at the time to have been orchestrated by the Iraqi Dawa party. Hizbullah barely existed in 1983 and Dawa cadres are said to have been instrumental in setting it up at Tehran’s behest. Dawa’s current leadership includes none other than the new Iraqi prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, feted last week in London and Washington as the great hope for the future of the Middle East. As the old saying goes, today’s terrorist is tomorrow’s statesman – at least when it suits us…
This articles’s well worth reading to the end, so follow the link to the rest of it…
The report, citing Israeli military and western intelligence sources, says that scientists are trying to identify distinctive genes carried by Arabs to create a genetically modified bacterium or virus.”
and check this one out too:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/07/31/1435219
:hopeless::hopeless::hopeless::hopeless:
Where did you get that quote from?
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/07/31/1435219
:hopeless::hopeless::hopeless::hopeless:
I listen to those when I’m cycling, I won’t read it now…
The problem with this situation imo is that the US and UK have set a precedent for attacking, bombing and occupying a state on the grounds that some of its population are believed to be terrorist with their actions in Iraq and Afghanistan.
With that being the case it was only a matter of time till Israel used the same tactics against its own enemies, and even if the US and UK wanted to condemn them, which I personally doubt, they would have little scope to take a moral highground when they are guilty of acting in exactly the same way so recently.
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Forums › Life › Politics, Media & Current Events › How can ‘terrorism’ be condemned while war crimes go without rebuke?