The New
York Times Whitewashes US Imperialism - Contemplates
Ethnic Cleansing
By Eric London
August 17,
2013 "Information
Clearing House"
- "WSWS"
- The entirety of the August 14 print edition
of the New York Times Magazine is dedicated
to a series titled “Fractured Lands: How the Arab
World Came Apart,” by Scott Anderson. The series is
60 pages long and includes detailed sketches of the
lives of six people from various parts of the Middle
East dating back to the years before the 2003 US
invasion of Iraq, through the Arab Spring, the rise
of ISIS in 2014-15, and the migratory outpouring
from the war-torn region.
The
magazine’s editor-in-chief, Jake Silverstein, notes
in a foreword to the series:
“This is an
issue unlike any we have previously published…the
subject of this book is the catastrophe that has
fractured the Arab world since the invasion of Iraq
13 years ago, leading to the rise of ISIS and the
global refugee crisis. The geography of this
catastrophe is broad and its causes are many, but
its consequences—terror and uncertainty around the
world—are familiar to us all.”
Silverstein
concludes his editor’s note: “It is unprecedented
for us to focus so much energy and attention on a
single story and to ask our readers to do the same.
We would not do so were we not convinced that this
is one of the most clear-eyed, powerful and human
explanations of what has gone wrong in this region
that you will ever read.”
The
publication of “Fractured Lands” has an objective
significance. The presentation, the content and the
tone of the series express the American ruling
class’ sense that it faces a catastrophe of
historically unprecedented proportions in the Middle
East. When Anderson asks in his preface: “Why did it
turn out that way?” he is asking on behalf of a
ruling class that is dazed by the catastrophic
outcome of its own reckless and shortsighted
policies.
For the
last 25 years, US imperialism has laid waste to a
span of territory stretching several thousand miles
from North Africa to Central Asia, leaving over 1
million dead. A new vocabulary of words like “shock
and awe,” “extraordinary rendition,” “black site
prison,” “disposition matrix” and “Terror Tuesday”
has emerged as the language of the US wars. A
significant portion of the region’s 200 million
people has been left homeless or have fled for safe
haven abroad. Next January, Barack Obama will leave
office as the first president in US history to serve
his entire two terms while the country was at war.
“Fractured
Lands” is an apologia for the record of American
imperialism. Its author has served as a war
correspondent for 33 years and has worked for the
New York Times for the last 17. He is a
prolific, educated writer and recently published a
historical book on the post-World War One
imperialist carve-up of the Middle East. Whatever
Anderson’s intentions, “Fractured Lands” is a “human
interest” story that serves to justify “human rights
imperialism” and pave the way for new wars.
“Fractured
Lands” makes the argument that the nation-state
system established in the aftermath of the First
World War failed to conform sufficiently to the
various tribal, ethnic and religious divisions in
the region. Anderson concludes that the collapse of
the bourgeois nationalist governments in Syria,
Egypt, Iraq and Libya proves the necessity for
racial and ethnic groups to fill the political
vacuum and fight among themselves to establish
fiefdoms and zones of tribal influence. “Fractured
Lands” acknowledges that this may involve ethnic
cleansing. The author concludes by contemplating
whether pogroms and genocide may be necessary to
establish order in the region.
Whitewashing 25 years of
imperialist war crimes
The series
presents the lives of the six subject individuals
and explains their stories of hardship and disaster.
The reader sympathizes with these hardships, but the
material is presented so as to portray the United
States as a benevolent power whose interventions are
meant to bring democracy and human rights,
especially for religious minorities and women.
Anderson
presents the story of Khulood a-Zaidi, a young Iraqi
woman from Kut who was 23 years old when the United
States invaded Iraq in 2003:
“Before the
invasion, Vice President Dick Cheney predicted that
Americans would be ‘greeted as liberators’ in Iraq,
and his prediction was borne out in the streets of
Kut on April 4. As the Marines consolidated their
hold on the city, they were happily swarmed by young
men and children proffering trays of sweets and hot
tea. Finally permitted to leave her home, Khulood,
like most other women in Kut, observed the spectacle
from a discreet distance. ‘The Americans were very
relaxed, friendly, but mostly I was struck by how
huge they seemed—and all their weapons and vehicles,
too. Everything seemed out of scale, like we had
been invaded by aliens.’”
Anderson
recounts that the Americans “quickly returned the
city to something close to normalcy.” He continues:
“The real work now was in rebuilding the nation’s
shattered economy and reconstituting its government,
and to that end a small army of foreign engineers,
accountants and consultants descended on Iraq under
the aegis of the Coalition Provisional Authority, or
C.P.A., the American-led transitional administration
that would stand down once a new Iraqi government
was in place.”
The
invasion forces brought in teams of “human rights
advisers” who were tasked with overseeing
“development projects to empower women in the Shiite
heartland of southern Iraq.” Khulood became a
beneficiary of this program, soon sent off to
Washington to join the American occupation’s
collaborators in drafting a new US-imposed
constitution. When she returned, the young woman
was, understandably, treated by her neighbors as a
US spy.
Anderson
waxes enthusiastically on this development in the
abortive attempt by Washington to fashion a
functioning puppet regime in Baghdad. He declares
that “a new Iraq was being established, one in which
democracy and respect for human rights would reign
supreme. What’s more, to consolidate this new Iraq,
everyone had a role to play, not least the women of
Kut.”
Another
Iraqi, Wakaz Hassan, is featured in the series.
Anderson writes that Hassan “remembered hearing
something about the mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners
at an American-operated prison—clearly a reference
to the Abu Ghraib scandal—and then there was the
time American soldiers searched his family’s home,
but those soldiers were quite respectful, and the
episode passed without incident.
“‘I know
others had problems with the Americans,’ Wakaz said,
‘but my family, no. For us, we were really not
affected at all.’” Anderson states that the invasion
brought many important advances in the realm of
“human rights.” For example, the US invasion
established that 25 percent of parliamentary seats
would be reserved for women.
Those
familiar with the history of Iraq can only rub their
eyes in disbelief as this propaganda figure is
trotted out once again, as if the 25 percent of
parliamentary seats reserved for the wives, sisters
and daughters of the leaders of the various
sectarian parties in the Iraqi parliament represents
a gain for the country’s women.
The idea
that US imperialism’s rape of the country was
carried out in the interests of liberating its women
is obscene. Whatever the crimes of the Iraqi
Baathist government of Saddam Hussein, women in Iraq
enjoyed the highest status and most rights of
virtually any country in the region. The erosion of
these conditions began with the first Gulf War of
1991 and continued under the punishing US sanctions
that devastated the country’s economy.
The war
itself left over a million Iraqi women as destitute
widows. In the wake of the US invasion, secular law
guaranteeing equal legal and employment rights has
been replaced by religious codes stripping women of
all such protections. In the 13 years since the US
invasion, women in Iraq have seen their status go
from among the highest in the region, to among the
lowest.
“Fractured
Lands” employs similar distortions with respect to
Libya. One young man, Majdi El-Mangoush, is
portrayed by Anderson as brainwashed by false
pro-Gaddafi claims that “US imperialism” was
involved in the conflict: “Provided with this
narrative, Majdi was not altogether surprised when,
in mid-March [2011], Western alliance warplanes
began appearing over Tripoli to bomb government
installations. It seemed merely to confirm that the
nation was being attacked from beyond.” Majdi ends
up switching sides, informing on pro-Gaddafi
soldiers, and siding with the US-backed opposition.
By
examining these events solely through the eyes of
individuals who became unwillingly caught up in
them, the Times magazine piece manages to
completely obscure the responsibility of those who
made the decisions that led to these wars and the
resulting death and social devastation.
That those
within the Bush administration who ordered an
unprovoked war of aggression against Iraq, like
those in the Obama White House who engineered first
the US-NATO war for regime change in Libya in 2011,
followed by the CIA-backed proxy war for regime
change in Syria, are responsible for killing and
maiming millions is deliberately excluded from the
article. So too, it should be added, is the criminal
role of the New York Times in
propagandizing for these wars.
Anderson
has also selected his subjects in a dishonest
manner. The New York Times chose not to
select the parents or children of those killed in
the US wars as subjects in this series. Instead, it
regurgitates the same propaganda it employed when
the newspaper supported the US invasion of Iraq over
a decade ago.
The New York Times
contemplates ethnic cleansing
In
answering the question “Why did it turn out this
way?” Anderson points to the collapse of the former
bourgeois nationalist governments of the Middle East
and the political vacuum created in their absence.
Though Anderson minimizes the role of US imperialism
in the region, he notes in his introduction: “While
most of the 22 nations that make up the Arab world
would have been buffeted to some degree by the Arab
Spring, the six most profoundly affected—Egypt,
Iraq, Libya, Syria, Tunisia, and Yemen—are all
republics, rather than monarchies.”
Anderson
briefly traces the method by which the imperialist
powers carved up the Middle East in the aftermath of
the First World War. He points to the
“divide-and-conquer approach” of the British and
French, which “consisted of empowering a local
ethnic or religious minority to serve as their local
administrators” despite the fact that “just beneath
the sectarian and regional divisions in these
‘nations’ there lay extraordinarily complex
tapestries of tribes and subtribes and clans…”
Curiously, he fails to note that these same methods
have been employed by US imperialism, both in its
dismemberment of Iraq and in its provocation of
sectarian civil war in Syria.
Anderson
concludes that the nation state is fundamentally
incapable of expressing the interests of various
national, ethnic and religious minority groups.
The article
focuses particular attention on the Yazidi
Christians and the Kurds. He interviews Azar Mirkhan,
an ultra-nationalist doctor from Kurdistan. While
Anderson is present, Mirkhan orders a peshmerga
senior official to carry out a pogrom of Arab
peasants in an area south of Mount Sinjar in
northwestern Iraq. Mirkhan claims this is payback
for the local Arab population’s failure to prevent
an ISIS-led massacre of Kurds.
Anderson
contemplates what Mirkhan has done:
“Until a
short time ago, Azar might have been derided as a
xenophobe, even a fascist, for his radical
separatist views. In seeing the results of ISIS’s
barbarism, however, and in contemplating the hatreds
that have been unleashed across the Middle East in
the past few years, some observers have begun to
believe that his hard way of thinking might offer
the best—or, more accurately, only—path out of the
morass. The despair over how impossible it seems to
reassemble the shattered nations of the region has
caused an ever-increasing number of diplomats and
generals and statesmen to consider just the sort of
ethnic and sectarian separation that Azar advocates,
albeit in less brutal form.
“Even
proponents acknowledge that such separations would
not be easy. What to do with the thoroughly ‘mixed’
populations of cities like Baghdad or Aleppo? In
Iraq, many tribes are divided into Shia and Sunni
subgroups, and in Libya by geographic dispersions
going back centuries. Do these people choose to go
with tribe or sect or homeland? In fact, parallels
in history suggest that such a course would be both
wrenching and murderous—witness the postwar
‘de-Germanization’ policy in Eastern Europe and the
1947 partition of the Indian subcontinent—but
despite the misery and potential body count entailed
in getting there, maybe this is the last, best
option available to prevent the failed states of the
Middle East from devolving into even more brutal
slaughter.”
That such
lines could be published in the leading paper of
American liberalism underscores the reactionary
political climate cultivated by 25 years of
permanent war. The “last, best option” consists of
pitting populations against each other along ethnic
and religious lines in an exercise of region-wide
partition that would mean the deaths and dislocation
of millions.
In fact,
the policy promoted by the New York Times
is already in place. Al-Qaeda, ISIS, the al-Nusra
Front and other ultra-right wing Islamic groups have
been utilized by American imperialism to destroy the
old state-structure of the Middle East in an effort
to subordinate the entire region to the interests of
American banks and corporations.
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