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Who Else Is Responsible for the London Carnage?
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By
Ramzy Baroud*
Freelance Writer – Qatar
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July
10, 2005
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Innocent
Londoners have paid the price for Blair’s policies. |
“Barbaric”;
there is hardly any other term that is capable of depicting the
murder of over 50 people and the wounding of hundreds more during
London’s rush hour on Thursday, July 7. “Unexpected,” however,
is the least relevant term.
But
why would “mass murder”—an expression used fittingly by
London’s highly regarded Mayor Ken Livingstone following the
attacks—become an “inevitable” event, is another dreadful
component in this disastrous episode.
It
was Livingstone who warned in September 2002, “An assault on Iraq
will inflame world opinion and jeopardize security and peace
everywhere. London, as one of the major world cities, has a great
deal to lose from war and a lot to gain from peace, international
cooperation and global security.”
The
mayor’s words were poignant and ring true today more than ever
before. However, they were of little consequence for British Prime
Minister Tony Blair, so adamant in his quest for war, so incessant
in maintaining his country’s dangerous alliance with
Washington’s self-serving and now debauched “war on terror.”
Although
Britain can only claim a small portion of the subsequent carnage in
Afghanistan and Iraq, Blair was and remains an unyielding partner in
both wars. He has, so pompously, overlooked untold atrocities
against innocent civilians in both countries while maintaining an
active role in the “ridding the world of evil” farce, which
continues to plague the world and increasingly, albeit misguidedly
define the correlation between the West and the Muslim world.
It
is quite a paradox that Blair was the first to infuse the term
“barbaric” following the London carnage—a paradox because the
barbarism in London had an undeniable kinship with the years of
barbarism in Iraq, barbarism which continues to unfold in full
force.
Terrorism
is not random; it’s a callous mirroring to an equally
callous legacy of terror and violence.
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In
May 2003, following protests from human rights groups regarding the
British army’s use of cluster bombs in and around the Iraqi city
of Basra, British officials had nothing but unabashed
rationalization as a response.
Armed
Forces Minister Adam Ingram justified the use of cluster bombs, in
an interview with BBC radio, on military grounds, arguing:
“Cluster bombs are not illegal. They are effective weapons. They
are used in specific circumstances where there is a threat to our
troops.”
Those
“specific circumstances,” according to British media, compelled
the dropping of 2,000 Israeli-made cluster bombs on Basra and its
surroundings in April 2003 alone.
Richard
Lloyd, Director of Landmine Action, asserted that he had seen
maps—provided to the UN by the US military—showing cities that
were almost completely masked by a heap of symbols indicating where
cluster bombs had been used. “These weapons were used in and
around virtually every built-up area where there was major
fighting,” Lloyd said.
Hundreds
of these bombs are still there, not yet detonated and just waiting
to go off among hoards of scavenging children, a dreadful and
recurring episode in both Afghanistan and Iraq—utterly barbaric
indeed.
Its
a catastrophe that innocent Londoners, who have fought so earnestly
for the cause of justice from the very beginning, objecting so
earnestly to the war, mass protesting and taking on their government
like in no other capital in Europe, had to pay the profound and
sorrowful price for Blair’s reprehensible lies and forgeries—his
groundless case for Weapons of Mass Destruction and his
unsubstantiated claims that regime change in Iraq means security for
his country. But who ever said that barbarism subscribes to any
rules of conduct?
Terrorism
is not random; it’s a callous mirroring to an equally callous
legacy of terror and violence, this time ensued in part by
relentlessly arrogant and self-congratulating statesmen like Tony
Blair.
Commenting
on the slaughter in London, Blair’s response failed to abandon the
highly predictable and self-observed rhetoric: “My opinion is that
those people who kill the innocent and cause such bloodshed … are
solely responsible.”
But
isn’t the above so twisted an underlying of a principle? It’s
another cruel irony that following years of war in Afghanistan and
Iraq with a human toll that has been put past the one hundred
thousand mark and a price tag of hundreds of billions of dollars, to
pin the “sole responsibility” on a few terrorists, who—despite
their reprehensible acts—pale in comparison to the Bush-Blair
mega-crimes against humanity.
Is
it possible that we have not learned a single thing since the
massacres of September 11, Jenin, Kandahar, and Fallujah? Such
erroneous logic will persist with pundits like Gerard Baker of The
Times blaming “14th century [Islamic] fanaticism” for the London
bombings, while strongly rebuffing any linkage between group and
state terrorism.
Terrorism
and militancy are thriving all around, with Iraq
as a base and a cause.
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And
when will the Bush and Blair crowd wake up and smell the decomposed
Iraqi bodies and forever quit utilizing the ever handy “we will
not change our way of life” comeback to terrorism, based on the
fallacious conclusion that terrorists are blowing people up because
they hate freedom?
The
reality that Blair conveniently wishes to neglect is as plain as it
is tragic. Terrorism and militancy are thriving all around, with
Iraq as a base and a cause. The Anglo-American war has wrought
nothing but murder and mayhem, which crossed the borders of many
countries and cities with London as its latest target. The
intelligence failure that led to war in Iraq is repeated with
another disastrous failure that couldn’t intercept a major bombing
scheme that disabled a major city like London. This is yet another
attestation of which neither sheer military strength nor superior
intelligence holds the answer.
The
answer lies in an immediate halt of all military aggressions
perpetrated in the name of civilization and democratization by the
super powers against vulnerable and defenseless countries. This void
can only be filled by sensible diplomacy, cultural integration, and
dialogue to achieve what cluster bombs have utterly failed to
deliver. Otherwise the “inevitable” attacks on London will go on
with the same certainty as the promise of each new day.
*
Ramzy Baroud is the author of
the forthcoming book A Force to Be Reckoned With: Writings on the
Second Palestinian Uprising, to be published by Pluto Press.
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