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A Letter to a US Soldier

15/01/2004 

Freelance journalist Felicity Arbuthnot writes a letter to US Soldier Mohammed Omar Masry in response to entry#2 of his diary that IslamOnline published on January 12, 2004.

Dear Sgt. Mohammed Omar Masry,

Might I respond I am sure you have your heart in the right place. I am sure, too, you have been unleashed on Iraq’s schools by the US military is a public relations exercise because you have a Muslim name and do look so nice. It would be interesting to know if you speak Arabic and/or majored in Arabic studies: culture, history. You appeal for school textbooks “preferably in Arabic.” Surely this hardly needs underlining. Iraqi children speak Arabic. Were England or America invaded and occupied by the Arabs, one would hope the occupiers were more sensible than to appeal for textbooks “preferably in English.”

Might I correct you on a vital point Iraqis have resisted every attempt to take over their oil since its discovery. The Haifa pipeline from Kirkuk was mooted over sixty years ago, actually, by the British – the then occupiers – to supply oil to Israel. As soon as the US invaded Iraq last March, the plans to restore this disastrous idea, which will lead to explosion after explosion and sabotage after sabotage, was stated as a US policy. By the way, you talk of “smugglers stealing oil.” March’s madness was an illegal invasion. The oil belongs to Iraqis, not US and Halliburton etc. The complexities of Iraq’s relationship with Israel, however, are outside the scope of this, but look up Babylon’s fall in the Bible’s Book of Revelations, and it will give you a starting point. Then leap forward a few thousand years to a history lesson and the formation of Israel - and there is quite a bit in between.

You have not taken on board neither current events (with respect) nor modern history. The US is importing oil because of utter incompetence to secure the flow, no knowledge of the precarious state of Iraq’s oil production and sheer greed. To benefit Halliburton, Kellog Brown and Root and others and make a quick buck, they have also brought in foreign contractors, who knew nothing of the complexities. To beneft Halliburton, Kellog Brown and Root, Carlyle Group (in which both the Bush family and Bin Laden family were in business), Bechtel and the like, you and your friends are risking and losing your lives, day after day.

In spite of the draconian embargo on Iraq which denied it parts of the oil fields for thirteen years (but via US funding gave millions to NATO’s friend Turkey to update their oil fields/installations - through which, it was demanded, Iraq export and pay for that export - making the systems entirely incompatible) Iraqi engineers nevertheless kept the oil flowing. Might I suggest they get these experts back. A few more employed, able to provide for those they love, might mean a few less bitter and a few less American and “coalition of the unwilling” deaths.

And Sgt. Omar, if you are allowed home on leave, go for it and don’t come back. As I’ve written elsewhere, buy a history book and see that this is a historically reckless and feckless adventure. The Iraqis will prevail, whatever it takes. A little after, the doomed pipeline to Israel fantasy failed, so did British rule. The last British imposed Prime Minister was dragged through the streets until there was so little left of him. Many moderate, anti Saddam Iraqis, enraged at more “disappeared,” shot, run over - with no accounting for “some mother’s son” - daughters, children by the “liberators,” are saying they will not rest until they do to Viceroy Bremer what they did to the Prime Minister - Nuri Sa’ad. I am sure your heart is in the right place, but frankly, for you all, it is time to go. Your compatriots are - literally - dying for oil. Oh and by the way, could you suggest they stop stealing from the homes whose doors they kick down in night time raids, repay the money and return the jewellery they have stolen? What about also suggesting they knock?

And I have a last question: Why does your army put bags over people’s heads, blindfold them in contravention of the Geneva and many other treaties and conventions on Human Rights? “Hearts and Minds,” democracy, is not going to come to Iraq this way. It was, say Iraqis better even, before - and a few school books in any language won’t tip the balance.

Yours sincerely,

Felicity Arbuthnot (white, middle class, middle aged and with a bit of knowledge of Iraq.)

Felicity Arbuthnot has written and broadcast widely on Iraq and with former UN Co-ordinator in Iraq and UN Under Secretary General, Denis Halliday. She was Senior Researcher for John Pilger’s award winning documentary “Paying the Price - Killing the Children of Iraq.”


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