Who's In Charge?
A Tiny, Un-elected Group, Backed by Powerful Unrepresentative
Interests
By
EDWARD SAID
The Bush administration's relentless unilateral march
towards war is profoundly disturbing for many reasons, but so far
as American citizens are concerned the whole grotesque show is a tremendous
failure in democracy. An immensely wealthy and powerful republic has
been hijacked by a small cabal of individuals, all of them unelected
and therefore unresponsive to public pressure, and simply turned on
its head. It is no exaggeration to say that this war is the most unpopular
in modern history. Before the war has begun there have been more people
protesting it in this country alone than was the case at the height
of the anti- Vietnam war demonstrations during the 60s and 70s. Note
also that those rallies took place after the war had been going on
for several years: this one has yet to begin, even though a large
number of overtly aggressive and belligerent steps have already been
taken by the US and its loyal puppy, the UK government of the increasingly
ridiculous Tony Blair.
I have been criticised recently for my anti-war position
by illiterates who claim that what I say is an implied defence of
Saddam Hussein and his appalling regime. To my Kuwaiti critics, do
I need to remind them that I publicly opposed Ba'athi Iraq during
the only visit I made to Kuwait in 1985, when in an open conversation
with the then Minister of Education Hassan Al-Ibrahim I accused him
and his regime of aiding and abetting Arab fascism in their financial
support of Saddam Hussein? I was told then that Kuwait was proud to
have committed billions of dollars to Saddam's war against "the Persians",
as they were then contemptuously called, and that it was a more important
struggle than someone like me could comprehend. I remember clearly
warning those Kuwaiti acolytes of Saddam Hussein about him and his
ill will against Kuwait, but to no avail. I have been a public opponent
of the Iraqi regime since it came to power in the 70s: I never visited
the place, never was fooled by its claims to secularism and modernisation
(even when many of my contemporaries either worked for or celebrated
Iraq as the main gun in the Arab arsenal against Zionism, a stupid
idea, I thought), never concealed my contempt for its methods of rule
and fascist behaviour. And now when I speak my mind about the ridiculous
posturing of certain members of the Iraqi opposition as hapless strutting
tools of US imperialism, I am told that I know nothing about life
without democracy (about which more later), and am therefore unable
to appreciate their nobility of soul. Little notice is taken of the
fact that barely a week after extolling President Bush's commitment
to democracy Professor Makiya is now denouncing the US and its plans
for a post-Saddam military-Ba'athi government in Iraq. When individuals
get in the habit of switching the gods whom they worship politically
there's no end to the number of changes they make before they finally
come to rest in utter disgrace and well deserved oblivion.
But to return to the US and its current actions.
In all my encounters and travels I have yet to meet a person who is
for the war. Even worse, most Americans now feel that this mobilisation
has already gone too far to stop, and that we are on the verge of
a disaster for the country. Consider first of all that the Democratic
Party, with few exceptions, has simply gone over to the president's
side in a gutless display of false patriotism. Wherever you look in
the Congress there are the tell-tale signs either of the Zionist lobby,
the right-wing Christians, or the military-industrial complex, three
inordinately influential minority groups who share hostility to the
Arab world, unbridled support for extremist Zionism, and an insensate
conviction that they are on the side of the angels. Every one of the
500 congressional districts in this country has a defence industry
in it, so that war has been turned into a matter of jobs, not of security.
But, one might well ask, how does running an unbelievably expensive
war remedy, for instance, economic recession, the almost certain bankruptcy
of the social security system, a mounting national debt, and a massive
failure in public education? Demonstrations are looked at simply as
a kind of degraded mob action, while the most hypocritical lies pass
for absolute truth, without criticism and without objection.
The media has simply become a branch of the war effort.
What has entirely disappeared from television is anything remotely
resembling a consistently dissenting voice. Every major channel now
employs retired generals, former CIA agents, terrorism experts and
known neoconservatives as "consultants" who speak a revolting jargon
designed to sound authoritative but in effect supporting everything
done by the US, from the UN to the sands of Arabia. Only one major
daily newspaper (in Baltimore) has published anything about US eavesdropping,
telephone tapping and message interception of the six small countries
that are members of the Security Council and whose votes are undecided.
There are no antiwar voices to read or hear in any of the major medias
of this country, no Arabs or Muslims (who have been consigned en masse
to the ranks of the fanatics and terrorists of this world), no critics
of Israel, not on Public Broadcasting, not in The New York Times,
the New Yorker, US News and World Report, CNN and the rest. When these
organisations mention Iraq's flouting of 17 UN resolutions as a pretext
for war, the 64 resolutions flouted by Israel (with US support) are
never mentioned. Nor is the enormous human suffering of the Iraqi
people during the past 12 years mentioned. Whatever the dreaded Saddam
has done Israel and Sharon have also done with American support, yet
no one says anything about the latter while fulminating about the
former. This makes a total mockery of taunts by Bush and others that
the UN should abide by its own resolutions.
The American people have thus been deliberately lied
to, their interests cynically misrepresented and misreported, the
real aims and intentions of this private war of Bush the son and his
junta concealed with complete arrogance. Never mind that Wolfowitz,
Feith, and Perle, all of them unelected officials who work for unelected
Donald Rumsfeld at the Pentagon, have for some time openly advocated
Israeli annexation of the West Bank and Gaza and the cessation of
the Oslo process, have called for war against Iraq (and later Iran),
and the building of more illegal Israeli settlements in their capacity
(during Netanyahu's successful campaign for prime minister in 1996)
as private consultants to him, and that that has become US policy
now.
Never mind that Israel's iniquitous policies against
Palestinians, which are reported only at the ends of articles (when
they are reported at all) as so many miscellaneous civilian deaths,
are never compared with Saddam's crimes, which they match or in some
cases exceed, all of them, in the final analysis, paid for by the
US taxpayer without consultation or approval. Over 40,000 Palestinians
have been wounded seriously in the last two years, and about 2,500
killed wantonly by Israeli soldiers who are instructed to humiliate
and punish an entire people during what has become the longest military
occupation in modern history.
Never mind that not a single critical Arab or Muslim
voice has been seen or heard on the major American media, liberal,
moderate, or reactionary, with any regularity at all since the preparations
for war have gone into their final phase. Consider also that none
of the major planners of this war, certainly not the so-called experts
like Bernard Lewis and Fouad Ajami, neither of whom has so much as
lived in or come near the Arab world in decades, nor the military
and political people like Powell, Rice, Cheney, or the great god Bush
himself, know anything about the Muslim or Arab worlds beyond what
they see through Israeli or oil company or military lenses, and therefore
have no idea what a war of this magnitude against Iraq will produce
for the people actually living there.
And consider too the sheer, unadorned hubris of men
like Wolfowitz and his assistants. Asked to testify to a largely somnolent
Congress about the war's consequences and costs they are allowed to
escape without giving any concrete answers, which effectively dismisses
the evidence of the army chief of staff who has spoken of a military
occupation force of 400,000 troops for 10 years at a cost of almost
a trillion dollars.
Democracy traduced and betrayed, democracy celebrated
but in fact humiliated and trampled on by a tiny group of men who
have simply taken charge of this republic as if it were nothing more
than, what, an Arab country? It is right to ask who is in charge since
clearly the people of the United States are not properly represented
by the war this administration is about to loose on a world already
beleaguered by too much misery and poverty to endure more. And Americans
have been badly served by a media controlled essentially by a tiny
group of men who edit out anything that might cause the government
the slightest concern or worry. As for the demagogues and servile
intellectuals who talk about war from the privacy of their fantasy
worlds, who gave them the right to connive in the immiseration of
millions of people whose major crime seems to be that they are Muslims
and Arabs? What American, except for this small unrepresentative group,
is seriously interested in increasing the world's already ample stores
of anti-Americanism? Hardly any I would suppose.
Jonathan Swift, thou shouldst be living
at this hour.