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Amy Goodman Interviews Robert Fisk on Iraq/Palestine
June 21, 2003 - 4:23pm -- jim
hydrarchist submits:
Robert Fisk Interviewed by Amy Goodman
On June 11, 2003, Amy Goodman interviewed Robert Fisk. He recently
left Iraq
where he was chronicling the rising resistance to the U.S.
occupation. Ten
American soldiers have been killed in ambushes across Iraq in the
past 15
days including one yesterday in Baghdad who was attacked with
rocket
propelled grenades. Fallujah has been a hotbed of Iraqi resistance
since
April when U.S. troops fired into large crowds of civilians twice
killing at
least 18 people.
AMY GOODMAN: Robert Fisk, can you talk more about what you found
there?
ROBERT FISK: I don't think I've ever seen a clearer example of an
army that
thought it was an army of liberation and has become an army of
occupation.
It's important perhaps to say -- I did mention it in [a recent]
article that
a number of those soldiers who were attached to the 3rd infantry
division
who were military policeman, American ordinary cops like one from
Rhode
Island, for example--they had a pretty shrewd idea of what was
going on. You
got different kinds of behavior from the Americans. You got this
very nice
guy, Phil Cummings, who was a Rhode Island cop, very sensitive
towards
people, didn't worry if people shouted at him. He remained smiling.
He just
said that if people throw rocks at me or stones at me, I give them
candies.
There was another soldier who went up to a middle aged man sitting
on a seat
and he said, "If you get out of that seat, I'll break your neck,"
and there
was quite a lot of language like that as well. There were good guys
as well
as bad guys among the Americans as there always are in armies, but
the
people who I talked to, the sergeants and captains and so on--most
of them
acknowledge that something had gone wrong, that this was not going
to be
good.
One guy said to me, every time we go down to the river here--he was
talking
about the river area in Fallujah--it's a tributary of the
Tigris--it's like
Somalia down there. You always get shot at and you always get
stoned, I
mean, have stones thrown at them. Some of the soldiers spoke very
frankly
about the situation in Baghdad. One man told me--I heard twice
before in
Baghdad itself, once from a British Commonwealth diplomat and once
from a
fairly senior officer in what we now have to call the coalition,
C.P.A., the
Coalition-- for the moment forces or whatever it's
called--Authority, the
authority that's hanging on there until they can create some kind
of Iraqi
government--they all say that Baghdad airport now comes under
nightly sniper
fire from the perimeter of the runways from Iraqis. Two of them
told me that
every time a military aircraft comes in at night, it's fired at. In
fact
some of the American pilots are now going back to the old
Vietnamese tactic
of cork screwing down tightly on to the runways from above rather
than
making the normal level flight approach across open countryside
because
they're shot at so much. It's a coalition provisional authority I'm
thinking
of, the C.P.A., previously an even more long fangled name. There is
a very
serious problem of security.
The Americans still officially call them the remnants of Saddam or
terrorists.
But in fact, it is obviously an increase in the organized
resistance and not
just people who were in Saddam's forces, who were in the Ba'ath
Party or the
Saddam Fedayeen.
There was also increasing anger among the Shiite community, those
who were
of course most opposed to Saddam, and I think what we're actually
seeing,
you can get clues in Iraq, is a cross fertilization. Shiites who
are
disillusioned, who don't believe they have been liberated, who
spent so long
in Iran, they don't like the Americans anyway. Sunni Muslims who
feel like
they're threatened by the Shiites, former Sadaam acolytes who've
lost their
jobs and found that their money has stopped. Kurds who are
disaffected and
are beginning to have contacts, and that of course is the beginning
of a
real resistance movement and that's the great danger for the
Americans now.
GOODMAN: We're talking to Robert Fisk, who is just come out of
Iraq. There's
a front page piece in The New York Times today, "GI's In Iraqi City
Are
Stalked By Faceless Enemies At Night, and Michael Gordon writes
about how
organized the resistance is, how it seems to come alive at night
and that
what's clear, he says , is some attacks are premeditated, involve
cooperation among small groups of fighters including a system of
signaling
the presence of American forces: talking about the use of red,
white and
blue flares when forces come and then the attacks begin.
FISK: Yes, I've heard this. I also know that in Fallujah, for
example,
there's a system of honking the horns of cars: when the vehicles
approach,
the American convoy approaches, there's one honk on the horn. When
the last
vehicle goes by the same spot, there's two honks on the horn, and
the
purpose is to work out the time element between the first hooter
and the
second because by that, they know how big is the convoy and whether
it's
small enough to be attacked. That comes from a sergeant in the
military
police in Fallujah taking part in this actual operation which I
described to
you just now, which you read out from my report.
One of the problems with the Americans I think is that the top
people in the
Pentagon always knew that this wasn't going to be human rights
abuses ended,
flowers and music for the soldiers, and everyone lives happily
every after
and loves America. You may remember when Rumsfeld first came to
Baghdad,
something your president didn't dare to do in the end, he wanted to
fly over
in an airplane.
He made a speech which I thought was very interesting, rather
sinister in
the big hanger at Baghdad airport. He said we still have to fight
the
remnants of Saddam and the terrorists in Iraq, and I thought, hang
on a
minute, who are these people? And it took me a few minutes to
realize I
think what he was doing, he was laying the future narrative of the
opposition to the Americans. I.E when the Americans get attacked,
it could
be first of all laid down to remnants of Saddam, as in remnants of
the
Taliban who seem to be moving around in Afghanistan now in
battalion
strength, but never mind. It could be blamed on Al Qaeda, so
America was
back fighting its old enemies again. This was familiar territory.
If you were to suggest that it was a resistance movement, harakat
muqawama,
resistance party in Arabic, that would suggest the people didn't
believe
they had been liberated, and of course, all good-natured peace
loving people
have to believe they were liberated by the Americans, not occupied
by them.
What you're finding for example is a whole series of blunders by
Paul
Bremer, the American head of the so-called coalition forces, at
least
coalition authority in Baghdad.
First of all, he dissolved the Iraqi Army. Well, I can't imagine an
Army
that better deserves to be dissolved. But that means that more than
quarter
of a million armed men overnight are deprived of their welfare and
money.
Now if you have quarter of a million armed Iraqis who suddenly
don't get
paid any more, and they all know each other, what are they going to
do? They
are going to form some kind of force which is secret, which is
covered; then
they will be called terrorists, but I guess they know that, and
then of
course they will be saying to people, why don't you come and join
us.
It was very interesting that in Fallujah, a young man came out to
see me from a shop just after the American searches there had ended and
said some
people came from the resistance a few nights ago and asked him to
join. I
said, what did you say, and he said, I wouldn't do that. But now,
he said, I
might think differently. I met a Shiite Muslim family in Baghdad
who moved
into the former home of a Saddam intelligence officer. This family
had been
visited three nights previously by armed men who said, you better
move out
of this house. It doesn't belong to you unless you want to join us.
The guy
in Fallujah said that the men, the armed men who came to invite him
to join
the resistance had weapons, showed their mukhabarat intelligence
identity
card and said, we're still being paid and we are proud to hold our
I.D.
cards for the Ba'ath Party. So, now you have to realize that
Fallujah and
other towns like it are very unlike Tikrit, are very much
pro-Saddam.
Fallujah is the site of a great munitions factory, it gave people
massive
employment. They all loved Saddam in the way Arabs are encouraged
to love
dictators or go to prison otherwise. But nonetheless, there is an
embryo of a serious resistance movement now.
On top of this, you can see the measure of what I think is
basically
desperation. I've been writing about this in The Independent this
morning in
London, well, last night for this morning's paper, and Paul Bremer
now asked
the legal side of the coalition provisional authority to set up the
machinery of Iraqi press censorship. In other words, Iraqi
newspapers are
going to be censored. Controlled I think is the official word they
use, but
that means censorship.
That is the kind of language that Saddam used. Iraqis are used to a
censored
press; after all, they lived with it for more than 20 years under
Saddam
Hussein.
Now when you question the Americans about it, first of all they
deny it.
Then the British half accept it; then other people involved in the
coalition
say well it's probably true, yes, it is true.
But the problem is the wild stories appearing in the Iraqi press.
Now, of
course there's no tradition of western style journalism in Iraq.
There are
those that say it's a good idea, no tradition for example of
letting the
other side have a say, checking the story out, going back on the
ground and
asking the other side for their version of events. It doesn't
exist. It's a
little bit, but not much. What you get after saying that Americans
are going
with Iraqi prostitutes, American troops are chasing Iraqi women,
that Muslim
women are being invited to marry Christian foreigners, that this is
worse
than it was under Saddam. I'm actually quoting from one particular
newspaper
called The Witness, which is a Shiite Muslim paper, basically that
had its
first issue the other day. Other newspapers carry reports of
American
beatings; they also carry reports of "I was Saddam's double" , and
the
opening of mass graves. They're not totally one sided against the
Americans.
But you can see how the occupation forces, let's call them by their
real
name, are troubled by this kind of publication because it seems to
them to
provoke or incite animosity towards the liberators of Iraq, which
it is not
meant to do. But of course the problem is that the Imams in the
mosques are
saying the same thing about the Americans. Now, the last quote I
read from
American official said that it may be necessary to control what the
Imams
were saying in the mosques; well, this is preposterous. I sat on
Rashid
Street in Baghdad a few days ago and listened to the loud speaker
carrying
the sermon of the imam from within the mosque.
I think he was saying the Americans must leave immediately, now.
Well, under
the new rule presumably he's inciting the people to violence. What
are we
going to do? Arrest all the Imams in the mosques, arrest all the
journalists
who won't obey, close down the newspapers? I mean what Iraqi
journalists
need are courses in journalism from reporters who work in real
democracies.
You can come along and say, look, by all means criticize the
Americans and
put the boot in if you want to, but make sure you get it right. And
if you
also do that you have to look at your own society and what is wrong
in it
and how Saddam ever came about. He didn't just come about because
America
supported Saddam which my goodness they did. But Bremer is not
interested in
this. What Bremer wants to do is control, control the press,
control the
Imams, and it doesn't work. A lot of the incidents taking place
now, the
violent incidents are not being divulged.
GOODMAN: Robert, you were just talking about a lot of the attacks
we're
hearing about--what seems like a good number, a lot of the
attacks--on U.S.
forces are not being reported.
FISK: I have a colleague, for example, who went down to Fallujah
before the
incident I was describing to you earlier, after two gunmen, one
American had
been killed in the fire fight, he reported, I spoke to both sides.
On his
way back he was traveling past the town of Abu Garab a rather
sinister place
where the huge prison is where Saddam executed so many prisoners,
including
an Observer journalist back in the late 1980's.
As we were, as the colleague was passing by the town, he saw a
young man
come up and throw a hand grenade at American troops in the Humvee.
The grenade missed them and exploded in the canal and wounded six
Iraqi
children, a very clear account of what happened. I rang the
coalition
forces, the telephone didn't answer as it very often doesn't do.
And no
report ever emerged except in my paper that this incident had
occurred.
Now, over and over again we keep seeing things, seeing small
incidents
occur, soldiers threatening people outside petrol lines because
people are
trying to jump the line and steal. And it just doesn't make it back
into the
coalition record of what's actually happening in Iraq. The danger
here is
not so much that we're not being told about it because we can see
and find
out for ourselves. The danger is that the United States leadership
in
Baghdad, and of course, especially back in the White House and
Pentagon is
also not being told about it. Or if it is, information is only
going to
certain people who can deal with that information.
It's very easy to say, well Iraq's been a great success we've got
rid of a
dictatorship, the weapons of mass destruction which didn't exist
have now
been destroyed or whatever interpretation you want to put on that.
Human
rights abuses have ended, certainly the Saddam kind. But if you try
and if
this information goes up the ladder every bit of it to people like
Bremer,
I'm not sure it all is--I think it should be--then you can see how
the
coalition doesn't represent the reality.
One of the big problems at the moment is the Americans and, to some
extent
the British, particularly the Americans in Baghdad. They're all
ensconced in
this chic gleaming marble palace, largest, most expensive palace.
There they
sit with their laptops trying to work out with Washington how
they're going
to bring about this new democracy in Iraq. They rely upon for the
most part
former Iraqi exiles who never endured Saddam Hussein, who are
hovering
around making sure that they get the biggest part of the pie
possible. When
they leave the palace, when they go into the streets of Baghdad,
the
dangerous streets of Baghdad, they leave in these armored black
Mercedes
with gunmen in the front and back, soldiers, plain clothes guys
with weapons
and sunglasses.
One Iraqi said to me the other day "who did you think was the last
person we
saw driving through town like [this]?" I said, Saddam Hussein?
They all
burst out laughing, of course, they said, exactly the same.
We are used to this just like they're used to press censorship. I
think it's
difficult--you need to be in Baghdad to understand the degree to
which
there's been this slippage of ambition and slippage in the
ideological war.
I was in small hotel called the Al Hama the other day--it has a
swimming
pool, 24-hour generators. Just going down to have a meal in the
evening, I
came across two westerners, one with a pump action shotgun, the
other with a
submachine gun passing me in the hallway.
I said, "Who are you?"
He said, "Well, who are you?"
"I'm a guest in the hotel. You have guns. Who are you?"
He said, "We work for D.O.D"
"Department of Defense, right?" (But he was obviously English--he
had a
British accent.) "Hang on a second you're not American."
"No, we're a British company that is hired to look after D.O.D.
employees in
Baghdad. That's why we're armed."
I said, "Who gives you permission to have weapons?"
He said, "The coalition forces, we're here protecting them."
Now, how often have Iraqis seen armed plain clothes men moving in
and out of
hotels, they have for more than 20 years, now seeing them again.
Well these
guys are not going to string them up by their fingernails and
electrocute
them in torture cells. But again, the image, the picture is the
same. The
armored escort, limousines in the street, soldiers kicking down the
doors
searching for, "terrorists." The press censorship plans. Plain
clothes
armed men going into a hotel asking who you are immediately by
asking them
who they are, same system as before. It has this kind of ghastly
ghostly
veneer of the old regime about it. The Americans are not Saddam,
they're not
murdering people - they're not lining up people at mass graves, of
course
they're not. But if you see through the eyes of the Iraqis, it
doesn't look
quite that simple.
GOODMAN: We are talking to Robert Fisk, just came out of Iraq but
you've
also written about the so-called road map to peace. I just wanted
to get
your response to what happened yesterday in Gaza, with the Israeli
helicopter gun ships attempting to assassinate the political leader
for
Hamas, Abdel Azziz Rantizzi. And also Bush strongly criticizing the
attempted assassination on the part of the Israel.
FISK: First of all he didn't strongly criticize them, he mildly,
rather
pathetically and rather cowardly criticized the Israelis. This was
an attack
which was meant to kill the political head of Hamas. And in the
ghastly role
which the Palestinians and Israelis play in their bloody and
useless
conflict, I can understand why the attack was made in that context.
But that attack did not kill Rantizzi, it killed a little child of
five and
a young woman. Now your president said that that was "troubling".
That isn't
troubling that's a shameful act, that's a despicable thing to do.
But there
was no strong condemnation from Mr. Bush, he just said it was
troubling. If
a Palestinian had attacked Israeli forces or Israeli political
leader
involved in encouraging violence, had killed a little Israeli girl,
and a
young innocent Israeli woman Mr. Bush would not have called it
troubling. He
would have said it was a shameful, terrorist act, which it would
have been.
How can it work when the most powerful president of the most
powerful state
in the world, United States of America, can be so gutless and
cowardly in
condemning the killing of two innocent people.
It is not troubling. It is an outrage that those two innocent
people died.
Just as it would be if the Palestinians had done it. Just as it is
when the
Palestinians do do it. [For Bush]It is not an outrage. Not a
tragedy. Not
shameful. It is merely troubling. Like a flood is troubling or a
heavy
rainfall that kills people or a storm is troubling. In that context
how can
this new peace possibly work.
It's called a road map, who invented the phrase road map? I suppose
the poor
old State Department and all the journalists dutifully used the
word road
map.
They can't use peace process because that's associated with Oslo
and that
failed. You remember the cliche for the peace process, always had
to be put
back on track. I suppose peace process was a railway line or a
railway train
so it presumably always has to be put back on the main road or back
on the
highway that is the cliche.
What has Sharon done? he's closed down a few empty caravans on
hilltops.
At large and continuing to expand Jewish settlements, the Jews and
Jews only
in occupied Arab land. What have the Palestinians done? Mahmoud
Abbas says
I'm going to finish terrorism, there's going to be no more violence
by the
Palestinians and, bang, there immediately is. We have the three
main violent
groups, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Al-Aqsa immediately carrying out
the
suicide bombing.
And then praised by Rantizzi, I remember thinking, he's praising
them,
that's against the road map so Israelis have got a green light to
knock him
off and they tried and failed. I remember interviewing Rantizzi
along
similar lines about six months ago in Gaza, as I was talking to him
I saw an
Israeli helicopter emerge in the window and his body guard looked
around
very nervously and I thought, oh, no, please go away and so I
finished the
interview.
But I always thought he was a target, he always had two gunmen with
him all
the time. That's not the point. Rantizzi is a very tough Hamas man,
a very
ruthless man. He was one of the Palestinians who was illegally
deported from
Israeli prisons into Lebanon in 1992. I actually met him there in
the
southern Lebanon in the hills, when he was living rough, months
after months
in a tent.
This is a very rough character, very tough guy--grew up the hard
way in
guerrilla warfare as well as politics.
But when you're going to have a situation where you have an Israeli
prime
minister who doesn't want to end the settlements, who is indeed the
creator
of the settlements, and a Palestinian prime minister who can't stop
the
intifada and a U.S. president who is so gutless he can only call a
killing
of a woman and a child troubling, what chance is there for a road
map or
peace process or any other kind of agreement in the Middle East?
GOODMAN: We're talking to Robert Fisk, who is just come out of Iraq
and who
has reported extensively on the Middle East for more than 30 years.
I wanted to end, back in Iraq. CNN is reporting today that Ahmed
Chalabi who
has addressed the Council on Foreign Relations is saying that
Saddam Hussein
is moving in an arc around the Tigris River starting northeast of
Baghdad.He
said finding Saddam would just be a matter of knowing whom to talk
to.He
says based on information from credible sources, he believes the
former
Iraqi president wants revenge and has obtained two suicide bombing
vests for
attacks on U.S. forces. Chalabi says Saddam is paying bounty for
every U.S.
soldier killed. Your response?
FISK: I long ago gave up putting any credit in anything that Ahmed
Chalabi
says.The real issue is not where is Saddam Hussein, he could be
sitting in
Minsk or Belarus or he could be sitting in Tikrit or in the Iraqi
countryside somewhere.Obviously there were plans to hide him in
advance. You
know this goes back to another issue of the degree of real effort
to find
him. Just look back, the Americans wanted to arrest Valadich and
put him in
the Hague. We were going to capture Osama bin laden, he's still on
the
loose. We were going to capture Mullah Omar, he's only got one eye,
not
difficult to identify. But he's still on the loose. We can't get
vice
president Ramadan in Iraq or Uday Hussein, the sons of Saddam. We
can't get
Saddam himself. Can't get Naji Sabri the foreign minister.
I was sitting in a restaurant in Baghdad a week and a half ago, at
the next
table next to me was Saddam's personal translator. I sort of did a
double
take, I said, hi, how are you? I knew the guy. I'd known him for
years and
years. I said, are you okay? Fine, fine no problem, he was having a
beer
with friends. And he walked out. This is the same restaurant that
later on I
saw Paul Bremer walk into with several special forces men to
protect him and
his guests for dinner. I have to ask myself sometimes what's going
on. Ahmed
Chalabi says that Saddam is moving in an arc, he maybe moving in a
circle or
square for all I know but it's clear he's still alive. That's the
point.
GOODMAN: Well, Robert Fisk, thank you very much for being with
us.Robert
Fisk of the Independent of London just out of Iraq.
hydrarchist submits:
Robert Fisk Interviewed by Amy Goodman
On June 11, 2003, Amy Goodman interviewed Robert Fisk. He recently
left Iraq
where he was chronicling the rising resistance to the U.S.
occupation. Ten
American soldiers have been killed in ambushes across Iraq in the
past 15
days including one yesterday in Baghdad who was attacked with
rocket
propelled grenades. Fallujah has been a hotbed of Iraqi resistance
since
April when U.S. troops fired into large crowds of civilians twice
killing at
least 18 people.
AMY GOODMAN: Robert Fisk, can you talk more about what you found
there?
ROBERT FISK: I don't think I've ever seen a clearer example of an
army that
thought it was an army of liberation and has become an army of
occupation.
It's important perhaps to say -- I did mention it in [a recent]
article that
a number of those soldiers who were attached to the 3rd infantry
division
who were military policeman, American ordinary cops like one from
Rhode
Island, for example--they had a pretty shrewd idea of what was
going on. You
got different kinds of behavior from the Americans. You got this
very nice
guy, Phil Cummings, who was a Rhode Island cop, very sensitive
towards
people, didn't worry if people shouted at him. He remained smiling.
He just
said that if people throw rocks at me or stones at me, I give them
candies.
There was another soldier who went up to a middle aged man sitting
on a seat
and he said, "If you get out of that seat, I'll break your neck,"
and there
was quite a lot of language like that as well. There were good guys
as well
as bad guys among the Americans as there always are in armies, but
the
people who I talked to, the sergeants and captains and so on--most
of them
acknowledge that something had gone wrong, that this was not going
to be
good.
One guy said to me, every time we go down to the river here--he was
talking
about the river area in Fallujah--it's a tributary of the
Tigris--it's like
Somalia down there. You always get shot at and you always get
stoned, I
mean, have stones thrown at them. Some of the soldiers spoke very
frankly
about the situation in Baghdad. One man told me--I heard twice
before in
Baghdad itself, once from a British Commonwealth diplomat and once
from a
fairly senior officer in what we now have to call the coalition,
C.P.A., the
Coalition-- for the moment forces or whatever it's
called--Authority, the
authority that's hanging on there until they can create some kind
of Iraqi
government--they all say that Baghdad airport now comes under
nightly sniper
fire from the perimeter of the runways from Iraqis. Two of them
told me that
every time a military aircraft comes in at night, it's fired at. In
fact
some of the American pilots are now going back to the old
Vietnamese tactic
of cork screwing down tightly on to the runways from above rather
than
making the normal level flight approach across open countryside
because
they're shot at so much. It's a coalition provisional authority I'm
thinking
of, the C.P.A., previously an even more long fangled name. There is
a very
serious problem of security.
The Americans still officially call them the remnants of Saddam or
terrorists.
But in fact, it is obviously an increase in the organized
resistance and not
just people who were in Saddam's forces, who were in the Ba'ath
Party or the
Saddam Fedayeen.
There was also increasing anger among the Shiite community, those
who were
of course most opposed to Saddam, and I think what we're actually
seeing,
you can get clues in Iraq, is a cross fertilization. Shiites who
are
disillusioned, who don't believe they have been liberated, who
spent so long
in Iran, they don't like the Americans anyway. Sunni Muslims who
feel like
they're threatened by the Shiites, former Sadaam acolytes who've
lost their
jobs and found that their money has stopped. Kurds who are
disaffected and
are beginning to have contacts, and that of course is the beginning
of a
real resistance movement and that's the great danger for the
Americans now.
GOODMAN: We're talking to Robert Fisk, who is just come out of
Iraq. There's
a front page piece in The New York Times today, "GI's In Iraqi City
Are
Stalked By Faceless Enemies At Night, and Michael Gordon writes
about how
organized the resistance is, how it seems to come alive at night
and that
what's clear, he says , is some attacks are premeditated, involve
cooperation among small groups of fighters including a system of
signaling
the presence of American forces: talking about the use of red,
white and
blue flares when forces come and then the attacks begin.
FISK: Yes, I've heard this. I also know that in Fallujah, for
example,
there's a system of honking the horns of cars: when the vehicles
approach,
the American convoy approaches, there's one honk on the horn. When
the last
vehicle goes by the same spot, there's two honks on the horn, and
the
purpose is to work out the time element between the first hooter
and the
second because by that, they know how big is the convoy and whether
it's
small enough to be attacked. That comes from a sergeant in the
military
police in Fallujah taking part in this actual operation which I
described to
you just now, which you read out from my report.
One of the problems with the Americans I think is that the top
people in the
Pentagon always knew that this wasn't going to be human rights
abuses ended,
flowers and music for the soldiers, and everyone lives happily
every after
and loves America. You may remember when Rumsfeld first came to
Baghdad,
something your president didn't dare to do in the end, he wanted to
fly over
in an airplane.
He made a speech which I thought was very interesting, rather
sinister in
the big hanger at Baghdad airport. He said we still have to fight
the
remnants of Saddam and the terrorists in Iraq, and I thought, hang
on a
minute, who are these people? And it took me a few minutes to
realize I
think what he was doing, he was laying the future narrative of the
opposition to the Americans. I.E when the Americans get attacked,
it could
be first of all laid down to remnants of Saddam, as in remnants of
the
Taliban who seem to be moving around in Afghanistan now in
battalion
strength, but never mind. It could be blamed on Al Qaeda, so
America was
back fighting its old enemies again. This was familiar territory.
If you were to suggest that it was a resistance movement, harakat
muqawama,
resistance party in Arabic, that would suggest the people didn't
believe
they had been liberated, and of course, all good-natured peace
loving people
have to believe they were liberated by the Americans, not occupied
by them.
What you're finding for example is a whole series of blunders by
Paul
Bremer, the American head of the so-called coalition forces, at
least
coalition authority in Baghdad.
First of all, he dissolved the Iraqi Army. Well, I can't imagine an
Army
that better deserves to be dissolved. But that means that more than
quarter
of a million armed men overnight are deprived of their welfare and
money.
Now if you have quarter of a million armed Iraqis who suddenly
don't get
paid any more, and they all know each other, what are they going to
do? They
are going to form some kind of force which is secret, which is
covered; then
they will be called terrorists, but I guess they know that, and
then of
course they will be saying to people, why don't you come and join
us.
It was very interesting that in Fallujah, a young man came out to
see me from a shop just after the American searches there had ended and
said some
people came from the resistance a few nights ago and asked him to
join. I
said, what did you say, and he said, I wouldn't do that. But now,
he said, I
might think differently. I met a Shiite Muslim family in Baghdad
who moved
into the former home of a Saddam intelligence officer. This family
had been
visited three nights previously by armed men who said, you better
move out
of this house. It doesn't belong to you unless you want to join us.
The guy
in Fallujah said that the men, the armed men who came to invite him
to join
the resistance had weapons, showed their mukhabarat intelligence
identity
card and said, we're still being paid and we are proud to hold our
I.D.
cards for the Ba'ath Party. So, now you have to realize that
Fallujah and
other towns like it are very unlike Tikrit, are very much
pro-Saddam.
Fallujah is the site of a great munitions factory, it gave people
massive
employment. They all loved Saddam in the way Arabs are encouraged
to love
dictators or go to prison otherwise. But nonetheless, there is an
embryo of a serious resistance movement now.
On top of this, you can see the measure of what I think is
basically
desperation. I've been writing about this in The Independent this
morning in
London, well, last night for this morning's paper, and Paul Bremer
now asked
the legal side of the coalition provisional authority to set up the
machinery of Iraqi press censorship. In other words, Iraqi
newspapers are
going to be censored. Controlled I think is the official word they
use, but
that means censorship.
That is the kind of language that Saddam used. Iraqis are used to a
censored
press; after all, they lived with it for more than 20 years under
Saddam
Hussein.
Now when you question the Americans about it, first of all they
deny it.
Then the British half accept it; then other people involved in the
coalition
say well it's probably true, yes, it is true.
But the problem is the wild stories appearing in the Iraqi press.
Now, of
course there's no tradition of western style journalism in Iraq.
There are
those that say it's a good idea, no tradition for example of
letting the
other side have a say, checking the story out, going back on the
ground and
asking the other side for their version of events. It doesn't
exist. It's a
little bit, but not much. What you get after saying that Americans
are going
with Iraqi prostitutes, American troops are chasing Iraqi women,
that Muslim
women are being invited to marry Christian foreigners, that this is
worse
than it was under Saddam. I'm actually quoting from one particular
newspaper
called The Witness, which is a Shiite Muslim paper, basically that
had its
first issue the other day. Other newspapers carry reports of
American
beatings; they also carry reports of "I was Saddam's double" , and
the
opening of mass graves. They're not totally one sided against the
Americans.
But you can see how the occupation forces, let's call them by their
real
name, are troubled by this kind of publication because it seems to
them to
provoke or incite animosity towards the liberators of Iraq, which
it is not
meant to do. But of course the problem is that the Imams in the
mosques are
saying the same thing about the Americans. Now, the last quote I
read from
American official said that it may be necessary to control what the
Imams
were saying in the mosques; well, this is preposterous. I sat on
Rashid
Street in Baghdad a few days ago and listened to the loud speaker
carrying
the sermon of the imam from within the mosque.
I think he was saying the Americans must leave immediately, now.
Well, under
the new rule presumably he's inciting the people to violence. What
are we
going to do? Arrest all the Imams in the mosques, arrest all the
journalists
who won't obey, close down the newspapers? I mean what Iraqi
journalists
need are courses in journalism from reporters who work in real
democracies.
You can come along and say, look, by all means criticize the
Americans and
put the boot in if you want to, but make sure you get it right. And
if you
also do that you have to look at your own society and what is wrong
in it
and how Saddam ever came about. He didn't just come about because
America
supported Saddam which my goodness they did. But Bremer is not
interested in
this. What Bremer wants to do is control, control the press,
control the
Imams, and it doesn't work. A lot of the incidents taking place
now, the
violent incidents are not being divulged.
GOODMAN: Robert, you were just talking about a lot of the attacks
we're
hearing about--what seems like a good number, a lot of the
attacks--on U.S.
forces are not being reported.
FISK: I have a colleague, for example, who went down to Fallujah
before the
incident I was describing to you earlier, after two gunmen, one
American had
been killed in the fire fight, he reported, I spoke to both sides.
On his
way back he was traveling past the town of Abu Garab a rather
sinister place
where the huge prison is where Saddam executed so many prisoners,
including
an Observer journalist back in the late 1980's.
As we were, as the colleague was passing by the town, he saw a
young man
come up and throw a hand grenade at American troops in the Humvee.
The grenade missed them and exploded in the canal and wounded six
Iraqi
children, a very clear account of what happened. I rang the
coalition
forces, the telephone didn't answer as it very often doesn't do.
And no
report ever emerged except in my paper that this incident had
occurred.
Now, over and over again we keep seeing things, seeing small
incidents
occur, soldiers threatening people outside petrol lines because
people are
trying to jump the line and steal. And it just doesn't make it back
into the
coalition record of what's actually happening in Iraq. The danger
here is
not so much that we're not being told about it because we can see
and find
out for ourselves. The danger is that the United States leadership
in
Baghdad, and of course, especially back in the White House and
Pentagon is
also not being told about it. Or if it is, information is only
going to
certain people who can deal with that information.
It's very easy to say, well Iraq's been a great success we've got
rid of a
dictatorship, the weapons of mass destruction which didn't exist
have now
been destroyed or whatever interpretation you want to put on that.
Human
rights abuses have ended, certainly the Saddam kind. But if you try
and if
this information goes up the ladder every bit of it to people like
Bremer,
I'm not sure it all is--I think it should be--then you can see how
the
coalition doesn't represent the reality.
One of the big problems at the moment is the Americans and, to some
extent
the British, particularly the Americans in Baghdad. They're all
ensconced in
this chic gleaming marble palace, largest, most expensive palace.
There they
sit with their laptops trying to work out with Washington how
they're going
to bring about this new democracy in Iraq. They rely upon for the
most part
former Iraqi exiles who never endured Saddam Hussein, who are
hovering
around making sure that they get the biggest part of the pie
possible. When
they leave the palace, when they go into the streets of Baghdad,
the
dangerous streets of Baghdad, they leave in these armored black
Mercedes
with gunmen in the front and back, soldiers, plain clothes guys
with weapons
and sunglasses.
One Iraqi said to me the other day "who did you think was the last
person we
saw driving through town like [this]?" I said, Saddam Hussein?
They all
burst out laughing, of course, they said, exactly the same.
We are used to this just like they're used to press censorship. I
think it's
difficult--you need to be in Baghdad to understand the degree to
which
there's been this slippage of ambition and slippage in the
ideological war.
I was in small hotel called the Al Hama the other day--it has a
swimming
pool, 24-hour generators. Just going down to have a meal in the
evening, I
came across two westerners, one with a pump action shotgun, the
other with a
submachine gun passing me in the hallway.
I said, "Who are you?"
He said, "Well, who are you?"
"I'm a guest in the hotel. You have guns. Who are you?"
He said, "We work for D.O.D"
"Department of Defense, right?" (But he was obviously English--he
had a
British accent.) "Hang on a second you're not American."
"No, we're a British company that is hired to look after D.O.D.
employees in
Baghdad. That's why we're armed."
I said, "Who gives you permission to have weapons?"
He said, "The coalition forces, we're here protecting them."
Now, how often have Iraqis seen armed plain clothes men moving in
and out of
hotels, they have for more than 20 years, now seeing them again.
Well these
guys are not going to string them up by their fingernails and
electrocute
them in torture cells. But again, the image, the picture is the
same. The
armored escort, limousines in the street, soldiers kicking down the
doors
searching for, "terrorists." The press censorship plans. Plain
clothes
armed men going into a hotel asking who you are immediately by
asking them
who they are, same system as before. It has this kind of ghastly
ghostly
veneer of the old regime about it. The Americans are not Saddam,
they're not
murdering people - they're not lining up people at mass graves, of
course
they're not. But if you see through the eyes of the Iraqis, it
doesn't look
quite that simple.
GOODMAN: We are talking to Robert Fisk, just came out of Iraq but
you've
also written about the so-called road map to peace. I just wanted
to get
your response to what happened yesterday in Gaza, with the Israeli
helicopter gun ships attempting to assassinate the political leader
for
Hamas, Abdel Azziz Rantizzi. And also Bush strongly criticizing the
attempted assassination on the part of the Israel.
FISK: First of all he didn't strongly criticize them, he mildly,
rather
pathetically and rather cowardly criticized the Israelis. This was
an attack
which was meant to kill the political head of Hamas. And in the
ghastly role
which the Palestinians and Israelis play in their bloody and
useless
conflict, I can understand why the attack was made in that context.
But that attack did not kill Rantizzi, it killed a little child of
five and
a young woman. Now your president said that that was "troubling".
That isn't
troubling that's a shameful act, that's a despicable thing to do.
But there
was no strong condemnation from Mr. Bush, he just said it was
troubling. If
a Palestinian had attacked Israeli forces or Israeli political
leader
involved in encouraging violence, had killed a little Israeli girl,
and a
young innocent Israeli woman Mr. Bush would not have called it
troubling. He
would have said it was a shameful, terrorist act, which it would
have been.
How can it work when the most powerful president of the most
powerful state
in the world, United States of America, can be so gutless and
cowardly in
condemning the killing of two innocent people.
It is not troubling. It is an outrage that those two innocent
people died.
Just as it would be if the Palestinians had done it. Just as it is
when the
Palestinians do do it. [For Bush]It is not an outrage. Not a
tragedy. Not
shameful. It is merely troubling. Like a flood is troubling or a
heavy
rainfall that kills people or a storm is troubling. In that context
how can
this new peace possibly work.
It's called a road map, who invented the phrase road map? I suppose
the poor
old State Department and all the journalists dutifully used the
word road
map.
They can't use peace process because that's associated with Oslo
and that
failed. You remember the cliche for the peace process, always had
to be put
back on track. I suppose peace process was a railway line or a
railway train
so it presumably always has to be put back on the main road or back
on the
highway that is the cliche.
What has Sharon done? he's closed down a few empty caravans on
hilltops.
At large and continuing to expand Jewish settlements, the Jews and
Jews only
in occupied Arab land. What have the Palestinians done? Mahmoud
Abbas says
I'm going to finish terrorism, there's going to be no more violence
by the
Palestinians and, bang, there immediately is. We have the three
main violent
groups, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Al-Aqsa immediately carrying out
the
suicide bombing.
And then praised by Rantizzi, I remember thinking, he's praising
them,
that's against the road map so Israelis have got a green light to
knock him
off and they tried and failed. I remember interviewing Rantizzi
along
similar lines about six months ago in Gaza, as I was talking to him
I saw an
Israeli helicopter emerge in the window and his body guard looked
around
very nervously and I thought, oh, no, please go away and so I
finished the
interview.
But I always thought he was a target, he always had two gunmen with
him all
the time. That's not the point. Rantizzi is a very tough Hamas man,
a very
ruthless man. He was one of the Palestinians who was illegally
deported from
Israeli prisons into Lebanon in 1992. I actually met him there in
the
southern Lebanon in the hills, when he was living rough, months
after months
in a tent.
This is a very rough character, very tough guy--grew up the hard
way in
guerrilla warfare as well as politics.
But when you're going to have a situation where you have an Israeli
prime
minister who doesn't want to end the settlements, who is indeed the
creator
of the settlements, and a Palestinian prime minister who can't stop
the
intifada and a U.S. president who is so gutless he can only call a
killing
of a woman and a child troubling, what chance is there for a road
map or
peace process or any other kind of agreement in the Middle East?
GOODMAN: We're talking to Robert Fisk, who is just come out of Iraq
and who
has reported extensively on the Middle East for more than 30 years.
I wanted to end, back in Iraq. CNN is reporting today that Ahmed
Chalabi who
has addressed the Council on Foreign Relations is saying that
Saddam Hussein
is moving in an arc around the Tigris River starting northeast of
Baghdad.He
said finding Saddam would just be a matter of knowing whom to talk
to.He
says based on information from credible sources, he believes the
former
Iraqi president wants revenge and has obtained two suicide bombing
vests for
attacks on U.S. forces. Chalabi says Saddam is paying bounty for
every U.S.
soldier killed. Your response?
FISK: I long ago gave up putting any credit in anything that Ahmed
Chalabi
says.The real issue is not where is Saddam Hussein, he could be
sitting in
Minsk or Belarus or he could be sitting in Tikrit or in the Iraqi
countryside somewhere.Obviously there were plans to hide him in
advance. You
know this goes back to another issue of the degree of real effort
to find
him. Just look back, the Americans wanted to arrest Valadich and
put him in
the Hague. We were going to capture Osama bin laden, he's still on
the
loose. We were going to capture Mullah Omar, he's only got one eye,
not
difficult to identify. But he's still on the loose. We can't get
vice
president Ramadan in Iraq or Uday Hussein, the sons of Saddam. We
can't get
Saddam himself. Can't get Naji Sabri the foreign minister.
I was sitting in a restaurant in Baghdad a week and a half ago, at
the next
table next to me was Saddam's personal translator. I sort of did a
double
take, I said, hi, how are you? I knew the guy. I'd known him for
years and
years. I said, are you okay? Fine, fine no problem, he was having a
beer
with friends. And he walked out. This is the same restaurant that
later on I
saw Paul Bremer walk into with several special forces men to
protect him and
his guests for dinner. I have to ask myself sometimes what's going
on. Ahmed
Chalabi says that Saddam is moving in an arc, he maybe moving in a
circle or
square for all I know but it's clear he's still alive. That's the
point.
GOODMAN: Well, Robert Fisk, thank you very much for being with
us.Robert
Fisk of the Independent of London just out of Iraq.