Bengali book on the subject of terrorism (2)
Partha Banerjee
Terrorism and Its Real Face
By Partha Banerjee
Chapter 3.
Fake Democracy and the Trade Monster�s True Colors
Translated from Bengali. Originally published in Akhon Samoy Weekly, July 2003. Now included in Banerjee�s Bengali book published from Dhaka, Bangladesh, 2005.
With the demise of the Saddam Hussain and Taliban regimes, two staunchly anti-American forces are now gone. It would not be any surprise if the U.S. now attempts to destroy other such powers in Syria, Iran or North Korea.
Ever since the days of Hafez al-Assad, Syria has been resolutely anti-American. Then, since the fall of the Shah and the return of the Ayatollah, Iran has become one of the strongest anti-U.S. nations in the Middle East. During the decade-long war between Iran and Iraq, U.S. and some Western countries were instigators behind the bloodshed. At that time, Saddam Hussain was our �good guy� that got generous financial and political endorsement from the Ronald Reagan government. Reagan�s National Security Advisor Colin Powell and his Middle East Envoy Donald Rumsfeld both played important roles in aiding Iraq during the war. Moreover, then-CIA director William Casey used a Chilean firm to send to Iraq cluster bombs to use against Iran's "human wave" attacks. The point is, Powell, Rumsfeld and the U.S. government have long known the war strategies of Saddam Hussain. Mr Rumsfeld, in his drumbeat to bomb Iraq, said that he had "cautioned" the Iraqi leader against using weapons of mass destruction. But there was no mention of such a warning in state department notes of his meeting with Saddam in the eighties.
U.S. establishment, with help from mainstream media, is now working hard to distort that history, sink the �unlikable� parts into oblivion. But the fact is, in spite of all the campaigns, one cannot really warp history, however hard he tries to do it.
Let us discuss some other historical facts.
Carlos Mauricio and Martin Almada, two ex-prisoners from El Salvador, recently published their real-life stories in various international newspapers. In 1983, during the civil war in El Salvador, U.S. military consultants infiltrated this tiny Latin American nation. The more they went in, the more the government-sponsored militia of El Salvador became violent and bled the innocent. Mauricio was a professor of biochemistry at El Salvador University. One morning, plainclothes police officers dragged him out of his classroom. He was branded as an enemy of the government and a guerilla commander. It was purely fear mongering, a tactic then Salvador government used to scare off the students and intellectuals. This is one of the many tactics the infamous School of the Americas (SOA) teaches its students, many of whom are known tyrants in Latin America.
Thugs of the militia then handcuffed Mauricio, blindfolded him and beat him mercilessly right in front of his students. For more than ten days, they tortured him in a secret chamber. Mauricio is lucky that he is still alive to tell his story; many of his colleagues, students and compatriots have disappeared from the face of the earth courtesy those SOA graduates.
Mauricio, Alamada and a few of their victim friends have recently brought in a lawsuit against the two Salvadoran military generals who were responsible for their torture and humiliation. These two perpetrators now live in Florida: U.S. government gave these human rights violators a safe haven.
On the contrary, another such criminal Slobodan Milosevic of Yugoslavia got a different kind of treatment. U.S. in fact actively pursued the trial of Milosevic at the International Court. The reason behind the different treatment is that this man, just like Saddam Hussain, had turned into an "enemy" for his anti-American activities and rhetoric.
At the same time, many other such despots and dictators all over the world received direct or indirect political and economic support from the U.S. governments via active lobbying of Henry Kissinger, Zbignew Brzezinsky, Donald Rumsfeld, George Bush, Sr. or Dick Cheney. Kissinger and CIA took part in staging a bloody coup against Chile�s popular, democratically elected leader Allende in the seventies. The same was done against Indonesia�s leader Sukarno in the sixties. In these countries, the post-coup years saw extreme violence, killing and anti-people, anti-union activities led by two notorious dictators Pinochet and Suharto. Both these tyrants still escape international law and justice, just like the way Henry Kissinger keeps fleeing justice throughout the world.
Pinochet�s victims included laborers, farmers, intellectuals, students, teachers, artists, singers and activists. One such victim was protest singer Victor Jara � the Bob Dylan of Chile. Jara was tortured, blinded and murdered by Pinochet�s militia.
I didn�t meet Jara. But I met Jafar Hamzah Siddique. We were roommates in Sunnyside, Queens. Jafar was a law student at the New School University and he was from Aceh, a small island off Indonesia. The Indonesian militia under Suharto and then under post-Suharto rulers brutalized East Timor and Aceh. In August, 2000, Jafar decided to travel to Banda Aceh to visit his parents; a few days after he had arrived there, he disappeared. His torturned and mangled body was found on the riverbanks of Medan in September.
I had the opportunity to have a long interview with Jafar in April, just a few months before he was killed. Jafar spoke fondly of his motherland � about the tiny island Aceh. He spoke about its history and its bloody tale of ongoing colonization. Jafar had described how multinational oil corporation Mobil kept occupying and exploiting the land with help from the militia defying the wills and protests of thousands of Acehnese men and women.
Ibrahim, Sulaiman and other Achenese friends had implored Jafar not to go back to Aceh. They warned him that the militia might kill him. Jafar said he must go to pay a last visit to his ailing parents. He never came back.
There was a time when Britain, France, Spain, Holland, Portugal or Belgium invaded and captured Asian and African countries. After plundering the colonized land for centuries, they went back to Europe leaving the country bereft of its riches and with feudalistic people put on as its new leaders. The new �leaders� of the �independent� country kept serving the interests of the colonialists.
This old version of political colonialism has now given way to a new version, something that we can term a capital colonialism. The U.S. and European governments, with help from the World Bank, International Monetary Fund or World Trade Organizations have imposed severe sanctions against poor and underdeveloped countries and imposed the strictest possible undemocratic, anti-labor economic conditions. In the name of globalization, the rich countries under the stewardship of U.S. are wielding their fierce capital sticks worldwide However, with the unilateral, unprecedented aggression and occupation of Iraq, it seems the primitive, centuries-old brute-force colonization era has returned.
Are we then going back to those dark, ancient era of monstrous aggression? Often these days, I tend to think that in a way, that is actually good for all of us. The sooner the trade monsters shed off their masks of civilization and democracy and the sooner their true colors come out, the better for us.
Also read Partha Banerjee's article in MM: