Iraq: the great UK cover-up
Iraq: the great UK cover-up By John Pilger.
19 Jan 2001
On the eve of an election campaign, the Blair
government is attempting,with mounting desperation, to
suppress a scandal potentially greater than the arms-to-Iraq
cover-up. This is the deaths of hundreds of thousands of
people, perhaps many more, caused by decisions taken in
Whitehall and Washington. Moreover, the evidence of deceit
and lying points to at least two Cabinet ministers and three
junior ministers. At its centre is the unerring, wilful
destruction of a whole society, Iraq, the aim of which is to
keep the regime in Baghdad weak enough to be influenced by
the west and yet strong enough to control its own people.
This is longstanding Anglo-American policy. Contrary to the
propaganda version about protecting Iraq's ethnic peoples,
the objective is to prevent a Kurdish secession in the north
and the establishment of a Shi'ite religious state in the
rest of the country, while maintaining the west's dominance
of the region and its access to cheap oil. The victims of
this policy are 20 million Iraqis, uniquely isolated from
the rest of humanity by an economic embargo whose
viciousness has been compared with a medieval siege. The
word "genocide" has been used by experts on international
law and other cautious voices, such as Denis Halliday, the
former assistant secretary general of the United Nations,
who resigned as the UN's senior humanitarian official in
Iraq, and Hans von Sponeck, his successor, who also resigned
in protest. Each had 34 years at the UN and were acclaimed
in their field; their resignations, along with the head of
the World Food Programme in Baghdad, were unprecedented.
After more than a decade of sanctions, no one on the
Security Council wants them, except the United States and
Britain. The French foreign minister, Hubert Vedrine, has
called them "cruel, because they exclusively punish the
Iraqi people and the weakest among them, and ineffective,
because they don't touch the regime". Had Saddam Hussein
said on television "we think the price is worth it",
referring to Unicef's figure of half a million child deaths,
he would have been called a monster by the British
government. Madeleine Albright said that. Whitehall remained
silent. The Blair government has played the traditional role
of Washington's proxy with particular enthusiasm. The latest
Security Council resolution,1284, was drafted by British
officials in New York. They are said to be proud of it.
Peter Hain, the Foreign Office minister, constantly refers
to it as "Iraq's way out". In fact, it is a specious set of
demands, requiring the return of weapons inspectors, but not
offering any guarantee that sanctions will be suspended if
the regime complies. Last year, Jon Davies, then head of the
Iraq desk at the Foreign Office, admitted the "lack of
clarity in exactly what the provisions will be". The
suspicion all along, says Dr Eric Herring, the Bristol
University specialist, is that "US and British policy is one
of continually moving or hiding the goalposts so that
compliance [by Iraq] becomes impossible and so that the
sanctions cannot be lifted". In recent months, in the
columns of the New Statesman and the Guardian, Peter Hain
has defended a sanctions regime that, says Unicef, is a
principal cause of the deaths of at least 180 children every
day. Hain's articles and letters are scripted by Foreign
Office officials using the familiar, weasel lexicon that
denied British support for the Khmer Rouge, the use of Hawk
aircraft in East Timor and the illegal shipment of weapons
parts to Britain's favourite 1980s tyrant,Saddam Hussein.
Sir Richard Scott's inquiry acknowledged their "culture of
lying". You get a sense of the scale of lying from Hain's
latest letter to the NS (15 January), in which he claimed
that "about $16bn of humanitarian relief was available to
the Iraqi people last year". Quoting UN documents, Hans von
Sponeck replies in this issue (page 37) that the figure was
actually for four years and that, after reparations are paid
to Kuwait and the oil companies, Iraq is left with just $100
a year with which to keep one human being alive. That Hain
does not appear even to question the competence of those who
write his disinformation is remarkable. That he allows the
bureaucracy of a rapacious order he once opposed to invoke
his anti-apartheid record is a bleak irony. That he is said
privately to have serious doubts about sanctions, which he
rejected for Zimbabwe, saying they would "hurt the ordinary
people, not the elite", is a measure of his ambition, and
perhaps explains why he refuses to engage his critics,
preferring rhetoric and abuse. Each time he calls a
principled, informed critic, such as Halliday and von
Sponeck, "a dupe of Saddam Hussein", there is an echo of the
apartheid regime calling a young Hain "a dupe of communism".
The sanctions issue is one of three related scandals
involving epic suffering and loss of life. The truth about
the effects of depleted uranium in shells fired in the 1991
Gulf war and Nato's 1999 attack on Yugoslavia, is that the
Americans and British waged a form of nuclear warfare on
civilian populations, disregarding the health and safety of
their own troops. This was largely to test the Pentagon's
post-cold war strategy of "all-out war". On 9 January, John
Spellar, the Defence Minister, told the House of Commons
that the conclusion of many years of research showed "there
is no evidence linking DU to cancers or to the more general
ill health being experienced by some Gulf veterans". This
echoes Peter Hain, who said there had been "no credible
research data". In fact, the data is credible and
voluminous, dating back to the development of the atomic
bomb in 1943, when Brigadier General Leslie Groves, the head
of the Manhattan Project, warned that particles of uranium
used in ammunition could cause "permanent lung damage". In
1991, the UK Atomic Energy Authority warned that, if
particles from merely 8 per cent of the DU used in the Gulf
were inhaled, there could be "300,000 potential deaths".
Spellar claimed there had been no rise in the number of
kidney ailments or cancers among veterans of the Gulf war.
The Ministry of Defence has been told by the National Gulf
Veterans and Families Association of a dramatic increase in
both diseases among veterans. Last year, Speller said: "We
are unaware of anything that shows depleted uranium has
caused any ill health or death of people who served in
Kosovo or Bosnia." Again, this was false. Nato's own
guidelines include: "Inhalation of insoluble depleted
uranium dust particles has been associated with long-term
health effects including cancers and birth defects." It was
only after six Italian soldiers, who had served in Kosovo,
died from leukaemia, that the scandal caused panic in Nato,
with the Defence Secretary, Geoffrey Hoon, contradicting
himself, saying DU posed a "limited risk", then "no risks",
then, bizarrely, that it is "protecting British forces". For
the Iraqi people, however, the cover-up continues. What has
been striking about the political and media reaction over
the past fortnight is that most of the victims of depleted
uranium have rated barely a mention. Yet Tony Blair himself
was made aware of their suffering when he was sent, in March
1999, UN statistics, published in the British Medical
Journal, showing a sevenfold increase in cancer in southern
Iraq between 1989 and 1994. It is in southern Iraq that the
theoretical figure of "500,000 potential deaths" can be
applied, in a desert landscape where the dust gets in your
eyes, nose and throat, swirling around people in the street
and children in playgrounds. In Basra's hospitals, the
cancer wards are overflowing. Before the Gulf war, they did
not exist. "The dust carries death," Dr Jawad Al-Ali, a
cancer specialist and member of Britain's Royal College of
Physicians, told me. "Our own studies indicate that more
than 40 per cent of the population in this area will get
cancer in five years' time to begin with, then long
afterwards. Most of my own family now have cancer, and we
have no history of the disease. It has spread to the medical
staff of this hospital. We are living through another
Hiroshima. Of course, we don't know the precise source of
the contamination, because we are not allowed [under
sanctions] to get the equipment to conduct a proper
scientific survey, or even to test the excess level in our
bodies. We suspect depleted uranium. There simply can be no
other explanation." The Sanctions Committee in New York has
blocked or delayed a range of cancer diagnostic equipment
and drugs, even painkillers. Professor Karol Sikora, as
chief of the cancer programme of the World Health
Organisation, wrote in the British Medical Journal:
"Requested radiotherapy equipment, chemotherapy drugs and
analgesics are consistently blocked by United States and
British advisers [to the Sanctions Committee]. There seems
to be a rather ludicrous notion that such agents could be
converted into chemical or other weapons." Professor Sikora
told me: "The saddest thing I saw in Iraq was children dying
because there was no chemotherapy and no pain control. It
seemed crazy they couldn't have morphine, because for
everybody with cancer pain, it is the best drug. When I was
there, they had a little bottle of aspirin pills to go round
200 patients in pain." Although there have since been
improvements in some areas, more than 1,000 life-saving
items remain "on hold" in New York, with Kofi Annan
personally appealing for their release "without delay". I
interviewed Professor Doug Rokke, the US Army health
physicist who led the "clean-up" of depleted uranium in
Kuwait. He now has 5,000 times the permissible level of
radiation in his body, and is ill. "There can be no
reasonable doubt about this," he said. "As a result of the
heavy metal and radiological poison of DU, people in
southern Iraq are experiencing respiratory problems,
breathing problems, kidney problems, cancers. Members of my
own team have died or are dying from cancer . . . At various
meetings and conferences, the Iraqis have asked for the
normal medical treatment protocols. The US Department of
Defense and the British Ministry of Defence have refused
them. I attended a conference in Washington where the Iraqis
came looking for help. They approached myself, officials of
the Defense Department and the British MoD. They were told
it was their responsibility; they were rebuffed." The third
strand in the cover-up is the killing of Iraqi civilians by
RAF and American aircraft in the "no-fly zones". As Hans von
Sponeck points out in his letter, these violate
international law. In a five-month period surveyed by the UN
Security Sector, almost half the casualties were civilians.
I interviewed eyewitnesses to one of the attacks described
in the UN report. A shepherd family of six - a grandfather,
the father and four children - were killed by a British or
American pilot, who made two passes at them in open desert.
Pieces of the missile lay among the remains of their sheep.
United Nations staff - not the Iraqi government - confirmed
in person the facts of this atrocity. The Blair government
has spent £800m bombing Iraq. In his 15 January letter to
the NS, Peter Hain described my reference to the possibility
that he, along with other western politicians, might find
themselves summoned before the new International Criminal
Court as "gratuitous". It is far from gratuitous. A report
for the UN Secretary General, written by Professor Marc
Bossuyt, a distinguished authority on international law,
says that the "sanctions regime against Iraq is
unequivocally illegal under existing human rights law" and
"could raise questions under the Genocide Convention". His
subtext is that if the new court is to have authority, it
cannot merely dispense the justice of the powerful. A
growing body of legal opinion agrees that the court has a
duty, as Eric Herring wrote, to investigate "not only the
regime, but also the UN bombing and sanctions which have
violated the human rights of Iraqi civilians on a vast scale
by denying them many of the means necessary for survival. It
should also investigate those who assisted [Saddam
Hussein's] programmes of now prohibited weapons, including
western governments and companies." Last year, Peter Hain
blocked a parliamentary request to publish the full list of
culpable British companies Why? A prosecutor might ask why,
then ask who has killed the most number of innocent people
in Iraq: Saddam Hussein, or British and American murderous
policy-makers? The answer may well put the murderous tyrant
in second place.
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ENDS