
Does Tony Blair Have Any Idea
What The Flies Are Like That Feed Off The Dead?
by Robert Fisk
LONDON,
26 January 2003 On the road to Basra, ITV was filming wild dogs
as they tore at the corpses of the Iraqi dead. Every few seconds a ravenous
beast would rip off a decaying arm and make off with it over the desert
in front of us, dead fingers trailing through the sand, the remains
of the burned military sleeve flapping in the wind.
Just
for the record, the cameraman said to me. Of course. Because ITV
would never show such footage. The things we see the filth and
obscenity of corpses cannot be shown. First because it is not
appropriate to depict such reality on breakfast-time TV.
Second because, if what we saw was shown on television, no one would
ever again agree to support a war.
That
of course was in 1991. The highway of death, they called
it there was actually a parallel and much worse highway
of death 10 miles to the east, courtesy of the US Air Force and
the RAF, but no one turned up to film it and the only true picture
of the horrors we saw was the photograph of the shriveled, carbonized
Iraqi soldier in his truck. This was an iconic illustration of a kind
because it did represent what we had seen, when it was eventually published.
For
Iraqi casualties to appear on television during that Gulf War
there was another one between 1980 and 1988, and a third is in the offing
it was necessary for them to have died with care, to have fallen
romantically on their backs, one hand over a ruined face. Like those
World War I paintings of the British dead on the Somme, Iraqis had to
die benignly and without obvious wounds, without any kind of squalor,
without a trace of shit or mucus or congealed blood, if they wanted
to make it on to the morning news programs.
I rage
at this contrivance. At Qaa in 1996, when the Israelis had shelled Lebanese
refugees at the UN compound for 17 minutes, killing 106 civilians, more
than half of them children, I came across a young woman holding in her
arms a middle-aged man. He was dead. My father, my father,
she kept crying, cradling his face. One of his arms and one of his legs
was missing the Israelis used proximity shells which cause amputation
wounds but when that scene reached television screens in Europe
and America, the camera was close up on the girl and the dead mans
face. The amputations were not to be seen. The cause of death had been
erased in the interests of good taste. It was as if the old man had
died of tiredness, just turned his head upon his daughters shoulder
to die in peace.
Today,
when I listen to the threats of US President George W. Bush against
Iraq and the shrill moralistic warnings of British Prime Minister Tony
Blair, I wonder what they know of this terrible reality. Does George,
who declined to serve his county in Vietnam, have any idea what these
corpses smell like? Does Tony have the slightest conception of what
the flies are like, the big bluebottles that feed on the dead, and then
come to settle on our faces and our notepads? Soldiers know. I remember
one British officer asking to use the BBCs satellite phone just
after the liberation of Kuwait in 1991. He was talking to his family
in England and I watched him carefully. I have seen some terrible
things, he said. And then he broke down, weeping and shaking and
holding the phone dangling in his hand over the transmission set. Did
his family have the slightest idea what he was talking about? They would
not have understood by watching television.
Thus
can we face the prospect of war. Our glorious, patriotic population
albeit only about 20 percent in support of this particular Iraqi
folly has been protected from the realities of violent death.
But I am much struck by the number of letters in my postbag from veterans
of World War II, men and women, all against this new Iraqi war, with
an inalienable memory of torn limbs and suffering.
I remember
once a wounded man in Iran, a piece of steel in his forehead, howling
like an animal which is, of course, what we all are before
he died; and the Palestinian boy who simply collapsed in front of me
when an Israeli soldier shot him dead, quite deliberately, coldly, murderously,
for throwing a stone; and the Israeli with a chair leg sticking out
of her stomach outside the Sbarro pizzeria in Jerusalem after a Palestinian
bomber had decided to execute the families inside; and the heaps of
Iraqi dead at the Battle of Dezful in the Iran-Iraq war; and the young
man showing me the thick black trail of his daughters blood outside
Algiers where armed men had cut her throat.
But
George Bush and Tony Blair and Dick Cheney and Jack Straw and all the
other little warriors who are bamboozling us into war will not have
to think of these vile images. For them its about surgical strikes,
collateral damage and all the other examples of wars linguistic
mendacity. We are going to have a just war; we are going to liberate
the people of Iraq some of whom we will obviously kill
and we are going to give them democracy and protect their oil wealth
and stage war crimes trials and we are going to be ever so moral, and
we are going to watch our defense experts on TV with their
bloodless sandpits and their awesome knowledge of weapons which rip
off heads.
Come
to think of it, I recall the head of an Albanian refugee, chopped neatly
off when the Americans, ever so accidentally, bombed a refugee convoy
in Kosovo in 1999 which they thought was a Serb military unit. His head
lay in the long grass, bearded, eyes open, severed as if by a Tudor
executioner. Months later, I learned his name and talked to the girl
who was hit by the severed head during the US air strike and who laid
the head reverently in the grass where I found it. NATO, of course,
did not apologize to the family. Nor to the girl. No one says sorry
after war. No one acknowledges the truth of it. No one shows you what
we see. Which is how our leaders and our betters persuade us
still to go to war. (The Independent)