Id like to concentrate
mainly today on propaganda and what it really is about in a free society. I received a
letter from Robin Cook [British Foreign Secretary] a few weeks ago. He wrote to me to say
he could not be with us today because of a prior engagement. I invited him after he said
in parliament in answer to Tam Dalyell, that he was always prepared to debate the issue of
sanctions. I took him up on this and asked him to debate Denis and Hans. Mr Cook is
understandably a busy man; or in the sneering or rather disloyal words of a one of his
junior officials who spoke to a colleague of mine: the Foreign Secretary
"
doesnt want to be skewered." Had Robin Cook accepted my invitation
he would have faced, I believe, a moment of truth; he would have been asked about a
propaganda campaign waged by the Foreign Office and the American State Department. In many
years of reporting on governments and their lies, Ive never known anything quite
like it. The Foreign Office, these days, appears to be consumed by, what one of its former
officials Mark Higson, who headed the Iraq Desk during the Arms to Iraq scandal, described
to the Scott Inquiry as '...a culture of lies.
Now this three page letter which some of you may have received had you bothered to write
to Mr. Cook, or anybody else at the Foreign Office, says it all. It is currently being
sent to MPs and members of the public who have written to the government following the
recent showing of my film PAYING THE PRICE THE KILLING OF THE CHILDREN OF
IRAQ. In paragraph after paragraph it tells lies; not merely distortions: lies.
It says the British government is not obstructing vitally needed humanitarian supplies
going to Iraq when in fact Britain has supported an incessant American campaign of
destruction so blatant that even Kofi Annan complained publicly.
The letter says that Iraq fails to distribute over a quarter of all medical goods, which
lie in the warehouses. This has been refuted time and again. For example the World Health
programme has insisted that Iraq maintain buffer stocks in warehouses and increase them.
As Hans von Sponeck has pointed out: 88% of all humanitarian supplies get to where they
are meant to go - and I think he has updated that figure - it is even higher now.
The letter claims that there is no credible research data that links the use of Depleted
Uranium with the seven-fold increase in cancer in southern Iraq. This is a breathtaking
lie. Since 1943 when the atomic bomb was developed there has been an abundance of
documented evidence that Depleted Uranium destroys lung tissue and leads to cancer.
The UK Atomic Energy Authority quoted a theoretical 500,000 potential deaths in the region following the Gulf War, if only a fraction of DU dust was inhaled. Anybody who has heard the expert and moving testimony of Professor Doug Rokke is left in no doubt of the effects of DU on the civilian population in the region. And what makes this particular Foreign Office lie criminal, is that under its sanctions policy the British government denies Iraq the equipment and expertise with which to clean up its contaminated battlefields as Kuwait was cleaned up; while at the same time the Sanctions Committee in New York, dominated by the US and Britain, has blocked and delayed a range of medical equipment that diagnoses and treats cancer, along with chemotherapy drugs. The reason given for blocking these drugs is that they might be used in weapons of mass destruction.
The WHO sent a team to Iraq
to investigate this. It was led by Professor Carol Secoura, head of the WHO Cancer
programme, an eminent specialist. He described the dual use theory applied to anti-cancer
drugs as ludicrous and said there is no possibility of converting these drugs into
chemical warfare agents. Vital vaccines for children are banned because they might be dual
use: but Robin Cook says they are not banned, or rather John Davies, Head of the Iraq Desk
at the Foreign Office, says they are not banned. According to Davies, the British
government must be reassured that the use of every batch of vaccine ordered by Iraq is not
for weapons. That so called reassurance can only be given by UN Weapons Inspectors, says
Davies, but these were expelled from Iraq in 1998 after they were used to spy for the
Americans. According to Davies, no other UN personnel can be trusted. So in this way, the
Foreign Office can say that Britain does not technically ban vaccines to Iraq but for the
children of Iraq this sophistry means death from preventable disease.
The letter lords the latest Security Council Resolution, Resolution 1284: a complicated,
qualified, arcane mess. Almost designed to be rejected by Iraq. John Davies has told
colleagues of mine that this Resolution changes nothing whatsoever. In other words, it
reflects the whole Sanctions policy - it is cynical. Davies attended a conference at
Cambridge University last year and was given the special privilege of his remarks being
off the record. I always thought a University like Cambridge was meant to be place of free
flowing ideas; civil servant who say one thing in private while their Minister says
something else in public should be invited to these conferences but the rest of us should
not have to take a pledge of secrecy.
For too long the so-called
Chatham House Rules have denied open public discussion on matters of grave
public interest. Let them come and speak the truth to everybody.
I havent the time to describe every lie in this three-page letter, every deception.
It says that I fell for the Iraqi line on the bombing by Britain and America that
goes on almost every day. When innocent people are killed by British and American pilots -
what is the line? That it didnt happen? That a shepherd and his family of six
were not killed by a pilot who made two passes at them? That fishermen were not killed
sitting fishing? That villagers were not attacked ? All this happened and was verified by
UN staff; but because it happened in Iraq the lying machine at the Foreign Office can
dismiss it as a line.
Between 30 and 40% of causalities, as I understand it, from the bombing are civilians. That is not a line; its a fact.
The United States has conducted 24,000 combat missions over southern Iraq since December 1998; many of them bombing missions. Thats not a line; its a fact. Its the longest Anglo-American bombing campaign since World War II and its hardly reported.
I met the parents of six
children who died in their beds when an American missile struck their street in Basra. I
should have said to the fathers, holding pictures of their dead children, Im
sorry
.thats a line.
Of the bombing, the Foreign Office letter says: '...our actions are entirely lawful.' How
can they get away with making such a statement? Hans Von Sponeck has referred to that kind
of lie which in my book meets the David Irving standard. The bombing of Iraq has no basis
whatsoever in international law. It was never approved or ratified or anything else by the
Security Council - and thats a fact. I asked the former Secretary- General, Dr
Boutros Boutros Ghali, when I met him about this and he was Secretary General in the early
90s, and he verified it, that it had no basis in international law.
Now listen to this sentence from the letter: Saddam Hussein makes sure there are
plenty of malnourished children to film for TV. I cant really describe the
obscenity and offence caused by those words and its effect on those of us who have been to
Iraq and have watched children die in front of us and find them everywhere. They die, of
course, for want of basic medicines and equipment, thanks largely to policies made in
London and Washington.
John Davies, the civil
servant in charge, has never been to Iraq. The junior official who signed this letter,
Jamie Cooper, has never been to Iraq . Robin Cook and Peter Hain and Tony Blair, the moral
crusader, have never been to Iraq.
Of course, the issue is an old one. It is about those impeccable men in suits who live
impeccable middle class lives and who condemn to death thousands of people at great remove
in distance and culture. Kissinger did it when he and Nixon killed half a million
Cambodians with their illegal bombing. Reagan did it with his illegal attacks on the
people of Central America. George Bush did it with his slaughter of Iraqis in 1991, which
he called the greatest moral crusade since World War II. You may not have noticed because
it has hardly had any publicity, but he has just published a book in which he has told the
truth at last: it was all about oil, he said. The moral crusade had nothing to do with it.
Imperial governments have been doing it for as long as anyone can remember: from a safe distance, killing people for strategic and commercial advantage. Without Britain as its biggest arms supplier, Indonesia would not have been able to oppress the people of East Timor for as long as it did. A year after New Labour came to power the Blair government secretly urged British arms manufacturers to sell an additional 3000 million pounds worth of arms to the Suharto dictatorship. Right at that time the Indonesian people and the East Timorese people were struggling to free themselves. In other words, from a safe distance, Tony Blair and Robin Cook and the rest were prepared to prolong the agony of that country for commercial gain.
They are prolonging the agony of Iraq so that as junior partner to Washington, Britain can draw advantage and gain from a new American oil protectorate that now stretches from Turkey all the way to the caucuses of the former Soviet Union, or one that is being developed. None of this has much to do, frankly, with Saddam Hussein; whose power was partly invented anyway by Washington and London and probably still has a role to play in their eyes by presiding over a crippled nation. But Iraq certainly is a model; and its a model we should look closely at for what might happen in the future. Policy unofficially called Bomb Now - Die Later.
After Vietnam the United
States decided it was politically problematic for any American soldiers to die abroad and
that has been the policy. It is now a policy in this country - which you kill from a
distance and you kill mainly from the air. You bomb first, isolate the country with
sanctions, bomb its infrastructure, isolate it with sanctions, and bypass it. Yugoslavia
is already undergoing great suffering because of food shortages and well see, unless
we begin raising our voices now, this policy extended to other countries throughout the
world in the future. I do think as a journalist that it is important that all of us
understand that great power is unsentimental: it has no use for the truth. Or as Claude
Coburn once wrote: Never believe anything until it is officially denied.
I think its time that in a democracy, those of us who are journalists in a democracy, we
simply didnt present the rest of the world in terms of its usefulness to western
power; that we didnt on behalf of western power censor by omission or minimise the
culpability of our own governments. If we are to call ourselves free journalists I think
we have to regard ourselves not as agents of power but as agents of people; and Iraq is
the best example of that. Its all historically now staring us in the face- or it
should be- it has just gone too far. Too many lies have been told. We cant go on
like this.
The Cold War was largely a lie; all the declassified documents now tell us that Britain
and America did not believe for a moment that the Russians were coming; the nuclear arms
race was largely a lie; the so-called missile gap between the Soviet Union and the United
States was an American propaganda invention. The Vietnam War, which claimed 5 million
lives, was largely a lie; Ho Chi Minh appealed to the Americans in the 1940s and Vietnam
was divided only because Washington sabotaged peace talks in 1954, and of course these
sanctions against Iraq are largely a lie too. If their stated aim was to weaken the regime
of Saddam Hussein the very opposite has happened, as anybody who has been there has
observed.
I am truly sorry that Robin Cook had to decline my invitation to come today. He also
declined, as some of you will know, to appear in my film without impossible conditions
imposed by his spin-doctors. Of course, as one of his officials, again disloyally, told
us: "
.the Foreign Secretary does not wish to appear in a film with dying
babies."
I can understand that,
especially if you are defending a policy which is killing babies. So I asked for Peter
Hain, the Junior Minister of the Foreign Office, who was also unavailable unless he could
make a speech at the end of my film. Peter Hain, the ambitious Peter Hain, another who
crossed over, another intellectual and moral contortionist who slanders critics of
sanctions as apologists for the Iraqi regime.
I once knew Peter Hain very well. We were both thrown out of Cardiff Arms Rugby Ground
when he was demonstrating against Apartheid and I was there as a sympathetic reporter. We
became friends and I made a film defending him when he was stitched up by the conspiracy
laws; indeed he described me the other day in print as '
his old friend. '
I offer this advice from an old friend: the sanctions policy you defend, Peter Hain, is
disintegrating under the weight of its indecency, its immorality and its illegality.
Sanctions against the Iraqi people breach a multitude of international laws, including the
Nuremberg Charter and the Covenant against Genocide. So take care, Peter, that you are not
the fall guy, the ambitious patsy, who is left to defend a murderous policy that is
undoubtedly a crime against humanity. Think, Peter, of the company you keep and the words
of Denis Halliday: "History will slaughter those responsible."