ONCE AGAIN THEY ARE LYING TO US
by
JOHN PILGER
Originally published in
THE NEW STATEMSMAN
20th March 2000
The Foreign Office repeatedly hides the truth from
the public: on Cambodia, on East Timor, on arms sales and now on sanctions.
Mark Higson was the Iraq desk officer at the Foreign Office in 1989 when the British
government was still giving Saddam Hussein almost anything he wanted, secretly and
illegally, a year before Iraq invaded Kuwait. Higson, who resigned in protest, was one of
the few British officials commended by the Scott inquiry into the arms-to-Iraq scandal. He
described "a culture of lying" at the Foreign Office.
"The draft letters I wrote for various ministers," he later told me, "were
saying that nothing had changed, the embargo on the sale of arms to Iraq was the
same."
"Was that true?" I asked.
"No, it wasn't true . . ."
"And your superiors knew it wasn't true?"
"Yes. If I was writing a draft reply for a minister, replying to a letter from an MP,
I wrote the agreed line. I also wrote replies to go to members of the public. The letters
were awfully polite. But we were all quite well aware that nothing had changed: that
Jordan was being used [to get arms to Iraq]."
"So how much truth did the public get?"
"The public got as much truth as we could squeeze out, given that we told downright
lies . . ."
I went to the Foreign Office that same year, 1989, to interview Lord Brabazon, a junior
minister. The subject was Cambodia. The Thatcher government was then supporting the Khmer
Rouge-led coalition and the SAS was secretly providing training in mine- laying. Like its
part in the arms-to-Iraq scandal, the Foreign Office was lying about it. (Two years later,
the Major government owned up.)
I was met by a minder from the news department, Ian Whitehead, who took me aside, as he
was no doubt used to doing with journalists, and told me to "go easy" on the
minister. With the interview under way, he began shouting that I had departed from the
"agreed line of questioning". No "line" had been agreed. These days,
the style is less obtuse, but the aim is the same. Senior broadcasters and commentators
pop in to the Foreign Office without any material favours expected; for them, the flattery
and "access" are enough. Thus, much of the world is represented in terms of its
usefulness to western "interests".
Over the years, I have been able to observe how the Foreign Office, the last true citadel
of the British imperium, treats the public. From time to time, documentary films that I
have made have caused people to write to the government and their MPs, seeking answers to
serious questions about the effects of British policies on large numbers of human beings
all over the world. East Timor was a prime example. For years, British officials denied
any British complicity in the genocide there and sought to devalue the scale of suffering.
One official, J L Wilkins of the South East Asia department, was the prolific author of
replies to the public. "No one really knows the truth" about the death toll, was
his message, because some estimates "are sometimes so dramatically different"
from the British government's that they "cannot help but suspect them to be
exaggerated." The same devotion to historical accuracy was shown by another official
who, when asked about the huge death toll, replied, "Yes, but it didn't happen in one
year."
In 1993, a letter sent to the Labour MP Greg Pope, and signed by a senior official in the
Indonesia section, claimed: "We are currently pressing the Indonesians to allow
resumed [Red Cross] access to Xanana Gusmao." This was entirely bogus. An internal
Foreign Office memorandum, which accompanied the letter, read: "Attached for
infn/edification. The letter is for stonewalling."
The sale of British Aerospace Hawk aircraft to Indonesia, and their use in East Timor, is
a famous case in point. In 1978, when David Owen, the Labour foreign secretary, approved
the export of the first Hawks to Indonesia, a young MP called Robin Cook described the
sale as "particularly disturbing" because the Jakarta regime was "at war in
East Timor".
Sixteen years later, Cook, now a member of Labour's front bench, lambasted the Tories for
selling more Hawks to Indonesia. The minister, said Cook, "will be aware that Hawk
aircraft have been seen on bombing runs in East Timor in most years since 1984". He
was right. Indeed, Mark Higson told me that the Foreign Office had known all along exactly
where and how the Hawks were being used in East Timor.
Five years later, with Labour in office and Cook the Foreign Secretary, Foreign Office
officials continued to lie in off-the-record briefings to prominent journalists that Hawks
were not being used in East Timor. There was plenty of evidence to the contrary; but it
was only last year, when the world's press finally discovered East Timor, and a Hawk swept
menacingly over Dili, the capital, that the Foreign Office came clean - with Robin Cook
expressing indignation that the Indonesians could do such a thing, his expose from the
opposition benches long forgotten.
This brings us to the great suffering in Iraq, where 200 children die every day under the
most ruthless embargo in the modern era, enforced principally by the United States and
Britain and sustained by arguably the biggest lie of all. "We must nail the absurd
claim," said Cook, "that sanctions are responsible for the suffering of the
Iraqi people." Again, the evidence to the contrary has been overwhelming. According
to Unicef, half a million children have died in eight years, having borne "the brunt
of the economic hardship" caused by sanctions.
Because few journalists bother to go to Iraq and the propaganda of an entire society's
guilt by association with a tyrant has been seldom questioned, the suffering and its
principal cause are not news. Iraqis are media "unpeople". So Cook can say,
unchallenged: "Food and medicines have never been covered by sanctions." In
fact, while food, medicines and "supplies for essential civilian needs" are
technically exempt from sanctions, the truth is very different: Iraq is prevented from
obtaining foreign currency and therefore from funding the minimum needs of the population.
Shortly before he resigned in protest against sanctions, Hans von Sponeck, the UN
humanitarian co-ordinator in Baghdad, explained: "We are allowed just $180 [over six
months] for every Iraqi. Everything must come out of that: food, water, health, power. How
can people live a proper life on that? It is not possible." Currently, approval for
$1.5 billions'-worth of vital humanitarian-delayed shipments is "on hold" at the
UN Sanctions Committee in New York, which Washington and London dominate. This includes
food and $150 million worth of medical supplies.
Then there is the $10-billion lie. Cook told parliament that Iraq "can now sell over
$10 billion of oil per annum to pay for food, medicine and other humanitarian goods."
Under the oil-for-food programme, the UN controls all the revenue from sales of Iraqi oil
and allocates only 66 per cent for humanitarian supplies.
The balance, more than a third of the revenue, pays compensation to the multi-billionaire
Kuwaiti royal family and western oil companies and "expenses" to the UN. The
oil-for-food programme, said the Economist, was "a meaningless gesture", because
the Iraqi oil industry had been so devastated by allied bombing that it could not pump the
quantity of oil permitted by the Security Council. And less oil means less food and
medicine, and more dying children.
Last month, the UN executive in charge of the sanctions office in New York attacked the
Security Council (that is, the US and Britain) for holding up shipments of oil industry
parts, which the Security Council had already approved. This followed an extraordinary
attack by Kofi Annan, the UN secretary-general, on the US and by implication on Britain,
for "using its muscle to put indefinite 'holds' on more than $500 million in
humanitarian goods that Iraq would like to buy". A senior US official told the
Washington Post: "The longer we can fool around in the [Security] Council and keep
things static, the better."
Then there is the lie that the Baghdad regime is culpably hoarding food and medicine while
the population goes without. Peter Hain, the Foreign Office minister, offered this in
recent letters to the New Statesman and the Guardian. "The goods that come into this
country are distributed to where they belong," said von Sponeck, the senior UN
official in charge. "Our most recent stock analysis shows that 88.8 per cent of all
humanitarian supplies have been distributed." Unicef and the World Food Programme
confirm this. The medicines which, says Hain, "lie in warehouses" are there
because, as UN officials tirelessly explain, the World Health Organisation has instructed
Iraq to maintain emergency buffer stocks and actually wants these increased. Because of
the delays in New York, they say, supplies arrive erratically: for example, IV fluids
frequently turn up ahead of equipment, without which they are useless.
Much of the latest Foreign Office propaganda has come almost word-for-word from a US State
Department briefing document, Saddam Hussein's Iraq, distributed last September. Denis
Halliday, the former UN assistant secretary-general who also resigned in protest rather
than continue to administer the oil-for-food programme, has analysed this report,
describing it as "garbage from beginning to end". Saddam Hussein's palaces are
said to cover "an area greater than Paris". In fact, UN weapons inspectors found
his palaces to be nearer the size of Paddington.
Such desperation is evident in the government's response to the ITV documentary on Iraq
that I made with Alan Lowery, Paying the Price, which, on 6 March, drew a powerful
response from the public. Peter Hain, having metamorphosed in the depressingly
time-honoured way from a principled political activist to yet another Foreign Office
mouthpiece, wrote in the Guardian that Saddam Hussein "makes sure there are plenty of
malnourished children to film". Those of us who, unlike him, have watched Iraqi
children dying in front of us, reserve a particular contempt for such an obscenity, and
wilful ignorance. Tens of thousands of malnourished children need no setting up; they are
everywhere. And they are dying because this government bans vaccines and blocks standard
equipment like blood platelet machines, and refuses to allow the restoration of clean
drinking-water: a universal child saver. Hain might like to see a cancer patient dying in
pain, denied morphine by this government, as I did.
Having brought a born-again zeal to his new career, Hain indulges in smear. "The
friends of the Iraqi regime," he told parliament, are "all those who in one way
or another lend their weight" to Iraq's opposition to sanctions. Dupes, in other
words. As for the parallels that he draws with the sanctions against South Africa, these
are absurd. Unlike Iraq, which imported 70 per cent of its essentials, South Africa was
largely self-sufficient in food, and the majority of people and the ANC supported the
disinvestment and cultural and sporting isolation that hit the white elite. In Iraq, there
has been an opposite effect; instead of weakening the regime, the resistance has been
weakened, and the majority made more powerless than ever. That is why both Nelson Mandela
and Desmond Tutu have publicly opposed sanctions against Iraq. To Hain, they must be
dupes, too.
Both Richard Butler and Scott Ritter, late of Unscom, the weapons inspections agency, have
said that Saddam Hussein has been disarmed of his weapons of mass destruction. With all
non-military sanctions lifted, Baghdad has indicated that the inspectors can return. What
alarms the US and Britain is a section of the original Resolution 687 on Iraq, which they
never mention. This calls for the downgrading of weapons of mass destruction throughout
the region, meaning the nuclear-armed Israeli invaders of Lebanon and the Turkish invaders
of Iraqi Kurdistan. It would also mean the scaling down of the west's arming of countries
like Saudi Arabia, upon which much of Britain's weapons trade depends.
The truth is that the policy of sanctions is disintegrating, with US oil companies already
making secret peace with Baghdad. In the US State Department, sanctions are dismissed as
"Albright's vendetta", and those officials and diplomats with an instinct for
career survival are keeping their distance and their silence during the presidential
campaign.
At the Foreign Office, there is sub- imperial confusion. Jon Davies, the head of the Iraq
desk - who has never been to Iraq - stood up at a conference and blamed the Americans,
then told his listeners that his remarks were "off the record". It seems that
the FO wants Britain to be a bridge between the US and Europe, and if the government
opposed sanctions, the Americans would be displeased and the great strategy would suffer.
That this obsequious bit of realpolitik has nothing to do with Iraq, let alone its dying
children, is by the by. Davies has said privately that last December's Security Council
Resolution 1284, which Hain promotes as a breakthrough, changes nothing. Publicly, the
Foreign Office says the opposite, of course.
It was understandable that no member of the government would be interviewed by me for
Paying the Price without Millbank conditions of control. In parliament, Robin Cook
entirely misrepresented his refusal to appear, claiming he was denied a "right of
reply". For two months, I offered him a major interview, with the bulk of the
questions supplied beforehand so he could prepare his responses to longstanding
criticisism. Unlike the secretary-general of the UN and the US State Department spokesman,
he demanded special "as live" treatment. Our fearless Foreign Secretary, an FO
man explained, did not want to be "skewered" nor appear in a film "with
dying babies". I asked for Peter Hain, who in last week's NS described me as his old
friend. But he too was available only on spin-doctors' terms.
I offer him this old friend's advice: sanctions against the Iraqi people breach a
multitude of international laws, including the Nuremberg Charter and the Convenant against
Genocide. Even Margaret Thatcher is careful where she travels these days, lest she be
indicted. So take care, Peter, that you are not assigned the last watch as others scuttle
overboard, leaving a murderous policy that is already regarded, judicially not
rhetorically, as an epic crime against humanity. Think of the company you keep, and the
words of Denis Halliday: "History will slaughter those responsible."