By Daniel M Pourkesali, Virginia (CASMII)
Iran's sudden release of 15 Britons arrested 2 weeks
ago in the disputed territorial waters inside the Persian Gulf took many in the
West by surprise and sucked the wind out of warmongers sail who had used the
event to continue their demonization of Iran as a pariah state. Of course
following the release of the sailors yesterday, the ever compliant and
predictable major U.S. news media dropped the story like a hot sack of potatoes.
After all, portrayal of Iran as anything other than an outlaw nation deserving
membership in the 'axis of evil' club does not bode well with the aims of their
'special interest' controlled masters.
Not surprisingly the occasion was also used by both
Bush and Blair to step up anti-Iran propaganda and try to boost their sagging
popularity among a war-wary populace in the US and Britain. But their
hypocritical and repeated cries of 'inexcusable behavior'[1] and recitations of
international law fell mostly on deaf ears of an unsympathetic world community
who no longer views them as holding the moral authority to accuse Iranians of
mischief in face of numerous inhumane and despicable acts perpetrated by their
governments.
After all, it was the blatant violation of this very
fundamental tenet of international law enshrined in the United Nations Charter
[2] article 2 paragraph 4 that "All Members shall refrain in their
international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial
integrity or political independence of any state, or in any other manner
inconsistent with the Purposes of the United Nations" leading to the invasion of Iraq in 2003
and it is the daily violation of the same that keeps thousands of British and
American troops there today.
Back then, international law was considered little
more than a nuisance getting in the way of Mr. Bush and Blair's plans - to
replace the Iraqi regime with one that is compliant, control their resources
[3], and threaten other countries in the region to get in line and accept Israel
as the regional power.
When a video of sailors appeared on
Iranian television last week, Mr. Blair and others in the western press [4]
immediately denounced it as a violation of international law and the terms of
Geneva Conventions. A charge repeated by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld back
in March of 2003 when five American soldiers were captured in the Iraqi
city of Nasiriya and their images were broadcast on Iraqi TV.
Yet no journalist working for any of the major Western media outlets
raised any question about Geneva violations when the Iraqi POWs, some forced at
gunpoint to kneel with their hands behind their heads, were paraded before U.S.
cameras as evidence that Iraqi resistance was crumbling. Same
distinguished members of the press corps were also silent when Mr. Bush drew
worldwide condemnation for stripping many POWs captured in Afghanistan of their
Geneva Convention rights while parading them gagged and hooded, shackled in leg
irons, and dressed in orange jumpsuits on their way to Guantanamo where they
continue to perish today with no due process 5 years on.
During the course of the Britons detention, Mr.
Bush repeatedly called on the Iranian government to free the 'hostages'. This in
contrast to ordering raids against an Iranian consular office in northern Iraq
back in December and arresting five Iranian diplomats whose fates remain unknown
to this day. Has anyone seen a single story in the Western news media
about these 'hostages' and violations of international law while we're being
preached about what constitutes an 'inexcusable
behavior'?
[1] Washington
Post, Sunday, April 1, 2007; Page A01
[2] Charter of the United Nations
[3] Noam Chomsky interviewed by Simon Mars on December 2,
2003
[4] Christian
Science Monitor
... Payvand News - 4/6/07 ... --