By Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar
Cry "Havoc," and let slip
the dogs of war (Julius Caesar Act III, Scene I). The call for war against
Iran was issued by no other
than Mr. Bernard Kouchner the foreign minister of France, a country with the motto of Liberty, Equality and
Fraternity. France the home of Voltaire and
Rousseau is now calling for war against a country that has never threatened
France or its neighbours. France a nuclear power with
illustrious colonial past is urging others to be aware of the dangers that
nuclear weapons pose.
From the other side of
the Atlantic we hear the same cries for more
war, death and destruction. As though the death of 650000 Iraqis was not enough,
we are urged to prepare ourselves for another war. We are told that by killing
more civilians, creating more refugees, destroying more bridges, power plants,
schools, hospitals and factories we are going to be safer and live better lives.
Recently Mr. Greenspan told us what
we already knew: namely that Iraq was invaded because of its
oil.
This of course was not the first time that we heard this and it certainly will
not be the last either. But who cares? Here we see President Bush and his allies
illegally attacking and destroying a country, making millions homeless and
starting a civil war without a slightest sign of remorse. They went to steal the
natural resources of Iraq and they did it and are doing
it. And now they want more. Yesterday it was Iraq; tomorrow it will be Iran and the day after it will be
Venezuela. When the president of the
world’s only superpower acts like a thief, what protection is there for the rest
of the world? The very same people that brought us the Iraq tragedy are
using the same excuses to repeat their misdeeds again.
In late August,
“Iran and the Vienna-based
International Atomic Energy Agency released a plan laying out a step-by-step
timetable of cooperation with the goal of resolving by December issues that have
been under investigation for four years. Agency officials have praised the
timetable as a breakthrough and Iran’s president, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, on Tuesday said the investigation into his country’s nuclear
activities was now closed.”[1]
This agreement was hailed
as a success by the IAEA and UN. The problem with this agreement is that it
takes away the excuse needed by Bush and Co to implement their strategy of
strangling Iran and get their
hands on Iran’s oil and gas. Naturally, just
like the case in Iraq, they have dismissed the
agreement saying that it was not enough. Then the talk of war intensified, with
US, Israel and then France
talking loudly about an eventual attack on Iran. The main
aim of these shrill voices is to take the people’s attention away from the
IAEA-Iran agreement and back to some illogical talk of Iran’s threat to
the world.
It is said that if you
tell a lie big enough and often enough, people will eventually come to believe
you. Having used this tactics in Iraq with some success, they believe
they can do it again. They believe that people will eventually come to believe
that Iran is a serious threat to the world
and grudgingly accept another war. And the good thing about this is, so they
believe, that this time they don’t even have to produce any evidence of
wrongdoing by Iran. They just have to say that they
have prevented Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons
in the “future”. Very logical, isn’t it?
The fact that these same
countries posses lots of nuclear weapons is irrelevant, so we are told. We are
to believe that Israel,
Pakistan, India, US, UK, France, China and Russia are all
exception to the rules. Other countries that enrich Uranium are also exceptions.
It is only Iran with its vast natural resources
that is a danger to the world peace and prosperity.
Israel has over 200 nuclear
weapons and last year was involved in one of the most savage attacks on
Lebanon. She also recently bombed
Syria. Yet we hear no protest from
the so called “civilized world”. Pakistan, a dictatorship, with its
tremendous security problems (Taliban, Al Qaeda, etc) has nuclear weapons and is
awarded F16s. India tested nuclear weapons and was awarded trade and nuclear
technology transfer agreements.
What is the moral lesson
from all this? There is none; the law of the jungle rules. Those who can steal
will steal. Those who can rape will do so with impunity. There is no punishment
for the strong; it is the weak that has to pay. Meanwhile we pretend to believe
all their lies and keep hoping for cheaper oil and higher share prices;
otherwise we have to face our own complicity in their crimes. After all who
elected them and who re-elected them? Our very silence makes us an accomplice.
As you read this you
should think about all those Iraqis that have been killed, the 2.5 million
Iraqis that had to flee the carnage in their country and a similar number of
internal Iraqi refugees. You should think about all the lies that you have been
told and ask yourself these questions: do I want another incident like
Iraq? Can I stay silent and accept
more killings and destruction? Is it OK for the powerful to commit armed
robbery?
If one finds it difficult
to answer these questions, then perhaps one should follow what Bertrand Russell
said: “We have, in fact, two kinds of morality side by side: one which we preach
but do not practice, and another which we practice but seldom
preach”.
Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar lives
in Norway. He is a management consultant
and a contributing writer for many online journals. He can be contacted by
e-mail at:Bakhtiarspace-articles@yahoo.no
Copyright Abbas Bakhtiar,
all rights reserved.
... Payvand News - 9/21/07 ...