He
has been refused entry to Britain and treatment for a
serious heart ailment by the National Health Service:
outrages rescinded only after a public campaign. On 25
June, he came to Down ing Street to hand his Victoria
Cross back to the Prime Minister, but Gordon Brown
refused to see him.
The second photograph is of a 12-year-old boy, one of
three children. They are Kuchis, nomads of Afghanistan.
They have been hit by Nato bombs, American or British,
and nurses are trying to peel away their roasted skin
with tweezers. On the night of 10 June, Nato planes
struck again, killing at least 30 civilians in a single
village: children, women, schoolteachers, students. On 4
July, another 22 civilians died like this. All,
including the roasted children, are described as
"militants" or "suspected Taliban". The Defence
Secretary, Des Browne, says the invasion of Afghan istan
is "the noble cause of the 21st century".
The third photograph is of a computer-generated aircraft
carrier not yet built, one of two of the biggest ships
ever ordered for the Royal Navy. The £4bn contract is
shared by BAE Systems, whose sale of 72 fighter jets to
the corrupt tyranny in Saudi Arabia has made Britain the
biggest arms merchant on earth, selling mostly to
oppressive regimes in poor countries. At a time of
economic crisis, Browne describes the carriers as "an
affordable expenditure".
The fourth photograph is of a young British soldier,
Gavin Williams, who was "beasted" to death by three
non-commissioned officers. This "informal summary
punishment", which sent his body temperature to more
than 41 degrees, was intended to "humiliate, push to the
limit and hurt". The torture was described in court as a
fact of army life.
The final photograph is of an Iraqi man, Baha Mousa, who
was tortured to death by British soldiers. Taken during
his post-mortem, it shows some of the 93 horrific
injuries he suffered at the hands of men of the Queen's
Lancashire Regiment who beat and abused him for 36
hours, including double-hooding him with hessian sacks
in stifling heat. He was a hotel receptionist. Although
his murder took place almost five years ago, it was only
in May this year that the Ministry of Defence responded
to the courts and agreed to an independent inquiry. A
judge has described this as a "wall of silence".
A court martial convicted just one soldier of Mousa's
"inhumane treatment", and he has since been quietly
released. Phil Shiner of Public Interest Lawyers,
representing the families of Iraqis who have died in
British custody, says the evidence is clear - abuse and
torture by the British army is systemic.
Shiner and his colleagues have witness statements and
corroborations of prima facie crimes of an especially
atrocious kind usually associated with the Americans.
"The more cases I am dealing with, the worse it gets,"
he says. These include an "incident" near the town of
Majar al-Kabir in 2004, when British soldiers executed
as many as 20 Iraqi prisoners after mutilating them. The
latest is that of a 14-year-old boy who was forced to
simulate anal and oral sex over a prolonged period.
"At the heart of the US and UK project," says Shiner,
"is a desire to avoid accountability for what they want
to do. Guantanamo Bay and extraordinary renditions are
part of the same struggle to avoid accountability
through jurisdiction." British soldiers, he says, use
the same torture techniques as the Americans and deny
that the European Convention on Human Rights, the Human
Rights Act and the UN Convention on Torture apply to
them. And British torture is "commonplace": so much so,
that "the routine nature of this ill-treatment helps to
explain why, despite the abuse of the soldiers and cries
of the detainees being clearly audible, nobody,
particularly in authority, took any notice".
Arcane rituals
Unbelievably, says Shiner, the Ministry of Defence under
Tony Blair decided that the 1972 Heath government's ban
on certain torture techniques applied only in the UK and
Northern Ireland. Consequently, "many Iraqis were killed
and tortured in UK detention facilities". Shiner is
working on 46 horrific cases.
A wall of silence has always surrounded the British
military, its arcane rituals, rites and practices and,
above all, its contempt for the law and natural justice
in its various imperial pursuits. For 80 years, the
Ministry of Defence and compliant ministers refused to
countenance posthumous pardons for terrified boys shot
at dawn during the slaughter of the First World War.
British soldiers used as guinea pigs during the testing
of nuclear weapons in the Indian Ocean were abandoned,
as were many others who suffered the toxic effects of
the 1991 Gulf War. The treatment of Gurkha Tul Bahadur
Pun is typical. Having been sent back to Nepal, many of
these "soldiers of the Queen" have no pension, are
deeply impoverished and are refused residence or medical
help in the country for which they fought and for which
43,000 of them have died or been injured. The Gurkhas
have won no fewer than 26 Victoria Crosses, yet Browne's
"affordable expenditure" excludes them.
An even more imposing wall of silence ensures that the
British public remains largely unaware of the industrial
killing of civilians in Britain's modern colonial wars.
In his landmark work Unpeople: Britain's Secret Human
Rights Abuses, the historian Mark Curtis uses three main
categories: direct responsibility, indirect
responsibility and active inaction.
"The overall figure [since 1945] is between 8.6 and 13.5
million," Curtis writes. "Of these, Britain bears direct
responsibility for between four million and six million
deaths. This figure is, if anything, likely to be an
underestimate. Not all British interventions have been
included, because of lack of data." Since his study was
published, the Iraq death toll has reached, by reliable
measure, a million men, women and children.
The spiralling rise of militarism within Britain is
rarely acknowledged, even by those alerting the public
to legislation attacking basic civil liberties, such as
the recently drafted Data Com muni cations Bill, which
will give the government powers to keep records of all
electronic communication. Like the plans for identity
cards, this is in keeping what the Americans call "the
national security state", which seeks the control of
domestic dissent while pursuing military aggression
abroad. The £4bn aircraft carriers are to have a "global
role". For global read colonial. The Ministry of Defence
and the Foreign Office follow Washington's line almost
to the letter, as in Browne's preposterous description
of Afghanistan as a noble cause. In reality, the
US-inspired Nato invasion has had two effects: the
killing and dispossession of large numbers of Afghans,
and the return of the opium trade, which the Taliban had
banned. According to Hamid Karzai, the west's puppet
leader, Britain's role in Helmand Province has led
directly to the return of the Taliban.
Loans for arms
The militarising of how the British state perceives and
treats other societies is vividly demonstrated in
Africa, where ten out of 14 of the most impoverished and
conflict-ridden countries are seduced into buying
British arms and military equipment with "soft loans".
Like the British royal family, the British Prime
Minister simply follows the money. Having ritually
condemned a despot in Zimbabwe for "human rights abuses"
- in truth, for no longer serving as the west's business
agent - and having obeyed the latest US dictum on Iran
and Iraq, Brown set off recently for Saudi Arabia,
exporter of Wahhabi fundamentalism and wheeler of
fabulous arms deals.
To complement this, the Brown government is spending
£11bn of taxpayers' money on a huge, pri vatised
military academy in Wales, which will train foreign
soldiers and mercenaries recruited to the bogus "war on
terror". With arms companies such as Raytheon profiting,
this will become Britain's "School of the Americas", a
centre for counter-insurgency (terrorist) training and
the design of future colonial adventures.
It has had almost no publicity.
Of course, the image of militarist Britain clashes with
a benign national regard formed, wrote Tolstoy, "from
infancy, by every possible means - class books, church
services, sermons, speeches, books, papers, songs,
poetry, monuments [leading to] people stupefied in the
one direction". Much has changed since he wrote that. Or
has it? The shabby, destructive colonial war in
Afghanistan is now reported almost entirely through the
British army, with squaddies always doing their Kipling
best, and with the Afghan resistance routinely dismissed
as "outsiders" and "invaders". Pictures of nomadic boys
with Nato-roasted skin almost never appear in the press
or on television, nor the after-effects of British
thermobaric weapons, or "vacuum bombs", designed to suck
the air out of human lungs. Instead, whole pages mourn a
British military intelligence agent in Afghanis tan,
because she happens to have been a 26-year-old woman,
the first to die in active service since the 2001
invasion.
Baha Mousa, tortured to death by British soldiers, was
also 26 years old. But he was different. His father,
Daoud, says that the way the Ministry of Defence has
behaved over his son's death convinces him that the
British government regards the lives of others as
"cheap". And he is right.
www.johnpilger.com
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