Check out this information about Iraq,
taken from the Jerusalem Post
The full article is
here
One thing I noticed in Iraq was the missing body
parts. Not immediately. I spend most of my time in
the Great North Woods of New Hampshire and Quebec
and, when you're in old mill towns, it's not unusual
to find yourself sitting at a lunch counter with
three codgers who can barely muster 10 fingers
between them.
So at first I didn't pay much attention to the
missing digits and missing limbs. It was the third
missing ear I saw - in Ramadi - that made me realize
what was really going on. An ear's a hard thing to
lose. So's a tongue.
That's why I cannot share the "outrage" over Abu
Ghraib of some of the more excitable correspondents
("The Shaming of America: George Bush's boast of
shutting down Saddam Hussein's torture chambers in
Iraq rings hollow now," according to my chums at The
Irish Times). More to the point, nor do most Iraqis.
Representatives of the Shi'ites and Kurds, who
between them account for four-fifths of the
population, have said nary a word. Ayatollah Sistani,
the most prominent figure in the land and a man who
can cause the coalition serious trouble any time he
wishes, has let the matter lie.
And, as I endeavored to explain last week, most
Americans don't share the "outrage." A week later,
they share it even less. As Senator Zell Miller, a
Democrat, put it: "Why is it that there's more
indignation over a photo of a prisoner with
underwear on his head than over the video of a young
American with no head at all?"
That wouldn't, in normal circumstances, be a
valid comparison. If you go to the hospital in
Dublin or Rotterdam and they botch the operation,
it's no consolation to be told that it's better
treatment than you'd have got in the Sudan. You want
your health care to be measured against London,
Geneva, Vancouver - not Chad and Rwanda. But for
Iraqis, this is the only comparison that matters -
pre-April 2003 vs post-April 2003.
The best rule of politics is this: Don't make the
perfect the enemy of the good.
Is the Anglo-American occupation of Iraq perfect?
No.
Is it good? Yes.
Was Saddam Hussein's rule perfect? No.
Was it good? No.
This shouldn't be a tough call. But, shortly
after the liberation, the bespoke apologists for the
Middle East's thug regimes and the more depraved
"peace activists" in Europe set themselves a tall
order - to prove that the Iraqis were better off
under Saddam. At first, they confined this
proposition to matters such as drinking water. When
some of us pointed out that the potable water supply
in Iraq is now double what it was pre-war, or that
health care funding is 25 times larger than it was a
year ago, Europe's Saddamite cheerleaders gave up
this line of attack. It was always rather boring and
technocratic, anyway. So now they've got right down
to basics - not potable water but "torture." Why,
Bush is torturing just as many Iraqis as Saddam did!
The Shia and Kurds know better than to go along
with this. No doubt the average American network
anchor or New York Times columnist wouldn't want to
be led around naked with Victoria's Secret knickers
on their heads by some freaky West Virginia slut.
But I'll bet they'd take it any day over being
thrown off a four-story building or having their
fingers cut off one by one or being castrated
without anesthetic or being beheaded while the men
around you sing "Happy birthday, Saddam." Video and
photographic material exists of all the above being
performed on Arabs and Kurds.
Readers may recall that last year I wrote about a
Canadian female journalist questioned to death by
the Iranians. Some British businessmen were brutally
tortured by the Saudis. Bad luck, old man. But
nobody's fired because nobody cares. By comparison,
post-Saddam Iraq is a novelty - an Arab country
where state torture is investigated and its
perpetrators punished.
But let's go to the next stage. What do the
"Bush's boast rings hollow" crowd want for Iraq?
Usually, they want the UN to take over.
Is the UN perfect? No.
Is the UN good? Well, I'm not sure I'd even say
that. But if you object to what's going on in those
Abu Ghraib pictures - the sexual humiliation of
prisoners and their conscription as a vast army of
extras in their guards' porno fantasies - then you
might want to think twice about handing over Iraq to
the UN.
In Eritrea, the government recently accused the
UN mission of, among other offences, pedophilia. In
Cambodia, UN troops fueled an explosion of child
prostitutes and AIDS. Amnesty International reports
that the UN mission in Kosovo has presided over a
massive expansion of the sex trade, with girls as
young as 11 being lured from Moldova and Bulgaria to
service international peacekeepers.
In Bosnia, where the sex-slave trade barely
existed before the UN showed up in 1995, there are
now hundreds of brothels with underage girls living
as captives. The 2002 Save the Children report on
the UN's cover-up of the sex-for-food scandal in
West Africa provides grim details of peacekeepers'
demanding sexual favors from children as young as
four in exchange for biscuits and cake powder. "What
is particularly shocking and appalling is that those
people who ought to be there protecting the local
population have actually become perpetrators," said
Steve Crawshaw, the director of Human Rights Watch.
By now you're maybe thinking, "Hmm. I must have
been on holiday the week the papers ran all those
stories about 'The Shaming of the UN.'"
In the last few days, The Daily Mirror has had to
concede that their pictures of members of the
Queen's Lancashire Regiment committing atrocities
are all fakes. The Boston Globe has admitted that
their pictures of US troops sexually abusing Iraqi
women are also phony. The Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation has apologized for claiming that Israel
was implicated in the events at Abu Ghraib. Why
would these big-media fact-checked-to-death news
operations get suckered so easily? Because, to the
great herd of independent minds, these stories
conform to their general view that all the ills of
the world can be laid at the door of Bush, Blair,
and Sharon.
Are the media perfect? No.
Are the media good? After these last two weeks, I
think I'll pass on that one.