"War on Terror's" hit parade: An Islamophobia retrospective
By Trish Schuh
Online Journal Contributing Writer
May 4, 2006, 01:48
It was the potshot
heard round the world that touched off a counter-crusade. Packaged in Western
free speech cliches, and marketed as innocent satire, the newspaper Jylland-Posten's
depiction of the Prophet Muhammad as a terrorist/suicide bomber with a ticking
bomb for a turban was "provocation-entrapment" propaganda. Dual-use
entertainment, in this case frivolous caricature, is an unexamined aspect of
"full spectrum information dominance."
The
US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld's "Information Operations
Roadmap" mandates that "information warfare" utilize all
cultural venues to further its agenda -- news, posters, books, movies, art,
internet, and music etc.
Can comedy be far
behind? At recent CIA training sessions in Dubai, Iranian opposition agent
provocateurs were taught the importance of mockery and ridicule when used to
discredit and "demythologize" an enemy or incite against it. Even
populist actions like grafitti "could embolden the student movement and
provoke a general government crackdown, which could then be used as a pretext
to 'spark' a mass uprising that appeared to be spontaneous." (Asia Times,
Mar 14, 06). Such provocation tactics operated in the cartoon intifada, as well
as in US Embassy-coordinated "color revolutions."
As a free speech
crusader, Flemming Rose, Jyllands-Posten's editor behind the Muhammad
cartoons (and ally/author of a Daniel Pipes profile, "The Threat from
Islam"), had earlier refused to publish denigrating cartoons of Jesus,
fearing it would "offend readers." Jylland-Posten also
rescinded sponsorship of a Holocaust cartoon contest for the same reason. Kurt
Westergaard, Jylland-Posten's "Muhammad bomb" illustrator even
transcribed a Koranic verse onto Muhammad's turban to reinforce his message.
Westergaard later admitted to The Herald of Glasgow, Scotland that
"terrorism" which he said got "spiritual ammunition" from
Islam was the inspiration for that message.
If propaganda is a
weapon of war, Islam is under carpet-bombing. Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels
described the methods, which define those used today: "Concentrating the
fire of all the media on one particular point -- a single theme, a single
enemy, a single idea -- the campaign uses this concentration of all media, but
progressively . . ."
Theme: "War on
Terror" Enemy: Muslims. Addressing the 2006 AIPAC "Now is the Time to
Stop Iran" Conference, Israeli Ambassador to the UN, Daniel Gillerman
summarized the Idea: "While it may be true -- and probably is -- that not
all Muslims are terrorists, it also happens to be true that nearly all
terrorists are Muslim." Former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami put it
another way: "the West needs an enemy, and this time it is Islam. And
Islamophobia becomes part of all policies of the great powers, of hegemonic
powers."
Is Islamophobia de
facto state policy? Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi declared in 2001
that Western civilization is superior to the Islamic World: "We should be
confident of the superiority of our civilization, which consists of a value
system that has given people widespread prosperity in those countries that
embrace it, and guarantees respect for human rights." He added that this
superiority entitled the West to "occidentalize and conquer new
people." Another Italian official, MP Roberto Calderoni, flaunted his
Muhammad cartoon T-shirt on TV, warning of a an "Islamic attack on the
West." French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy pronounced Muslim
immigrants "gangrene" and "scum," and one Danish MP labeled
Muslims "a cancer in Denmark."
In
America, Congressman Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) commented: "I'm okay with
discrimination against young Arab males from terrorist-producing states." Congressman
Sam Johnson (R-Texas) bragged to a crowd of veterans that he had advised Bush
to nuke Syria, and Congressman Tom Tancredo (R-Col.) advocated wiping out Mecca
to get even with Muslims for terrorist attacks. Recently the Bush
administration itself revealed its plans to "nuke Iran" with bunker
buster bombs.
Zionist Neocon
Daniel Pipes, a representative at the Congress-sponsored think tank US
Institute for Peace (who was appointed by Bush despite heavy public protest
against Pipe's racism), recently diagnosed Muslims as carriers of a sinister,
latent psychopathic contagion: "Individuals may appear law-abiding and
reasonable, but they are part of a totalitarian movement, and as such, all must
be considered potential killers . . . This is what I have dubbed the Sudden
Jihad Syndrome, whereby normal-appearing Muslims abruptly become violent. It
has the awful but legitimate consequence of casting suspicion on all Muslims.
Who knows whence the next jihadi? How can one be confident a law-abiding Muslim
will not suddenly erupt in a homicidal rage?"
Muslims' angry
reactions to the cartoon provocation unwittingly served a goal of Pipe's
Anti-Islamist Institute: "the delegitimation of the Islamists. We seek to
have them shunned by the government, the media, the churches, the academy and
the corporate world." For once, Israel, America and Europe were united to
protect civilization's free speech virtues against "crazed, rampaging,"
"dirty Arabs" or, as Pipes himself once remarked, "brown-skinned
peoples cooking strange foods and not exactly maintaining Germanic standards of
hygiene."
I asked Pipes about
the systemic racism and Muslim/Arab "terrorist" stereotypes in the US
media. Pipes said: "I would strongly, strongly disagree. There is an
enormous amount of media that is very, very positive about Muslims, an enormous
amount. I see it every day. There is a steady stream of media that is very
positive about Muslims- steady, steady, steady. I see it everyday- all the time
. . ." When persistently pressed to name five positive stories or Muslim
role models among this plethora of good news -- authors, academics, lawyers,
celebrities, etc. -- Pipes could not give a single example. But he easily
supplied numerous names of prominent Arab Americans allegedly "linked"
to terrorism.
Despite
disclaimers, bigoted, hideous and contemptuous anti-Muslim content continues
unabated: hooded corpses in Abu Ghraib displayed by jovial "thumbs
up" troops, force-fed hunger strikers at Guantanamo (who Donald Rumsfeld
wisecracked were "on a diet"), refugee camps flattened, Palestinians
starving, taunts of "Taliban lady boys" after US troops had set fire
to Afghan bodies, ubiquitous car bombings, wedding parties crushed, mosques demolished,
civilians attacked with cluster bombs and daisy cutters. Depleted uranium
mutating future generations, and a thousand Iraqi pilgrims stampeded to death
in an hour . . . In the midst of which President Bush pantomimed and joked
about missing WMD to an applauding audience at the 2004 Radio and
Television Correspondents Dinner. And call
they themselves a press corp. Bush's antics befitted a noncombatant president
who greeted the initial bombing of Iraq with pumped fists: "I feel
good!" (BBC) "See in my line of work you got to keep repeating things
over and over and over again for the truth to sink in, to kind of catapult the
propaganda." (George W Bush, 5/24/05)
This
state-sponsored smirking has trickled down to spawn a climate of recreational
cruelty in the US military. Reflecting anti-Muslim propaganda while
perpetuating it is the "Rumsfeld Contingent" of the armed forces.
Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Lt. Gen. William Jerry Boykin propagated hate
at the grassroots level in dozens of speeches to church groups, saying that the
war on terror was actually spiritual warfare, with the enemy "Satan"
being embodied by Islam. Speaking of God versus Allah he said: "Well, you
know what I knew, that my God was bigger than his. I knew that my God was a
real God, and his was an idol." Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld defended
Boykin, so it was unsurprising that after the Abu Ghraib crimes were exposed
Boykin found "no pattern of misconduct."
Dropping down the
chain of command, Marine Corps Lt. Gen. James Mattis's comments were caught by the
Associated Press. "Actually, it's a lot of fun to fight. You know it's a
hell of a hoot. It's fun to shoot some people. I'll be right upfront with you,
I like brawling." Drawing on the 'Muslim misogynist' stereotype, Mattis
added that Muslim men were wife-beaters and continued: "You know, guys
like that ain't got no manhood left anyway. So it's a hell of a lot of fun to
shoot them." Some troops on the ground echoed this "raghead"
ethos as they shot Iraqis.
Or shot down their
sacred symbols. In May 2005, worldwide Muslim reaction compelled Newsweek to
retract a story about US interrogators flushing the Koran down a toilet at
Guantanamo Bay. Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld maintained that the revelation
was not true, and demanded that Newsweek explain to the Muslim world "the
care that the US military takes" to respect Islamic beliefs.
But such behavior
had been documented independently elsewhere. The Denver Post: prisoners were
"forced to watch copies of the Koran being flushed down toilets"
(January 2005); Financial Times: "they were beaten and had their Korans
thrown into toilets" (Oct 28, 2004); NY Daily News: "They would kick
the Koran, throw it into the toilet and generally disrespect it." (Aug. 5,
2004); The Independent UK: "Guards allegedly threw prisoners' Korans into
toilets" (Aug 5, 2004); The Observer UK: "copies of the Koran would
be trampled on by soldiers and, on one occasion, thrown into a toilet
bucket." (March 14, 2004); Washington Post: "American soldiers
insulted Islam by sitting on the Koran or dumping their sacred text into a
toilet to taunt them" (March 26, 2003). These were but a few of similar
media reports over a period of years.
Other instances of
Islamic desecration were also recorded. One online fundraiser sold printed
toilet paper with the words "Koran, the Holy Quran" which was then
distributed to mosques and the media with a letter claiming the Koran was a
"cookbook for terrorists" and incited violence. The Mercury
News revealed that flyers posted on a Sacramento National Guard military base
extolled World War I General John Pershing as a hero for executing "Muslim
terrorists" with bullets dipped in pigs' blood, thus excluding them from
Paradise. WorldNetDaily reported on a US Army Reserve recruit's contest that
used pages from the Koran to make porcine figures. His website pabaah.com
showed a paper-mache pig with a US flag on its back, and included paper-mache
instructions and links to get free Korans.
Some troop contests
were flippant in a physical way. At Camp Nama adjacent to Baghdad Airport, The
New York Times reported that detainees were bruised after being used for target
practice by soldiers playing in the High Five Paintball Club. Human Rights
Watch later assessed that prisoners were sometimes tortured as a form of stress
relief for soldiers to help while away the hours. "Some days we would just
get bored so we would have everyone sit in a corner and then make them get in a
pyramid. We did that for amusement." Another soldier added " . . . it
was like a game . . . for sport.." This R & R earned the 82nd Airborne
at FOB Mercury a prized nickname from terrified Iraqis: "Murderous
Maniacs". Departing military personnel who did a "good job" were
later awarded by commanders with trophies- a detainee's black hood, and a piece
of tile from the medical office that had once held Saddam Hussein. (After the
1991 Gulf War, one soldier tried to smuggle an Iraqi's limb home in his duffel
bag as a trophy.)
At Abu Ghraib, Sgt
Michael J. Smith laughed and partied with rival dog handlers as they competed
to see who could outscare and humiliate Iraqi prisoners (dogs are considered
unclean and human contact is forbidden by Islam) by siccing ferocious, violent
killer dogs on them. Smith said: "My buddy and I are having a contest to
see if we can get them to defecate on themselves because we've already had some
urinate on themselves." Then in a show of good canine conscience (or just
good sportsmanship), one trainer's Belgian shepherd turned its back on the
detainee and instead attacked the interrogator.
Michael Blake, an
Iraq veteran explained that the military indoctrinated troops with the idea
"Islam is Evil" and "they hate us." This attitude
facilitated the abuse and killing of civilians, and was not just "a few
bad apples." (There are around 2,000 unreleased torture photos).
"Most of the guys I was with believed it", he added. Maj. Gen.
Charles Swannack, a former 82nd Airborne commander insisted that responsibility
for such abuses ultimately lead "directly back to Secretary
Rumsfeld," as an architect of the torture policy.
Lower level troops
prosecuted to deflect responsibility from Rumsfeld have also testified that
they were following orders from above. An official report in 2005 by the Army
Inspector General confirms that authorities at the highest level sanctioned the
crimes. The report documented Rumsfeld's direct, personal briefings by Army interrogator
Major Geoffrey Miller.
British Brigadier
Alan Sharp (American Bronze Star winner for writing the "coalition
campaign plan") disapproved of the gung ho, swaggering "streak of
Hollywood" displayed by US troops. Acknowledging that such
"heroics" made for good television back in the States, he warned that
heavily armed Americans boasting "how many Iraqis have been killed by US
forces today" was no "hearts and minds" winning tool.
But the example had
been set after 9-11 by the "gunslingin', nuke-totin'" swagger of
Cowboy-in-Chief Dubya Bush. His blustering wisecrack, "Osama- Wanted: Dead
or Alive" mimicked posters of old Hollywood westerns. The New York Times
reported that major Tinsel Town executives were working with top Bush advisor
Karl Rove to revive the former propaganda partnership between the entertainment
industry and the Department of Defense. "Hollywood Now Plays Cowboys and
Arabs," ran one headline. (Ironically, Bush's grandfather Prescott claimed
to have stolen the skull of legendary American Indian warrior Geronimo for
his college secret society. It was proudly kept on display in The Tomb -- Skull
& Bones headquarters -- as a trophy.)
In 2004, the
Pentagon previewed it's own "coming attractions." Marines staged a
desert "gladiators' Ben-Hur" drill in full historic costume -- togas,
Trojan helmuts, and shields -- while swinging spiked truncheons to "psych
up for a planned invasion" against Fallujah. "Friends, Romans,
countryman, fend off their spears. When in Fallujah, do as the Romans do"
the New York Post quipped. White phosphorus "burning at the stake"
was strictly offscreen.
Internet audiences
could catch candids of Iraqi dead "just for fun". At undermars.com,
troops posted photos of bloody faces ground to a pulp. Others showed a birthday
candle stuffed into a smashed skull, and various decapitated heads. Evoking Bush's
cowboy spirit, one caption read: "i'm an indian outlaw . . . look my first
scalp."
NowThatsFuckedUp.com
accepted photos of Iraqi war crimes and atrocities as currency to buy
pornography when credit card companies refused to okay payment in dollars. After
a brief outcry from Iraqi expatriates, the site was closed and diverted to an
address called barbecuestoppers.com. There troops laughed and gloated over "baked,"
charred and hideously disfigured Iraqi cadavers, with captions like "Die,
Haji die." One picture showed a "barbecued" corpse steeped in
it's own blood and entrails, labeled "what every Iraqi should look
like." The US Department of Defense is aware of the site, but it is still
accessible to voyeurs despite being in violation of the Geneva Conventions.
Unfortunately,
these damaging associations have increased Americans' prejudice against Islam.
A March 2006 ABC News poll found 46 percent view Islam negatively, up from 39
percent in the months after September 11, 2001. Americans who believe that Islam
promotes violence have risen from 14 percent in 2002 to 33 percent today.
Former US president Bill Clinton warned: "So now what are we going to do?
Replace anti-Semitic prejudice with anti-Islamic prejudice?"
It seems so. In
2005, for the first time since the atomic devastation of Japan, an Associated
Press poll found that half of all Americans would approve the use of atomic
bombs, especially against terrorist targets. A mushroom cloud of anti-Muslim
hate, with a sickly "humorous" spin, has been winning American "hearts
and minds" into acceptance of the Bush administration's nuclear
attack against the "axis of evil" terror sponsor, the Islamic
Republic of Iran.
Meanwhile, another
cheap shot has recently been fired at Islam. A provocative "Muhammad
cartoon" depicts the Prophet Muhammad cut in half, and burning in Hell,
next to a woman among burning coals. It's editor says the cartoon represents
policy towards Islam and that any angry reaction to it could serve to further
alienate Muslims: "if the cartoon provoked an attack, it would only
'confirm the idiotic positions' of Muslim extremists." And most Muslims
are portrayed as extremists.
So the jester's jihad goes on, until we're "entertained"
to death and while Muslims die laughing.
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