Editor's Note: The following testimonials are drawn from a longer report,
90 Statements
Commemorating Five Years of War in Iraq, published by The Brussels Tribunal.
20th March 2003: the American army and its allies bombard Baghdad.
The War in Iraq has started. The blood and ink flow in abundance. Five years
later, we, as writers, are sending a message to the people. We would like to
appeal to each and every one of you and make you think.
Five or Seventeen?
It jolts me to hear "fifth year anniversary" and "beginning of
sixth year of the war in Iraq" when we all know that the US never stopped
bombing Iraq since January of 1991. That's 17 years. Remember the no-fly zones?
Remember looking on page 12 in the papers and seeing a one inch article about
how "sheep were bombed yesterday in Iraq" or some such "news"?
I'm reminded of Carolyn Forche's book of poetry: Against Forgetting. In it
she reminds us that Hitler asked his military cabinet before his invasion of
Poland in 1939: "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the
Armenians?"
The media cultivates amnesia in us; the government requires such mindlessness
in us. And yet we have a responsibility as a peace community to remember the
nation that Iraq was before 1991: the water systems, the electrical systems,
the educational, medical and agricultural systems that were, in some ways, more
advanced than what we have today in the states. We have a responsibility to
remember the carpet bombing that in 42 days systematically destroyed objects
"indispensable to the survival of the civilian population" which is
against the Geneva conventions. In those 42 days, Iraq was bombed to a pre-industrial
age and then, through sanctions, Iraqis were denied trade, telecommunications,
power, sanitation, water repairs, seed, food, medical supplies and equipment.
And how many Iraqi people have been killed? Must be more than 1,000,000: a
number too large to comprehend unless you're an Iraqi mother or father or child
who has lost a family member. And how many Iraqi people have suffered? The stories
of suffering are heartbreaking: the terror of the bombs, soldiers breaking down
doors, poisoning from depleted uranium munitions... These stories could fill
all the books in the world.
And so we move forward and support all the nonviolent actions on March 19:
we're thankful for the work people have put into planning many good and creative
resistance actions but we must urge remembrance of the many years our country
has punished, bombed, poisoned and killed people of Iraq and done all in its
power to destroy their country.
"Love is the measure."
Susan Crane, Jonah House
An Iraqi in America
In our small Midwestern town in the middle of cornfields that extend hundreds
of kilometers in every direction, there is a grocery run by a former Iraqi schoolteacher
named Mohammed. We often shop there; my wife likes to practice her Arabic with
him. Mohammed came to the States in the late 1990s, a refugee from Saddam's
terror. And he stayed to witness his adopted country invade and destroy the
country of his birth.
We visited with Mohammed not long ago. He's our best source of reliable information
about Iraq, five years after the invasion. He has by now lost 11 extended family
members in the war. His cousin survived imprisonment by the Americans. His brother
recently died a terrible and wholly gratuitous death. I asked Mohammed what
he thought about the struggle now gripping America, dominating the elections,
and at last challenging the conscience of the core of the country. I asked him
what he thought the best way forward was, out of the intractable morass we have
made there.
In his cosmopolitan, Middle Eastern, now Midwestern-inflected English, he answered,
"The Americans must leave, the sooner the better. Today, if possible. It
doesn't matter how. If they do, the situation can only improve. Iraq has governed
itself for 5000 years; it can do so again, without any further lessons in nation-building."
Most people in our small town now agree with our friend. So do most people in
the state of Illinois, and, by several different counts, so do a majority in
the rest of this incredibly diverse country. And I believe that, come November,
most of our elected officials in Washington will agree as well. If I'm right,
then the next time we greet Mohammed, our As-Salamu `Alaykum stands some better
chance of coming true.
Richard Powers, American novelist
Justice for the People of Iraq
The international community must not allow that more dishonesty is added to
history by referring to the wrongdoings of a dictator to explain the horrific
suffering the Iraqi people have had to endure. There is much that can only be
added to the account of the outside world, to the Governments of the United
States and the United Kingdom and other governments and tragically to the United
Nations in explaining the Iraq drama: many years of sanctions that punished
the Iraqi people for something they had not done followed by the subsequent
illegal invasion and brutal occupation.
The tally of international guilt amounts to millions of dead and even larger
numbers of physically and mentally maimed. Added to this is a nation's destroyed
social infrastructure.
Iraqis are a proud and strong people who will do everything to help themselves.
Yet, we can make our contribution by demanding that those responsible for the
carnage and destruction are taken to task and held accountable for what they
have done. The international peace movement must never relent in calling for
justice for the people of Iraq.
Hans von Sponeck, Former UN Assistant Secretary General and UN Humanitarian
Coordinator for Iraq (1998-2000)
My Country
For five years my country has shown the world just how ruthless and cold-blooded
it can be. While the result has provided the younger generation with a grim
lesson in the cheapening of human life, the damage the current rulers of this
country have done to millions of people in Iraq is unspeakable, incalculable.
Meanwhile the profits of oil companies and weapons manufacturers have soared.
No apologies can hope to convey the regret millions of us who oppose the war
feel every minute of every day, and no promises can match the obligation we
have incurred to the victims of our warlord's actions.
Askold Melnyczuk, Author (House of Widows), Founding Editor (Agni),
Editor (Arrowsmith Press)
The Costs of War and Occupation
It has cost the United States and its allies three trillion dollars to kill
one million Iraqis, wound a million more and drive two million Iraqis out of
their country as refugees. The human cost of this war would, if some other country
were doing it, be labeled genocide. The leaders who went to war would be tried
as war criminals, but this is the war of 'western civilization' against Islamo-barbarians,
Islamo-fascists and all the other names given to the new enemy. Abusing, defaming,
killing Muslims is now calmly accepted in Euro-American culture. The people
who do this have institutionalized the judeocide of the Second World War as
the only universal crime. As long as you denounce that crime, you can commit
your own crimes today. This is the world we live in. This is the world of double-standards.
Why the surprise when those under fire refuse to accept these standards. A modest
proposal. Perhaps the Nobel Prize Committee should institute a new award: the
Nobel Prize for War Crimes.
Tariq Ali, British-Pakistani historian, novelist, film maker and commentator
How did it Go?
More than fifteen years ago, in January 1991, I wrote, in response to the outbreak
of the Gulf War, the following lines. They remain relevant:
The daily news seeps into the room. Sharp, wet north wind and heavy clouds
are to be expected. Suddenly we look at each other, shocked: war has broken
out. Tonight, British and American fighters, the shimmering miracles of high
technology, have carried out the first 'surgery' on Baghdad. The latest euphemism
to evade the international law on war. A rhetorical perversion of medical language.
Baghdad as a malignant lump to be removed from the globe. So has decided the
hygienic healthcare of the western world. Doctors beyond borders. Science as
a new Bible. God with US, Allah a desert rat.
A pilot, safely returned, wipes the sweat from his forehead and is pushed a
microphone under his nose: how did it go? Science turns into aesthetics: It
was like the movies. The city was illuminated like a Christmas tree, it was
like shooting colored balls off it. Reality is a movie, movie and television
are reality. In the prehistoric times of Vietnam the screen at least showed
a glimpse of the real war, but the civilized world was panicking by seeing her
own blood splashed murderers face. No such thing should happen again. War will
always be, but never, never the truth about war.
Paul de Wispelaere, Romanschrijver, essayist
(Translation Ria Hillewaert)
The American Occupation of Iraq: Most Flagrant Crime of Modern History
The American ongoing crime of invading and occupying Iraq since 2003 was the
most notorious and comprehensive political and military aggression in modern
history, mocked at all the moral codes of humanity and the international laws.
While all the world, including the American administration itself, was completely
aware that all the pretexts of invading Iraq (WMD, link to terrorism, or liberation)
were false, and in spite of the fact that the international community opposed
that aggression and protested against it, the Bush administration ignored everything
and everybody and invaded one of the oldest civilizations of the world. Iraq,
6000 years of history, the cradle of civilizations, where the first letter was
written, the first law was put, the first university was built, the first money
was done, the first irrigation system was created, the first poetry was written...
What the occupation authorities and their Iraqi agents did during the last
5 years of controlling Iraq, and what they are still doing now, were even more
flagrant. Iraq was subjugated to systematic destruction. The State was dismantled,
the institutions were abolished, the educational, health, economic, security
and infrastructure systems were broken, even the cultural and social fabrics
were torn apart. So far 1.3 million civilian Iraqis were killed, more than 5
million are refugees outside Iraq or displaced inside (1.5 m of them are children),
2 million orphans and more widows, and hundreds of thousands are detainees,
exposed to the worst kinds of torture and humiliation (including 10.000 women),
and without any kind of legal procedures
According to the UN 8 million Iraqis are in need of emergency assistance. 70%
of Iraqi's are without access to safe drinking water supplies. Electricity supply
is beneath pre-invasion levels (in many areas electricity simply does not exist).
43% of the population lives on less than half a Dollar a day. Living standards
in Iraq are getting worse despite contracts of over $20 billion being paid to
companies to rebuild Iraq; they were swallowed by governmental corruption. Iraq
now is the 3rd on the list of the most corrupted states in the world. The Iraqi
Government figures say that unemployment is between 60% and 70%. Child malnutrition
has increased from 19 percent during 1990s "economic sanctions period"
before the invasion, to 28 percent today.
But worst of all these hardships is the dark future that is awaiting Iraq.
The old colonial divide and rule strategy is 100% responsible for the sectarian
divisions, and the longer the occupying armies remain the greater the chances
of civil war and a break up of the country. The occupation created different
official security bodies out of sectarian militias, hence giving them the authority
to kill or to support and help those who kill, kidnap, displace on sectarian
bases. On the other hand there are 180,000 mercenaries (apart from 170,000 official
American troops) who are committing different kinds of killings, assassinations
and explosions of civilian areas in the name of sectarian conflict.
The American administration is working with its Iraqi agents in the Iraqi government
to sign a long term treaty that will control Iraq politically, economically
(including oil), and militarily for decades to come. Needless to say this treaty
is illegal as it is signed by two illegal parties: the occupying state (by its
name it has no right to sign) and the Iraqi government which was created under
(and by the occupation), and also because it is the third most corrupt government
in the world according to the international reports.
The only way to stop all these crimes, to hold the American and other criminals
responsible of them, and to start the real rebuilding of Iraq is to support
the Iraqi people in its resistance to the occupation, to mobilize the world
community against it, and to stop the world silence and indifference to the
first genocide of the 21st century.
Eman Khammas, Iraqi journalist and activist, former director of Occupation
Watch, now a refugee.
What Does the Future Hold for Us?
What does the future hold for us? The exit of occupation troops from Iraq is
imminent. For us, the question is no longer when the troops are leaving, but
rather how they will deal with the chaos and destruction they created, how to
compensate the people they killed and maimed, and how to build bridges with
Iraqi, Arab and Muslim population to regain hope in democracy. On the eve of
US led invasion, Nelson Mandela described it as "the US wanting to plunge
the world into a holocaust." It has.
Life in post "liberation" Iraq is not just the continuity of misery
and death under new guises. It is much, much worse - even without the extra
dimensions of pillage, corruption and the total ruin of the infrastructure.
The occupation has managed to end our hopes, as Iraqis in opposition, of persuading
our people of the humanity of democracy and how it would, put an end to all
abuses of human rights, torture, and violence against women, death penalty and
public executions.
We who had dreams of going back home to help rebuild our country have been
joined now in exile by another 2.5 millions. Hopes to see the "new Iraq"
is diminishing with every house demolished, with every school and hospital bombarded,
with every family forced to leave home, with every woman widowed. Despair is
overtaking our souls and we know very well, from the Palestinian tragedy of
occupation and injustice, how volatile is despair when mixed with injustice
and how indiscriminate violence could be.
The new implant called terrorism, introduced in Iraq's body under "War
on terror" slogan has grown fast in Iraq and neighboring countries. Now,
in order to regain people's trust and believe in democracy, we have to face
the huge task of fighting the occupation troops and its mercenaries, the sectarian
medieval political parties and its militias, the gangs and terrorists. The daily
carnage, the meaningless violence in Iraq, justified by tiresome US politicians
and their stooges as necessary to establish democracy, has often forced us to
distance ourselves from any project carries the word "democracy".
Democracy for people in the Arab and Muslim world has become a dirty word.
The US has failed spectacularly in Iraq yet it is still criminally high on
the cocktail of power, arrogance, and ignorance. But above all racism: what
is good for us is not good for you. We are patriots but you are terrorists and
this racism unless dealt with by people of the world will continue to cost us
all innocent lives and blood.
Personally, I find the way out of the mess, for both the US and Iraq, almost
clear, provided that the occupiers are willing "to see". In fact we,
a group of over one hundred Iraqi writers, artists and academics in exile, did
summaries our position, on the future of Iraq and the Middle East, in a letter
we delivered to the British government, few months before the invasion. We said;
"That a real change can only be brought about by the Iraqi people themselves
within an environment of peace and justice for all the peoples of the Middle
East."
This continues to be the case. It implies that the occupiers have to get off
their tanks, take off their racist dark glasses to see us as ordinary people
just like themselves. We are not terrorists but willing to risk our lives defending
our homes, families, and way of life, history, culture, identity and resources.
We do not hate Americans and we do not want to humiliate America but we fight
to get rid of the occupation, its greed, brutality and humiliation. We simply
believe that Iraq belongs to Iraqis.
Haifa Zangana, Iraqi novelist, UK
The Brussells Tribunal are intellectuals, artists and activists who denounce the logic of permanent war promoted by the American government and its allies, affecting for the time being particularly one region in the world: the Middle East. It tries to be a bridge between the intellectual resistance in the Arab World and the Western peace movements.