by William Blum
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is a man seemingly custom-made for the White House in its endless quest for enemies with whom to scare Congress, the American people, and the world, in order to justify the unseemly behavior of the empire. The Iranian president has declared that he wants to "wipe Israel off the map". He's said that "the Holocaust is a myth". He recently held a conference in Iran for "Holocaust deniers". And his government passed a new law requiring Jews to wear a yellow insignia, Ã la the Nazis. On top of all that, he's aiming to build nuclear bombs, one of which would surely be aimed at Israel. What right-thinking person would not be scared by such a man?
However, like with all such designer monsters made bigger than life during the Cold War and since by Washington, the truth about Ahmadinejad is a bit more complicated. According to people who know Farsi, the Iranian leader has never said anything about "wiping Israel off the map". In his October 29, 2005 speech, when he reportedly first made the remark, the word "map" does not even appear. According to the translation of Juan Cole, American professor of Modern Middle East and South Asian History, Ahmadinejad said that "the regime occupying Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time." His remark, said Cole, "does not imply military action or killing anyone at all," which presumably is what would make the remark threatening.[1] Readers are advised that the next time they come across such an Ahmadinejad citation to note whether a complete sentence is being quoted, and not just "wipe Israel off the map".
At the conference in Teheran ("Review of the Holocaust: Global Vision"), the Iranian president said: "The Zionist regime will be wiped out soon, the same way the Soviet Union was, and humanity will achieve freedom."[2] Obviously, the man is not calling for any kind of violent attack upon Israel, for the dissolution of the Soviet Union did not occur through force or violence.
As for the Holocaust myth, I have yet to read or hear words
from Ahmadinejad's mouth saying simply and clearly and unequivocally
that he thinks that the Holocaust never happened. He has commented
about the peculiarity of a Holocaust which took place in Europe
resulting in a state for the Jews in the Middle East instead of in
Europe. And he argues that Israel and the United States have exploited
the memory of the Holocaust for their own imperialist purposes. He also
wonders about the accuracy of the number of Jews -- six million --
killed in the Holocaust, as have many other people of all political
stripes, including Holocaust survivors like author Primo Levi. (The
much publicized World War One atrocities which turned out to be false
made the public very skeptical of the Holocaust claims for a long
time.)
The conference gave a platform to various points of view, including six
members of Jews United Against Zionism, at least two of whom were
rabbis. One was Ahron Cohen, from London, who declared: "There is no
doubt what so ever, that during World War 2 there developed a terrible
and catastrophic policy and action of genocide perpetrated by Nazi
Germany against the Jewish People." He also said that "the Zionists
make a great issue of the Holocaust in order to further their
illegitimate philosophy and aims," indicating as well that the figure
of six million Jewish victims is debatable. The other rabbi was Moshe
David Weiss, who told the delegates: "We don't want to deny the killing
of Jews in World War II, but Zionists have given much higher figures
for how many people were killed. They have used the Holocaust as a
device to justify their oppression." His group rejects the creation of
Israel on the grounds that it violates Jewish religious law in that a
Jewish state can't exist until the return of the Messiah .[3]
Clearly, the conference -- which the White House called "an affront to
the entire civilized world"[4] -- was not set up to be simply a forum
for people to deny that the Holocaust, to any significant degree,
literally never took place at all. I think its safe to say that very
few of the attendees held this position, which is so untenable.
As to the yellow star story of this past May -- that was a complete
fabrication by a prominent Iranian-American neo-conservative, Amir
Taheri. There are as well other egregious examples of Ahmadinejad's
policies and words being twisted out of shape in the Western media,
making him look like a danger to all that's holy and decent. Political
science professor Virginia Tilley has written a good account of this.
"Why is Mr. Ahmadinejad being so systematically misquoted and
demonized?" Tilley asks. "Need we ask? If the world believes that Iran
is preparing to attack Israel, then the US or Israel can claim
justification in attacking Iran first. On that agenda, the
disinformation campaign about Mr. Ahmadinejad's statements has been
bonded at the hip to a second set of lies: promoting Iran's
(nonexistent) nuclear weapon programme."[5]
Ahmadinejad, however, is partly to blame for this "disinformation". I
heard him in an interview while he was at the UN in September being
asked directly about "the map" and the reality of the Holocaust, and he
refused to give explicit answers of "yes" or "no", which I interpret as
his prideful refusal to accede to the wishes of what he regarded as a
hostile Western interviewer asking hostile questions. In an interview
with the German news magazine, Der Spiegel (May 31 2006), Ahmadinejad
states: "We don't want to confirm or deny the Holocaust." The Iranian
president is also in the habit of prefacing certain remarks with "Even
if the Holocaust happened ... ", a rhetorical device we all use in
argument and discussion.
It may already be too late. The conventional wisdom about what
Ahmadinejad has said and meant may already be set in marble. Ban I
Moon, at a news conference on December 14, after being sworn in as the
new secretary-general of the United Nations, was asked by an Israeli
reporter whether the United Nations was going to address the issue of
Holocaust deniers. Ban replied: "Denying historical facts, especially
on such an important subject as the Holocaust is just not acceptable.
Nor is it acceptable to call for the elimination of any state or
people."[6] Let's hope that this is not very indicative of the
independence of mind that we can expect from the new secretary-general.
Myths die so hard.
Time magazine has just foregone its usual selection of "Person of the
Year" and instead chosen "You", the Internet user. Managing editor
Richard Stengel said that if it came down to one individual it probably
would have been Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, but that "It just felt to me a
little off selecting him."[7] In previous years Time's "Person of the
Year" has included Joseph Stalin and Adolf Hitler.
No one ever thinks they're guilty of anything. They're all just good ol' patriots.
General Augusto Pinochet, who escaped earthly justice on December 10,
was detained in London in 1999 awaiting a ruling by a British court on
whether he would be extradited to Spain on a Spanish judge's warrant to
face charges of crimes against humanity committed during his rule in
Chile from 1973 to 1990. "I tell you how I feel," he told a London
journalist at the time. "I would like to be remembered as a man who
served his country, who served Chile throughout his entire life on this
earth. And what he did was always done thinking about the welfare of
Chile."[8]
P.W. Botha, former president of South Africa died November 1. He was a
man who had vigorously defended the apartheid system, which led to the
jailing of tens of thousands of people. He never repented or apologized
for his actions, and resisted attempts to make him appear before the
South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission. At one point he
declared: "I am not going to repent. I am not going to ask for
forgiveness. What I did, I did for my country."[9]
As Pol Pot lay on his death bed in 1997, he was interviewed by a
journalist, who later wrote: "Asked whether he wants to apologize for
the suffering he caused, he looks genuinely confused, has the
interpreter repeat the question, and answers ‘No'. ... ‘I want you to
know that everything I did, I did for my country'."[10]
"In these three decades I have been actuated solely by love and loyalty
to my people in all my thoughts, acts, and life." Adolf Hitler, "Last
Will and Testament", written in his bunker in his final hours, April
29, 1945.
Fast Forward now to 2036 ... George W. Bush lies dying, Fox News
Channel is in the room recording his last words ... "I know that people
think the whole thing ... that thing in Iraq ... was a bad thing, and
they hold it against me ... I appreciate their view ... I can
understand how they feel ... But y'know, I did it for America, and the
American people, and their freedom ... The more you love freedom, the
more likely it is you'll be attacked ... Saddam was a real threat ... I
still think he had weapons of mass destruction ... and someday we'll
find 'em ... someday we'll say mission accomplished! ... that will really be a turning point! ... So I'm prepared to meet my maker and whatever he has in mind for me ... in fact I say Bring it on!"
William Shirer, in his monumental work "The Rise and Fall of the Third
Reich", comments that Hitler's Last Will and Testament "confirm that
the man who had ruled over Germany with an iron hand for more than
twelve years, and over most of Europe for four, had learned nothing
from his experience."[11]
Shirer tells us of another happening concerning Hitler's bunker, on
April 12. When news of the death of President Franklin Roosevelt
reached Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels, he phoned Hitler in
the bunker. "My Fuehrer," Goebbels said. "I congratulate you! Roosevelt
is dead! ... It is the turning point."[12]
The United States of Punishment
2.2
million imprisoned ... "We're Number One! USA! USA! USA!" ... 7 million
-- one in every 32 American adults -- either behind bars, on probation,
or on parole ... When it comes to sentencing, let me tell you, people,
and pardon my language, the United States is one hell of a tough mother
fucker ... beginning with mandatory minimum sentences ... there are
tens of thousands of young men rotting their lives away in American
prisons for simple possession of a drug, for their own use, for their
own pleasure, to enjoy with a friend, no victims involved. Do you think
a person should be in prison if he hasn't hurt anyone? Either
physically, financially, or in some other real and serious manner? Jose
Antonio Lopez, a legal permanent resident with a family and business in
South Dakota, was deported back to Mexico a while ago because of a
cocaine charge -- Sale? No. Use? No. Possession? No. ... He told
someone where they could buy some.[13] Another man was sentenced to 55
years in prison for three marijuana deals because he was in possession
of a gun each time, which he did not use or brandish. Possession of a
firearm in a drug transaction requires a much stiffer prison sentence.
Four former attorneys-general and 145 former prosecutors and judges
wrote in support of a lighter sentence for this man. The presiding
judge himself called the sentence "unjust, cruel and irrational", but
said the law left him no choice.[14]
On December 1, a court in the Netherlands convicted four Dutch Muslims
of plotting terrorist attacks against political leaders and government
buildings. The heaviest sentence for any of them was eight years.[15]
On December 13, a priest was convicted of taking part in Rwanda's 1994
genocide by ordering militiamen to set fire to a church and then
bulldoze it while 2,000 people seeking safety were huddled inside. The
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda sentenced him to 15 years in
prison.[16] Considerably lighter sentences than in the United States
are generally a common phenomenon in much of the world. In the US, the
mere mention of the word "terrorist" in a courtroom will likely bring
down 30, 40, 50 years, life in prison, on the defendant's head, even
for only thinking and talking of an action, an Orwellian
"thoughtcrime", with nothing concrete done to further the plan.
Colombian drug traffickers, British Muslims, and others accused of
"terrorist" offenses strenuously fight extradition to the United States
for fear of Uncle Sam's merciless fist. They're the lucky ones amongst
Washington's foreign targets; they're not kidnapped off the street and
flown shackled and blindfolded to secret dungeons in shadowy corners of
the world to be tortured.
For those who think that no punishment is too severe, too cruel, in the
War on Terrorism against the Bad Guys, it must be asked what they think
of the case of the Cuban Five. These are five Cubans who were engaged
in the United States in the 1990s trying to uncover information about
anti-Castro terrorists based in Miami, some of whom shortly before had
been carrying out a series of bombing attacks in Havana hotels and may
have been plotting new attacks. The Five infiltrated Cuban-American
organizations based in Miami to monitor their actions, and they
informed the Cuban government of their findings. The Cuban government
then passed on some of the information to the FBI. And what happened
next? The FBI arrested the five Cubans.
The Cubans were held in solitary confinement for 17 months; eventually
they were tried, and in 2001 convicted on a variety of charges thrown
together by the government for the occasion, including murder (sic!)
and conspiracy to commit espionage (probably the first case in American
judicial history of alleged espionage without a single page from a
single secret document). They were sentenced to prison terms ranging
from 15 years to life. But the federal government's lust for punishment
was still not satisfied. They have made it extremely difficult for
their Cuban prisoners to receive family visits. Two of them have not
seen their wives and children since their arrest in 1998; the other
three have had only scarcely better luck.[17] Yet another glorious
chapter in the War on Terrorism.
The making of official history
It was
just a passing remark in an Associated Press story about the recent
overthrow of the Fiji government. "It was the nation's fourth coup in
19 years," the article noted, the first being the 1987 coup. "The
takeover, like the previous three coups, has its roots in the ethnic
divide between the descendants of ancient Melanesian warrior tribes and
those of Indian laborers brought by former colonial power Britain to
work in sugar plantations."[18] That's how "official history" is
created and passed on, all the more effective because it's unconscious,
unknowing, voluntary, and done by "objective" journalists.
In 1987, Fiji Prime Minister Timoci Bavrada made Washington officials
unhappy by identifying himself with the non-aligned movement (always a
risk for a country during the Cold War), and even more so by taking
office with a pledge to reinstate Fiji as a nuclear free zone, meaning
that nuclear-powered or nuclear-weapons-carrying ships could not make
port calls. When Bavrada's predecessor, R.S.K. Mara, instituted the
same policy in 1982, he was put under intense American pressure to drop
it. Said the US ambassador to Fiji that year, William Bodde, Jr., "a
nuclear free zone would be unacceptable to the US, given our strategic
needs ... the US must do everything possible to counter this movement."
The following year, Mara dropped the policy.
Two weeks after Bavrada took office, American UN Ambassador Vernon
Walters visited the island. The former Deputy Director of the CIA had a
long and infamous history of showing up shortly before, during, or
shortly after CIA destabilization operations. Walters met with Bavrada,
ostensibly to discuss UN matters. He also met with Lt. Col. Sitiveni
Rabuka, third-in-command of the Army. Two weeks later, Rabuka led a
military coup which ousted Bavrada.
The day after the coup, a Pentagon source, while denying US
involvement, declared: "We're kinda delighted ... All of a sudden our
ships couldn't go to Fiji, and now all of a sudden they can."
These happenings, and others concerning the 1987 Fiji coup which I
recount elsewhere [19], are of the type that the mainstream media
typically ignore or, if obliged to deal with them, would have us
believe are no more than coincidences.
The anonymous author of the Associated Press story can be forgiven for
not knowing of the American fingerprints all over the Fiji coup. The
story has probably not appeared in any media except those on the left;
if by chance a mainstream editor came across such a story he would
likely dismiss it as a "conspiracy theory". Well, you can call people
like me "conspiracy theorists" if you call everyone else "coincidence
theorists".
There are of course implausible conspiracy theories, but that is an altogether different matter.
Some things to look forward to in 2007
January: Insurgents in Iraq explode a nuclear bomb, totally destroying
all of Iraq and everyone in it. Bush declares: "There will be no change
in our policy of bringing freedom and democracy to the people of Iraq.
We will not cut and run."
March: To add to the ban of liquids and jells aboard aircraft, solids are now banned. But gasses are still allowed.
June: Halliburton is awarded a 300 million dollar no-bid contract to investigate contractor fraud in Iraq.
September: New York City policemen run down, then shoot, mace, stab,
beat up, and hang a Muslim resident of Brooklyn after thinking that he
might be a suspected terrorist who fit the Terrorist Profile, was
alleged to be on the Master Terrorist Watch List, and appeared to be
carrying what they imagined, or think they imagined, might be a
concealed bomb, or something of that nature.
November: George W. announces that he will ask Congress to give embryos the vote.
December: Gasses are now banned aboard aircraft. The only permitted
forms of matter are now ionized atoms, electrons, neutrinos, quarks,
and dark matter. (The last being what Dick Cheney is completely
composed of, he is allowed aboard any airplane.)
NOTES
[1] AlterNet, www.alternet.org/, May 5, 2006
[2] Associated Press, December 12, 2006
[3] nkusa.org/activities/Speeches/2006Iran-ACohen.cfm (Cohen's talk);
Telegraph.co.uk, article by Alex Spillius, December 13, 2006;
Associated Press, December 12, 2006
[4] Associated Press, December 12, 2006
[5] counterpunch.org/tilley08282006.html
[6] Washington Post, December 15, 2006, p.27
[7] Associated Press, December 16, 2006
[8] Sunday Telegraph (London), July 18, 1999
[9] Democracy Now (Pacifica Network), November 1, 2006
[10] Nate Thayer, in Far Eastern Economic Review (Hong Kong), October 30, 1997, pages 15 and 20
[11] paperback edition, p.1459
[12] Ibid., p.1441
[13] Washington Post, December 6, 2006, p.3
[14] Bulletin News Network, Inc., The White House Bulletin, December 4, 2006
[15] Associated Press, December 1, 2006
[16] Associated Press, December 13, 2006
[17] For the details of the case see my essay, "Cuban political
prisoners ... in the United States", members.aol.com/bblum6/polpris.htm
[18] Associated Press, December 6, 2006
[19] William Blum, Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower, pages 199-200
To make a financial donation to support the work of the
Anti-Empire Report you can use the following address.
Thank you.
William Blum
5100 Connecticut Ave., NW #707
Washington, DC 20008-2064
William Blum is the author of:
Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War 2
Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower
West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir
Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American Empire
Portions of the books can be read, and copies purchased, at <www.killinghope.org >
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