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Celebrating Warsaw

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  • Celebrating Warsaw

    ABS CBN News, Philippines
    Aug 12 2004

    Celebrating Warsaw

    On August 1, 1944, the people of Warsaw rose up against their Nazi
    occupiers on what they thought was the implicit signal of the arrival
    of an Allied army (Soviet) on the opposite bank of the Vistula river
    bordering the Polish capital on the east. Overhead US and British
    warplanes flew sorties that would suddenly stop as the Warsaw
    uprising was slowly, relentlessly and meticulously exterminated. Nazi
    Germany was losing the war, but it had in the Polish capital some of
    the best and most brutal fighting units of its war machine.

    Half a century later, another people, the Kurds, rose up against
    another oppressor, Saddam Hussein, on the explicit signal of an
    Allied army (US) stationed across the border (Kuwait). To be sure,
    the Kurds, as a race, were not as noble as the Poles, for they had
    joined in the rape and slaughter of Armenian women and children.

    But, like the heroic agony of the Warsaw uprising, that of the
    Kurdish revolt would only be watched and never helped by those most
    strongly positioned to save it and even make it prevail.

    The Soviet Army in 1944 preferred to stay on its side of the river,
    until the German war machine had ground Warsaw to rubble -- making it
    the most devastated city in World War II, followed only by Manila
    which was destroyed by the American war machine -- and cut down the
    flower of the Polish nation so that no natural leader would arise to
    oppose the Soviet occupation of that sad country.

    Thus did Saddam Hussein in 1991 devastate the lands of the Kurds and
    exterminate the Kurdish uprising which the United States encouraged
    and then abandoned. So brave were the Polish militants -- of whom
    200,000 were killed -- that even the Nazis could not forbear but to
    render them honors, calling their resistance one of the bravest acts
    they had ever witnessed.

    Now, the greatest war machine since the fall of Nazi Germany stands
    poised to devastate the city of Najaf, where scores of Iraqi
    militants have vowed to make a final stand against the invaders of
    their country. Like the Poles in Warsaw before them, the Iraqis in
    Najaf have been urged by the US to lay down their arms or face
    extinction. Like the Poles before them, the Iraqis have accepted
    their doom.

    The Polish uprising lasted two months; the Iraqi resistance continues
    one year after the defeat of the country was proudly announced on the
    deck of an aircraft by the American commander in chief. Two months,
    one year -- but then US armed forces in Iraq pack far more wallop
    than the Nazi armies in Poland. The US is fighting a pre-World War I
    colonial war with the weapons of World War IV, having improved its
    weaponry exponentially since the end of World War III, otherwise
    known as the Cold War.

    The anniversary of the Warsaw uprising was barely noticed and was
    marked only by the publication of an exhaustive but finally
    exhausting and unreadable volume by the British historian Norman
    Davis. But now comes a more fitting memorial to hopeless bravery: the
    forthcoming extermination of Najaf. The only irony would be that the
    Poles are with the Nazis this time, so to speak, except that the
    Poland of today bears no resemblance to yesteryear's sad and noble
    country of the same name.
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