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'We Have Got To Call A Spade A Spade And We Are Not'

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  • 'We Have Got To Call A Spade A Spade And We Are Not'

    'WE HAVE GOT TO CALL A SPADE A SPADE AND WE ARE NOT'
    By Jean Christou

    Cyprus Mail
    22 June 06

    International journalist says West's good intentions are misfiring

    THE WAR on Terror is a sham and America's "peacemaking" is producing
    neither peace nor democracy in the Middle East, award-winning
    journalist and author Robert Fisk said in Nicosia yesterday.

    Beirut-based Fisk, who was on the island to take part in a conference
    on mediation and conflict resolution, took time out to talk about
    his epic 1,366-page new book The Great War for Civilisation : The
    Conquest of the Middle East.

    Love him or hate him - and it's heard in equal measure - Fisk,
    who writes for Britain's Independent newspaper nothing if not
    outspoken. He said his book aims at correcting Western misconceptions
    of the Middle East. The purpose to tell those who read it not to accept
    the narratives of history as told by presidents, prime ministers and
    journalists, he said.

    "Writing the book was a depressing experience. The book is hell,"
    he told the audience at Cyprus College. "The people of the Middle
    East have endured years of consistent injustice and war, mostly at
    our hands. I am amazed at how restrained Muslims have been.

    We are always arriving to liberate the Arabs. We are always offering
    the Muslims democracy. I think what they want is freedom from us."

    Fisk lashed out, not only at Western governments but also at the
    mainstream US media and their continuing compliance with the official
    agenda. He said journalists today were in denial when it comes to
    the question of "why" terrorism exists.

    He said the Western attitude towards the Middle East over the past
    century, with its support of police states and dictators was part of
    that "why". "There is no hope for peace in the Middle East when what
    the people there want is justice," he said.

    In interview with the Cyprus Mail earlier yesterday, Fisk said one
    of the great tragedies of what was going on in the region was that
    the Arabs would probably like to see some of the democracy the West
    says it wants to give them.

    "And they'd like some packets of human rights off our western
    supermarket shelves. But I think they would also like another kind
    of freedom, which is freedom from us, and that, we are not going to
    give them," he said.

    "We are always arriving in the Arab world with our tanks and
    helicopters and our swords offering them liberation but they never
    seem to get that liberation."

    Fisk said the West keeps apologising for the mistakes they have made
    in Iraq but qualify it by saying they are not as bad as Saddam was.

    However he said if that was the benchmark that was being used to
    measure the behaviour of the occupying forces, there were likely to
    be a lot more Hadithas in the future.

    "We have got to call a spade a spade and we are not. Western policy
    is filled with lies like never before," said Fisk.

    "The word terrorism is a plague on our vocabulary. The war on terror
    is a war against America's enemies. It has nothing to do with terrorism
    at all."

    Fisk, who spends quite a bit of time in the Baghdad morgue while some
    of his colleagues hole up in hotels in safe areas, said the current
    rate of deaths of civilians does make him angry, even after more than
    30 years covering conflicts in the region.

    "The deaths of civilians makes me very, very angry. It didn't used
    to trouble me as much as it does now. But now I see young women
    with their hands tied together shot in the head, babies shot in the
    face. It's outrageous and we journalists should say it is," he said.

    "I can't see any obvious signs for hope at the moment.

    America's "peacemaking" is not producing peace. It was a terrible
    mistake to invade Iraq. The whole American project is dead.

    The schools are not being rebuilt. The electricity is not on. There is
    no democracy. The only thing the government controls is the Green Zone,
    which is about three acres of grass at the side of the Tigris River."

    The Iraq invasion was probably part of the bigger plan to redraw the
    Middle East but Fisk said it obviously hasn't worked. He said Bush
    and British Prime Minister Tony Blair and their war cabinets knew
    very little about wars, unlike their World War II predecessors.

    "Their experience today is Hollywood and TV. They don't see the reality
    that war is effectively total failure of the human spirit. It's about
    death," said Fisk.

    Asked his opinion of the Cyprus issue, Fisk said he thought a lot of
    people in the world had grown tired of the Cyprus problem.

    "There are genuine issues that need to be resolved. My feeling is that
    to get into the European Union the Turks have a number of hurdles
    to get over and the first and primary one for me is to acknowledge
    that the Armenian genocide happened. Continued denial would be like
    accepting Germany into the European Union if it denied the Jewish
    holocaust. Germany acknowledges it. Turkey should do the same,"
    he said.

    "You have very intelligent Cypriots on both sides of the Green
    Line. You may lack the sensible people but you don't lack intelligent
    people and I think Cyprus could be resolved."

    Fisk said he believes the bottom line in Cyprus is the same as it is
    for the Iraqis, the Palestinians and the Israelis.

    "People want security. They want to feel they are safe. Turkish
    Cypriots want to feel they're safe and Greek Cypriots want to feel
    they're safe even before talking about property, land territory.

    "It's about security. Just like Israel and Palestine is about
    security. Just like Iraq is about security. Do Cypriots want to
    live together? Do they? That's the question. We believed that the
    Bosnian Muslims and Christians wanted to live together and we were
    wrong. It's very easy to be wishful thinking and modern and trendy
    and liberal and say that all people are the same but they're clearly
    not the same are they?"
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