Can eyes that choose not to see Gaza, Iraq and Afghanistan have tears for Syria? |
The United States of America and its allies are a
trigger happy lot. They are also heavily invested in hanging people. Sorry, that’s a crass claim. There is a caveat to all this:
selective. They are ready-’n-able to
shoot some people, invade some countries, drag some people to the International
Criminal Court (ICC) and push through UNHRC resolutions on some countries. That ‘some’
implies ‘some others’. There are nations
and individuals whose track records on the very same counts are as or more
horrendous than that of the ‘some’. For
reasons of ‘interest’ are left alone.
Anyway, of the ‘some’, the country that was in censure-focus recently is
Syria.
The USA wants to hang Bashar Hafez al-Assad, the
President of Syria. The USA wants to
take Syria to the ICC. The USA tried.
The attempt was vetoed, again for ‘interest-reasons’, this time of
Russia and China.
Let there be no tears and let there be no hurrahs
here. None of it is about human rights
and the protection of the same. None of it is about democracy, justice or
peace. It’s just global politics. Let’s not kid ourselves that it is
otherwise.
Old hate though it is, the theatrics certainly have
their benefits. Shows people up. Yields a good laugh.
Let’s start with what Britain’s UN Ambassador, Mark
Lyall Grant had to say after the vote: ‘The effect of
their actions is to protect a brutal regime. They have chosen to put their
national interests ahead of the lives of millions of Syrians.’ The ‘they’ here are of course Russia and
China.
When, ever, did Britain do anything that
put their national interest behind anything else, lives of millions
included? Wasn’t Britain the key ally in
the US-led illegal invasion of Iraq (Britain’s Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg
said by way of confession that it was illegal), putting the national interests
(of Britain) ahead of the lives of millions of Iraqis? Isn’t it this same ‘national interest’ that
prompted the tag-along with the US in the matter putting millions of Afghan and
Pakistani lives at risk? ‘Come, come Mr
Grant, you can’t be serious?’ did someone ask?
Well, the fact is, Grant is serious.
Lying comes easy. Partial
blindness is second nature. Selectivity
is a cultural trait.
The same goes for the US Ambassador to
the UN, who called the Russian and Chinese moves ‘dangerous and deplorable’ and
said the Security Council had ‘failed utterly.’
Rice knows that the Security Council has had a long utterly-failing
history. Whisper ‘Israel’ and that
should do. All those US moves have been
dangerous and deplorable. Indeed it is
not just the Security Council that has failed vulnerable peoples all over the
globe courtesy Washington’s veto option but the entire UN system.
The French Ambassador Gerard Araud
called it a sad day for Syria. Well Monsieur Araud, did you or your
predecessors ever feel sad on those days that turned into weeks and these into
months and years for countries like Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan? What are we to
make of your sorrow, your tears, then, Monsieur Araud, pray tell us?
The US representative claims that the draft resolution was
about accountability for ‘crimes so extensive and deadly that they had few
equals in modern history’. Really? Had this individual heard about Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, the ‘Road of Death’ in Iraq, where US fighter jets killed thousands
of fleeing soldiers, and the US sponsored sanctions regime on that country
which killed approximately half a million children?
There’s more humor.
The representative is reported to have recalled that ‘the International
Criminal Court had been able to act when extraordinary crimes had been
committed in the past’ and had asked why the Syrian people did not equally
deserve international justice. We don’t
know if anyone responded, but there is an easy answer: ‘because your country
does not believe in justice or in the equality of its dispensation, can we move
on already?’
Deputy Secretary-General Jan Eliasson’s
intervention before the vote takes the cake.
He says, ‘for more than three years, the Council had been unable to
agree on measures to bring an end to the brutal war that hurt not only Syrians,
but the entire region.’
‘The Syrian people had a fundamental
right to justice, and the United Nations had a duty to defend it, he
emphasized, warning ‘if the Council could not agree, the credibility of the
entire Organization would continue to suffer’.
Correct, the Syrian people do have a
fundamental right to justice and correct, the UN has a duty to defend it. The same
goes for people in Gaza. The same goes
for people in Iraq. The Council has not
been able to do anything to end the brutality that hurts both the people
resident in these unhappy regions and those in the region and all thanks to
whom? Why, the United States of America,
didn’t Eliasson do his homework? As for
the ‘credibility’ of the ‘entire organization’, doesn’t Eliasson know that the
word ceased to qualify for tagging to anything that has to do with the United
Nations?
The French representative, speaking
after the vote, is reported to have said that the resolution ‘appealed to the human conscience and was not a political gesture.’ When did France (or the USA or the UK) ever
have a conscience (we can stick to contemporary machinations, recent history or
pick the last 500 years to look for this thing called ‘conscience’ in the
policy preferences of these countries)?
When, indeed, were they ever apolitical, did anyone ask?
Monsieur Araud had earlier said that the
failure to adopt it would amount to an insult to humanity. Well, humanity has been insulted enough by
acts of omission and commission by France and its ‘besties’ in the West. Assuming that the world can’t remember is the
Mother of all Insults to Humanity, one has to conclude.
So we have hysteria and anger coming
from the USA, Britain and France. Need we say anything more than ‘Oh dear!’
considering their respective track records on these matters? These are war mongers, notorious ones too.
As for China and Russia, there are
certainly no saints in this drama. The
above mentioned individuals are not off-mark when they point fingers about
‘national interest’. The only problem is
that the finger-pointers don’t have a moral leg to stand on.
So can we just conclude, ‘move along,
move along, there’s nothing to see here, folks’ as the police does when curious
people gather at a crime scene? Or
should we just laugh and tell these respectable and self-righteous individuals
that there’s a wonderful cartoon doing the rounds in social media depicting an
American (of the US) asking the question, ‘Why do you hate us?’ and answering
it himself thus: ‘Why do you hate us? All we want to do is
invade your country, drone strike your women and children, steal your natural
resources and install a vassal king who will be useful to our imperial
ambitions and then call you a terrorist if you resist.’?
So the ‘Syrian’ vote/veto, it clearly put the US,
Britain and France in a funk, made them trip over words and struggle to cover
up nudities. The bottom line is that the
only thing to draw from these Security Council deliberations is knowledge of
process and machination. That, and ample
reasons to guffaw.
msenevira@gmail.com
1 comments:
Great Stuff Malinda. Well said.
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