¶ … Great War for Civilisation
Fisk begins chapter 14 Anything to Wipe Out a Devil… with an account of the French invasion of Algeria in 1830 and it's subsequent ramifications. The author went to great lengths to parallel the French invasion of Algeria to the British and American invasions of Iraq. Both the British invasion of Iraq during WWI and the American invasion in 2003 was done under the guise of liberation, the same as the French; but all three encountered the problem of not being welcomed as liberators. Fisk then began to describe a man named Mohammed Bouyali, who fought against the French and then fought against the Algerian government that replaced the French. His story was a microcosm of the story of Algeria: Bouyali helped expel the French only to be disillusioned by the native Algerian secular government which replaced the French. He went on to form a group which actively fought the Algerian government, but was eventually killed. (522-526) Fisk then detailed the secular Algerian government's attempts to keep control against the many different Islamist inspired groups which periodically arose to cause trouble. Fisk concluded the chapter with the story of an Algerian Special Forces officer who wrote a tell all book which Fisk described as "There could be no more damning evidence against the regime." (584) While this book described several atrocities in detail, the governments of Britain, France, and the U.S. didn't do anything.
Planet Damnation Fisk's next chapter described the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990, and the American response to it. He asserted that the U.S. And it's allies were defending Saudi Arabia only because of the oil, and then went on to detail the years of military, economic, and political support, not only the West, but also other Muslims gave Saddam Hussein in his war against Iran. Fisk is critical of the way reporters were restricted from reporting anything other than the official American line of propaganda. He didn't want to be under military control as part of the journalist's pools, which he referred to as "censorship." (618) But he also understood the gravity of the actions of the Iraqis in Kuwait and wrote of walking down a street in Kuwait City "to understand the extent of what the Iraqis did, that it really did amount to a crime." (632) Fisk is critical of the Americans and their allies, especially the Saudis, but he does not make excuses for the actions of Saddam Hussein. He only details the hypocrisy and irony of fighting against an evil tyrant who used to be a friend and a receiver of support from those now fighting him. Fisk ended the chapter with a sobering description of the "highway of death," a miles long trail of wrecked vehicles and rotting corpses, the remnants of the Iraqi Army who tried to flee from Kuwait. (644)
The sixteenth chapter of Fisk's book is entitled "Betrayal," and accurately described the aftermath of Operation Desert Storm; the uprising against Saddam Hussein by Kurdish forces in northern Iraq, the Shia in the south, as well as the Kuwaiti reign of terror. In Kuwait, private militias roamed the streets dispensing "justice" to anyone who had collaborated with the Iraqis, including any Palestinian. As the Palestinians had supported Saddam Hussein and his invasion of Kuwait, there were many in Kuwait who retaliated against any Palestinian they happened to find. (650) In Iraq, Saddam Hussein faced a simultaneous uprising with Kurdish forces rebelling in the north, and Shia in the south. Saddam Hussein crushed these uprisings with ruthless efficiency, and even though they had been inspired by the words of American President George H. Bush, the United States stood by and did nothing as these rebels were slaughtered by Saddam Hussein's Republican Guard. Eventually the Americans were forced to create two no-fly zones, one in the north to protect the Kurds, and one in the south to protect the Shia. While the Americans and their allies were enforcing no-fly zones, Saddam Hussein's forces were enforcing his tyranny over the rest of the country.
The next chapter discussed the American-led regime of sanctions against Iraq in the 1990's. Fisk began The Land of Graves by discussing the casualties from the war to liberate Kuwait and the mass graves of Iraqi soldiers killed by the Americans. He made references to the Geneva Convention's rules concerning the treatment...
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