Return of Al-Qaida
By Eric Margolis
January 15, 2014 - How did al-Qaida, a tiny anti-Communist group in Afghanistan that had no more than 200 active members in 2001 become a supposed worldwide threat?
January 15, 2014 - How did al-Qaida, a tiny anti-Communist group in Afghanistan that had no more than 200 active members in 2001 become a supposed worldwide threat?
How can
al-Qaida be all over the Mideast, North Africa, and now much of
black Africa? This after the US spent over $1 trillion trying to
stamp out al-Qaida in Afghanistan and Pakistan?
The answer
is simple. As an organization and threat, al-Qaida barely
exists. But as a name, al-Qaida and “terrorism” have become the
west’s handy universal term for armed groups fighting western
influence, corruption or repression in Asia and Africa. Al-Qaida
is nowhere – but everywhere.
If you’re
a rebel group seeking publicity, the fastest way is by pledging
allegiance to the shadowy, nowhere al-Qaida.
Take Iraq,
where fighting currently rages between the Shia government and
Sunni militias in Anbar Province. Interestingly, the Sunni
uprising is centered on Fallujah, which was almost flattened by
US Marines and blasted apart by depleted uranium shells and
illegal white phosphorus as a dire warning to Iraqis who
resisted.
After the
US invaded Iraq in 2003, over a dozen Iraqi resistance groups
rose to fight the Americans and their new-found Shia allies.
Chief among them were Saddam Hussein’s Ba’ath Party and Iraqi
military veterans. As I kept saying at the time on major US TV
networks, there was no al-Qaida and no nuclear weapons in Iraq.
Thank George W. Bush for Iraq’s so-called al-Qaida.
Thanks to
the magic of mass media manipulation, Washington was able to
divert attention from all of the Sunni resistance groups – or
“terrorists” as they were branded – to a single group of
cutthroats led by a mysterious, renegade Jordanian, Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi. The rest of the resistance groups simply vanished
from our view.
A few have
now resurfaced in western Iraq, notably the Islamic State of
Iraq and the Levant (Syria), or ISIS. It is always branded
“al-Qaida linked” by western media, though no evidence is
offered. Iraq’s increasingly brutal regime has also claimed it
is fighting al-Qaida in Anbar Province.
Mention of
the al-Qaida buzz-word has sent America’s conservative
Republicans and neoconservatives into a frenzy. They are
demanding that the Obama administration do something. Maybe
re-invade Iraq? There are some 10,000 US combat troops just down
the road in Kuwait.
US special
forces, drone and manned aircraft, and CIA mercenaries are
already in action around Fallujah and Ramadi. As in past years,
CIA is paying millions to Sunni tribesmen to fight
anti-government forces.
Crazy as it sounds, the US is considering buying attack
helicopters from Russia to give to the Baghdad regime, as it is
now doing in Afghanistan with the Kabul regime.
Speaking
of Afghanistan, former Pentagon chief Leon Panetta admitted that
there were no more than 25 to 50 al-Qaida members in
Afghanistan. But now, al-Qaida has popped up in Pakistan,
Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, across North Africa, Nigeria, Mali,
Central African Republic, and so on. Somalia’s anti-western
resistance group, Shebab, is also branded “al-Qaida linked.”
Back in
the Cold War, almost all groups opposing western domination were
called communists. Today, al-Qaida has replaced communism as a
hot button name. The widespread – but probably mistaken – belief
that Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaida was responsible for the 9/11
attacks has made anything “linked” to al-Qaida fair game for
liquidation.
Branding
your foes “terrorists” is a fine way of de-legitimizing them and
denying them any political or humanitarian rights. Israel did
this very effectively with the hapless Palestinians, who
foolishly cooperated by bombing civilians.
However,
the obvious problem here is that doing so creates an endless
supply of “terrorists” and pressure to take action against them.
That and oil are the reason US special forces are now beating
the bush all over black Africa. It’s the never-ending “long war”
that America’s militarist and neocon circles want, and against
which President Dwight Eisenhower so presciently warned back in
the 1950’s.
Egypt
offers another grim example of propaganda becoming fact. The
majority of its people who voted for a democratic government in
a fair election and its leaders are now condemned as
“terrorists” by the thuggish generals who overthrew the
legitimate government in Cairo. Anyone daring to oppose the US
and Saudi-backed military junta is a “terrorist.” They must
drive terrorist cars, eat terrorist food, and have terrorist
babies.
Eric S.
Margolis is an award-winning, internationally syndicated
columnist. His articles have appeared in the New York Times, the
International Herald Tribune the Los Angeles Times, Times of
London, the Gulf Times, the Khaleej Times, Nation – Pakistan,
Hurriyet, – Turkey, Sun Times Malaysia and other news sites in
Asia. http://ericmargolis.com
©
2014 Eric Margolis
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