El video dura ocho minutos y puede verse acá: https://youtu.be/Lh8xKBwbjp0. Nos muestra los resultados de una nueva intervención del Imperio en su lucha contra el Mal; esta vez, nuevamente en Irak. La prensa corporativa de Occidente, muy ocupada, como siempre que ocurren estas cosas, en temas vinculados con la sexualidad de los cangrejos o la anorexia de las modelos en los desfiles de Milán. La nota que sigue es de
Anwar Khan está fechada el 20 de Marzo pasado; hoy la reprodujo el sitio web The
Vineyard of the Saker:
Título: The Mosul
Massacres: the Banality of Evil revisited
Texto: What is
the moral difference–if any– between the intentional shooting at fleeing
civilians and using them as human shields on the one hand, and the flattening
of entire neighborhoods, killing hundreds of innocent civilians, on the pretext
of the presence of enemy fighters there-in, on the other? The answer is that
there is no moral difference. Both are high crimes under any book, and it is
being perpetrated on the people of Mosul as we speak. The first is done by
ISIS– the Frankenstein that crept out of the Empire’s Research and Development
labs, with the sole aim of destroying Muslim societies, disparaging the name of
Islam, and advancing the march towards Full Spectrum Dominance— and the second
is perpetrated by the Empire’s military might in broad day light, on the
pretext of annihilating the very monster that it created. In between a most
vicious massacre of innocent people is being perpetrated, with an almost
complete media blackout.
(Side Note: Not
that the knowledge of such crimes would bother much the moral nerves of the
western world, who have come to accept scenes of dead Muslims as a phenomenon
as normal as cloud formation. Between slavish work to pay for what they call
life, celebrity worship, and the collective immolation of the soul that takes
place in the dark temples we call cinemas— mirroring very much the darkness
that encompasses the modern conscience—one wonders if idle time could be spared
to show moral revulsion to such crimes. Yes, candles are lit and tears shed to
the unfortunate victims at home, but the Muslim lands are simply too far, too
unknown, and too “other” to cause any discomfort of the conscience)
While the Syrian
and Russian offensive to retake Aleppo from the terrorists saw much crocodile
tears from the Empire’s media, the Mosul offensive or Inherent Resolve—where
Coalition air strikes have turned the city into a heap of rubble hiding a
virtual urban graveyard inside its belly— is not even mentioned in passing. The
amount of suffering that the people of Mosul have faced since the operation
began is difficult to compare to anything in our times, including the Syrian
war theatre which is as cruel as modern warfare can be. The scenes from Mosul
Jadida(New Mosul) area are reminiscent of Dresden during the Second World War.
The Guardian
reported Chris Woods, the director of monitoring group Airwars, to have said:
“The Jadida incident alone is the worst toll of a single [airstrike] incident
that I can recall in decades. The coalition’s argument that it doesn’t target
noncombatants risks being devalued when so many civilians are being killed in
west Mosul.” He is referring to a coalition airstrike that killed over 200
civilians mostly children, women and elderly seeking shelter in a building. The
mounting human suffering and infrastructural destruction is of such a scale
that the Iraqi Army, conducting the ground offensive, had to call off its
advance fearing that the operation has slid into a catastrophe, thanks to the
coalition’s Make America Great Again strategy.
(Side Note: You
wonder where is Hollywood and George Clooney and their crocodile tears which
they shed incessantly for the people of Sudan– who we were told were going
through a “genocide”– eventually leading to imperial intervention and creation
of South Sudan. How courageous of these celebrities to root for imperial causes
and then hide in their holes when true courage is needed?)
Those who still
harbor any doubts about the Empire being beyond redemption and salvation need
to see its conduct in Mosul to realize how utterly indifferent it is to human
suffering, or even to public opinion, which was of some concern, purely for PR
reasons, not too long ago. But when the imperial hubris has reached such
proportions that it cannot be even bothered to explain why shelters housing
children and women are blown into oblivion for the sake of one ISIS fighter,
you surely have entered what I call the Curse Stage, a particular stage in the
stagnation of empires when there is not even a veneer of moral pretense behind
its conduct. It is the homestretch of the unraveling. It cannot possibly be reversed.
“Once the Heavens
cast the dice of fate, it shall not be reversed, even when a million
supplication intersect its path”. Hafiz Shirazi
What is also
there to be witnessed is that the same western world that always held Russia to
be morally inferior to the ideals of the Enlightenment, part of “the primitive
and cruel East”, have fared infinitely more inhumane and cruel in its conduct
of warfare under very similar circumstances. The Russian method displayed in
the Aleppo offensive was one that regarded avoidance of civilian suffering as
the driving factor in its formation. Humanitarian corridors were formed with
aid and shelter also being provided in some areas. It took months of meticulous
planning and coordination with local partners, and even with the rebels to
guarantee their and their families’ safe passage. It was a diplomatic and
humanitarian master class of an act. Carpet-bombing of Aleppo would have been a
rather easier choice. But the “primitive and cruel” Easterner had a soul after
all.
The Coalition on
the other hand, forbade the creation of any human corridors which would have
allowed many inhabitants to leave the city. This was proposed by the Iraqi
government but refused by the Coalition. Their rationale to the Iraqi
government was that “they feared ISIS will trickle out of the city with the
civilians”. They were told to have faith in the Coalition’s “precision
strikes”. To the media they would say “well its ISIS that is not allowing
civilians to leave, not us”, which actually is not entirely true. The fact is
that they wanted to send a clear message to the world with the new
administration’s military strategy in the Muslim lands, featuring Trump as
Krishna: Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.
This article can
go in many directions. I can begin with how Mosul fell in ISIS hands to begin
with; the conduct of ISIS terrorists of systematic terror to “reform” its
citizens; the role of Turkish, Gulf states and the Kurdish intelligence
agencies with ISIS during its four year occupation (yes, even the “anti-ISIS”
Kurdish leaders like Jalal Talabani and Masoud Barzani had intimate
relationship with ISIS and often allowed them safe passages to conduct its
operations. The ultimate Kurdish goal was to annex Mosul to Barzani and Talabani’s
fiefdoms when the conditions were ripe). But today I have one concern only and
that is the plight of the innocent civilians and the dead children under the
rubble.
I am embedding a
video here (with my edits and translation) that my Iraqi friends (whose
families are still trapped in Mosul) sent me to watch, and help spread the word
on the unspoken suffering that the people of Mosul have to persevere. I
promised them to do my part, knowing well the fate of such writings when it
meets the dead conscience of the modern media consumer. God forbid that the
comrades here on this site have such a disposition. But the fact remains that
in our times, no matter how deeply shocking an event comes to our knowledge, it
does not stay long enough deep inside our conscience to bother the usual
trajectory of our lives (this happens even to the most soft-hearted amongst us)
But it has to be said nonetheless, whether it finds the desired place or not.
That’s the least we owe to the dead children under the rubble–their little
bodies still warm from the not too long ago association with life.
The Prophet of
Islam is reported to have said “whosoever see an evil, let him stop it with his
hand; if he is not able, then with his tongue, and if he is not able to do so,
then with his heart— and that is the least of faith.” (The masculine pronoun is
inclusive of the feminine, lest the more gender-sensitive raise an issue with
that). I am doing the least of what the faith and humanity requires.
The video shows a
government official inspecting the part of Mosul most affected by the coalition
airstrikes, and gathering first-hand information on the nature of the offensive
and plight of the people. Please do watch the entirety of it. I will leave you
with one quote from her that sums up the Mosul offensive:
“After meeting
many people and hearing the reports from all sides, it has become abundantly
clear to me, and I can swear to God on this, that there are no more than 6 or 5
ISIS fighters in the entire New Mosul area and they walk around freely in open
streets and amazingly they are not targeted. Yet what is targeted are entire
neighborhoods and houses containing shelter seeking civilians. And all this on
the pretext of targeting these ISIS fighters. It is very clear that the idea is
to just destroy Mosul and nothing else”. Basma Basem, President of Mosul
Judiciary Council.
{From God we come
and to Him shall we return}–Common Muslim statement on hearing the news of
death.
Post Script:
Since this article, which was first written on March 20th, there finally has
been some media coverage. RT has been especially active and credit should go to
them. But the scale of suffering is still far from being portrayed accurately.
Also, the
subtitles could have been more viewer friendly, alas, that’s the extent of my
video editing skills.
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