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You Should Have Known Iraqis
would Fight LONDON, 27 March 2003 — It is now five days since the British and US
governments launched an unprecedented military invasion of my country of
birth, its people, land, towns and cities. This attack was launched
without UN authority, public support or the will of the international
community. To win support for this unjust and illegal campaign, it has been
claimed that this is not a colonial war of occupation but a war of
liberation; a compassionate war. Britain and the US will save the Iraqis
by bombing so they can thrive in a democratic Iraq and live at ease with
their neighbors. Those who believed the hype expected the Iraqis to welcome the invading
armies. After British troops were forced to retreat from Basra on Tuesday,
a military spokesman said: “We were expecting a lot of hands up, but it
hasn’t quite worked out that way.” It is now clear to everyone that ordinary Iraqis are resisting this
military aggression with their lives and souls. Commentators and
politicians in Britain and America seem taken aback: How come the Iraqis
are putting up such a fight? Why do they so passionately resist this
attempt to liberate them from the brutal dictator, Saddam? But Iraqis
aren’t surprised at all. When Iraq was first colonized by Britain in 1917, Iraqis were fed the
same British propaganda about liberation through occupation. We fought the
best part of last century to get rid of colonial Britain and, since then,
have helped a great number of independence movements worldwide. Iraqis may
wish for the current regime to change, but anyone who understands our
culture will know that in this war Iraqis will fight and die, not to save
President Saddam Hussein, but to protect their home, land, dignity and
self-respect from a new world order alien to their way of life. We are an
enormously proud people. And so history repeats itself. Just as in the past century, the
military superiority of the Anglo-American invaders may eventually
overwhelm the Iraqi Army, which is weak and ill-equipped because of
sanctions, containment and isolation. But there is also no doubt that in
the end this military crusade against Iraq will fail just like the
previous British occupation of Iraq, led by Gen. Maude, where the military
odds were just as much in favor of the British Army. Iraqis — in
particular the Arab-Iraqi Shiites — fought bitter and hard and suffered
thousands of casualties in order to liberate Iraq from the British
occupation. They will do so again. It is true that, this time, the British and US forces may assume
control of sea, air and deserts of Iraq, but they will never win the war
for the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people. Not only do the people of
Iraq face devastation by the US and UK aggression on a scale not
previously known to mankind, but they also face death and destruction by
another war — the civil war that would inevitably follow. We know what
this means, because we have been there before. As a young lad in the town of Mosul I lived through the horror of the
civil war in Iraq in 1959-60, when the Communist and Kurdish coalition
fought the nationalists for control of the country. With my brothers and
parents, we used to hide huddled together, in a small concealed basement
for days on end, absolutely terrified of being slaughtered because we were
considered to be on the nationalist side. I saw Iraqis split in half, while alive, by two cars. Girls were hanged
from telegraph posts, with fish hooks through their breasts. Men were
hanged outside my school gates. We were forced to watch mass hangings in
public squares. Dead bodies with their throats slit lay in the streets. Forty years on, in the comfort and safety of London, those images
remain vivid. A scar of fear for life, and one shared by a great many of
my people. This is the fate that awaits “liberated” Iraq. Only today, the
Kurds — backed by the US — have even more violent scores to settle.
There are many, many people in Iraq today who fear the sectarian violence
that may result from the breakdown of the secular regime; and Iraqi
history shows that they are right to fear it. I do not wish this future to
await anybody in the world, friend or foe. Neither the British nor the American forces will be able to react
quickly enough in order to prevent the slaughter of innocent civilians in
the ensuing civil war. In the aftermath there will not be an Iraq to
rebuild, but simply chaos. So the message from Iraq is clear: Go home and leave us alone. You will
never be welcome in Iraq as colonizers. Stop destroying Iraq. Do not bury
our nation. Stop the war and give peace and the UN inspectors a chance in
the name of humanity. (Dr. Burhan M. Al-Chalabi is chairman of the British Iraqi Foundation
and a member of the Royal Institute of International Affairs.)
Opinions expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah's.
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