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Business. "This war will be long", announced the president of the planet.
Bad news for the civilians who have died and will die. Good news for arms
manufacturers, though.
The usefulness of going to war is irrelevant. What is relevant is the
profitability of war. Since September 11 business has been in a steady
boom for General Dynamics, Lockheed, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, and
other companies in the war industry. The market loves them.
Television rarely shows the victims. Like it did in the bombings of Iraq
and Yugoslavia, TV is focused instead on showing the shopping cart of the
latest models of weapons. In the world of the market, war isn't a
tragedy-- it's an international trade fair. Arms manufacturers need war
like coat manufacturers need winter.
Hollywood. Reality imitates film. Kids get missiles from the film
'Atlantis' in their McDonald's Happy Meals and it gets harder and harder
to tell blood from ketchup.
The Pentagon has invited a number of screenwriters and special effects
experts to help guess at new terrorist threats and ways of defending
America. According to Variety magazine, one of these was the screenwriter
of the action movie 'Die Hard'.
Wardrobe. In one of he most widely seen images, the Hard to Kill Osama
bin Laden wears a turban over his head, but he's also sporting
US-military issue gear and wearing a Timex Watch-- made in the USA.
He too is made in the USA, like the other Muslim fundamentalists the CIA
recruited and armed and brought to Afghanistan from 40 countries to fight
Communism there. When the US celebrated their victory in that war, the
president of Pakistan, Benazir Bhutto, warned Bush Senior: 'You have
created a Frankenstein's Monster'. Her warning was in vain.
Two weeks before the towers fell, the world economy was falling. The
Economist suggested to its readers that they 'find a parachute'. In the
event, those who didn't have a parachute had, at least, a ready villain
to strike at.
Panic. Humanity is feeling the symptoms of antrhax: headaches, skin
rashes, shakes. We're all afraid to open our mail, and not because it's a
huge elecricity bill or the letter that says 'we regret to inform you
that we are forced to cut off your services...'
Ukraine's military was still in service when an SA-5 missile struck a
passenger plane and killed 78 people.
Was it a mistake or did those 'smart bombs' know that passenger planes
can be weapons? Will smart bombs
next be attacking post offices?
Weapons. A US aircraft carrier, the Nimitz, spent a day in Uruguayan
waters. The visit worried me. In my neighbourhood there is a building
that looks a lot like a mosque. With smart bombs, you never know.
Luckily, nothing happened. Well, almost nothing: some Uruguayan
politicians were invited to visit the carrier, the floating city of
death, and it almost killed them. The plane that took them there landed
badly and ended up with a wing in the water.
Thanks to the visit, we learned that the carrier costs $4.5 billion
dollars. According to UNICEF and other UN agencies, for the cost of three
carriers like the Nimitz they could provide food and medicine for a year
to every single hungry and sick child in the world-children who are dying
at a pace of 40,000 a day.
Pitching in to the effort. It's not just Islamic terrorism that uses
'sleepers', but also state terrorism. One of the protagonists of Plan
Condor in the years of South American military dictatorships, the
Uruguayan colonel Manuel Cordero, has declared that the 'dirty war' is
'the only way' to fight terrorism, and that kidnappings, torture,
assassination and disappearance are necessary. He has experience and is
offering to pitch in to the effort.
The colonel says he listened to the speeches of President Bush and that
he sees the speeches as the announcement of the Third World War.
Unfortunately, he listened well.
Precedents. Like the colonel, the ambassador also has experience. John
Negroponte, the US representative in the UN, threatens to take the war
'to other countries', and he knows what he's talking about.
A few years ago he took war to Central America. Negroponte was the
patron of the terrorism of the Contras in Nicaragua and of the
paramilitaries in Honduras. Reagan, the president at the time, said the
same thing that today is said by Bush and his enemy bin Laden: it is all
worth it.
Victims. This new war-is it against the Taliban dictatorship or the
people who suffer it? How many civilians will die in the bombings?
Four Afghanis, who worked for the United Nations, were some of the first
'collateral damage' we received news of. All so symbolic: their work was
deactivating landmines.
Afghanistan is the most landmined country in the world. Under its earth
are 10 million mines, ready to kill or mutilate whoever steps on them.
Many were placed by the Russians, when they invaded. Many were placed
against the Russians, by donation of the US, by the mujahaddin.
Afghanistan has never accepted the international agreement prohibiting
antipersonnel mines. Neither has the US. Today the caravans of refugees
try to escape, by foot or by donkey, the missiles that are raining from
the sky above and the mines that explode from the ground below.
Tears. Rigoberta Menchu, daughter of the Mayan people, a people of
weavers, warns that we are poised 'with hope balancing on a needle.' And
that's how it is. On a needle. In the global insane asylum. Between a man
who thinks he's Mohammad and another who thinks he's Buffalo Bill.
Between the terrorism of attacks and the terrorism of war. Violence is
unravelling us. (by Eduardo Galeano - Oct 18th)
Making a killing
We've all heard about how economies around the world are in recession,
but while the Dow Jones average fell by 14 % after September 11th, stocks
in US 'defence companies' soared by up to 39%. One of the many companies
standing to make a tidy profit post-September 11th is Lockheed Martin.
Lockheed Martin is a 'defence company', which in everyday language means
they design and manufacture killing machines for sale to the highest
bidder. Like the rest of the arms trade they're good capitalists, and
don't let inconveniences like human life get in the way of 'free trade'.
Lockheed Martin has just won a big fat contract worth $200 billion from
the US military to supply the next-generation of stealth 'joint strike'
F-35 fighter jets. Just an eighth of that $200 billion would ease world
hunger, but maybe that would be flaunting market forces. Lest all this
paints a negative picture of Lockheed Martin, rest assured they're good
guys really, as they're running a fund for victims of September 11th.
Whether they'll do the same for the victims of their bloody products
remains to be seen they haven't yet for all their other victims so
don't hold your breath.
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