Promises, Promises...
| Tuesday April
15, 2003
Wahib Binzagr, CBE From Saddam to Bin Laden, we all make promises. Also, we easily break
them. You can see who keeps looking for the smoking gun but need to look
into the mirror to realize who is carrying it. To catch up with the
atrocities of Saddam, hundreds of thousands of visitors and locals
permitted themselves to break up and loot Iraq or destroy it in order to
rebuild it. Islamic institutions and Arab culture have to be sacrificed
for free democracy to be implemented by forceful arrogance, and the
claim to replace dictatorships. The oil fields have to be safely protected so when the looting is
ended, wealth is saved for a rainy day. The religious zealots are using the latest technologies of the
invading Westerners and then blaming their values. Under Saddam all the ills known to mankind were carried out in cruel
style behind a veil. Today, after the introduction of imported democracy and fair Western
values, wrapped in Zionist aspirations, according to Likud ways, the
Arabs that they say, hear, see and feel horror being inflicted on them. With all these events, there are promises for a better tomorrow in
Iraq. Better still, a promising future for the other Arabs. They merely
need to be patient. Instead Arab nations must be agonized by nightmares. They seem to
sleep well on Western tranquilizers, made in the US to the best British
standards. The Ottoman Turks knew it best and let the British carry
everything back to the West. Now the Americans, by hook or crook, re-engineer it at the Arabs’
own risk. For a pound of flesh, they receive it, full of their best
wishes and plenty of debts paid for by oil pumped at low costs and sold
at high prices. Whether the future of Iraq is bright or bleak depends on the promises
and deliveries by the USA “firemen” in their pursuit to establish a
democracy in Iraq. Early signs are not comforting to well-intentioned,
fairly level-headed knowledgeable people. The promise given by the “US General”, entrusted with this
assignment and honor is such that no one can wait to see which way the
future of the Iraqi people will take shape. As a matter of fact, it could very well extend to all the countries
of the region except the only privileged “chosen nation”. After all
the Arabs are loved by the West so much and they deserve only the best. This particular “US General” has repeatedly in public told to his
assistants to look for employment somewhere else because their
assignments will not extend beyond three months. Therefore democracy is promised for Iraq by the “US General” in
three months but will Iraqis buy it? Certainly it is going for a song. The Arabs say “the valuable”
offer has its price built in. But do Arabs elevate themselves to
promises made repeatedly to them by the West? If not they had better
blame themselves, not others. It is well known that birds of a feather flock together. Arab News Features 14 April 2003 |
Copyright 2014 Q Madp www.OurWarHeroes.org