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31 Dec 2011 By Reason Wafawarova After Israel and its Western backers defeated Arab
nationalism in 1967, a solicitous Nizar Qabbani
emotionally called for the rekindling of the Arab
fighting spirit. He wrote in a poem: It has been 44 years since Qabbani wrote this
inspirational poem and the US-led Western alliance has
plundered, ruined and raped the Arab world, creating
this patchwork political landscape of "client
monarchies, degenerated nationalist dictatorships,
imperial petrol stations, a.k.a the Gulf States," to
quote author Tariq Ali. The legacy of Anglo-French colonialism in the Arab
world is no kinder to the slavery and genocidal
conquest by the same people in Africa for the former,
and in Australia and the United States for the later. The United States took over the control of the
region from the diminishing British Empire. This, of course, was all in the context of the
wider framework of the Cold War, a time when Moscow's
socialist influence had a tremendous grip on the
majority of former Western colonies in Africa, the
Middle East, and in Latin America. After the Cold War, the US assumed control of the
Middle East, creating numerous client states
controlled by pliant potentates, a strategy Washington
and its Western allies have employed successfully in
African countries like Burkina Faso, Congo, Banda's
Malawi, Uganda, and lately in Libya. The strategy has been ruthlessly thwarted in
Zimbabwe, at least for now; reversed in Zambia, and is
being experimented with in South Africa, where the
West hopes to tame the incumbent into a pliant puppet. South Africa's hands are already dripping with the
blood of innocent Libyans after his treacherous vote
for UN Resolution 1973, the pretext upon which Libya
was destroyed and plundered by the West. For Zimbabwe, the US-led Western aggressors still
hope they can set the populace against the
anti-colonial nationalist Zanu-PF party, or prop up
MDC-T's scandalous and ill-educated Morgan Tsvangirai,
the shameless West's puppet politician; or in the
worst case scenario, engineer scapegoat street
protests that would allow a Libya like NATO invasion. All the options are a tall order in a country whose
security forces treat foreign political meddling as a
legitimate provocation to war, and justifiably so. The national sentiment is generally anti-West and
anti-imperialism as well, and that is across the
political divide. After the 1979 Iranian Revolution and the
bigheadedness of Western-sponsored Iraq dictator,
Saddam Hussein, it became increasingly difficult for
the West to rely on puppet politicians and client
states, especially in the Arab world. Washington resorted more to establishment of
military bases and direct military occupation, like
the just-ended nine-year military occupation of Iraq,
or the ongoing occupation of Afghanistan. The opening
months of 2011 were a false realisation of Nizar
Qabbani's dream.It all appeared like the Arab world
was awakening to regain its lost pride once again.It
all started with shouts of "Al-Sha'byuridisquat al-nizam!"
- "The people want the downfall of the regime," in the
streets of Tunis. There were images of raucous calls for true freedom
and democracy, streaming out from Tunis to Cairo,
Saana to Bahrain, Libya to Yemen, and in occupied
Iraq, where demonstrators took to the streets against
the corruption of the Maliki regime. Jordan was shaken by nationwide strikes, determined
fighters for democracy called for the overthrow of the
Bahraini monarchy, and Syria's Baathist regime was
under siege by protesting Syrians.Saudi Arabia was on
high alert to thwart any threat to the Saudi monarchy.
Attempts by the West to light the fires in Tehran
flopped, but they were published. On January 14, chanting crowds converging at
Tunisia's Ministry of the Interior got puppet
president Ben Ali and his family fleeing to Saudi
Arabia. This was followed by the toppling of another
Western puppet on February 11, and that was
Egypt'sHosni Mubarak. Protests in Libya and Yemen did
not seem like they were strong enough to topple the
regimes in the respective countries, especially the
seemingly indomitable Jamahiriya of Muammar Gaddafi. The triumvirate France, US and the UK brazenly
joined in the seemingly harmless protest, escalated
the conflict to a fully-fledged brutal civil war, of
course armed with the South African and
Nigerian-backed UN Resolution 1973, and Libya was
burning before Gaddafi could say "rat". The US was at the same time arming Saudi Arabian
military invaders so they could ruthlessly thwart the
uprising in Bahrain, where the fall of the monarchy
was going to result in the loss of a trusted
potentate. On October 22, 2011 Muammar Gaddafi was captured by
US special forces, assisted by Western-sponsored
Libyan rebels, after his convoy had first been bombed
by US drones, before being decimated to smithereens by
French stealth bombers. Immediately after the capture,
Gaddafi was callously executed in broad daylight, and
Hilary Clinton was beamed heartily laughing and
enjoying every bit of the proceedings. The determinants for the uprisings in the Arab
world were economic, especially in Tunisia and Egypt;
where rising unemployment, escalating prices, and
scarcity of essential commodities were a real issue of
concern. US Vice President Joe Bidden indicated that his
major worry was Egypt and Saudi Arabia, of course the
real worry being Israel's fate in the event of regime
change in Egypt or of the fall of the Saudi monarchy
in Saudi Arabia. The US fears a democratic Muslim Brotherhood
government in Egypt could be out of control and renege
on the so-called "Peace Treaty," whose sole purpose is
the isolation and extermination of Palestinian people.
After the fall of Mubarak, Washington craftily
hijacked the Egyptian revolution and re-routed the
political process into a carefully orchestrated change
from above, led by Mubarak's Defence Minister Mohamed
Hussain Tantawi, a long-time ally of the Pentagon. Just like the bulk of Libya's puppet TNC is made up
of former Gaddafi officials, the Egyptian Military
Council is also largely made up of members of the
Mubarak regime. While the CIA and MOSSAD are busy engaging in
desperate behind-the-scenes negotiations with the
Muslim Brotherhood, the Military Council is trying to
silence protesting Egyptians, and to put a stop to
labour mobilisations. The idea is to ensure that there
is no serious shift in Egypt's relations with Israel. The last thing the US and its Western allies would
want is another round of leftist leaders in the mould
of Bolivia's Evo Morales, or Venezuela's Hugo
Chavez-not in the Middle East. This is why efforts to
roll back the mass movements are in earnest progress
right now. The affection for democracy in Libya did not extend
to any other country in the Arab region. In Bahrain, the US green-lighted a brutal Saudi
military intervention to preserve a hated despot,
crush the movement for democracy, enhance religious
sectarianism, and organise secret executions of
protestors. If Gaddafi was as reliable and predictable as the
Bahraini monarchy, he would have been allowed to carry
out any crack down of his choice against the Al-Qaeda
affiliates that engineered the Benghazi protests.He
blundered in assuming that the US and the West would
never fight alongside Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaeda. The opposition in Syria has openly denounced any
prospect of Western military intervention in the
ongoing struggle against the Baathist outfit ruling
there. Iraq and Libya have been disastrous enough to
enlighten would be admirers. But not all people in the developing world are as
discerning as the Syrians. There are hopelessly
delusional Zimbabweans with a dangerously narrow sense
of perception that leads them not only to celebrate
and admire the sad chapter of what has become known as
the "Arab Spring," but also to ignorantly rhapsodise
about the vainglorious possibility of a Harare bombing
by Western warplanes and American drones. MDC-T sees this prospect as its roadmap to power
should their scandalous and absolutely shallow leader
fail to secure undeserved victory at the polls. Why a party that openly advocates for imperial
aggression as a form of intervention in the internal
affairs of Zimbabwe should ever be allowed to exist is
a wonder that defies democratic logic. Africa we are one and together we will overcome! It
is homeland or death! Reason Wafawarova is a political writer based in
SYDNEY, Australia. |