The Lies of the Times: NYT Pushes Bush Line on Somalia
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
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The New
York Times has finally deigned to bestow prominent notice on
the Bush Administration's third on-going "regime change"
operation, its blood-soaked proxy war in Somalia. But it should
come as no surprise that today's front page piece by Jeffrey Gettleman
(People Who Feed Off Anarchy in Somalia Are Quick to Fuel It) is
riddled with the same kind of slavish spin, artful omissions and
outright lies that the paper produced in those glorious Judy Miller
days of yore before the invasion of Iraq. One can only hope that
Gettleman submits an invoice to the White House, to get his rightful
due for this remarkable piece of government propaganda. For the
story is permeated with the Bushist ethos: blame the victims, bury
the truth, and smear all those who oppose the Leader's will.
The
theme of Gettleman's piece is that resistance to the U.S.-backed
Ethiopian invasion of Somalia is being led by a bunch of greedy
gangsters grown fat on the anarchy that has plagued the land for
more than 15 years. What's more, this chaotic gangsterism is evidently
a national trait of Somalis, who are possessed of a "raw antigovernment
defiance" that is solely responsible for the collapse of the
nation, and is making it hard even for the entirely benevolent Bush
Administration to do anything for them. For as Gettleman ominously
notes, "many Somalis...will never go along with any program."
Obviously then, the only way to tame
these savages is by brute force such as the artillery
and tank fire that the Ethiopian invaders and their native warlord
allies are raining down on residential areas in Mogadishu even as
we speak, killing at least 350 people in the last week and
29 civilians just yesterday, as the BBC reports, but which Gettleman
politely declines to mention in his piece.
This is classic
Establishment thinking here: the reduction of complex human societies
to a few unruly character traits, supposedly unique and endemic
faults that the poor creatures can't control but which pose a danger
to civilization, thus justifying massive military action to bring
them to heel for their own good, of course. Gettleman is
stalwart in this regard. He ignores the direct and quite open American
military involvement in the invasion: the
U.S. training, arming and funding of the Ethiopian military,
the deployment of U.S. Special Forces in the invasion, the
airstrikes launched by U.S. planes on fleeing refugees, and
the role of U.S. intelligence agents in arresting and "rendering"
Somali refugees to the torture chambers of the Ethiopian dictatorship
all of which has been thoroughly documented by reputable
mainstream newspapers in Europe, Asia, and Africa. Aside from one
passing reference, in the 27th paragraph, of "covert American
help" in the invasion, the only other mention he makes of any
American involvement in Somalia is the Bush Administration's "pledge
of $100 million to rebuild the country." Just another noble
mission, in other words, another act of purest altruism from the
"shining city on the hill."
Of course,
there are greedy gangsters in Somalia just as there are in
every single human society on earth. (Even the "shining city"
itself is not noticeably lacking in this regard.) So it's not very
hard for Gettleman or rather, the local stringers he employs
in Mogadishu to dig up some nefarious figures to illustrate
his chosen theme.
Take Maxamuud
Nuur Muradeeste, for example, "a squatter landlord who makes
a few hundred dollars a year renting out rooms in the former Ministry
of Minerals and Water." Muradeeste says he would allow "insurgents"
(i.e., those resisting the armed conquest of their nation by foreign
invaders) to store guns at his place. Obviously a prime candidate
for a set of Gitmo pajamas.
Or what about
the equally sinister Omar Hussein Ahmed, a Mogadishu olive oil exporter?
In addition to sharing a name with anti-Bush terrorists like Saddam
and Obama, Ahmed "and a group of fellow traders recently bought
missiles to shoot at government soldiers." And why would they
do this? "'Taxes are annoying,' he explained."
And then there's...well,
that's it. These are the people who Gettleman says are "fueling"
the insurgency because the Ethiopian-installed government "poses
the biggest threat yet to the gravy days of anarchy." A gangster
who makes "a few hundred dollars a year" renting rooms
in a long-abandoned government building. (Perhaps Gettleman could
ask Dick Cheney's employers at Halliburton if they would consider
a few hundred dollars of revenue a year to be "gravy.")
And an olive oil producer who doesn't want to pay taxes. (Actually,
Gettleman's first capsule description of Somalia's gangsters sounds
exactly like Bush's corporate cronies: "They do not pay taxes,
their businesses are totally unregulated, and they have skills that
are not necessarily geared toward a peaceful society." So what's
not to like about these guys?)
But this would
not be a classic NYT piece if its nakedly ideological framework
was not subverted by the nuggets of fact buried deep beneath the
sludge-like prose. And so it proves in this case. Although olive
oil trader Ahmed first appears as a missile-toting gangster who
just doesn't want to pay taxes one of the "many Somalis"
whose "raw antigovernment defiance" compels them to "resist
any program" or government far, far down in the story
we learn that he and his fellow traders had actually accepted the
imposed new government at first, but were driven into opposition
by the Bush-backed warlords' own greed:
For many
Abgal [tribal members], an influential subclan of the Hawiye,
the last straw came in mid-March when the government raised port
taxes by 300 percent. Mr. Ahmed, the olive oil exporter and an
Abgal, said that after that, there was a mass Abgal defection
to the insurgency. "The government is trying to destroy business
as we know it," he said.
The new "government"
is led by clan leaders and warlords whose power and profits had
been curtailed by the Islamic Courts government that took power
in Somalia last year and brought the nation its first measure of
peace and relative security in 15 years. So when they sought to
recoup their losses with draconian tax hikes, many Somalis went
into rebellion, including the "gangster" Ahmed. This is
presented as some kind of wild, anarchic, even terroristic action.
But what would good ole God-fearin' American businessmen do if Washington
suddenly raised their taxes by 300 percent?
And Gettleman's
own portrayal of the deposed Islamic Courts system gives the lie
to his earlier depiction of Somalis' inborn anarchy and gangsterism:
Many in the
business community became fed up with paying protection fees to
the warlords and their countless middle-men. Business leaders
then backed a grass-roots Islamist movement that drove the warlords
out of Mogadishu last summer and brought peace to the city for
the first time in 15 years. The Islamists seemed to be the perfect
solution for the businessmen. They delivered stability, which
was good for most business, but they did not confiscate property
or levy heavy taxes. They called themselves an administration,
not a government. Our best days were under them, said
Abdi Ali Jama, who owns an electrical supply shop in Mogadishu.
So it seems
that Somalis even Somali businessmen can be governed,
as long as people are treated fairly. It seems that stability and
peace can be achieved in Somalia if it rises from the grass
roots and is not imposed by foreign fighters shelling neighborhoods
and American bombers attacking refugees. But you can only discern
this by looking at Gettleman's piece upside down, and discarding
the heavy scaffolding of spin he has erected around it.
And now we
come to the heart of darkness in Gettleman's story. For it is not
enough for him, and the "Western security officials" who
are his sources, simply to lampoon Somalis as a bunch of shiftless,
lazy, quarrelsome darkies in the traditional Establishment fashion.
No, Gettleman goes beyond this to concoct a completely false account
of how this new front in Bush's "War on Terror" was launched.
Here, he invokes the eternal cry of every aggressor from time out
of mind: "They made us do it." It's what Hitler said when
he invaded Poland. It's what Saddam said when he invaded Kuwait.
It's what Bush said when he invaded Iraq. And it's obviously the
Bushist party line now:
But then
a radical wing took over, and the Islamists declared war on Ethiopia,
which commands one of the mightiest armies in Africa. The Ethiopians,
with covert American help, crushed the Islamist army in December
and bolstered the authority of Somalias transitional government
in the capital.
"The Islamists
declared war on Ethiopia." This, of course, is a blatant and
outright lie. (Although perhaps Gettleman, taking dictation from
his "Western security officials" and apparently
unable to access, say, the
BBC on his computer doesn't actually know the truth.
In any case, he obviously can't be bothered to find out.) The truth
is that Ethiopia sent a 100-strong column of trucks and armored
cars across the border into Somalia on July 20 of last year to bolster
the Bush-backed warlords who were trying to overthrow the Islamist
Courts government, which had taken over Mogadishu a month before.
It was the day after this armed incursion into Somalian territory
that the Islamist Courts declared a jihad "against Ethiopians
in Somalia," not a "war against Ethiopia."
Let's walk
through that sequence of events once again: Ethiopia makes an armed
incursion into Somalia. The Somalian government declares that the
Ethiopian troops should be driven out of Somalia. (Yes, I know that
if Mexico sent an armed column into Texas to join up with a Chinese-backed
group trying to overthrow the government of the United States, George
W. Bush would react with Zen-like calm and seek a peaceful solution
through diplomacy, negotiation and compromise, and that's what the
Islamic Courts guys should have done in this case. But you can't
expect such heathenish savages to respond with the enlightenment
and good will that has always marked conflict resolution among the
Christian nations of the West.)
Somehow from
this sequence Gettleman manages to convey to readers exactly what
the Bush Administration wants them to think: the Muslim terrorists
started it, and now they're getting what's coming to them. And if
you see any pictures on CNN or somewhere of innocent people being
killed in the crossfire, well, that's just because a bunch of greedy
gangsters and al Qaeders are causing trouble.
And this is
the "news" about Somalia that the New York Times
believes is "fit to print": lies and spin about yet another
war of aggression being fought at America's behest, with American
money, troops, arms and bombs.
April
26, 2007
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2007 Chris Floyd
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