|
My Arabic Neighbor
by
Bill Sardi
My
Christian Arabic neighbor, who was born in Nazareth, Israel, is
a TV repairman and is able to get satellite signal from Al Jazeera,
the Arabic TV network in the Middle East. I sit in his home and
watch the Arabic version of the war. Heart-racing film is shown
of US troops busting down doors to raid Iraqi homes, of maimed and
wounded children in the hospital, of giant bombs going off in Baghdad,
of President Bush saying US forces will win at any cost, of open
markets destroyed by errant missiles (who knows whether they were
launched by US or Iraqi forces?).
The
point is, this is the war that the Arabic world sees. It is different
from the war the American people view, which is largely filtered
and interpreted for them.
The
Americans have now been forced to pause, and the quick war they
sold to the American people is now turning into a prolonged fight.
It is no longer an attack, it is a siege of a city of 5 million
people. Seven million Iraqi's have guns. Even with reinforcements
there will only be 200,000 or so American troops. Western forces
must supply Baghdad with food, water and medicines while trying
to kill the Iraqi leadership in hopes the Iraqi people will embrace
a US-led regime change.
But
Al Jazeera is winning over the minds and hearts of the Arabic people.
NBC News reports over 40 million people worldwide have subscribed
to Al Jazeera in just one week. There is no way the US can win the
war as long as Al Jazeera is on the air. Tanks on the streets of
Baghdad are nothing more than sitting targets. Missiles can't blow
up everybody in Baghdad. The success of the war depends upon the
US gaining the confidence of the Iraqi people. It isn't happening.
US
troops now face a hot summer, 110-degree heat, and the need for
continual provision of water, food and gasoline. Guns cannot be
fired when they are jammed with sand from dust storms. The cost
of the war is mounting and economic analysts noted before the war
started that President Bush was risking his political career on
a fast war. The US simply can't afford a prolonged conflict. Furthermore,
Syria and Iran are getting into the fray and will totally outnumber
western troop strength in the region. It could turn into WWIII and
a Holy War to boot.
Our
leadership in the USA is too over-committed to this conflict. US
troops are in a no-win situation and military and political leaders
are not in a mind to back down. Massive loss of life may ensue among
western-led forces.
March
31, 2003
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is
a health journalist who dabbles from time to time in current affairs.
His website is www.askbillsardi.com
His most recent web report describes the hazards posed by statin
cholesterol-lowering drugs.
Copyright
© 2003 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
Not for commercial reproduction without permission of the author.
Bill
Sardi Archives
|