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    Home » Z Commentary » Behind Enemy Lines
    Asia China Foreign Policy Iraq Media (Corporate) Middle East North America Turkey

    Behind Enemy Lines

    avatarBy Brian DominickApril 11, 1999Z CommentaryNo Comments6 Mins Read
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    ZNet Commentary

    In a disturbing case of hypocritical Western propaganda tripping over its own

    distortions, the Associated Press recently reported that Turkish troops and warplanes have

    crossed into Northeastern Iraq in pursuit of Kurdish rebels presumably taking refuge there

    (AP, 4/7/99). Any honest observer will be mesmerized by the juggling act of ignorance

    involved in reporting this story. The same "respectable" news service which

    consistently fails to mention that the "no-fly zones" over Northern and Southern

    Iraq are a flagrant violation of international law, has now forgotten they exist at all,

    at least while the omission is momentarily convenient.

    Ostensibly established to protect ethnic minorities in those regions from Iraqi

    military assaults, the no-fly zones are more often used to justify periodic air assaults

    against unspecified Iraqi targets referred to as "air defense positions" and

    whatnot. Actually, it isn’t true that the no-fly zones themselves are against

    international conventions. I honestly can’t find anything in the laws of global conduct

    against drawing a line on a map and telling a sovereign nation it cannot fly airplanes

    within its own borders. What is illegal is violating a sovereign nation’s airspace

    to patrol such a zone. It took Malaysia, backed by Russia and China on the Security

    Council, to point this fact out just this year. But never mind, neither Washington nor the

    media, nor seemingly the United Nations, has any concern for the illegality of

    unilaterally drawing and enforcing no-fly zones. After all, they are intended to protect

    the Kurds, and protecting poor minorities is high on the Western agenda, as the current

    Kosova debacle demonstrates.

    In any case, the reality of the situation is that when US and British fighters scoping

    out the no-fly zones, supposedly looking for wandering units of the "formidable"

    Iraqi air force, are fired on by Iraqi troops under orders to defend Iraqi airspace, the

    logic of Western doublespeak dictates that US forces are then free to rain death upon the

    soldiers defending their homeland as well as other seemingly indiscriminate targets in the

    area. And this is happening with startling regularity over Iraq.

    The truth is, reports of Iraqi "violations" of these US-imposed no-fly zones

    are rare. There is an occasional air encounter between US and Iraqi jets, but in reality

    the patrols are successful both in preventing Iraqi air maneuverability and in providing

    the perfect excuse to continue attacking Saddam’s forces and other targets.

    And now we find out that the only state violating the no-fly zones, other than the US

    and UK, is Turkey, a favored US client. Like Iraq, the Turkish government is trying to

    extinguish the threat of Kurdish rebellion and independence within its borders. But Turkey

    is going much farther. The extermination campaign has so far been quite brutal, quite

    thorough — as one might expect from such a campaign. And, as reported by the Associated

    Press, it has led well inside Iraqi territory, inside the northern no-fly zone, with

    Kurdish guerillas hiding in the mountains there and Turkish warplanes "pounding"

    them from above.

    There is no word yet on whether US patrols have opened fire on American-made Turkish

    fighters for violating the occupied airspace, but it’s probably safe to expect the answer

    is no. I’ll leave it up to the reader to ponder the level of self-deception — or

    downright dishonesty — required by news sources which simultaneously (1) refuse to

    mention the illegality of patrolling "no-fly zones" and (2) failing to state

    that Turkish violations of the touted no-fly zones are (a) taking place and (b) being

    accepted by the forces we’re being told are there to protect Kurds from oppression.

    And while we are on the subject, let’s evaluate the efficacy and legitimacy of the

    no-fly zones. There can be no question that they are illegal, imposed unilaterally as they

    have been by the US/UK alliance, without UN approval. And there really should be no

    illusion that the real motivation behind the zones’ existence is the protection of huddled

    Kurds under attack from a vicious Iraqi air force that can’t seem to scramble so much as a

    handful of jets even outside the zones. If humanitarian interests were really a factor in

    US policy, we wouldn’t be simultaneously backing genocide against Kurds across the border

    in Turkey, nor the slaughters of so many other peoples around the globe.

    But one question remains: is the net effect of the no-fly zones — ie protection of

    Kurds at least from Iraqi bombs, if not Turkish ones — something we can stand behind? It

    is probably true that, to some extent, Kurds in Iraq would be under more severe attack

    from Saddam’s military were it not for US/UK occupation of significant airspace. Indeed,

    the no-fly zones were established just after the 1991 Gulf War, when Kurdish refugees were

    being massacred from the air. Noam Chomsky and others severely and generally critical of

    US policy toward Iraq have come out in favor of the no-fly zones, of course citing

    protection of Kurds and Shi’ites, while not falling for notions of humanitarian motives.

    "I think the no fly zones that the US was pretty much forced to institute by popular

    pressure are legitimate, in principle," writes Chomsky, basing his statement on the

    premise that he believes the zones still offer actual protection to otherwise defenseless

    peoples. This is a plausible, not altogether irrational conclusion.

    However, we need to look at this situation in the context of an ongoing, virtually

    one-sided war between the US/UK and the demonized Iraqi people. With many thousands of

    Iraqis dying monthly as a result of war and sanctions, any US policy or action which

    serves to justify that attack is itself unjustifiable. In fact, during an incident this

    year, eleven Iraqi civilians were killed when a stray missile fired from a US warplane hit

    a populated area near Basra during an enforcement of the southern no-fly zone. So while it

    isn’t obvious that lives are being saved, they are definitely being lost as both direct

    and indirect results of the occupied airspace policy.

    Since it is not a certainty that Iraqi forces would attack Kurds living in the no-fly

    zones were they to be lifted, though we can be quite sure that as long as the zones exist,

    Iraq will continue to defend its airspace with futile, indeed counterproductive results.

    And as those results include the continuation of the insane US war on Iraqi people, we

    must in good conscience oppose the no-fly zones and their enforcement.

     

    Brian Dominick is a freelance journalist and community organizer living in Syracuse,

    NY, where he works with the Let Iraq Live! Action Coalition among other groups.

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    avatar
    Brian Dominick

    Brian Dominick is an organizer and journalist who did most of his activist work based in Syracuse, NY, where he was born in 1973. Brian now lives in Brooklyn, New York.

    Brian was a co-founder with Jessica Azulay of The NewStandard, a hard-news publication that operated from 2004-2007. He and Jessica then founded WebRoot Solutions, an activist-oriented website design, development and hosting project, which Jessica still runs. Brian is now projects manager at Agaric.

    He has been an active participant in Z's online operations since 1994, when he attended the Z Media Institute. Brian has taught a variety of courses at ZMI in the years since.

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

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