Bush Says in Iraq, Everything's All Right ...
By Mohammad Al Sammak
Translated By Nicolas Dagher
March 24, 2006
Lebanon - Al-Mustaqbal - Original Article (Arabic)
'What Has Become of the U.S. and Iraq on the 3rd
Anniversary of the Invasion and Occupation?'
[Alquds Alarabi, U.K.] (above).
—BBC NEWS VIDEO: U.S. Military Investigates Charges that U.S.
Troops Massacred Iraqi Civilians, Mar. 22, 00:06:07
[LATEST NEWS PHOTOS: Iraq].
Politicians from Iraq's Shiite Majority Accused U.S. Troops
of Massacring 20 Worshippers at a Baghdad Mosque on Sunday,
But Police and Residents Said Many Died in Clashes Between
Shiite Militia Fighters and Americans. (below).
Lieutenant General Peter Chiarelli, Commander of Coalition
Forces in Iraq, Says the Scene After an Iraqi
Special Forces Raid on an Insurgent Cell Was Altered
[By Insurgents] for Propaganda Purposes. (above).
The U.S. Occupation Divides Iraqis Into Shiites and Sunnis.'
[Alhayat Aljadeeda, Palestine] (below).
'The U.S. Delivers the Arab World to Israel.'
[Alhayat Aljadeeda, Palestine] (above).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Everything's
all right in Iraq. This is what the U.S. President George Bush is saying. The
country couldn't be closer to a civil war that would destroy everything.
Instead, everything's all right.
Human
rights violation came out of Abu Ghraib to people's houses from Basra in the
south (where the British troops are) to Mossul in the
north (where US troops are), and in spite of this, everything's all right.
From the
start of the invasion up to now, the number of Iraqi killed has surpassed
100,000. Every day there are 50 additional victims, but despite of this,
everything's all right.
Among
scientists and college professors, there are counted 160 dead. Science research
centers are in ruins. And in spite of this, everything's all right.
The Iraqi
State or what's left of it is an empty shell. It has become nothing more than
several sectarian and racist factions preying on one another. And in spite of
this, everything's all right.
Iraqis
not only miss security, but they also miss electricity and potable water, and
are humiliated from standing in front of gas stations for hours on end, even
though their country had some of the world's largest oil reserves. And in spite
of this, everything's all right.
Under
Iraq's old regime, things weren't perfect. Iraq possessed weapons of mass
destruction. Iraq was working on producing nuclear weapons and threatened the
security of the U.S. and its allies. Iraq was coordinating with al-Qaeda, offering it help and
support, and therefore had to be terminated … so everything becomes all right.
But the
old regime in Iraq did not possess weapons of mass destruction, nor a reactor to produce a nuclear weapon, and therefore was
not a threat to the security of the U.S. or its allies. The only crime of the
old regime's leader was that he escaped the punishment of the Iraqi people, who
had suffered so tremendously from his crimes. It was a dictatorship that violated
people's lives and property. The American forces of occupation used these
sufferings to their own advantage and as justification for committing the worst
crime in the history of modern Iraq.
It is
true that a bad regime has fallen. But it is also true that on its ruins an
even worse occupation regime has taken hold. And in spite of this, everything's
all right.
There are
statistics which prove what President Bush said. Those statistics were released
by USA Today and show that the daily number of air strikes against targets in
Iraq rose in the first 2 months of the year from 11 in 2004 to 14 in 2005 to 30
in 2006. And in spite of this, everything's all right.
U.S
forces have destroyed Fallujah and from there
proclaimed the destruction of the Iraqi resistance. Since that proclamation, Fallujah became a trap for U.S. forces where dozens have
been lost. And in spite of this, everything's all right.
Even in
the U.S. itself, the popularity of the President has fallen to its lowest level
since entering office. Moreover, at 35% his popularity is lower than any
previous president, which means that 65% of the American people oppose his
policy in Iraq, consider the war unjustified and believe that it had disastrous
impact U.S. interests and at the same time, America's reputation. And in spite
of this, everything's all right.
After
beautifying the crimes of President Bush, the man that chose this war, the
neo-conservatives who planned the war (even before the crime of 9/11 in New York
and Washington) - after realizing the size of the catastrophe which has hit not
only Iraq, but the U.S. in general and the Republican Party in particular, are
now divided and exchanging accusations with one another. And in spite of this,
everything's all right.
The only
benefactor of all this misery in Iraq and consequently the Arab world, is the
Israeli project. The Israeli project aims to tear people apart and divide,
along religious, sectarian and racial lines. It is here and here alone, that
everything looks all right.
Could it
be that this is what President Bush is referring to?!
VIDEO FROM SAUDI ARABIA: 'HOLY KA'BA IS FROM OUTER SPACE'
Al-Risala TV, Saudi Arabia: Excerpts from an interview by Abd Al-Baset Sayyid, on the Origins of one of Islam's Holiest Objects, March 9, 00:02:10, MEMRI
"The British Museum announced that it possessed three pieces of the black stone [of Mecca]. It declares that these pieces prove that the black stone is not from our solar system."
Dr. Abd Al-Basset Al-Sayyid, Egyptian National Research Center