Azzaman,
Iraq
What the American Flag Symbolizes for Iraqis
By Fatih Abdulsalam
July 26, 2006
Azzaman - Iraq- Original
Article (English)
A man flees the scene of a bomb attack in Baghdad, Thursday. (above).
[LATEST NEWS PHOTOS: Iraq].
Seeking medical aid, after one of several bombing
attacks in central Baghdad on Thursday. (above).
Mother grieves over loss of two sons, just moments before in a
rocket attack on her apartment building in Baghdad, July 27. (below).
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki becomes the first Iraqi leader
to address a joint session of the U.S. Congress. (above).
—C-SPAN VIDEO: Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki addresses
a joint session of the U.S. Congress, June 26,00:29:52
Hooded police with their blindfolded insurgent-captives, Wednesday
in Baquba, July 26. The gunmen attacked a police patrol. (below).
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Some 230
years have passed since the United States declaration of independence. But as Americans
celebrated their national day this year, they certainly had the terrible
experience of their Iraqi adventure in the back of their minds.
The grey
years that the Americans have spent in Iraq will haunt the United States for
decades to come, even though their presence in the country is ostensibly under the
U.N. banner.
Almost everywhere
in the world, the American flag indicates the values of a civilized society,
and one that has transformed the face of the globe over the past 70 years. But that
is unfortunately not the case in Iraq, where the U.S. flag carries entirely
different connotations.
In Iraq,
the American flag is seen as symbol of moral decadence, and has nothing to do
with technology, democracy, welfare or human rights.
It is
indeed ironic to watch the United States so readily dispense with the values that
it so valiantly fought and struggled for when it occupied Iraq in the first
place. Prior to the invasion, many Iraqis had hopes of share perhaps a sliver of
the sublime values trumpeted by Washington.
But alas,
the world's most powerful country doesn't appear to have the capacity to learn
from its mistakes, whether in Iraq or the larger Middle East.
The
United States loves creating its own enemies, by its own hand; and as a result its
Middle East policies are headed into the abyss. In Iraq, the
U.S. has created a vulnerable target for the covetous intentions of neighboring
states, and has actually turned it into a venue for "international
terror." The U.S. has turned Iraq into an example that runs contrary to America's
values, beliefs and assumptions.
Why isn't
there a single wise man in the world's mightiest country capable of telling the
White House that America's enemies, whether in Iraq or anywhere else in the
Middle East, are a result of U.S. policies? The world's only superpower gathers,
nourishes and fortifies its own enemies, and as a result, U.S. policies in the
region are leading toward oblivion.
And it is
for these reasons that both the American flag and the American battle tank are powerless
to contain Iraq's murderous militias.
In Iraqi
minds, the U.S. flag is associated with surgical strikes on crowded cities such
as Falluja, Tal Affar, Ramadi, Qaim and Baaquba.
The U.S.
flag is associated with humiliating practices, such as ordering female university
students on their campus in Mosul to take off their clothes.
The U.S.
flag is connected to the sex crimes committed at the Abu Ghraib prison, which
has become even more notorious than it was during the days of the former
President Saddam Hussein.
The U.S.
flag is related to the Marines who raped and then murdered an Iraqi virgin in
the city of Mahmodiya.
These are
just a few examples of the things that pop up in Iraqi minds when spotting a
U.S. flag.
No wonder
there isn't a trace of the flag anywhere in Iraq, apart from the Green Zone, which
is encircled by huge slabs of reinforced concrete.
VIDEO FROM SYRIA: 'IRAQI RESISTANCE
HAS SHOWN LIMITS OF U.S. HEDGEMONY'
SYRIAN TV, SYRIA: Excerpts from an interview with Secretary-General of the Sunni Clerics Association in Iraq, Sheik Hareth Al-Dhari, June 24, 00:04:48, Via MEMRI
"The occupation, the destruction, the killing, and so on only increase the hatred of the Iraqis towards America, the Americans, and the American army. The Iraqis will continue to put up resistance to the American army as long as blood flows in their veins, even if it stays there for decades."
Sheik Hareth Al-Dhari