Blowback - Michael Luders - E-Book

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Michael Lüders

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In August 1953, in a covert operation, the CIA and MI6 jointly overthrew the democratically elected Prime Minister of Iran, Mohammed Mossadegh, installing the Shah in his place. Michael Luders illuminates the dark chain of cause and effect that flowed from this conveniently forgotten 'original sin' of postwar Western interference, extending right up to the present day. Along the way he examines other ill-fated interventions, from Iraq to Afghanistan to Libya to Palestine, blowing apart the West's claim to the moral high ground and making a powerful case for a radical rethink. Already a bestseller in Europe, Blowback is an essential read for anyone who wants to understand a region that remains at the heart of today's violent and disordered world.

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BLOWBACK

HOW THE WEST F*CKED UP THE MIDDLE EAST

MICHAEL LUDERS

When everybody’s thinking the same thing, I start having doubts.

Stefan Hell, Nobel Prizewinner for Chemistry, 2014

CONTENTS

Title PageEpigraphIntroduction: ‘Sow the wind, Reap the Whirlwind’Coup in Tehran: the ‘Original Sin’Endgame in the Hindu Kush: Washington and Riyadh, Midwives of Al-Qaida‘Mission Accomplished’: The US Sets the Scene for Islamic State‘Good’ and ‘Bad’ Jihadis: How the West Fails to Learn from its MistakesInto the Heart of Darkness: the Rise of Islamic StateUnholy AlliancesFree Pass for Israel? The 2014 Gaza WarA New World OrderMapCopyright

Introduction

‘Sow the wind, reap the whirlwind’

When I told a friend in Budapest the idea for this book, he understood it in his own way: ‘How the Americans and the British fucked up the Middle East and happily continue to do so.’ Essentially, he was right. Blowback is an attempt to hold to account Western policy, which claims to act from moral principles but again and again leaves nothing but scorched earth in its wake. The main protagonists are the United States of America and its closest ally, the United Kingdom, but since 9/11 they have been joined by other European countries.

No one who wants to understand today’s conflicts, including the rise of Islamic State, the nuclear wranglings with Iran or the slaughter in Syria, can afford to ignore the influence of Western policy on the region since the end of World War II. The West is not the sole culprit of the Middle East’s misfortunes, but the basic pattern of Western intervention in the Arab-Islamic world has scarcely changed since the toppling of Mohammed Mossadegh, the democratically elected Prime Minister of Iran, in 1953.

Ever since this ‘original sin’ of intervention, the West has relied upon a crude division of opposing parties into good and evil. Once a state, a non-state entity (Hamas, Hezbollah), or a leader has been branded ‘evil’, the process of demonisation is completed only too willingly by thinktanks and the media. The comparison with Hitler is an especially beloved tactic – from which it naturally follows that a willingness to negotiate is mere cover for appeasement, collaboration, and the betrayal of ‘Western values’.

The first to be thus demonised as a ‘second Hitler’ was Mohammed Mossadegh, who in 1951 nationalised the Iranian oil industry (previously under British control) and two years later paid the price with a coup sponsored by the British and American secret services. Then came President Nasser of Egypt, who dared to nationalise the Suez Canal in 1956, thereby incurring the rage of the British and French investors. The most recent trio to join the ever-lengthening list of reincarnated Hitlers are Saddam Hussein, the ex-President of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinedjad of Iran, and the Syrian President, Bashar al-Assad, with Russia’s Putin on the reserve list.

Naturally, absolute Evil must have its counterpart: selfless Good. That’s us Westerners. We stand for Freedom, Democracy and Human Rights. Whenever they can, Western politicians stress values, and avoid talking about interests. As they despatch their warships or their bombers, they like to give the impression that they are simply implementing a global program of democratisation and aid. Under the banner of such noble motives, the mistakes, oversights, lies and crimes that have, in the Arab-Islamic world alone, cost hundreds of thousands of lives, can be generously overlooked. After all, surely the good guys have the right to punish the baddies, for example by sanctions (with the attendant if unspoken hope that they will bring down said ‘evil’ regime).

Baddies, of course, can come and go as swiftly as sanctions. Those imposed on China after the Tiananmen Square massacre were quietly lifted by Washington as the economic ties between the two super-powers deepened, with Iran and Russia taking on the villain’s mantle (and the sanctions). The election of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the United States is reshuffling the pack once again.

The self-appointed good guys like to believe in their own moral superiority – because they push for freedom in the Ukraine, say, or for human rights in Iran – but the chief purpose of their interventions is geopolitical: to destroy or weaken their opponents. And they continue to believe in the success of their policies – that, for instance, their sanctions forced the Mullahs to negotiate about Iran’s atomic program. Yet this is only partially true. Sooner or later, the West was always going to have to come to an arrangement with Iran, the unavoidable central power in the region.

There is no shortage of evidence that the economic and military resources of the West are stretched to their limits, that American power is on the wane, and that we can no longer simply enforce our wishes upon an increasingly multi-polar world. Yet most politicians continue to act according to the Cold War premise that ‘West is Best’. How else can we explain the ongoing preference for confrontation over cooperation? Why else do they show so little readiness to learn from past mistakes? Has the ‘War on Terror’ defeated Islamist extremism in Afghanistan? In Syria? Iraq? If drone attacks are included, the United States has intervened militarily in seven predominantly Muslim countries since 2001: Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Yemen, Pakistan, Libya and Syria. In which of these states have the lives of the inhabitants improved as a result? Where have stability and security emerged? Is there, in fact, a single Western military intervention that has not resulted in chaos, dictatorship and fresh waves of violence? Without the fall of Saddam Hussein at the hands of a US-led ‘coalition of the willing’ and the ensuing devastation of the Iraqi state under an ill-informed and sectarian occupation force, would Islamic State exist today?

The region from Algeria to Pakistan represents an almost unbroken arc of crisis, plagued by wars, state collapse, stagnation and violence. The causes are numerous, but two stand out. First is the long-standing inability – or reluctance – of the local ruling elites to serve any but their own partisan interests. The slightest opposition is violently suppressed, until at last tensions boil over, as during the Arab Spring revolts in Egypt and Libya. The resulting power vacuum is then filled by a chaotic assortment of generals, militias, and warlords, of clans and tribes, of religious and ethnic groups. Fragmentation, self-destruction and barbarity follow. This is an environment in which jihadi groups thrive, using the Koran and the general distress of the population to justify all forms of arbitrary violence, conquest and terror.

The second cause is the baneful influence of the West since colonial times, not least the arbitrary ‘lines in the sand’ drawn through the Middle East by Britain and France after World War I. In the 1950s, though, a new power became dominant in the region. The consequences of Washington’s interventions – above all of the Tehran coup in 1953 – are still being felt today, even if we in the West have conveniently forgotten them, or overlaid them with the myth of a benevolent, ‘irreplaceable’ superpower.

Let us then start with the past, in order better to understand the present: in Iran.

COUP IN TEHRAN: THE ‘ORIGINAL SIN’

The coup against the democratically elected Prime Minister of Iran, Mohammed Mossadegh, had been minutely planned over months of preparation. The CIA and the British Secret Service, MI6, had left nothing to chance. The aim was clearly stated in the title of a recently released CIA document from 1953:

CAMPAIGN TO INSTALL PRO-WESTERN GOVERNMENT IN IRAN AUTHORITY

TARGET

Prime Minister Mossadeq and his government

OBJECTIVES

Through legal, or quasi-legal, methods, to effect the fall of the Mossadeq government; and

To replace it with a pro-western government under the Shah’s leadership, with Zahedi as its Prime Minister.

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!

Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!