The Real Weapons of Mass Destruction in Iraq

By Bouthaina Shaaban

24 April 2008

   It has lately leaked that when Collin Powell visited the Middle East in the aftermath of invading Iraq in 2004 he asked some Arab leaders not to receive Iraqi scientists.  This reveals that the Bush government, officially, and in a predetermined way,  targeted Iraqi scientists,  thinkers and doctors,  especially those who refused to migrate to the US. Later on, we read in the media, that scientists who refused to move to the U.S. and work there were physically liquidated in Iraq.   The majority of Iraqi scientists refused to leave Iraq and thus they faced their imminent death. Some highly qualified Iraqi doctors were kidnapped and taken to Israel.   Although the killing of Iraqi scientists and university professors used to be shown as part and parcel of the absurd violence in Iraq. closer follow up to what is happening shows that explosions aimed first and foremost to kill a doctor,  a scientist or a university professor and tens of people who happened to be nearby were killed with him.  Thus the killing of  a doctor,  a physicist or a chemist seems as if it happened by chance,  but there was nothing coincidental in these killings.  The Americans had a checklist of Iraqi scientists who should be killed,  all of them are prominent in science,  medicine,  technology or even languages or art,  music, and especially those who are renowned for their national feelings.  This has also been done in order to achieve what James Baker,  the American secretary of state, then,  threatened to achieve,  which is "to knock Iraq back to the Middle Ages".

    The news about Iraqi scientists are similar to the news of journalists and cameramen targeted in the West Bank and Gaza in Palestine.   Israel perpetrates ugly massacres against Palestinian people, killing children and women, in order to kill a cameraman or a well-known journalist,  with the aim of preventing real news about these massacres from reaching people everywhere in the world.  The  latest example of which is the killing of the Palestinian cameraman working for Reuters,  Fadal Shana (25 years) with 19 other Palestinians in Gaza on April 16, 2008.  B'Tselem movement in Israel announced next day that the cameraman may have been killed deliberately and the report emphasized that there was no violence next to him,  and his camera showed fighting faraway from him and then went black when a missile hit him.  Israel has previously tried to kill Fadal Shana in 2006 when they hit his car with a missile,  but they did not hit him,  but this time they did, and killed with him 19 other Palestinians including many children.

    Hence,  the violence and killing taking place in Iraq and Palestine are not coincidental.  Both the US in Iraq, and Israel in Palestine, have checklists of the best Arab men and women they want to kill, in order to drain this nation and its ability to gather its factors of strength and compete on the international arena.  The real objective of the American invasion of Iraq is to destroy the great scientific,  technological and intellectual wealth that Iraq possessed, which could have put Iraq on the same footing with the industrially advanced countries, especially as Iraq was the one Arab country that possessed great human and material resources.  Iraq could've provided an example for Arab countries to march on the way of scientific and technological progress which is prohibited to the Arabs.  Different pretexts are used in order to target Arab countries which are on the threshold of real scientific and technological achievement.

   The major problem that the Arabs have in facing these devious wars which target their identity,  intellect and their human and intellectual resources, is that the Arab thinkers have not devoted the necessary time and energy to study the depth and dimensions of this attack on our nation,  and thus they have not yet formulated terms of reference to deal with all aspects of this challenge facing the Arab nation.  Instead they deal with parts and particles of this challenge here and there, without having a clear vision of the big picture and how it should be approached comprehensively and within a reasonable timetable.

    Arab reactions to what they are suffering, as a nation, are still partial and varied and far from being effective.  Yet, Arab cultural activities are, by and large, cross-borders.  Hardly any week passes without an Arab cultural activity takeing place in one Arab country or another.  On re-reading the news of last week, alone, we see that Arab women sociologists from 12 Arab countries have met in Sousa, Tunisia.  Arab cartoonists are meeting in Saudi Arabia under the banner,  "Controversial Art".  Abu Dhabi commission for culture and heritage is organizing an Arab musical festival in which the best Arab music from most Arab countries are played.

     My conclusion is that despite all military  and political pressures on Arab countries, all Arabs still think culturally as one nation.  This in itself is the state targeted by our enemies.  This is precisely what assassinations,  and, so-called targeted killings, aim to destroy.  Hence the propaganda invoked by the U.S,  prior to its invasion of Iraq,  and the misleading Israeli propaganda, about terrorism are unfounded.   The real target for all the violence and destruction to which Arab people are subjected from Iraq to Palestine, Somalia,  Sudan and Yemen, is the cultural, historical and civilized identity of this Arab nation under pretexts of democracy and freedom▪