NICK
GRIFFIN
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BACK
TO THE FUTURE
NICK
GRIFFIN, Chairman of the British National Party
www.bnp.org.uk
Examines the parallels between Blair's Iraq adventure
and August 1914
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"It will all be over by Christmas," was the expert
view at the start of the First World War. As the bands played
and the boys in smart new uniforms paraded past cheering crowds
to the train stations, the rulers of every European country
except Switzerland thought of honour and glory, commercial
advantage and increased profits, and the 'need' to thrash
'enemies' with whom they had no fundamental quarrel.
So the civilised world marched happily to war, totally unaware
of the fact that the ensuing carnage would not only claim
millions of lives, but also destroy most of the regimes responsible.
In August 1914 the whole of Europe was dominated by monarchies,
Christianity and deference; but the old certainties were about
to be cut down by the new warfare. Four years later the Crowned
heads lay broken in the mud and the established order was
swept aside. Even for the 'victors', the world was changed
forever.
MODERN DAY PARALLEL
Nearly one hundred years later, the modern rulers of the
Western world are sleep-walking into another world war, absent-mindedly
cheered on by the busy shoppers whose manic credit-financed
consumerism is the only thing propping up the crumbling world
economy. Once again, from the point of view of the ruling
'elite', there are good reasons for a War-to-End - All- ('Terrorist')-Wars:
The economic benefits to be had from knocking out key competitors
are now mirrored by the prospect of dirt-cheap oil from a
puppet regime in Iraq. Where the bosses of Krupps and ICI
saw the chance for extra profits then, high-tech companies
and US oil giants see the same glittering opportunity today.
A quick victory abroad will also, as always, shift popular
attention from politically embarrassing problems at home.
Under cover of a war against evil, Imperially minded leaders
will be able to expand and consolidate their empires. Then
it was a matter of kicking the Germans out of "Britain's"
Africa, this time it's going to be kicking the Palestinians
out of Sharon's Greater Israel. And, for all the key players,
there's the prospect of getting themselves into the history
books. Greed, stupidity and vanity - human nature being what
it is, the rulers who sign the death warrants of the young
generation haven't changed in the slightest. Watch Tony Blair
and George W Bush puff up their chests and the mass media
whip up the war fever. Here we are, right back in August 1914.
NEW RULES AND REALITIES
Of course, the coming war won't be anything like the First
World War in tactical terms. That's the whole point of how
huge and uncontrollable conflicts catch out those who start
them so eagerly. They're all ready to fight the last war,
but changed enemies and the new technologies and tactics at
their disposal mean that things rarely work out as expected.
This is invariably the case even when the devastating form
of the new warfare has already been tried and tested. In 1914
the rulers and their generals had already seen rapid-fire
rifles and machine guns at work from the Sudan to South Africa.
In 2002 we've already seen nerve gas attacks on crowded underground
trains and what vans packed with explosives can do to civilian
targets. The slaughter of British soldiers by Boer marksmen
on Spion Kop showed anyone prepared to think things through
what would happen on the Somme. The Twin Towers and Bali are,
likewise, the shape of the war to come. Just as the Kaiser
and the Prime Minister should have known what hell it would
be on the front line, so Bush and Blair should know that -
this time around - there isn't going to be a front line at
all, but that this generation will still get its grandstand
view of hell.
To compare November 2002 with August 1914 is not to predict
massive Western casualties in any big push against Saddam
Hussein. The odds are that overwhelming US airpower will destroy
Iraq's army every bit as easily as it crushed the Taliban
in Afghanistan. This isn't certain, of course; indeed, the
news that Ukraine has recently supplied Iraq with a $100 million
state-of-the-art ground-to-air defence system seems to have
contributed to President Bush's last minute reversion to diplomacy
and suggestion that Saddam Hussein might not have to go after
all, as long as he complies with all sorts of demands. A desire
to stamp on its elite's 'enemies', coupled with a reluctance
to take any casualties, is making America look less and less
like a would-be International Policeman for the New World
Order, and more and more like a Global Bully - plenty of threats
but no action.
PLAN FOR AMERICAN GLOBAL DOMINATION
That said, the sheer political and media clout of the 'American'
war party is such that the odds are that they'll quickly roast
Bush's cold feet. The war against Iraq, after all, isn't a
spur of the moment whim, but part of a long established plan
which some very powerful people are determined will be put
into practice - and soon. The 'war party' around Bush drew
up its blueprint for the creation of a global 'Pax Americana'
- the first stage of which is to be an attack on Iraq - in
September 2000, before its man even became President. The
document, entitled 'Rebuilding America's Defences: Strategies,
Forces And Resources For A New Century', was drawn up by the
neoconservative think-tank Project for the New American Century
(PNAC).
The plan shows that Bush and his chief cronies, including
Dick Cheney (vice- president), Donald Rumsfeld (defence secretary)
and Paul Wolfowitz (Rumsfeld's deputy), have intended all
along to take military control of the Gulf region, whether
or not Saddam Hussein was in power. It says: "The United
States has for decades sought to play a more permanent role
in Gulf regional security. While the unresolved conflict with
Iraq provides the immediate justification, the need for a
substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends
the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein."
The PNAC report also refers to the use of key allies such
as the UK as "the most effective and efficient means
of exercising American global leadership." Properly translated
this means: "We want cheap oil and to deal with the Middle
Eastern enemies of Israel. But even our stupid voters won't
be too keen to have their sons brought home in body bags,
but fortunately we can rely on Tony Blair to pay the 'blood
price' with British lives."
ZIONIST INFLUENCE
To refer to Israel in this context is, of course, not considered
polite, but it is a fact nevertheless. It most certainly is
not 'anti-Semitic' to make this point, not least because there
have been massive demonstrations in Israel itself by ordinary
Jews who oppose their own government's brutal suppression
of the Palestinians as well as the threatened war against
Iraq. Jewish civil rights activists such as Israel Shamir
have been at the forefront of the campaign to expose the role
of the Zionist cabal around President Bush in pushing for
an attack on Saddam Hussein. The extent of the influence of
the White House Zionist lobby was exposed in The Guardian
on 3rd September, in an article entitled 'Playing Skittles
With Saddam': "The 'skittles theory' of the Middle East
- that one ball aimed at Iraq can knock down several regimes
- has been around for some time on the wilder fringes of politics
but has come to the fore in the United States on the back
of the 'war against terrorism'. \ "Its roots can be traced,
at least in part, to a paper published in 1996 by an Israeli
think-tank, the Institute for Advanced Strategic and Political
Studies. Entitled 'A clean break: a new strategy for securing
the realm', it was intended as a political blueprint for the
incoming government of Binyamin Netanyahu. "The paper
set out a plan by which Israel would 'shape its strategic
environment', beginning with the removal of Saddam Hussein
. To succeed, the paper stressed, Israel would have to win
broad American support."
Furthermore, the paper made it clear that Iraq was only the
first of a number of Middle Eastern skittles that Israel should
aim to knock down; it explained how Syria and Lebanon would
also be dealt with once Saddam Hussein had gone.
The full significance of the document, however, isn't so
much what it said, as who produced it. The Guardian explains:
"The leader of the 'prominent opinion makers' who wrote
it was Richard Perle - now chairman of the Defence Policy
Board at the Pentagon. Also among the eight-person team was
Douglas Feith, a neo-conservative lawyer, who now holds one
of the top four posts at the Pentagon." Two other opinion-makers
in the team were David Wurmser and his wife, Meyrav. David
Wurmser is now at the State Department, as a special assistant
to John Bolton, the under-secretary for arms control and international
security. "With several of the 'Clean Break paper's authors
now holding key positions in Washington, the plan for Israel
to 'transcend' its foes by reshaping the Middle East looks
a good deal more achievable today than it did in 1996. Americans
may even be persuaded to give up their lives to achieve it.
"The six-year-old plan for Israel's 'strategic environment'
remains more or less intact, though two extra skittles - Saudi
Arabia and Iran - have joined Iraq, Syria and Lebanon on the
hit list."
Another well-known and very influential neo-conservative,
Norman Podhoretz, goes even further: "The regimes that
richly deserve to be overthrown . are not confined to the
three singled-out members of the axis of evil (Iraq, Iran,
North Korea). At a minimum, the axis should extend to Syria
and Lebanon and Libya, as well as 'friends' of America like
the Saudi royal family and Egypt's Hosni Mubarak, along with
the Palestinian Authority."
PLAYING WITH FIRE
If this is the 'minimum', one dreads to think of what the
warmongers around Bush would regard as the 'ideal'! The ordinary
public may think that an attack on Iraq over alleged support
for terrorism won't signal the beginning of a new World War,
but the ordinary public in 1914 didn't understand the significance
of Austria's attack on the Serbs over the assassination of
an obscure Archduke either. Whatever happens in the next Iraq
war - and, as already noted, it is quite likely to be a turkey
shoot for the US air force - it will only be the beginning.
For a start, Bush and Co have already drawn up plans for the
military occupation of Iraq. This, it is envisaged, will not
be "over by Christmas," but will last for up to
six years, during which time a combination of sticks and carrots
would be used to "impose a new political culture"
on the defeated nation, just as was done on Germany and Japan
after WW2.
The crucial difference, of course, is that defeated Germany
and Japan had no allies. They had no friendly states in which
resistance fighters could regroup and plan to fight on. They
didn't have any of the weapons - tanks, ships and planes -
with which advanced industrial states wage conventional war.
And members of the broken German and Japanese armed forces
were not at liberty to jet around the world and merge into
German and Japanese communities in London, Paris, Moscow or
Washington DC, so terrorist attacks in the victors' own cities
weren't an option either.
With their plans to bully and invade a string of weak Middle
Eastern states, however, Bush, Blair & Co. are opening
up a whole new can of worms. Whatever they say about this
being essentially political, a "War on Terror",
that's not how it will be seen from the top of the world's
minarets. In picking a fight with the world's one billion
Muslims, the current ruling elite of the West are taking on
a very different kind of enemy and dragging us into a very
different and very unconventional war.
ASYMMETRICAL WARFARE
That doesn't mean, however, that it isn't possible to take
an educated guess at what form the war will take. Just as
several far-sighted British and German military theorists
after World War One dreamt up the blitzkrieg tactics of the
coming rematch, so military theorists have already proposed
ways in which 'asymmetrical warfare' can be used even by weak
countries to defeat the world's last Superpower, the USA.
The key predictive text for the tactics of the coming World
War was written in 1999 by two Senior Colonels in the Chinese
Army, and published with the endorsement of the Chinese government.
The resulting book, 'Unrestricted Warfare', has one basic
aim: to offer China and other 'weak' countries a strategy
to break the United States, without a full-scale invasion,
by using unusual or 'asymmetrical' warfare.
Among the 'new' tactics proposed for 21st century war are
the manipulation of Western media outlets, suicide bombings,
cyber attacks on critical high-tech infrastructure and using
immigrants as a fifth column. Most striking of all, however,
is the prediction that an attack by Osama bin Laden on the
World Trade Center would be the kind of 'unrestricted warfare'
tactic that could bring America to its knees.
That was written back in 1999, but asked about their uncanny
prediction after the event, the Colonels agreed that the unconventional
assaults of September 11th were straight from the pages of
their book and prove that their theory is correct: "The
attacks demonstrated the United State's fragility and weakness
and showed that essentially it is unable to stand attacks
. The United States, a giant tiger, has been dealing with
mice; unexpectedly, this time it was bitten by mice - it has
been wielding a large hammer but has been unable to find the
flea."
Having predicted such problems for the USA, the Colonels
were equally blunt in analysing their long-term impact: "September
11th, 2001, very likely is the beginning of the decline of
the United States as a Superpower." American military
experts are inclined to agree. Maj. Gen. John Singlaub, former
Chief of Staff of US Forces Korea, a man with direct experience
of dealing with the Chinese military in action, warns that:
"The 9/11 attacks may be just the beginning. Many terrorist
nations and groups will try to imitate this operation. China's
war book 'Unrestricted Warfare' will be their text."
THE CLASH OF CIVILISATIONS
The fiery bloodbath in Bali rolled several benefits of such
'unconventional' warfare into one: It was a further devastating
blow to the airlines and tourist industry which form an important
part of the modern Western economy; it will inflict serious
damage on the Indonesian economy, and hence on the chances
of that unstable collection of ethnic and religious groups
remaining under the control of a pro-Western government; and
it made it clear to both the Australians and British that
their governments' insistence on backing America in the Middle
East puts them directly in the firing line.
This last point is the most important. Although the initial
impact of the atrocity was to swing public opinion in both
countries more in favour of war, the long-term effect of such
terrorism, repeated over and over again, will be to sap the
will of the soft-minded, selfish West to continue the fight,
and to turn people against the governments that refuse to
sue for peace.
But this isn't the biggest problem facing our masters. The
real danger of their decision to provoke the Clash of Civilisations
predicted by Samuel Huntington is that, while they are unlikely
to lose militarily, they cannot do other than lose politically.
Win or lose on the battlefield, the liberal Establishment
will lose on the home front. The fatal flaw in their plan
to impose Western ways on the Islamic world at gunpoint is
that they have allowed a significant and growing Muslim minority
into the Western world. In the short term, this raises the
possibility that the kind of xenophobic war hysteria being
whipped up by the likes of the Daily Express and 'Panorama'
might create the kind of mob violence suffered by German and
Italian shopkeepers in British cities in 1914 and 1939.
CIVIL WAR DANGER ACROSS EUROPE
Longer term, and far more serious as a destabilising factor
in a multiracial society, there is the question of how the
Muslim minority will feel when they see their adopted homeland
at war with their co-religionists. What the Koran tells them
about the endless struggle between the Faithful and the Infidels
is something about which - owing to recent additional restrictions
on free speech, enacted by 'New' Labour with the eager backing
of the party formerly known as the Conservatives - I am no
longer at liberty to comment, so I would merely recommend
that you go to your local library and find out for yourself.
But consider the options if 'we' go to war. Either the Iraqis
will once again be exterminated on an industrial scale by
the Yanks and the RAF, in which case the feeling of persecution
and outraged helplessness that is the thing that turns young
Palestinians into suicide bombers will be felt by millions
of Muslims all over the world. What will happen to the diversity
of places like Bradford if or when such bombs start going
off in Britain?
Or they will put up a stiff house-to-house fight, in which
case large numbers of British servicemen will come home in
body bags, and huge numbers of ordinary Brits at home will
be angry and may well be inclined to take that anger out on
the nearest Muslim, even though he or she may well actually
think that Saddam Hussein is a murderous old goat much better
off dead. What will happen in London if Bangladeshi restaurants
suffer the same fate as German-owned shops did in 1914?
In either case, the biggest casualty of the war will not,
for once, be truth, but the relative peace of the liberals'
glorious multicultural society. In Britain, as in France,
Germany, Holland and all the other liberal-run countries populated
by blocks of the 32 million Muslims now estimated to live
in Europe, the Clash of Civilisations heralded by the attack
on Iraq could all too easily become a civil war as well. At
the very least, we will undoubtedly see the native white/Christian
majority hit by the kind of low level extreme fundamentalist
violence that has made us the main victims of racist attacks
and led to the murders of innocents like Ross Parker and Gavin
Hopley.
THE FURTHER COLLAPSE OF 'MULTICULTURALISM'
In many European countries, support for nationalist parties
akin to the BNP already hovers around the 18% mark also achieved
by Steve Batkin in Stoke. Establishment commentators were
quick to put that stunning result, like our advances in Burnley
and Oldham, down to "racial tension" in the areas
in question. Whether that's true is not to be debated here,
but if the liberals believe that a handful of riots last summer
was all it took to turn thousands of ordinary people into
BNP voters, what do they think is going to happen if an extremist
handful of those rioters - let alone any of the 4,000 Al Qaeda-trained
militants officially estimated as living in our country -
decide to bring the war home to Britain?
This is not something that is going to happen next week,
perhaps not even over the next year or so. But it will happen
sooner or later. How could it be otherwise? The US government
is planning to occupy Iraq with the help of 10,000 British
soldiers. The people behind that plan say openly that they
know that the likely result of a 'Western' victory in the
Gulf will be the fall of the House of Saud, resulting in the
need to march into Saudi Arabia as well in order to keep its
oil wealth out of the hands of the Talibanlike regime which
would otherwise take over. That in turn would make likely
that other corrupt pro-American governments in the Islamic
world would fall like so many dominoes: Egypt; the Magreb;
Indonesia; even the narco-nuclear state of Pakistan.
With every new crisis, even a 'Western' 'victory' will produce
fresh problems - a new place where young occupation soldiers
will be easy terrorist targets, another puppet regime to pay
for and prop up, a further load of high octane fuel thrown
on the already raging fire of resentment and hatred of those
who feel defeated and humiliated, wherever they happen to
live. The security that most Westerners took for granted for
forty years or so is over. Mr. Fear is just around the corner,
and everyone knows what he looks like. And all this won't
be over by Christmas, or even in six years' time like the
American neoconservatives hope.
THE ALTERNATIVES
It will go on, and on, and on - Belfast on a global scale
- for a generation. Apart from Armageddon, there are only
three ways in which it can end:
i) The de-Islamification of hundreds of millions of people;
ii) Tensions in the multicultural West leading to the political
defeat of the liberal elites and their replacement by nationalist
governments which will do a peace deal with Islam - "We'll
get out of your part of the world if you'll get out of ours;"
iii) A collapse in US political will and economic viability
leading to a return to isolationism - a cross between the
cut-and-run from Vietnam and the German collapse in 1918,
something which would also quite possibly lead to the political
and cultural eclipse of America's client regimes elsewhere
in the West, and the consequent victory of nationalism.
From the nationalist point of view, "two out of three
ain't bad", especially when the first of the three just
isn't a realistic possibility. It is in this sense, not in
terms of the possibility of massive casualties among our servicemen
or of a 'dirty' nuclear device going off in Trafalgar Square,
that we're back in August 1914. We are sliding into a war
which our soldiers will probably 'win', but which our masters
can only lose. Just as the social order that the Victorians
took for granted died in the mud of Flanders, so the multicultural
Utopia of the liberal elite will die as the sounds of the
dusty conflict in the Middle East echo through the streets
of the West.
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