No
one says it quite like John Pilger
TERROR
IN BRITAIN: WHAT DID THE PRIME MINISTER KNOW?
John
Pilger
31
May, 2017
The
unsayable in Britain's general election campaign is this. The causes
of the Manchester atrocity, in which 22 mostly young people were
murdered by a jihadist, are being suppressed to protect the secrets
of British foreign policy.
Critical
questions - such as why the security service MI5 maintained terrorist
"assets" in Manchester and why the government did not warn
the public of the threat in their midst - remain unanswered,
deflected by the promise of an internal "review".
The
alleged suicide bomber, Salman Abedi, was part of an extremist group,
the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, that thrived in Manchester and was
cultivated and used by MI5 for more than 20 years.
The
LIFG is proscribed by Britain as a terrorist organisation which seeks
a "hardline Islamic state" in Libya and "is part of
the wider global Islamist extremist movement, as inspired by
al-Qaida".
The
"smoking gun" is that when Theresa May was Home Secretary,
LIFG jihadists were allowed to travel unhindered across Europe and
encouraged to engage in "battle": first to remove Mu'ammar
Gadaffi in Libya, then to join al-Qaida affiliated groups in Syria.
Last
year, the FBI reportedly placed Abedi on a "terrorist watch
list" and warned MI5 that his group was looking for a "political
target" in Britain. Why wasn't he apprehended and the network
around him prevented from planning and executing the atrocity on 22
May?
These
questions arise because of an FBI leak that demolished the "lone
wolf" spin in the wake of the 22 May attack - thus, the panicky,
uncharacteristic outrage directed at Washington from London and
Donald Trump's apology.
The
Manchester atrocity lifts the rock of British foreign policy to
reveal its Faustian alliance with extreme Islam, especially the sect
known as Wahhabism or Salafism, whose principal custodian and banker
is the oil kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Britain's biggest weapons
customer.
This
imperial marriage reaches back to the Second World War and the early
days of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. The aim of British policy
was to stop pan-Arabism: Arab states developing a modern secularism,
asserting their independence from the imperial west and controlling
their resources. The creation of a rapacious Israel was meant to
expedite this. Pan-Arabism has since been crushed; the goal now is
division and conquest.
In
2011, according to Middle East Eye, the LIFG in Manchester were known
as the "Manchester boys". Implacably opposed to Mu'ammar
Gadaffi, they were considered high risk and a number were under Home
Office control orders - house arrest - when anti-Gadaffi
demonstrations broke out in Libya, a country forged from myriad
tribal enmities.
Suddenly
the control orders were lifted. "I was allowed to go, no
questions asked," said one LIFG member. MI5 returned their
passports and counter-terrorism police at Heathrow airport were told
to let them board their flights.
The
overthrow of Gaddafi, who controlled Africa's largest oil reserves,
had been long been planned in Washington and London. According to
French intelligence, the LIFG made several assassination attempts on
Gadaffi in the 1990s - bank-rolled by British intelligence. In March
2011, France, Britain and the US seized the opportunity of a
"humanitarian intervention" and attacked Libya. They were
joined by Nato under cover of a UN resolution to "protect
civilians".
Last
September, a House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee
inquiry concluded that then Prime Minister David Cameron had taken
the country to war against Gaddafi on a series of "erroneous
assumptions" and that the attack "had led to the rise of
Islamic State in North Africa". The Commons committee quoted
what it called Barack Obama's "pithy" description of
Cameron's role in Libya as a "shit show".
In
fact, Obama was a leading actor in the "shit show", urged
on by his warmongering Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, and a
media accusing Gaddafi of planning "genocide" against his
own people. "We knew... that if we waited one more day,"
said Obama, "Benghazi, a city the size of Charlotte, could
suffer a massacre that would have reverberated across the region and
stained the conscience of the world."
The
massacre story was fabricated by Salafist militias facing defeat by
Libyan government forces. They told Reuters there would be "a
real bloodbath, a massacre like we saw in Rwanda". The Commons
committee reported, "The proposition that Mu'ammar Gaddafi would
have ordered the massacre of civilians in Benghazi was not supported
by the available evidence".
Britain,
France and the United States effectively destroyed Libya as a modern
state. According to its own records, Nato launched 9,700 "strike
sorties", of which more than a third hit civilian targets. They
included fragmentation bombs and missiles with uranium warheads. The
cities of Misurata and Sirte were carpet-bombed. Unicef, the UN
children's organisation, reported a high proportion of the children
killed "were under the age of ten".
More
than "giving rise" to Islamic State - ISIS had already
taken root in the ruins of Iraq following the Blair and Bush invasion
in 2003 - these ultimate medievalists now had all of north Africa as
a base. The attack also triggered a stampede of refugees fleeing to
Europe.
Cameron
was celebrated in Tripoli as a "liberator", or imagined he
was. The crowds cheering him included those secretly supplied and
trained by Britain's SAS and inspired by Islamic State, such as the
"Manchester boys".
To
the Americans and British, Gadaffi's true crime was his iconoclastic
independence and his plan to abandon the petrodollar, a pillar of
American imperial power. He had audaciously planned to underwrite a
common African currency backed by gold, establish an all-Africa bank
and promote economic union among poor countries with prized
resources. Whether or not this would have happened, the very notion
was intolerable to the US as it prepared to "enter" Africa
and bribe African governments with military "partnerships".
The
fallen dictator fled for his life. A Royal Air Force plane spotted
his convoy, and in the rubble of Sirte, he was sodomised with a knife
by a fanatic described in the news as "a rebel".
Having
plundered Libya's $30 billion arsenal, the "rebels"
advanced south, terrorising towns and villages. Crossing into
sub-Saharan Mali, they destroyed that country's fragile stability.
The ever-eager French sent planes and troops to their former colony
"to fight al-Qaida", or the menace they had helped create.
On
14 October, 2011, President Obama announced he was sending special
forces troops to Uganda to join the civil war there. In the next few
months, US combat troops were sent to South Sudan, Congo and the
Central African Republic. With Libya secured, an American invasion of
the African continent was under way, largely unreported.
In
London, one of the world's biggest arms fairs was staged by the
British government. The buzz in the stands was the "demonstration
effect in Libya". The London Chamber of Commerce and Industry
held a preview entitled "Middle East: A vast market for UK
defence and security companies". The host was the Royal Bank of
Scotland, a major investor in cluster bombs, which were used
extensively against civilian targets in Libya. The blurb for the
bank's arms party lauded the "unprecedented opportunities for UK
defence and security companies."
Last
month, Prime Minister Theresa May was in Saudi Arabia, selling more
of the £3 billion worth of British arms which the Saudis have used
against Yemen. Based in control rooms in Riyadh, British military
advisers assist the Saudi bombing raids, which have killed more than
10,000 civilians. There are now clear signs of famine. A Yemeni child
dies every 10 minutes from preventable disease, says Unicef.
The
Manchester atrocity on 22 May was the product of such unrelenting
state violence in faraway places, much of it British sponsored. The
lives and names of the victims are almost never known to us.
This
truth struggles to be heard, just as it struggled to be heard when
the London Underground was bombed on July 7, 2005. Occasionally, a
member of the public would break the silence, such as the east
Londoner who walked in front of a CNN camera crew and reporter in
mid-platitude. "Iraq!" he said. "We invaded Iraq. What
did we expect? Go on, say it."
At
a large media gathering I attended, many of the important guests
uttered "Iraq" and "Blair" as a kind of catharsis
for that which they dared not say professionally and publicly.
Yet,
before he invaded Iraq, Blair was warned by the Joint Intelligence
Committee that "the threat from al-Qaida will increase at the
onset of any military action against Iraq... The worldwide threat
from other Islamist terrorist groups and individuals will increase
significantly".
Just
as Blair brought home to Britain the violence of his and George W
Bush's blood-soaked "shit show", so David Cameron,
supported by Theresa May, compounded his crime in Libya and its
horrific aftermath, including those killed and maimed in Manchester
Arena on 22 May.
The
spin is back, not surprisingly. Salman Abedi acted alone. He was a
petty criminal, no more. The extensive network revealed last week by
the American leak has vanished. But the questions have not.
Why
was Abedi able to travel freely through Europe to Libya and back to
Manchester only days before he committed his terrible crime? Was
Theresa May told by MI5 that the FBI had tracked him as part of an
Islamic cell planning to attack a "political target" in
Britain?
In
the current election campaign, the Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has
made a guarded reference to a "war on terror that has failed".
As he knows, it was never a war on terror but a war of conquest and
subjugation. Palestine. Afghanistan. Iraq. Libya. Syria. Iran is said
to be next. Before there is another Manchester, who will have the
courage to say that?
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