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D R A M A_ Q U E E N Drama
Queen: Where are the farting toys of
yesteryear?
- - - - - - - - - - T A B L E_T A L K Does your child hate going to the dentist? Discuss ways to deal in the Mothers area of Table Talk
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R E C E N T L Y
Second Thoughts: Rolling out the years Marriage among the mullahs The devil in your family room The prisoner of Pennsylvania Avenue My Advent adventure BROWSE THE MOTHERS WHO THINK HOT FLASH ARCHIVES
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Mamafesto
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A Kurd carries his daughter across a footbridge from Iraq to Turkey in the aftermath of the 1991 Gulf War. ____________________- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Airstrikes of mercy A FORMER MIDDLE EAST CORRESPONDENT EXPLAINS HOW SADDAM HUSSEIN TURNED HER FROM A PACIFIST INTO A HAWK. BY GERALDINE BROOKS | SYDNEY, Australia -- Until the Gulf War, I had always been on the pacifist side of the argument in all the conflicts of my lifetime. Vietnam, Panama, the Falklands -- I protested them all. And then in 1988, on a searing summer day, I stepped off a plane in Baghdad and began my acquaintance with a regime of such unfathomable cruelty that it changed my views on the use of force. I learned from Iraqi dissidents about mothers, under interrogation, tortured by the cries of their own starving infants whom they weren't allowed to breast-feed; about thalium, the slow-acting rat poison Saddam Hussein used on his enemies; about Iraqi government employees whose official job description was "violator of women's honor" -- i.e., prison rapist. One bright spring day during the Kurdish uprising, I followed Kurds into the security prison they'd just liberated in northern Iraq. It was dim in the underground cells, so my face was only inches from the wall before I was sure what I was looking at. Long, rusty nails had been driven into the plaster. Around them curled small pieces of human flesh. One withered curve of cartilage looked like part of an ear. I'm home now in my own liberal, pacifist country, Australia. Within a couple of hours of the news of the latest Baghdad bombings, people in Sydney were in the streets, demonstrating against them. Friends were on the phone, upset: "Terrible, isn't it? And at this time of the year! Whatever happened to peace on earth, goodwill to men?" Local pundits argued on the television, decrying American bully-boy tactics against a small and defanged Arab country. I agreed with almost everything they said: Yes, the slaughter and injury of Iraqi civilians is tragic. And yes, the timing of the bombing is the worst kind of political cynicism. And yes, it is questionable what effect this new onslaught will have on Iraq's weapons capability. And yet I disagreed with their conclusion: that this bombing is therefore wrong. If Saddam Hussein has weapons of mass destruction, he will use them. We know that, because he already has. For two years I've studied a haunting photograph of two of his victims: a young Kurdish father prone on a dusty street in Halabja and his infant, still tenderly cradeled in his arms. N E X T_ P A G E: The West's real crimes in Iraq |
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