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『亜空間通信』663号(2003/09/17)
【改憲派読売と統一教会系米紙WTがパウエル国務相ハラブジャ訪問を報じた悪臭紛々の狙い目】
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●●緊急連絡:9/12下記阿修羅戦争掲示板のみならず阿修羅全体ダウン移動中●●
転送、転載、引用、訳出、大歓迎!
忠犬ポチで通るようになった小泉が、自民党総裁選を目前にして、「自衛隊」の処遇を巡る改憲論を打ち出した。その折りも折り、飼い主のアメリカでイラク「戦争」の後始末役に浮上したパウエル米国務長官の「ハラブジャ訪問」を、日本の改憲派の先鋒、「右」の読売新聞と、アメリカの「右」で、しかも、統一教会系の悪名高いワシントンタイムズ(WT)が、同時に報じた。
こりゃあ、気味が悪い。悪臭紛々である。以下の「旧フセイン政権の毒ガス攻撃」に関しては、すでに、本通信でも、日本の毎日新聞の「記者の目」記事などの疑惑沸騰状況を、以下で紹介した。
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http://www.jca.apc.org/~altmedka/aku587.html
『亜空間通信』587号(2003/05/02)
【イラクが自国のクルド人を毒ガス大量虐殺の大嘘を日本大手メディアも暴露開始】
[後略]
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この「大嘘」、湾岸戦争でもブッシュの親父が、サダム・フセインからパレスチナ問題を持ち出され、ダブル・スタンダード、二枚舌を批判され、どぎつい切り返しに使ったプロパガンダ、デマゴギー、「嘘も百万遍言えば真実になる」の類の典型である。しかも、餓鬼ブッシュの国防相、ラムズフェルドも、イラク「戦争」の苦境逃れにこのデマを再度使った。これを、またもや、三度目の「お役」に立てようというのである。
狙いはまさに、言わずと知れた「破落戸の奥の手」である。以下の提灯記事そのものが自ら語るように、「大量破壊兵器拡散阻止を大義に旧フセイン政権を打倒したしたイラク戦争の正当性を強調」するために繰り出した「伝家の宝刀」なのである。
はいっ、もう一度繰り返す。「イラク戦争の正当性を強調」するために他ならないのである。
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http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/world/news/20030916i201.htm
パウエル長官、毒ガス悲劇の町ハラブジャを訪問【バグダッド=岡本道郎】イラク訪問中のパウエル米国務長官は15日、1988年にで住民約5000人が犠牲となったイラク北部のクルド人の町・ハラブジャを訪れた。
長官は、犠牲者の集団墓地で行われた式典で、「世界はもっと早く(フセイン政権の残虐行為に対して)行動すべきだった。ここで88年に起きたことはもう2度と起きない」と演説し、大量破壊兵器拡散阻止を大義に旧フセイン政権を打倒したイラク戦争の正当性を強調した。
クルド民主党(KDP)のマスード・バルザニ、クルド愛国同盟(PUK)のジャラール・タラバニ両党首も同行。クルド人地域では、イラクの他の地域とは異なり、米国は「解放者」として好感されており、住民らは国務長官を熱狂的に歓迎した。
(2003/9/16/10:07 読売新聞
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はてはて、読売新聞の「岡本道郎」記者は、本当に「バグダッド」から、この記事を東京の読売新聞の「本社」に送ったのであろうか。現地のハラブジャ発なら、意味が分かるのではあるが。
以下は、統一教会系の悪名高いワシントンタイムズ(WT)が、現地のハラブジャ発として報じた記事である。短いので、全文を紹介する。
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http://www.washingtontimes.com/world/20030916-125140-4170r.htm
September 16, 2003
Powell visits site of Iraqi gas attackBy David R. Sands
THE WASHINGTON TIMESHALABJA, Iraq -- The slowly settling cloud, local residents told Secretary of State Colin L. Powell yesterday, had a sweetish, sugary odor, like overripe fruit.
But when the gaseous load from Iraqi military planes descended on this Kurdish town in the foothills of Iraq's Hawraman Mountains on a clear March afternoon 15 years ago, lungs seized up, eyes went dark, and thousands of men, women and children began to die.
With Mr. Powell and U.S. civilian administrator L. Paul Bremer in attendance, Kurdish leaders and hundreds of simply dressed Halabja residents yesterday dedicated a new museum and ceremonial grave site to the victims of the chemical gas attack.
The ceremony, conducted under a fierce sun, provided a symbolic and political boost to the struggling U.S. program for the reconstruction of Iraq on the second and last day of Mr. Powell's first visit to Iraq since the spring war.
The attack, part of a systematic campaign of chemical warfare against restive Kurdish centers by Ali Hassan al-Majid, Saddam Hussein's notorious military adviser known as "Chemical Ali," provided all the moral evidence needed to justify the U.S.-led campaign to oust Saddam, said Barham Salih, a top official of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), one of the two main Iraqi Kurdish parties.
"Halabja is a reminder of what indifference to tyranny means," said Mr. Salih, at his back a stylized, alabaster-white figure of a grieving woman dominating a field of 1,076 small white tombstones -- one for each area family who lost at least one relative in the 1988 attack.
"Here is the proof; Halabja is the proof of Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction," he said.
Massoud Barzani, head of the rival Kurdish Democratic Party, told the crowd of about 150: "For those who doubt the legitimacy [of the war], let them come and see Halabja."
For U.S. officials, Halabja provided a useful reinforcement for their argument that the war had removed a cruel and murderous tyrant from the region, even if the Bush administration's claims about more recent Iraqi weapons programs face sharp doubts around the globe.
Mr. Powell pushed the point in his own remarks, saying he would not presume to tell the victims of the chemical attack of their suffering, of the nature of the ousted regime, or of their struggle in the face of slow international reaction to the attack.
"What I can tell you is that what happened in 1988 is never going to happen again," he said. "Chemical Ali is in jail. Saddam is running and hiding and he is going to keep running and hiding until we catch him or he dies.
"Beyond that," he said, "the system that spawned them ... is smashed and will never return."
Mr. Powell said later the crowd would have been much bigger, but local authorities limited attendance out of security and organizational concerns.
The Powell visit produced some political dividends as well, as PUK leader Jalal Talabani gave a strong endorsement of the U.S. blueprint for the return of political sovereignty to a new Iraqi government.
A U.S. draft resolution before the U.N. Security Council has met with opposition from France and other leading powers, who are pushing for a faster handover of power to the Iraqi Governing Council and a smaller role for Mr. Bremer's civilian authority.
Mr. Talabani said he agreed with Mr. Powell that France's six-month timetable to sovereignty was much too fast, given the economic and political chores facing the country.
"We can't be in a hurry to make the steps for democracy," Mr. Talabani said. "We need a mature plan and we fully agree with the U.S. timetable."
But Mr. Powell admitted that Kurdish officials are deeply wary about any new Turkish troops in Iraq as part of the international peacekeeping mission. Turkey worries that growing autonomy for Iraq's ethnic Kurdish minority will fuel separatist feelings across the border.
There are "serious sensitivities associated with Turkish troops" among Kurdish leaders here, Mr. Powell said, adding that the United States would continue to work the issue.
Support for the United States was near-universal on the streets of Halabja, a far cry from the tightly scripted, security-heavy visit Mr. Powell made the day before in Baghdad.
"Thank you President Bush and Prime Minister Blair for our freedom," read large banners outside the soaring pavilion housing the museum.
A woman shrouded in a full-length black chador displayed a small printed sign in English reading: "We love America. Thank you."
Mr. Powell mingled with Halabja residents after his grave-site remarks, receiving flowers from children and inspecting framed portraits of those killed in the 1988 attack.
Halabja and surrounding villages are still dealing with the aftershocks of the attack, which killed an estimated 5,000 Kurds, according to Sandy Hodgkinson, a human rights official in the coalition authority who is investigating war crimes and other human rights violations by the Saddam regime.
Inside the museum, Mr. Powell lit a candle to the victims, escorted by a young man who still has difficulty breathing and an elderly woman who remains sightless since that March afternoon.
The woman, Suhayba Abdul Rahman, suffered losses typical of many in the close-knit town: Her husband and five children all died in the attack.
The museum features artwork dedicated to the victims as well as walls filled with photos of the dead and dying, slumped where they fell on city street corners or piled onto the back of flatbed trucks on eerily deserted streets.
A room-sized tableau depicted an extended family lying in the rocky soil beside a large cooking pot, husbands and wives, mothers and babies, even pets, birds and farm animals stretched out on the floor in a smoky haze.
Mr. Powell also met with Kuwaiti officials briefly before returning home yesterday evening.
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最後に、再三再四の憎まれ愚痴ではあるが、一応、これも記録に止めて置く。
「ホロコーストの大嘘」と同様に、この種の「破落戸の奥の手」は、徹底的な暴露なしには、葬り去ることは不可能である。何度騙されても懲りない「お人好し」では済まされない「阿呆」どもが、特に、破落戸だけではなく偽善系左翼の餌食にも、なり続けているからである。
この件でも、不勉強な癖に傲慢な「偽の友」の正体暴露が、不可欠なのである。ああ、疲れる。
以上。