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Why we do not want to be a US MILITARY OUTPOST.

category international | anti-war / imperialism | opinion/analysis author Friday July 25, 2003 19:09author by Tim Houriganauthor email tim_hourigan at hotmail dot com Report this post to the editors

Just some of the reasons Ireland said NO to Bush.

I originally wrote this for a group in Canada who are trying to prevent the US military from gaining access to the airport on Prince Edward Island in Canada.
I guess now is as good a time as any to publish it here.
galaxyafteremergencyatshannon.jpg

WHY WE DO NOT WANT TO BE A US MILITARY OUTPOST.
by Tim Hourigan

When Ireland became a link in a military chain, we didn't just help to inflict horrific violence on strangers in far away places, we also sacrificed our own sovereignty, rule of law, civil rights, the security and safety of our citizens, and the accountability of our elected representatives. These are some of the less obvious victims of Ireland's assistance to the US-led invasion of Iraq.

(While protesting the presence of the US military at Shannon my friends and I have been on the receiving end of some harsh criticism. "You're soft on Saddam", "You're just anti-American" "you wouldn't be allowed to do this in Baghdad", "You're making Shannon a target".
Of course our accusers won't stand for counter argument.
I didn't supply weapons, money or beef to Saddam Hussein's regime. The US, UK and Irish Governments can't honestly say that.
Some of my best friends are American, and I spent some of last week with Ramsey Clark, former US attorney general, and Scott Ritter, a former US
Marine and Weapons Inspector. Granted, I don't like Bush & Co, but that leaves 99% of the population that I would gladly shake hands with.
I wouldn't be allowed to protest in Baghdad, maybe so. But in little old Ireland people have been restricted from protesting the war, some even arrested for peaceful protest.
As for making Shannon a target, that's got to be the worst joke yet.
While our own government was denying it all and our media looked the other way, the papers in the US were writing fluff pieces about US troops enjoying the welcome in Ireland en route to the Gulf. But of course, terrorists don't
read US newspapers, only Irish ones.)

In the midst of all the jingoistic war cries it was considered rude to raise the reasons why we should refuse the US military access to Shannon, a civilian airport in a supposedly neutral and independent country.
Like many other outposts, we had to learn the lessons for ourselves.
We do not want the blood of innocent Iraqis on our hands but the stain is there regardless.
We gave runways, fuel and airspace to Bush's war machine so we must bear some of the blame for the loss of innocent life, the destruction of the
infrastructure and poisoning of the eco-system of Iraq with 'Depleted' Uranium.
And, of course, we helped to move some of those 18 yr old US
troops off to a living hell under false pretences. The reality long outlives
the hype.
The presence of the US military makes Shannon a target for violent
reprisal. Parking military flights between civilian airlines makes
human shields of the civilians using Shannon. (This is in fact a war crime
under article 8 (2) (b) (xxiii) of the Rome Conference on the International
Criminal Court)
If Irish citizens can be considered expendable in order to accommodate
Washington's wishes then we have lost any sense of accountability from
our elected representatives and have become nothing more than a useful
outpost for Bush's war machine.
Some of the military flights scheduled to land at Shannon declared
emergencies on approach. When the emergency crews got to the aircraft,
they were met by soldiers with automatic rifles who refused them entry and
dealt with the fire themselves. It seems the secrecy of the cargo was more
important than the safety of Shannon town and the brave men and women
who answered that mayday call. (We don't know what was on that plane but it
had no business at a civilian airport if the military would rather lose it
than disclose it.)
Recently obtained government documents reveal that missiles, guns and
ammunition have been passing through our airports and airspace on a
regular basis.
This introduces a creeping corruption into the emergency services.
Under pressure to allow this practice they have to keep silent, disregard
basic rules of safety at the airport and stand by while hazardous cargo sits
so close to the terminal. The police are then ordered into the middle of
all this. While turning a blind eye to war crimes, they are told to keep
peaceful protestors at bay and turn the airport into a police state
(in 2002 there were 30 Gardai / Police at Shannon. Now there
are 140, plus the 12th battalion of the army)

(The culture of secrecy was so bad that it took the establishment of a
peace camp to shine a light on what was really going on there. People
lived on the side of the road keeping vigil and recording the transit of
military personnel and cargo flights.)

Like peace activists in the USA and elsewhere, we have found our civil
liberties restricted. Peaceful protests at the airport are being pushed
further and further back. The police invoke laws that don't exist to
justify this, and refuse to apply the laws which do exist. More than a
dozen people are now banned from the county. (note: one photographer
was assaulted and arrested and had his film confiscated because the
authorities didn't like his pictures, two of us were arrested for holding a
banners, and 10 people were arrested for a sit down protest, - including 2
minors, an Iraqi woman and her Irish husband.)
The airport is a public place and our Constitution guarantees us the right to assemble and protest peacefully in a public place, Yet on more than one occasion the police have prevented this from happening.
We now have the police, Irish army and fire service deployed with guns
and water cannons to deter us from protesting, while behind them weapons of war move on unhindered. Planespotting has been "discouraged". The law is
clear on this and yet no arrests or weapons inspections are made.
Undermining the law is a dangerous thing for a democracy.
The local community has become polarised. loyalties have been split along economic lines. Some of the airport workers who opposed the war were afraid to speak out for fear of reprisal.
It is not even clear what the economic benefit is. We sell some fuel and duty-free, but we've also been subsidising the war effort by paying aviation fees that the military refused to pay (about 1 MILLION EURO per annum)
On top of that, we have the staggering cost of increased security at the airport. Someone is making money, but it doesn't look good for the taxpayer. We have yet to see if Iraqi citizens can sue us for assisting the illegal invasion of their country and slaughter of their relatives.
Our foreign policy now appears to be dictated from Washington.
Despite the upheaval this country went through to break away from the British Empire, our new leaders have sold us once more into servitude. Countries that admired us for our independent, anti-imperial history musty now shake their heads in sadness. I think especially of those smaller middle-eastern countries that welcomed the appointment of Ireland to a temporary seat
on the UN security council only to see us tip our cap in deference to the US and UK warmongers. Decades of trust has been thrown away.
The US military claims to defend democracy, not to practice it. A foreign power will use our territory as it fits their needs, not as it fits our laws. to believe otherwise is to ignore history.

(The denials made by the Irish Foreign Minister in relation to the possible illegal transit of weapons through Shannon are similar to those of
Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki of Japan when trying to defuse the scandal of US nuclear weapons being carried on US ships in Japanese ports.)

Related Link: http://www.refuelingpeace.org
author by BlackPopepublication date Thu Jul 31, 2003 02:02author address author phone Report this post to the editors

... at least try and add SOME coherence to your efforts to change the subject.

I am not talking about Africa, Asia or the US, Spondeen, but rather about a geographical location much closer to (your) home - i.e., the vast wastes of cyberspace between your ears

If you want to attempt honesty, surprise me by just answering this one simple question -

Q - how do you propose to repay your individual portion of the supposed Irish obligation to USA?

Engage in frank and HONEST conversation, Spondeen, without fear of what we both might learn!

Schalom, BP

author by shawneenpublication date Wed Jul 30, 2003 17:13author address author phone Report this post to the editors

ah, Seanin Og beag, be honest about it, yourself.
Wouldn't Saddam Hussein only be a footnote in history if he wasn't supported by US hawks and their ilk?
technology to track opponents, precursor chemicals, weapons, money beef.
his 'dealers' and 'pushers' are innocent in your opinion? or are we mistaken Seanin?

author by Seáinínpublication date Tue Jul 29, 2003 23:01author address author phone Report this post to the editors

If you're looking for someone to blame for the way things are and you hit in the US, you're not seeing the wood for the trees.

Cast your mind over africa, Asia, South America. All those lousy repressive murderous political systems.

Come on fella, be honest about it.

author by Kevpublication date Tue Jul 29, 2003 19:35author address author phone Report this post to the editors

take that pesky beef off our hands, and give many jobs to Irish nurses and such like in the bad old days of the 80's?

Surely we owe him something in return for such gestures too?

author by BlackPopepublication date Tue Jul 29, 2003 05:23author address author phone Report this post to the editors

- don't flatter yourself; the above challenge to you was not a rebuttal of anything, as you had made no argument. It was merely a request for clarification of your strange ideas.

I notice that you studiously avoid answering the serious question on how you would propose to honour your individual portion of this supposed obligation to the U(nilateral) S(tate) of A(ggression).

This question will, however, continue to haunt you, forever!

Your evasion now prompts a further few questions -

1) could it be that you intend to DISHONOUR your individual obligation to the U(nilateral) S(tate) of A(ggression), after having preached to the unwashed masses here? That is tantamount to theft, Spondeen, double-plus evil, deep pit burning sulphur everlasting nut-roasting, of PAIN!!

2) or is it laziness or cowardice that makes you slink away from any serious reply or discussion, or just both?

3) is your mind really as weak as the verbiage you regularly spew into Indymedia comments?

4) do you represent, in microcoosm, the Great White Hope for the Future of Proxy-Imperialism's Pimping of Ireland? i.e. short on argument, long-winded on bleating "Butsch good - Sanity evil".

Schalom my friend, BlackPope


PS: The suggestion that the US was a refuge for several of your ancestors etc. is most fascinating - that must equal quite a few bath-tubs-full of blood you owe Butsch by now, n'est-ce pas?
Who must bleed to repay your cumulative ancestral debt, Spondeen?
Did any of your ancestors by any chance flee to North Korea, Spondeen? In that case you may have a conflict of creditors interested in cashing in on that blood you owe.

author by Seáinínpublication date Sat Jul 26, 2003 21:23author address author phone Report this post to the editors

The sea-divided Gael and all that. The US was a refuge for our ancestors.

In view of Black Pope's substantive rebuttal of my comments I will withdraw from this particular thread.

author by BlackPopepublication date Sat Jul 26, 2003 05:56author email BlackPope at operamail dot comauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

BTW: Spondeen, what exactly are those 'ties' and 'obligations' you mention?
Anything to do with the 'special relationship' between an ÜberPimp and his crack-whore dependants?
You DO like bondage, don't you, Spondeen?

Would you,

A) explain (in comprehensible and non-rabid terms) how you propose to settle your individual portion of this supposed obligation to Imperialism's #1 Pimp?

or

B) if you owe some debt, arrange to honour it from your own funds - preferably in blood.

Yes, YOUR OWN precious white blood from your own precious white yankee ass. Which knows no honour.

Some seriously senseless human self-sacrifice is being called for here. Do not fail us.

or

C) go become a US-GameBoy-StormTrooper. You will enjoy the perks - silicone-inflated gonads as courage replacement therapy, M-16 penis-extension with no jerkoff limit and the obligatory Ray-Ban wraps around empty head, until such times as a hard-working sniper of the heroic resistance of Country -X- pops a cap in your sorry ass and sends you back home to Mommy curled-up like some bad bacon inside a US-flag-patterned zipper-bag.

Schalom, BP

PS: Spondeen, I like you - really, I'm the best friend you've ever had. That's why I must say this to you, because I REALLY do like and pity you.

Please respond (also) by e-mail so we can establish our fond relationship even more firmly.
Thank you, my friend.

author by Seáinínpublication date Sat Jul 26, 2003 04:02author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Bertie's just demonstrating that we should acknowledge our ties and obligations to the US. I wouldn't call it servitude. Go live in Cuba if you want to know about servitude. Tosser.

author by Kevpublication date Sat Jul 26, 2003 02:51author address author phone Report this post to the editors

"But of course, terrorists don't read US newspapers, only Irish ones"

Hahahaha. So true Tim! Every sleeper cell of 'Al-Queda' (ahem) gets their daily subscription to the Irish Times, Indo and Examiner. Sure they wouldn't be seen dead (suicide bombed?) without them. It's ALL your fault, yes YOU PERSONALLY TIM, for making our beloved island a target for international terrorism. Hang your head in shame boyo. because of YOU Tim, people now associate Ireland with state terrorism!! You and your hippy commie friends just couldnt leave it when things were nice and rosy and we had got rid of our own terrorist problem. No longer did ignorant tourists live in fear of being blown to shite by the 'depraved' ra/uff, they could concentrate on such traditional irish ventures as chasing the leprechaun and paying too much for drink. But TIM and your HIPPY MATES, you ruined this scenario! I hope you are so proud.

"It is not even clear what the economic benefit is".

Well didn't they tell the workers at shannon that if didnt assist the war effort they would face 'consequences'? And now what does our glorious leader want to do, only break up aer rianta (as a first step to privatisation). But rest assured, they'll blame it all on the anti-war movement. Agian, hahahaha! Keiran Allen was right when he said that the best allies the workers in shannon would have are those in the anti-war movement. (much as i hate to say a swimmer was right :P)

"Despite the upheaval this country went through to break away from the British Empire, our new leaders have sold us once more into servitude."

We've never left servitude. Always in debt to the Big C. Always willing to bow down to different masters. Always willing to be rogered. Alwaaays, Coca-Cola!

"Undermining the law is a dangerous thing for a democracy."

But this happens every day in every country. Can we take it from this that democracy doesn't actually exist? Well, I'd say yeah.

Excellent article Tim. Funny and anger inducing. Keep it up.

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