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Why Harold Pinter is afraid of Americans
The following is Pinter’s acceptance speech for his honorary
degree from the University of Turin
I am deeply honoured to receive this degree from
such a great university. Earlier this year I had a major operation
for cancer. The operation and its after-effects were something of
a nightmare. I felt I was a man unable to swim bobbing about under
water in a deep dark endless ocean. But I did not drown and I am
very glad to be alive. However, I found that to emerge from a personal
nightmare was to enter an infinitely more pervasive public nightmare—the
nightmare of American hysteria, ignorance, arrogance, stupidity
and belligerence; the most powerful nation the world has ever known
effectively waging war against the rest of the world. “If
you are not with us you are against us” President Bush has
said. He has also said, “We will not allow the world’s
worst weapons to remain in the hands of the world’s worst
leaders.” Quite right. Look in the mirror chum. That’s
you.
The U.S. is at this moment developing advanced systems of “weapons
of mass destruction” and is prepared to use them where it
sees fit. It has more of them than the rest of the world put together.
It has walked away from international agreements on biological and
chemical weapons, refusing to allow inspection of its own factories.
The hypocrisy behind its public declarations and its own actions
is almost a joke.
The United States believes that the 3,000 deaths in New York are
the only deaths that count, the only deaths that matter. They are
American deaths. Other deaths are unreal, abstract, of no consequence.
The 3,000 deaths in Afghanistan are never referred to.
The hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children dead through U.S. and
British sanctions, which have deprived them of essential medicines,
are never referred to.
The effect of depleted uranium, used by America in the Gulf War,
is never referred to. Radiation levels in Iraq are appallingly high.
Babies are born with no brain, no eyes, no genitals. Where they
do have ears, mouths or rectums, all that issues from these orifices
is blood.
The 200,000 deaths in East Timor in 1975 brought about by the Indonesian
government, but inspired and supported by the United States, are
never referred to.
The half a million deaths in Guatemala, Chile, El Salvador, Nicaragua,
Uruguay, Argentina and Haiti, in actions supported and subsidised
by the United States are never referred to.
The millions of deaths in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia are no longer
referred to.
The desperate plight of the Palestinian people, the central factor
in world unrest, is hardly referred to.
But what a misjudgement of the present and what a misreading of
history this is.
People do not forget. They do not forget the death of their fellows,
they do not forget torture and mutilation, they do not forget injustice,
they do not forget oppression, they do not forget the terrorism
of mighty powers. They not only don’t forget. They strike
back.
The atrocity in New York was predictable and inevitable. It was
an act of retaliation against constant and systematic manifestations
of state terrorism on the part of the United States over many years,
in all parts of the world.
In Britain the public is now being warned to be “vigilant”
in preparation for potential terrorist acts. The language is in
itself preposterous.
How will—or can—public vigilance be embodied? Wearing
a scarf over your mouth to keep out poison gas? However, terrorist
attacks are quite likely, the inevitable result of our Prime Minister’s
contemptible and shameful subservience to the United States. Apparently
a terrorist poison gas attack on the London Underground system was
recently prevented. But such an act may indeed take place. Thousands
of school children travel on the London Underground every day. If
there is a poison gas attack from which they die, the responsibility
will rest entirely on the shoulders of our Prime Minister. Needless
to say, the Prime Minister does not travel on the underground himself.
The planned war against Iraq is in fact a plan for premeditated
murder of thousands of civilians in order, apparently, to rescue
them from their dictator.
The United States and Britain are pursuing a course which can lead
only to an escalation of violence throughout the world and finally
to catastrophe.
It is obvious, however, that the United States is bursting at the
seams to attack Iraq. I believe that it will do this—not just
to take control of Iraqi oil—but because the U.S. administration
is now a bloodthirsty wild animal. Bombs are its only vocabulary.
Many Americans, we know, are horrified by the posture of their government
but seem to be helpless.
Unless Europe finds the solidarity, intelligence, courage and will
to challenge and resist U.S. power Europe itself will deserve Alexander
Herzen’s definition (as quoted in the Guardian newspaper in
London recently) “We are not the doctors. We are the disease.”
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