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US Forces Like The Crusaders Before Them Prisoners in Own Fortresses

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  • US Forces Like The Crusaders Before Them Prisoners in Own Fortresses

    The US forces, like the Crusaders before them, are prisoners in their own fortresses

    The Independent - United Kingdom
    Apr 02, 2005

    Robert Fisk


    I drove Pat and Alice Carey up the coast of Lebanon this week to look
    at some castles. Pat is a builder from County Wicklow, brave enough to
    take a holiday with his wife in Beirut when all others are thinking of
    running away. But I wanted to know what he thought of 12th-century
    construction work.

    How did he rate a Crusader keep? The most beautiful of Lebanon's
    castles is the smallest, a dinky-toy palisade on an outcrop of rock
    near the village of Batroun. You have to climb a set of well-polished
    steps - no hand-rails, for this is Lebanon - up the sheer side of
    Mseilha castle and then clamber over doorsills into the dark, damp
    interior.

    So we padded around the battlements for half an hour. "Strongly made
    or they wouldn't be still here," Pat remarked. "But you wouldn't find
    any company ready to put up the insurance. And in winter, it must have
    been very, very cold."

    And after some minutes, he looked at me with some intensity. "It's
    like being in a prison," he said.

    And he was right. The only view of the outside world was through the
    archers' loopholes in the walls. Inside was darkness. The bright world
    outside was cut off by the castle defences. I could just see the
    splashing river to the south of the castle and, on the distant
    horizon, a mountainside. That was all the defenders - Crusaders or
    Mamlukes - would have seen. It was the only contact they had with the
    land they were occupying.

    Up at Tripoli is Lebanon's biggest keep, the massive Castle of St
    Gilles that still towers ominously over the port city with its
    delicate minarets and mass of concrete hovels. Two shell holes -
    remnants of Lebanon's 1975- 1990 civil war - have been smashed into
    the walls, but the interior of the castle is a world of its own; a
    world, that is, of stables and eating halls and dungeons. It was empty
    - the tourists have almost all fled Lebanon - and we felt the
    oppressive isolation of this terrible place.

    Pat knew his Crusader castles. "When you besieged them, the only way
    to get inside was by pushing timber under the foundations and setting
    fire to the wood. When they turned to ash, the walls came tumbling
    down. The defenders didn't throw boiling oil from the ramparts. They
    threw sand on to the attackers. The sand would get inside their armour
    and start to burn them until they were in too much pain to fight. But
    it's the same thing here in Tripoli as in the little castle. You can
    hardly see the city through the arrow slits. It's another - bigger -
    prison."

    And so I sat on the cold stone floor and stared through a loophole
    and, sure enough, I could see only a single minaret and a few square
    metres of roadway. I was in darkness. Just as the Crusaders who built
    this fortress must have been in darkness.

    Indeed, Raymond de Saint-Gilles spent years besieging the city,
    looking down in anger from his great fortress, built on the "Pilgrim's
    Mountain", at the stout burghers of Tripoli who were constantly
    re-supplied by boat from Egypt. Raymond himself died in the castle,
    facing the city he dreamed of capturing but could not live to enter.

    And of course, far to the east, in the ancient land of Mesopotamia,
    there stand today equally stout if less aesthetic barricades around
    another great occupying army. The castles of the Americans are made of
    pre-stressed concrete and steel but they serve the same purpose and
    doom those who built them to live in prisons.

    >From the "Green Zone" in the centre of Baghdad, the US authorities
    and their Iraqi satellites can see little of the city and country
    they claim to govern. Sleeping around the gloomy republican palace of
    Saddam Hussein, they can stare over the parapets or peek through the
    machine-gun embrasures on the perimeter wall - but that is as much as
    most will ever see of Iraq.

    The Tigris river is almost as invisible as that stream sloshing past
    the castle of Mseilha. The British embassy inside the "Green Zone"
    flies its diplomats into Baghdad airport, airlifts them by helicopter
    into the fortress - and there they sit until recalled to London.

    Indeed, the Crusaders in Lebanon - men with thunderous names like
    Tancred and Bohemond and Baldwin - used a system of control remarkably
    similar to the US Marines and the 82nd Airborne. They positioned their
    castles at a day's ride - or a day's sailing down the coast in the
    case of Lebanon - from each other, venturing forth only to travel
    between their keeps.

    And then out of the east, from Syria and also from the Caliphate of
    Baghdad and from Persia came the "hashashin", the "Assassins" - the
    Crusaders brought the word back to Europe - who turned the Shia faith
    into an extremist doctrine, regarding assassination of their enemies
    as a religious duty.

    Anyone who doubts the relevance of these "foreign fighters" to
    present- day Iraq should read the history of ancient Tripoli by that
    redoubtable Lebanese-Armenian historian Nina Jidejian, which covers
    the period of the Assassins and was published at the height of the
    Lebanese civil war.

    "It was believed that the terrorists partook of hashish to induce
    ecstatic visions of paradise before setting out to perform their
    sacred duty and to face martyrdom..." she writes. "The arrival of the
    Crusaders had added to ... latent discontent and created a favourable
    terrain for their activities." Ouch.

    One of the Assassins' first victims was the Count of Montferrat,
    leader of the Third Crusade who had besieged Acre in 1191 - "Saint
    Jean d'Acre" to the Christians - and who met his death at the hands of
    men sent by the Persian "terrorist" leader, Hassan-i Sabbah. The
    Assassins treated Saladin's Muslim army with equal scorn - they made
    two attempts to murder him - and within 100 years had set up their own
    castles around Tripoli. They established a "mother fortress" from
    which - and here I quote a 13th- century Arab geographer - "the
    Assassins chosen are sent out thence to all countries and lands to
    slay kings and great men".

    And so it is not so hard, in the dank hallways of the Castle of St
    Gilles to see the folly of America's occupation of Iraq. Cut off from
    the people they rule, squeezed into their fortresses, under constant
    attack from "foreign fighters", the Crusaders' dreams were destroyed.

    Sitting behind that loophole in the castle at Tripoli, I could even
    see new meaning in Osama bin Laden's constant reference to the
    Americans as "the Crusader armies". The Crusades, too, were founded on
    a neo-conservative theology. The knights were going to protect the
    Christians of the Holy Land; they were going to "liberate" Jerusalem -
    "Mission Accomplished" - and ended up taking the spoils of the Levant,
    creating petty kingdoms which they claimed to control, living
    fearfully behind their stone defences. Their Arab opponents of the
    time did indeed possess a weapon of mass destruction for the
    Crusaders. It was called Islam.

    "You can see why the Crusaders couldn't last here," Pat said as we
    walked out of the huge gateway of the Castle of Saint Gilles. "I
    wonder if they even knew who they were fighting."

    I just resisted asking him if he'd come along on my next trip to
    Baghdad, so I could hear part two of the builder's wisdom.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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