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Books: Witness from the savage zone: Robert Fisk

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  • Books: Witness from the savage zone: Robert Fisk

    Independent on Sunday (London)
    October 16, 2005, Sunday

    BOOKS: WITNESS FROM THE SAVAGE ZONE;
    THE GREAT WAR FOR CIVILISATION BY ROBERT FISK FOURTH ESTATE £25

    by NEAL ASCHERSON

    Robert Fisk recovers after being beaten by a mob on a road near
    Quetta, Pakistan, 2001 HUSSEIN MALLA/AP


    Robert Fisk is the sort of reporter who walks in the opposite
    direction. I first came across him as an absence, 30 years ago in
    Belfast. We, the pack, had spent the day waiting for the big Paisley
    briefing, but where was Bob? It turned out that he had gone off alone
    to the battlefield of the Boyne, to see what the place and the past
    would say to him. In the first Gulf war, he enraged 'pool' colleagues
    under Army control by hiring an old car, putting on a borrowed helmet
    and driving down forbidden roads until he reached the front. When a
    'facility trip' is laid on for the press corps, Fisk stays behind,
    suspecting " usually rightly " that it's to get the hacks out of the
    way while something interesting happens.

    Right at the end of this book, he describes himself sitting in the
    roadside mud with an Iraqi family, watching as a 40-mile convoy of
    American armour thunders up Highway Eight towards Baghdad. For Fisk,
    it's a moment to reflect on Roman and American empires which have a
    visceral need to 'project power on a massive scale'. For the reader,
    it's almost a caricature: the journalist who wants to see the world
    from down in the muck with the victims, rather than from a tank
    turret as an 'embedded' correspondent.

    Today, Robert Fisk is one of the best-known reporters in the world.
    Long before 11 September, he had an enormous following of readers who
    had come to regard him as the only journalist consistently describing
    the Middle East 'as it is'. He has also accumulated a pack of
    vengeful enemies, longing to discredit and silence him. Not all of
    them are Israelis or American diplomats. Some are fellow-journalists,
    maddened by his gift for being in the right place at the right time.
    (The bomb which changed Near-Eastern history went off down his street
    in Beirut; the dead man with his socks still burning turned out to be
    his friend Rafiq Hariri, ex-prime-minister of Lebanon...)

    For the last 30 years, Fisk has been covering an enormous arc of
    territory which is not just 'the Middle East' but reaches from the
    Moroccan Atlantic to the Punjab with a northward extension into the
    Balkans. Almost all the peoples who live there are Muslim. All of
    them, without exception, have been the objects of imperial conquest
    and colonialism, of cultural suppression and big-power
    frontier-drawing.

    This is a book about what Fisk saw, heard, thought and wrote in those
    years. It is not an autobiography. Apart from his relationship with
    his parents, the door on his private life is locked. Neither is it a
    complete chronicle. Having just written a separate book about them,
    Fisk leaves out the experiences in Lebanon which generated some of
    his best-known writing (his accounts of the Israeli shelling of Qana
    in 1996, for instance). But what remains is overwhelming.

    This is a very long book, allowing Fisk to interleave political
    analysis, recent history and his own adventures with the real stories
    which concern him. These are the sufferings of ordinary people under
    monstrous tyrannies or in criminal, avoidable wars. Fisk reported the
    Iran-Iraq war, the Gulf war of 1991, the Palestine intifadas, the
    Taliban rule in Afghanistan and its sequel as the Americans and their
    allies invaded in 2002, the terror regimes of Saddam, the Shah and
    the ayatollahs, the frenzy of bloodshed in Algeria as Islamists and
    security forces competed to slaughter the innocent, and " of course "
    the Bush-Blair war against Iraq and its outcome. His chapter on the
    1915 Armenian genocide, still unpardonably denied and evaded and not
    only by Turks, revives his famous report from Syria when he stumbled
    across the mass graves at Margada (see extract, above).

    The source of most of this horror, for Fisk, is the post-1918
    carve-up of the Middle East between European powers. 'We' " Britain,
    France and much later America " are responsible. Subtly, Fisk weaves
    this sense of guilt around his own ambiguous feelings for his father,
    a young officer in the Great War for civilisation who became at once
    a cold, bullying husband and a stiffly proud parent. Shame for that
    generation's imperial mistakes, he seems to feel, is heritable, and
    when he is attacked and almost killed by an Afghan refugee mob,
    Fisk's impulse is that they are not to blame. He might have done the
    same to a Westerner, in their place.

    All the same, the cumulative impact of these terrible accounts of
    massacre, torture and almost unimaginable ruthlessness may not be
    what Fisk wants. The case against 'Us' (the West) diminishes; the
    unjust impression that this is a zone of endemic savagery grows
    stronger. He writes with a marvellous resource of image and language.
    His investigative reporting is lethally painstaking (see how he
    pieces together the biography of an American missile which somehow
    came into Israeli hands, was fired at an ambulance and killed an
    innocent Lebanese family).

    But the sense of inescapable doom which builds up in this book is
    misleading. What's missing is a sense that it's not just Fisk but
    most of the world which finds Western policy crazy. Fisk includes
    here several unforgettable, marvellously observed meetings with Osama
    bin Laden. Maybe he should try his talents on a meeting with George W
    Bush.
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