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Hitchens on Leftist Stupidity

by Karmone
Stupid stupid leftiests
An Interview with Christopher Hitchens: Adieu to the Left
By Johann Hari
JohannHari.com | October 4, 2004


To many of Christopher Hitchens' old friends, he died on September 11th 2001. Tariq Ali considered himself a comrade of Christopher Hitchens for over thirty years. Now he speaks about him with bewilderment. "On 11th September 2001, a small group of terrorists crashed the planes they had hijacked into the Twin Towers of New York. Among the casualties, although unreported that week, was a middle-aged Nation columnist called Christopher Hitchens. He was never seen again," Ali writes. "The vile replica currently on offer is a double."

This encapsulates how many of Hitchens' old allies - a roll-call of the Left's most distinguished intellectuals, from Noam Chomsky to Alexander Cockburn to (until his premature death last year) Edward Said - view his transformation. On September 10th, he was campaigning for Henry Kissinger to be arraigned before a war crimes tribunal in the Hague for his massive and systematic crimes against humanity in the 1960s and 1970s. He was preparing to testify in the Vatican - as a literal Devil's Advocate - against the canonisation of Mother Theresa, who he had exposed as a sadistic Christian fundamentalist, an apologist for some of the world's ugliest dictatorships, and a knowing beneficiary of corporate fraud. Hitchens was sailing along the slow, certain route from being the Left's belligerent bad boy to being one of its most revered old men.

And then a hijacked plane flew into the Pentagon - a building which stands just ten minutes' from Hitchens' home. The island of Manhattan became engulfed in smoke. Within a year, Hitchens was damning his former comrades as "soft on Islamic fascism," giving speeches at the Bush White House, and describing himself publicly as "a recovering ex-Trotskyite." What happened?

When I arrive, he is reclining in his usual cloud of Rothmans' smoke and sipping a whisky. "You're late," he says sternly. I begin to flap, and he laughs. "It's fine," he says and I give him a big hug. On the morning of September 11th, once I had checked everybody I knew in New York was safe, I thought of Hitch who had become a friend since he encouraged my early journalistic efforts. He had been campaigning against Islamic fundamentalism for decades. I knew this assault this would blast him into new political waters - and I buckled a mental seatbelt for the bumpy ride ahead.

I decide to open with the most basic of questions. Where would he place himself on the political spectrum today? "I don't have a political allegiance now, and I doubt I ever will have again. I can no longer describe myself as a socialist. I miss it like a lost limb." He takes a sip from his drink. "But I don't regret anything. I'm still fighting for Kissinger to be brought to justice. The socialist movement enabled universal suffrage, the imposition of limits upon exploitation, and the independence of colonial and subject populations. Its achievements were real, and I'm glad I was part of it. Where it succeeded, one can be proud of it. Where it failed - as in the attempt to stop the First World War and later to arrest the growth of fascism - one can honourably regret its failure."

He realised he was not a socialist any longer around three years ago. "Often young people ask me for political advice, and when you are talking to the young, you mustn't bullshit. It's one thing when you are sitting with old comrades to talk about reviving the left, but you can't say that to somebody who is just starting out. And what could I say to these people? I had to ask myself - is there an international socialist movement worth the name? No. No, there is not. Okay - will it revive? No, it won't. Okay then - but is there at least a critique of capitalism that has a potential for replacing it? Not that I can identify."

"If the answer to all these questions is no, then I have no right to go around calling myself a socialist. It's more like an affectation." But Hitch - there are still hundreds of causes on the left, even if the ?socialist' tag is outdated. You used to write about acid rain, the crimes of the IMF and World Bank, the death penalty... It's hard to imagine you writing about them now. He explains that he is still vehemently against the death penalty and "I haven't forgotten the 152 people George Bush executed in Texas." But the other issues? He seems to wave them aside as "anti-globalisation" causes - a movement he views with contempt.

He explains that he believes the moment the Left's bankruptcy became clear was on 9/11. "The United States was attacked by theocratic fascists who represents all the most reactionary elements on earth. They stand for liquidating everything the left has fought for: women's rights, democracy? And how did much of the left respond? By affecting a kind of neutrality between America and the theocratic fascists." He cites the cover of one of Tariq Ali's books as the perfect example. It shows Bush and Bin Laden morphed into one on its cover. "It's explicitly saying they are equally bad. However bad the American Empire has been, it is not as bad as this. It is not the Taliban, and anybody - any movement - that cannot see the difference has lost all moral bearings."

Hitchens - who has just returned from Afghanistan - says, "The world these [al-Quadea and Taliban] fascists want to create is one of constant submission and servility. The individual only has value to them if they enter into a life of constant reaffirmation and prayer. It is pure totalitarianism, and one of the ugliest totalitarianisms we've seen. It's the irrational combined with the idea of a completely closed society. To stand equidistant between that and a war to remove it is?" He shakes his head. I have never seen Hitch grasping for words before.

Some people on the left tried to understand the origins of al-Quadea as really being about inequalities in wealth, or Israel's brutality towards the Palestinians, or other legitimate grievances. "Look: inequalities in wealth had nothing to do with Beslan or Bali or Madrid," Hitchens says. "The case for redistributing wealth is either good or it isn't - I think it is - but it's a different argument. If you care about wealth distribution, please understand, the Taliban and the al-Qaeda murderers have less to say on this than even the most cold-hearted person on Wall Street. These jihadists actually prefer people to live in utter, dire poverty because they say it is purifying. Nor is it anti-imperialist: they explictly want to recreate the lost Caliphate, which was an Empire itself."

He continues, "I just reject the whole mentality that says, we need to consider this phenomenon in light of current grievances. It's an insult to the people who care about the real grievances of the Palestinians and the Chechens and all the others. It's not just the wrong interpretation of those causes; it's their negation." And this goes for the grievances of the Palestinians, who he has dedicated a great deal of energy to documenting and supporting. "Does anybody really think that if every Jew was driven from Palestine, these guys would go back to their caves? Nobody is blowing themselves up for a two-state solution. They openly say, 'We want a Jew-free Palestine, and a Christian-free Palestine.' And that would very quickly become, 'Don't be a Shia Muslim around here, baby.'" He supports a two-state solution - but he doesn't think it will solve the jihadist problem at all.

Can he ever see a defeat for this kind of Islamofascism? "This kind of theocratic fascism will never die because we belong to a very poorly-evolved mammarian species. I'm a complete materialist in that sense. We're stuck with being the product of a very sluggish evolution. Our pre-frontal lobes are too small and our adrenaline glands are too big. Our fear of the dark and of death is very intense, and people will always be able to profit from that. But nor can I see this kind of fascism winning. They couldn't even run Afghanistan. Our victory is assured - so we can afford to be very scrupulous in our methods."

But can he see a time when this kind of jihadist fever will be as marginalised as, say, Nazism is now, confined to a few reactionary eccentrics? "Not without what that took - which is an absolutely convincing defeat and discrediting. Something unarguable. I wouldn't exclude any measure either. There's nothing I wouldn't do to stop this form of fascism."

He is appalled that some people on the left are prepared to do almost nothing to defeat Islamofascism. "When I see some people who claim to be on the left abusing that tradition, making excuses for the most reactionary force in the world, I do feel pain that a great tradition is being defamed. So in that sense I still consider myself to be on the Left." A few months ago, when Bush went to Ireland for the G8 meeting, Hitchens was on a TV debate with the leader of a small socialist party in the Irish dail. "He said these Islamic fascists are doing this because they have deep-seated grievances. And I said, 'Ah yes, they have many grievances. They are aggrieved when they see unveiled woman. And they are aggrieved that we tolerate homosexuals and Jews and free speech and the reading of literature.'"

"And this man - who had presumably never met a jihadist in his life - said, 'No, it's about their economic grievances.' Well, of course, because the Taliban provided great healthcare and redistribution of wealth, didn't they? After the debate was over, I said, 'If James Connolly [the Irish socialist leader of the Easter Risings] could hear you defending these theocratic fascist barbarians, you would know you had been in a fight. Do you know what you are saying? Do you know who you are pissing on?'"

Many of us can agree passionately with all that - but it is a huge leap to actually supporting Bush. George Orwell - one of Hitchens' intellectual icons - managed to oppose fascism and Stalinism from the Left without ever offering a word of support for Winston Churchill. Can't Hitch agitate for a fight against Islamofascism without backing this awful President?

He explains by talking about the origins of his relationship with the neconservatives in Washington. "I first became interested in the neocons during the war in Bosnia-Herzgovinia. That war in the early 1990s changed a lot for me. I never thought I would see, in Europe, a full-dress reprise of internment camps, the mass murder of civilians, the reinstiutution of torture and rape as acts of policy. And I didn't expect so many of my comrades to be indifferent - or even take the side of the fascists."

"It was a time when many people on the left were saying 'Don't intervene, we'll only make things worse' or, 'Don't intervene, it might destabilise the region,'" he continues. "And I thought - destabilization of fascist regimes is a good thing. Why should the left care about the stability of undemocratic regimes? Wasn't it a good thing to destabilize the regime of General Franco?"

"It was a time when the left was mostly taking the conservative, status quo position - leave the Balkans alone, leave Milosevic alone, do nothing. And that kind of conservatism can easily mutate into actual support for the aggressors. Weimar-style conservatism can easily mutate into National Socialism," he elaborates. "So you had people like Noam Chomsky's co-author Ed Herman go from saying 'Do nothing in the Balkans,' to actually supporting[ital] Milosevic, the most reactionary force in the region."

"That's when I began to first find myself on the same side as the neocons. I was signing petitions in favour of action in Bosnia, and I would look down the list of names and I kept finding, there's Richard Perle. There's Paul Wolfowitz. That seemed interesting to me. These people were saying that we had to act." He continues, "Before, I had avoided them like the plague, especially because of what they said about General Sharon and about Nicaragua. But nobody could say they were interested in oil in the Balkans, or in strategic needs, and the people who tried to say that - like Chomsky - looked ridiculous. So now I was interested."

There are two strands of conservatism on the U.S. Right that Hitch has always opposed. The first was the Barry Goldwater-Pat Buchanan isolationist Right. They argued for "America First" - disengagement from the world, and the abandonment of Europe to fascism. The second was the Henry Kissinger Right, which argued for the installation of pro-American, pro-business regimes, even if it meant liquidating democracies (as in Chile or Iran) and supporting and equipping practitioners of genocide.

He believes neoconservatism is a distinctively new strain of thought, preached by ex-leftists, who believed in using US power to spread democracy. "It's explicitly anti-Kissingerian. Kissinger hates this stuff. He opposed intervening in the Balkans. Kissinger Associates were dead against [the war in] Iraq. He can't understand the idea of backing democracy - it's totally alien to him."

"So that interest in the neocons re-emerged after September 11th. They were saying - we can't carry on with the approach to the Middle East we have had for the past fifty years. We cannot go on with this proxy rule racket, where we back tyranny in the region for the sake of stability. So we have to take the risk of uncorking it and hoping the more progressive side wins." He has replaced a belief in Marxist revolution with a belief in spreading the American revolution. Thomas Jefferson has displaced Karl Marx.

But can we trust the Bush administration - filled with people like Dick Cheney, who didn't even support the release of Nelson Mandela - to support democracy and the spread of American values now? He offers an anecdote in response. There is a new liberal-left heroine in the States called Azar Nafisi. Her book Reading Lolita in Tehran documents an underground feminist resistance movement to the Iranian Mullahs that concentrated on reading great - and banned - works of Western literature. "And who is this book by an icon of the Iranian resistance dedicated to? [Deputy Secretary of Defence] Paul Wolfowitz, the bogeyman of the left, and the intellectual force behind [the recent war in] Iraq."

With the fine eye for ideological division that comes from a life on the Trotskyite Left, Hitch diagnoses the intellectual divisions within the Bush administration. He does not ally himself with the likes of Cheney; he backs the small sliver of pure neocon thought he associates with Wolfowitz. "The thing that would most surprise people about Wolfowitz if they met him is that he's a real bleeding heart. He's from a Polish-Jewish immigrant family. You know the drill - Kennedy Democrats, some of the family got out of Poland in time and some didn't make it, civil rights marchers? He impressed me when he was speaking at a pro-Israel rally in Washington a few years ago and he made a point of talking about Palestinian suffering. He didn't have to do it - at all - and he was booed. He knew he would be booed, and he got it. I've taken time to find out what he thinks about these issues, and it's always interesting."

He gives an account of how the neocon philosophy affected the course of the Iraq war. "The CIA - which is certainly not neoconservative - wanted to keep the Iraqi army together because you never know when you might need a large local army. That's how the U.S. used to govern. It's a Kissinger way of thinking. But Wolfowitz and others wanted to disband the Iraqi army, because they didn't want anybody to even suspect that they wanted to restore military rule." He thinks that if this philosophy can become dominant within the Republican Party, it can turn U.S. power into a revolutionary force.

I feel simultaneously roused by Hitch's arguments and strangely disconcerted. Why did Hitch so enthusiastically back the administration's bogus WMD arguments - arguments he still stands by? I think of the Bush administration's denial of global warming, the hideous 'structural adjustment' programmes it rams down the throats of the world's poor (including Iraq's), its description of Ariel Sharon as "a man of peace"? Why intellectually compromise on all these issues and back Bush?

Bosnia was not the only precedent for Hitch's reaction to 9/11. He was disgusted by the West's slothful, grudging reaction to the fatwa against his friend Salman Rushdie. Back in 1989, he was writing about the "absurdity" of "seeing Islamic fundamentalism as an anti-imperial movement." He was similarly appalled by the American Left's indulgence of Bill Clinton's crimes, including the execution of a mentally disabled black man and the bombing of a pharmaceutical factory in Sudan that led to the deaths of more than 10,000 innocent Sudanese people. This brought him into close contact with the Clinton-hating Right - and made him view their opponents with disgust.

And so the separation of Hitch and the organized Left occurred. Is it permanent? Nobody was a better fighter for left-wing causes than Hitch. Nobody makes the left-wing case against Islamofascism and Ba'athism better than him today. Yet he undermines these vital arguments by backing Bush and indulging in wishful thinking about the Republicans.

As I luxuriate in the warm bath of his charisma, I want to almost physically drag him all the way back to us. He might be dead to the likes of Tariq Ali but there is still a large constituency of people on the left who understand how abhorrent Islamic fundamentalism is. Why leave us behind? I stammer that I can't imagine him ever settling down on the American Right. He pauses, and I desperately hope that he will agree with me. "Not the Buchanan-Reagan Right, no," he says. There is a pause. I expect him to continue, but he doesn't.

Back in the mid-1980s, Hitch lambasted a small U.S. magazine called the Partsian Review for its "decline into neoconservatism". I don't think Hitch is lost to the Left quite yet. He will never stop campaigning for the serial murderer Henry Kissinger to be brought to justice, and his hatred of Islamic fundamentalism is based on good left-wing principles. But it does feel at the end of our three-hour lunch like I have been watching him slump into neoconservatism. Come home, Hitch - we need you.

by Robert B. Livingston (Robert.B.Livingston [at] gmail.com)
Like Hitchens, I am disturbed by the gulf between the words, character, and intentions of our leaders today.

Erich Fromm wrote this advice in an essay on "Great Shams":

"...words, in and by themselves, have no reality, except in terms of the context in which they are used, in terms of the intentions and the character of the one who uses them.."

Beyond the merits and weaknessess of arguments coming from all sides in the political spectrum today-- it has become ever more clear to me that a new humanitarian political movement must emerge to replace the paralysis that is gripping our society, and world today.

One sometimes gets a whiff of such a new movement when hearing the words of incredible individuals like Arundhati Roy. And I would unequivocably add -- Ralph Nader and his running mate, Peter Camejo who describe their independent presidential campaign as a campaign for a Humanitarian Democracy.

I think Mr. Hitchens is seeking answers. His extremism in his quest for the truth is exemplary-- if questionably productive at this time.

My suggestion for him is to read or re-read Fromm's ideas about Radical Humanism: A belief that mankind is indeed evolving, that people are a part of nature endowed with the capability to fulfill their most productive potentialities if they so choose, and key: that they should do so without illusions.

My biggest problem with Socialists as they exist, or don't exist today, with the intellectuals of the mainstream political left (a shallow New Age Left), and even with the neocons who ignore the on-the-ground sufferring of innocent people-- is that Erich Fromm ideas are virtually unknown to them today.

When Bush speaks of "Compassion" and Kerry of "Character"-- I, like Fromm (who with great care) suggested we do, look at their faces and analyze the depth of what lies behind their words-- which I find severely wanting.

For those interested in Erich Fromm's ideas a good introduction is to be found by reading his Credo which can be accessed under the subtitle "Fromm's Life and Work" at

http://www.erich-fromm.de/e/index.htm

For a thorough understanding of what fueled 9/11 a re-reading of his book, The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness is vital.









by aaron
one would think listening to hitchens that the wars he exhorted the left to support were some smashing success.

one can be clear-eyed about the dangers of islamism while understanding that the US invasion and occupation of Iraq only feeds the ranks of islamist terror outfits. indeed, the US--going back to the early 80s through today--has been Osama Bin Laden's most consistent foreign ally in his quest to marshal an army for a new caliphate. hitchens, in his complacent 'i'm so smart' way, thinks he's scored a slam-dunk against the "left" when he points out that most of the the leading islamists are invariably from the middle or ruling classes. what he doesn't address is the fact that poverty and widespread desperation facilitate their recruiting efforts.

there's so much self-aggrandizing garbage in this piece that one could spend a day picking it apart.

hitchen's arguments are as lardy as his stomach has become.

by ...
when will poor old Hitchens get his head out of his ass?
by not fooled
The problem with the Left isn't occasional turncoats like Hitchens, it's that Leftism has proven to be a fraud. Since 1917, Leftists have made excuses for the extreme authoritarianism of their favorite heros-of-the-moment. Since the definitive demise of real existing socialism around 1990, the Left has been in an identity crisis. Is it any real wonder that cynical blowhards like Hitchens has finally wised up to the sham? And the best he can do is switch sides like that other scumbag Horowitz (and the rest of that generation)? Who's next? Who cares. The trouble is that the flimsy ideological justifications for war, imperial adventures, the brutual extraction of capital from workers and the natural world that the Left has promoted for the past 150 years is finally catching up to these fools. The Left has failed in terms of both the individual and the natural world; its ideologues have nowhere else to turn but another pro-capitalist ideology, having long before jettisoned any possible adherence to mass revolutionary proletarian self-activity. I say good riddance to bad garbage--it's even clearer now where Hitchens stands. Before his "conversion" he was a counterrevolutionary(a Trotskyist--supporter of the suppression of insurgent anarchist Ukraine and the authentic revolutionaries of Kronstadt) masquerading as a radical; now we know him as an out-and-out counterrevolutionary. See you at the barricades motherfucker.
by snicker
exactly the problem with the part of the left that's in crisis:
"a Trotskyist--supporter of the suppression of insurgent anarchist Ukraine and the authentic revolutionaries of Kronstadt"

dude, the "masses" just don't know or give a shit what the hell you're talking about. i mean, they don't remember vietnam, even (and especially) as it's replaying, minus the foliage.

head out of ass time: your turn! the u.s. left hasn't been stronger since the 60s, until now, and it's only just begun. instead of taking advantage of this-here opportunity to be heard, you're still talking about, what, 1920 was it? dude, like, a century ago.

take only one clue from clinton (he did get reelected): yesterday's so gone, they said it twice in a row.
by not fooled
Dude, what the hell? Was my post intended for "the masses"? I doubt very much that any of them are interested in the snide comments being tossed back and forth by us. My comments on Hitchens and other ex-Trotskyists (and ex-Stalinists, et al) were meant for the few semi-intelligent people who might actually care what Leninism and Trotskyism have meant IN PRACTICE--specifically, counterrevolution (if by revolution we mean mass proletarian self-activity, which is exactly how I mean it). The split in the First International hasn't been resolved either, by the way. You might think that this so-called strenght of the Left is a positive sign, but I cannot concur. The Left has been bankrupt for years, finally some of the more notorious rats are abandonding the sinking ship, and you think that there's more strength left in the Left? The only authentically revolutionary game in town left comes from those factions and tendencies that never hitched (pun intended) their horses to the wagon of Lenin, specifically anarchism and libertarian communism. Identification with any of the failed projects and experiments of authoritarian socialism/Leninism condemns those fools to irrelevance. My invocation of Kronstadt and libertarian Ukraine was meant to embarrass those creeps. I'm only interested in history insofar as it can inform our present choices of allies and collaborators in truly revolutionary projects. All Leninsts have to be able to "explain" their suppression of Kronstadt and the Ukraine just as all Christians must be able to "explain" the Crusades and the Inquisition. If they did it once, they'll do it again. I, for one, refuse to be fooled even once. The Left perpetually loses because they have short memories--the ruling class has memories that stretch over many generations, and they learn every step of the way. Draw your own conclusions.

by elitism by any other name
smells the same to all nonparticipants.

stop talking different ways to different people as if everything's all parsed off and no one will notice.

maybe then you'll stop sounding so phony to all you would persuade, wherever their position in relation to your preconceived notions.
by not fooled
Clearly I need to make everything totally explicity to you, dude. The exchanges that occur on this site (and most others on the web) take place among people with a specialized knowledge base, in this case radical politics. "The masses" (whoever they are) hardly ever bother to read the news posts, let alone the hyper-specialized exchanges. I assume that semi-intelligent people frequent this site (and I recognize that is extremely presumptuous on my part), hence my reference. No disrespect to the people here or not here was meant. The reality is that normal (non-political) people don't care about politics in the same way your or I do, and that's fine with me. I don't understand why you think that smack of "elitism"; and unless you define what you mean by it, the term means nothing to me--it's just another piece of jargon. And I speak just like I write, so there's no difference in how I speak to various people. What are my "preconceived notions" and how'd you become psychic?
by right here
"And I speak just like I write, so there's no difference in how I speak to various people."

but the rest of the post is about how you're speaking differently here than you would to "normal" people, i.e. less.....

so which is it?
by aaron
Look how successful Hitchens' strategy for defeating "islamofascism" has been in Iraq:

Sympathy for al-Zarqawi grows among Iraqis amid U.S. airstrikes
By Hannah Allam
Knight Ridder Newspapers
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Once reviled as the man who brought beheadings to Iraq, Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is gaining support among Iraqis who are outraged over the trail of razed neighborhoods and dead civilians left by the U.S. military's anti-insurgent offensives this month.


The trademark black banner of al-Zarqawi's Monotheism and Jihad group typically hangs in the background of grainy videos that show foreign hostages in Iraq meeting grisly deaths at the hands of terrorists.


These days, the ominous flag also pops up in a Baghdad neighborhood known for daily shootouts between Islamic militants and American forces. When insurgents burned a U.S. armored vehicle there recently, locals stuffed the black banner in the vehicle's smoldering gun barrel. In an anti-American demonstration not long ago in the northwest city of Samarra, which is now the object of a joint U.S.-Iraqi military offensive, demonstrators carried the al-Zarqawi group's flag in broad daylight through public streets for the first time.


Many Iraqis explained the fledgling support for al-Zarqawi by citing a popular Arabic proverb: "Me and my brother against my cousin; me and my cousin against a stranger."


"The banners are a reaction to what the Americans did and what they are still doing in Fallujah and Samarra, with bombings and killings," said Sheik Hassan al Niemi of the Muslim Scholars Association, a conservative Sunni Muslim group that opposes the American presence in Iraq. "Why not have foreign fighters here? When the Americans came, they didn't come alone. They brought their allies. Why is it a crime against us if other Arabs stand with Iraqis? They're our brothers."


In a crowded Baghdad square known as the Thieves' Market for its array of stolen wares, vendors said they sold at least a hundred Monotheism and Jihad hostage videos every day. Titles for sale this week included "Soldiers of God" and "Zarqawi Slaughters an American." Men of all ages snapped them up for the equivalent of 75 cents each.


"At least 25 percent of my customers now support the beheadings because it's a way to take revenge against the Americans," said a 31-year-old vendor who gave his name only as Abu Ali.


He nervously looked both ways before pulling out a collection of beheading videos he'd tucked beneath a boom box. Under a decoy label featuring a buxom Arab pop star was a DVD of some of the most grisly crimes of postwar Iraq, nearly all committed under the banner of al-Zarqawi's Monotheism and Jihad.


"If the police caught me, I'd have to pay at least $30," Abu Ali said. "I don't like selling them, but people want to see them. Personally, I think the beheadings are brutal. If you want to kill someone, just shoot him."


While social scientists and government officials say most Iraqis still bristle against the extremist brand of Islam and the shocking murders committed by al-Zarqawi's ilk, his deeds have become more palatable if not outright supported by Iraqis who already opposed the U.S. military presence and the American-backed Iraqi government. A stepped-up campaign of airstrikes against al-Zarqawi and other militants in the flashpoint cities of Fallujah and Samarra only pushed Iraqis closer to a man who was once persona non grata.


"Because Zarqawi raised the banner of resistance, they support him," said Salman al-Jumaili, a Baghdad University professor and Fallujah native who tracks Sunni insurgent groups. "They welcome anyone who is anti-American. The public trend is toward extremism because their houses and towns are under bombardment. They don't support Zarqawi himself, they support the resistance he represents."




Along Haifa Street in Baghdad, soot-stained buildings and shattered windows are lingering evidence of intense gun battles between insurgents and American troops. Banners supporting al-Zarqawi appeared after the corridor's worst showdown, when 13 residents were killed and more than 50 wounded as a U.S. helicopter fired on a crowd cheering at the scene of a burning American armored vehicle last month.


"When I come to work early in the morning, I see the banners lining the whole streets. Between each palm tree you can find one," said Tareq Younis, 23, a barber on Haifa Street. "When the Americans come, they rip them down. When the Humvees leave, we see no more banners."


None of the black flags were visible Tuesday, but one section of Haifa Street remained too dangerous for reporters to venture down. Graffiti scrawled across walls left no mystery as to local loyalties.


"We'll be happy to cut off your head, Iyad Allawi," read one message aimed at the interim prime minister. "Long live the Arab fighters!" read another.


Some residents said they didn't truly support al-Zarqawi's group, but were afraid to speak out against him. Wissam Mehdi, who sells colorful baskets from a Haifa Street shop, said insurgents frequently commandeered locals' cars to transport their wounded. He said it was common knowledge that longtime Syrian residents in the area offered shelter to visiting foreign fighters, but that no one dared report them.


"We don't know who puts up the flags, but we know they're there to provoke the Americans," Mehdi said. "When it works, innocents get killed."

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