Clancy
Lends His Pen to the Cause of Barbarity!
By Kani
Xulam
March
4, 1997
Tom Clancy's Op-Center: Acts of
War, the newest Tom Clancy and Steve Pieczenik novel is sure to sell well, if
for no other reason than their introduction of the new bad guys of the Middle
East, the Kurds.
To be sure, Clancy and Pieczenik do
an okay job of compiling the facts of the present Kurdish conflict with their
neighbors. They have the American
Secretary of State note, "As things stand, [the Kurds] are among the most
persecuted people on Earth. ...
Until 1991, they weren't even allowed to speak their language in Turkey."
And, that is all the sympathy one
gets for the Kurds in a volume that is 492 pages. In the rest of the book, they are terrorists. Hardy, self disciplined, devout Muslims,
and torturers too, they plan to undo the oppression that has denied them a
country of their own.
They are engaged in a war of wits,
acts of sabotage, feats of valor to wear down an enemy that, although devoid of
humanity, is a friend of the United States and has recently signed a strategic
agreement with the ever resourceful Jewish state, Israel.
The Kurdish-Turkish war has been
going on since 1984. More than
twenty thousand people have died.
The Kurds of Syria, Iraq and Iran are also suffering. As the old adage, misery likes company,
would have it, the leader of the Turkish Kurds al-Nasri and the Iraqi Kurdish
leader Mirza agree to take on the Kurdish foes together.
The Middle East is arid. The water sources emanate from the land
of the Kurds. Turkey has built
dams over these rivers. Syria and
Iraq are denied water by Ankara.
Americans may fight for oil; the people of the Middle East fight for
water.
A mobile Kurdish unit embarks on a
journey to blow up the dam over the Euphrates. An American Regional Operation Center, ROC, an all eyes and
all ears surveillance minibus is in the neighborhood. A general, two marines and three technicians operate it.
The Kurdish unit does its job. Ataturk dam is blown up. The American general wants to get
closer to the scene. He is taken
prisoner by the Kurds. The crew of
the ROC and the big bosses in Washington are furious.
The minibus goes to the
rescue. Kurdish fighters put the
minibus out of commission and take the remaining Americans hostage too. Washington is flabbergasted. The Kurds are somewhat impervious to
the importance of their catch.
They want to head home, first to
Syria and then to Bekaa Valley. On
their way and at the camp they torture the chief of the ROC operation. The Americans are demoralized. Washington and Tel Aviv make plans to
rescue the Yankees.
The ROC crew is an interesting
bunch. One is a former
environmentalist, whose years of dissent in the Greenpeace movement come in
handy in dealing with the Kurds.
Another member is an African- American woman, who tells her Kurdish
torturer fighting oppression does not license one to abuse the captured.
The Kurd, as you would expect, is
speechless. He is not versed in
Martin Luther King Jr. or Malcolm X to engage her in a philosophical
dialogue. You admire the African-American
woman for putting oppression in perspective so eloquently.
At the end, the Israelis help the
Americans locate the camp in Bekaa Valley. The Kurds, together with the Americans, are attacked and
incapacitated by means of gas. The
American general angry with his tormentors, kills the Kurdish leader out of
revenge.
The White House is in a
conundrum. The general either has
to face the court of law for giving in to the feelings of personal vendetta or
the President has to pardon him.
The latter is done. The
general remains a general.
Of course, there are also
sub-plots. The American counsel in
Istanbul is murdered by Kurdish sympathizers. The Kurds attack Damascus to take over the government, but
to no avail. The general asks and is given the authority and a budget to fight
terrorism on his own.
Rest assured, the Turkish war
mongers will make this newest concoction of Clancy and Pieczenik a required
reading for their officers who are versed in English.
One wonders how much influence the
government of Turkey had over the much touted warrior in disguise, Tom Clancy,
to pen this novel. His and
Pieczenik's construction is grievous to an indigenous people who are fighting
to preserve themselves.
Why is it that the secular fighters
of the PKK are portrayed as devout Muslims? 4,000 women fighters in their rank would make a mockery of
Clancy's claim. This infantile
look at the world must come to an end.
The end of the Cold War and the
beginning of the Peace Process in the Middle East has depleted the market for
adversaries. The identification of
the Kurdish struggle for dignity as a form of terrorism and inimical to the
values of Americans is deplorable.
The Kurds have enough adversaries
of their own. Adding Americans to
the list reminds one of the popular Israeli song: "The whole world is
against us, who cares!"