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Fahrenheit
9/11 is a slick documentary, not brilliant, albeit full of anger
at the present US administration and its misadventure in Iraq. In
an atmosphere where patriotism is measured by how little one questions
the establishment, this is a good vent for frustrated citizens of
the US in an election year. However, it does not provide any real
information to audiences outside the US. Al-Jazeera, Al-Arabiya,
as well as much of the European media, has been saying all this
for years.
Much
of the footage in the film is not original; it has not been specifically
shot for this documentary. However, the collection is impressive.
Much of it seems to have been taken unofficially because the faces
we see the president of the US making are unbelievable. On the morning
of 9/11, after being informed of the second attack on the towers,
Bush is seen sitting idly for seven minutes and continuing to read
to kids as thousands of Americans are dying in New York City, almost
catatonic. This was voiced over as him not having any of his advisors
around to tell him what to do. Just before announcing the beginning
of the shock-and-awe campaign to the world he is seen behaving like
an idiot, making faces at someone we do not see. He is often seen
working at his ranch, playing golf, and with his dogs. All this
reinforces the image of this 'leader of the free world' who is essentially
driven by handlers and has not an iota of intellect to call his
own.
Then
there is the part in the film which shows the strong Bush-Saudi
connection, including the Bin Laden family. The only real information
this part provides to non-Americans is that the Saudis control 7
per cent of the US economy. The world already knew about the Saudi
investments in the Carlyle group and Citigroup. Moore looks at the
Bush family business associates, and the various corporations that
benefitted from the war on Iraq, thus creating, albeit without any
substantive argument, an umbrella of suspicion. So while the documentary
may not serve as a comprehensive guide to Bush's sordid past, it
does lead to the questions that have never been asked and policies
that have never been challenged in the US media and body politic.
The
president is shown as a man determined to go into Iraq not only
to fulfil a prior agenda but also to pacify the military-industrial
complex and the country's economic interests. The American audience
will no doubt, or at least that is what Moore expects, want to know
just what the hell is going on and why more people aren't mad about
it. How many more soldiers must die before there is a public outcry?
How can Bush make links to Saddam Hussein that even his own former
counterterrorism czar says did not exist? Why has the media not
crucified him on the absent WMDs? Why Iraq, why now, and why have
so many lives been lost for one man's re-election? To us it seems
strange that it needs a film to spur people to ask the questions
that the rest of the world has already been asking since the first
bombs fell on Iraq.
My
problem with the film is that it misses the entire thrust of the
Bush foreign policy. The invasion of Iraq and the foreign policy
of the administration is not driven by the relationship between
the oft-quoted 'House of Bush , House of Saud.' That there is no
mention at all of the link between the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
and the war is , to say the least, disingenuous. Here is where the
whole plot of the documentary falls apart. It is the neo-conservatives
who drove the agenda of war, not the Saudis. But apart from showing
Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary of Defence, licking his comb before
running it through his hair, there is no mention at all of the neo-con
cabal or the failed Middle-East policies that have led over the
years to millions dying in Iraq, Palestine, Israel and Afghanistan.
The agenda for the Iraq war was driven by the need to provide Israel
with the means to extend the kingdom of David from the Niles to
the Euphrates. That hundreds of Americans and thousands of others
have had to lay down their lives for this to happen should have
been the main question asked of the Bush administration.
That Moore does not, leads one to think that perhaps the
film has tried to deflect the entire issue away from the neo-conservatives
and their loyalty to the Likud Party of Israel towards the now clichéd
link between oil/arms and the fat cat corporate types in the US
government. What should have been examined was how is it that the
most powerful leader in the world has been taken down the path of
war inflicted by the world's most well armed army on a third world
country, by a bunch of ideologues who are Israeli citizens to boot.
Remember that Afghanistan had to be invaded to appease the American
people after 9/11. It must be conceded that Moore does make the
case that Afghanistan was a mere distraction and that Iraq was always
the target.
Should
Fahrenheit 9/11 have won Cannes? Maybe. As a movie with a specific
meaning for a specific time it does make an impact as a work that
is a present-day fusion of film and politics. It is pertinent today,
but may not stand the test of time. What is annoying is that for
a film with so much promise it delivers so little. The film reduces
American foreign-policy failures to the relationship of the Bushes
to the Saudis, thus reinforcing the American need to demonise individuals
instead of criticising institutions, which, while claiming to be
democratic, fail to uphold the rights of the people.
I must say, however, I did like the shots leading up to the war
in Iraq showing pictures of youngsters playing, running blissfully
through the streets, carefree and happy, before it was invaded.
Images of children torn to pieces are reminiscent of the pictures
of the little girl plucking petals from a flower before an atomic
explosion turns her into ashes.
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