Duct Tape and Plastic
Sheets
By Michael S. Ladah
It is laughable that the US government is
trying to scare the public into supporting the war on Iraq.
Our leaders seem to assume that the American people dont know the
difference between imminent threats and the simple scare tactics being used to justify a
war on Iraq. We can expect that our government
will use these tactics in the coming weeks and months, and we should be prepared to
distinguish between reasonable precautions and those designed to serve some ulterior
motive.
My family and I lived in Dhahran, Saudi
Arabia, during the Gulf War. My wife and I
were both employees of the Saudi Arabian Oil Company (Saudi Aramco) and my youngest son
was in sixth grade at the Aramco School in Dhahran. During
the months leading up to the war, we witnessed the arrival of hundreds of thousands US and
allied troops. We experienced the voluntary
evacuation and return (before the war started) of the non-essential families
of expatriates. We were also proud to host
young American soldiers, stationed in the desert, who came to the mostly American Aramco
residential compounds for a small taste of home. Many
of the soldiers had not had a home cooked meal, taken a hot shower or had the opportunity
to wash their clothes for weeks, and those who were hosted by American families in Dhahran
were able to relax during their visits in a familiar setting.
With the buildup of troops underway, we
were issued gas masks, one for each member of the family. Americans received two sets of
masks, one set from Aramco and the other from the U.S. Consulate in Dhahran. The Eastern Province was buzzing with advice
served-up by public relations officials, political advisors and military
experts. The recommendation that
the expatriate community seemed to value the most at the time was on the importance of
converting one room in our homes into a safe room, with duct tape and plastic
sheets. This was the best way to remain safe,
we were told, from chemical and biological agents. We
even received special instructions on the use of gas masks inside the safe
room, and we were issued special testing paper that, once exposed to the environment,
would detect for any possible contamination.
January 16, 1991 arrived, and along with
that fateful day came the first air-attack sirens that would serve as our instruction to
hide in the safe room while Iraqi scud missiles soared toward the coastal
towns and military bases of the Eastern Province. My
wifes instinct was not to take refuge in the safe room, but rather to open the
closest closet (a linen closet in our hallway with no vents) and shove our young son
inside and shut the door. Even under the most
serious threats, we hardly used the so-called safe room or wore our gas masks. Instead, we roamed around the house trying to find
news from CNN on Bahrain TV, and we answered phone calls from worried children in the US
inquiring about our safety.
The expert advice that we
received was little more than misinformation. The
ventilation that brought a considerable volume of outside air into the house would have
undoubtedly resulted in chemical and biological contamination if such weapons were used by
Iraq. Most houses in Dhahran never shut down
their ventilation system, and we later found out that even without ventilation, the duct
tape and plastic sheets would only have delayed the inevitable. It was as if the military advisors were just
providing information to placate us -- to give us something to occupy our time so we
didnt feel completely helpless as the war loomed nearer. As the war progressed, we learned that the
not-so-accurate Iraqi Scud missiles that the military advisers told us had an
accuracy as bad as tens of miles, werent really as inaccurate as we were
told. Saddams troops may have known
about the Scuds inaccuracy and may have targeted tens of miles away from
their intended target; we witnessed the devastation caused by at least one of the Scud
missiles sent from Iraq, courtesy of Saddam Hussein. The
missile landed on a steel building used as an Army barracks located in the Souks area on
the Airport to Dammam highway, killing 28 brave young American soldiers. It was one of the many sad moments of the war and
some of us cried, especially when we thought that one or more of the soldiers could have
been among our guests in the pervious weeks and months.
Now, twelve years later, the US government
is telling us that we are in danger of chemical and biological attack, right here in the
heartland of America. They have managed to
scare some of us to a point of panic -- so much so that they have to schedule follow-up
press conferences to diffuse the hysteria. Our
leaders antagonize friendly nations of the world, and continue to give reasons for
peace-loving people to question unbreakable US resolve in fighting this war on
terrorism. Our leaders further aggravate
the problem by ignoring the entire world with arrogance.
Our friends are nine to one against our planned invasion of Iraq and our
NATO allies are scrambling to dissociate themselves from any potential war.
While diplomacy and coalition-building is
taking place at the highest levels of government, the prospect of war hangs in the balance
and our government comes to the US public with talk of duct tape and plastic sheets. What theyve really given us is smoke and
mirrors, and as they prepare to pull a rabbit from their hat, we should all be on-guard
and prepared to distinguish doublethink and newspeak from reality.
© 2003 by
Michael S. Ladah. The writer is an Arab
American who lived and worked in various parts of the Middle East. He is
the author of Quicksand, Oil and Dreams: The Story of One of Five Million
Dispossessed Palestinians.
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