In
the Name of God, Most Compassionate, Most Merciful
Great
People of Iraq, Capable by the
Will of God, Mujahids, Steadfast and Trustworthy…
The
Valiant of our Brave, Honest Armed Forces,
Men
and Women of the State,
Courageous
Men of the National Security…
Praiseworthy
Women and Men, the Conscience
and Mind of Wakeful Iraq…
Freedom
Fighters and Mujahids Everywhere…
Peace
be upon you, and God's Mercy and Blessings…
With
the beginning of Man on the life-stage in this broad universe, or after a short
time, there emerged in the horizon and in accordance with Man's capabilities,
something better than what is common and tangible, more supreme than what is
materialized and visible which both rely merely on his sight-range. Concomitant
with the above, a thought and a hope were initiated: a thought that exceeds what
is visible and tangible, and a hope based on the potentiality of achieving
whatever is relevant to them or bridging them by working programmes. Concomitant
with this too, there appeared people who stood opposing the thought and the
hope. They were thus divided into two groups, or called by two sorts of labels
in the conflict: those who aspired after the better and more distant, and those
are acquiescent and resigned, being confused or whose will being defeated by
items pertaining to the common, tangible and visible, the legacy of the
predecessors.
With
the new thought and hope, and the degree and level of adherence to the old
labels and legacy and to the common and visible or the submission to the status
quo and defending it, and to the innovators' persistence in a new thought and a
new hope associated with what is more distant, deeper and more supreme than the
degree and level can be described. The deeper and the broader the thought and
hope, together with their programmes and objectives in their own fields, the
wider the gap between various or different labels, and with this the wider and
deeper the conflict, and by corollary the more sacrifices.
It
is only natural to say that the deeper the thought and the hope beyond what is
common and prevalent, the more serious is the transfer of the human surroundings
of the thought and hope and humanity in general to a better status. It is only
on this premiss, and not on what is common and prevalent that humanity has
developed, that Man's role on earth has been enhanced. It has become then
possible to perceive the oneness of the Lord of Heavens and Earth with indeed a
firm belief in it, since this perception of God's oneness is a developed
capability in both vision and conviction. With his liberation from what is only
visible to the naked eye, Man was capable to formulate a thought of whatever is
better, and a hope of achieving such a betterment, which has been attached to
his thought.
With
the gradual broadening of Man's intellectual capability, God has bestowed upon
him recurrent prophethood. Likewise, by exercising a limited yet escalating
role, Man has realized that he is incapable of absolute perception or
comprehension, and with such an incapability despite the progress achieved by
his mind and capabilities, Man has encountered a human need to make up for his
despair of being incapable of absolute comprehension to keep the thought and
hope living, to develop his mind, taste, role and endeavour in an incessant
manner except at the divine ordinance which God of the absolute comprehension,
Most Great, Most Capable, Most Compassionate and Most Merciful, has cared for
Man's incapability so as to salvage him from despair and to preserve an
inevitable, moral basis for his progress and development.
Thus
started the human revolution, as a thought and as a hope: it has assumed various
forms and made different attempts. Each revolution started compatibly with its
environment, vision, national and human role and the relevant readiness for
continuity, steadfastness and offering sacrifices.
Great
People
Accordingly,
our Revolution as a thought and as a hope, even as an embodiment of objectives,
in general, is not a new or an exceptional case of the above account, nor of the
trend of thought and hope; neither is it so to great people of Iraq, nor to the
glorious Arab Nation. We find, here and there, in the people, the nation and
humanity various thoughts and hopes and their relevant programmes, objectives
and attempts, some went into a certain distance beyond the starting-point, some
carried out certain objectives while other have succeeded in conveying a
well-developed message, all-including of humanity. Al-mighty God has taught us,
through his prophets and messengers, how the general can emerge from the
particular and how the latter is governed by the former, by law and by
corollary, when He made the Arab Nation and its vast land a cradle of
prophethood and heavenly messages and bestowed upon Iraq the honour of having a
greater share when he chose Abraham, the Iraqi, a father of prophets. God has
rendered a responsibility upon Abraham greater than the land of birth and
growth, so he went roaming about parts of the homeland of our Nation, to
communicate the message to where he should and with which he was honoured by
God, All-Comprehending, Most Capable, Most Generous and All-Powerful.
What
is new and more significant is not the thought of the revolution as a
starting-point of change, nor its objectives of unity, freedom and socialism,
but its seriousness and honesty: the Revolution has risen from a people known
historically of its deep seriousness, a people that has always exceeded what is
conventional and common of thoughts, programmes and attempts, and has always
aspired after what is more supreme, more developed, greater, deeper and more
comprehensive. God, glory be to Him, has eventually rescued the people of Iraq
from a continual disappointment in achieving deep penetration or sublimity as He
made its land a cradle of His prophets, chose Abraham a father of the prophets
and a messenger to the whole humanity, and organized Abraham's endeavour and
role to be more universal, more supreme, better, deeper and more comprehensive
in accordance with the course chosen to him by God, Most Compassionate, Most
Merciful.
Your
Revolution is serious, in a serious people; it is honest and true to its
patriotic, national and humanitarian notion. It has subjected itself to the test
of long struggle, not only to test its own seriousness, but also to test the
trustworthiness of its leadership, the great people of Iraq and the glorious
Ba'ath, to try out their sincerity after they have been unified into an
inseparable one. They have rejected any submission, weakness, servility and
bargaining at the expense of truth and right, any replacement of certainty by
doubt, rendering the particular as a substitute for the general, hesitation for
boldness and intrepidity, any sort of distancing itself from the course of
achieving its great objectives or giving in to bargain over alternatives which
bring no honour to the people.
In
compatibility with the level of the gravity of sacrifices for resisting the
greedy foreigners who are hostile to its legitimate objectives, the Revolution
has elevated itself to the level of the sublimity, profoundness and
comprehensiveness of its objectives, thus coming close to the universal and
comprehensive principles, after it has satisfied the Lord of Great Absoluteness,
and cleansed the soul and mind of any fanaticism dictated by certain practices
of local and national specificity, particularly in the existing circumstances.
Such a purification has been an outcome of an action and vision desirous that
the good, peace, security, love, justice and fairness based on the principles of
truth and eternal heritage should prevail humanity as a whole.
The
causes and significance of your patriotic, national, humanitarian, honest,
serious and true revolution, capable of long struggle, cannot be explained but
in terms of the sublimity and profoundness of its objectives. Thus, amidst
humanity, the Revolution has aggrandized in depth and width. Once more, God has
honoured our nation after the close of the era of prophethood and humanitarian
messages by making the particu, having been minutely perceived, a starting-point
towards the general and its right thought and towards a parallel great hope
whose programmes have been subjected to test daily as a pronouncement that
implementation is possible by relying on God and the ardour of noble Iraqis, the
great example, and by the firm support of the sons of our glorious faithful
nation as well as all friends in the world at large.
In
the light of a right notion and a sound programme, the Revolution, backed by an
unshaken conviction, has steadily advanced. Each step it has made has enhanced
Iraqis' conviction in the possibility of accomplishing the successive step for
the attainment of all objectives. Only God, glory be to Him, of Whom we seek
assistance.
Great
People
Sons
of our glorious Arab Nation
Thus
was the conflict, and thus it has always been, set off from these principles
between the Arab Nation under various titles of revival, development, and a
better role to play on the one hand, and enemies on the other. In the forefront
of this conflict, the more wakeful and prepared to play such a role the Nation,
the more capable to defeat its enemies with firm conviction and other requisites
and by reliance upon God. Regardless of anything else, the enemies cannot assent
to the Nation's national and humanitarian role before ascertaining its
capability to "snatch" that role and to reject humiliation,
submissiveness and weakness now that God has strengthened it by the power of
firm belief and the necessity of playing its historic role.
On
the basis of these principles, your great people, the vanguard of your Nation,
the proud, faithful, and capable people of Iraq, is resisting, as it has so far,
all attempts of the thwarted Zionism and the despot of this age: the successive
U.S administrations which have employed the economic, technological and
scientific potentialities directly on behalf of Zionism, known for its hatred
and vengeance upon the Arabs, the Muslims in general, and indeed the whole
humanity by means of the U.S Zionized Jewish administrations.
On
the premiss of such a vision of the doctrine, such a role of the thought, the
hope and the programme, and of such seriousness of the effective action to put
the programme into practice, we can perceive the Revolution of the people, of
the Ba'ath, which set out on July 17, 1968, to turn into a course of programme
and a march after it had been merely a hope and an underground struggle, both
based on a thought.
Hence,
likewise, we call to memory the significance of the Revolution on the occasion
of its birthday, as a revolution of a new and special style, as a beam of
brilliant light that dismisses darkness, God willing; now that any one who
believes in it and its course has been liberated from the slavery of
impossibility and unfeasibility and has become free in mind, conscience,
programme and objectives in this age, and now that the people of Iraq and its
leading party have pronounced in one resounding voice: "Perish be the
Impossible", to build, construct and plant the sublime morals and the
highest values in the conscience as well as in the mind, so that the zeal may,
without the slightest hesitation, overflow onto their fields, and that the sun
may rise, yet never set, on the flagpole bearing "God is Most Great",
a banner that has embodied the relationship between what is on earth, the Lord
of Heavens and Earth and the role of Man, the great and free in his land which
is the cradle of early civilizations and first calls for unity of God, and the
relationship with the Lord of the World, such calls which freed the Nation from
the burden of idols and the intermediaries between the Merciful Lord and Man,
the faithful, heedful, true and trustworthy, and capable by the will of God.
Thus,
brethren, the forearms have been freed following the freedom of the minds and
consciences, and thus they set out to construct and defend the construction.
Truly, triumph is firmly certain now that conviction has been ascertained within
the souls, minds and ardours. Masks have also been torn , unveiling gloomy,
dirty faces with their fangs dripping blood, after they have penetrated deep in
the blood of the innocent and martyrs.
Arab
Brethren
On
the premiss of these principles, their exquisite significance and their
requisites in the struggle and jihad, God has honoured your Nation from which he
selected the prophets and messengers in succession. He made them angels of faith
and virtue and examples to be followed in the process of change for the better,
in setting up justice and fighting oppression and oppressors, for He found them
prepared for all this. On these principles and sublime morals God, glory be to
Him, selected the prophets and messengers from the Arab land; and he chose them
as revolutionary, too, with the hope of communicating the divine messages to the
world after ensuring the base of their birth and their starting-point, that is,
the Arab Land, and its distinguished people. God prepared them, and developed
their capabilities to play the humanitarian role and communicate the message
where He wished to be and to the extent their determination could cope within a
certain circumstance and capability.
Indeed,
the prophets and messengers had revolted to quantitatively change the material
world for betterment and advancement. The first lesson from God to Man after
creating him is that He taught him how to play his role in life and his
obligation to develop it. Yet the most significant lesson relevant to that role
was received from the revolutionary messengers and prophets whom God had
accorded them a thought and the requisites for its implementation. He had
planted in their souls, conscience and minds the hope of firm conviction and
great faith that both thought and hope are applicable and spreadable, as they
should and as God, glory be to Him permits.
Thus
Man in the great Arab homeland is the first to learn the thought which
transcends what is tangible, common and visible from the prophets.
Correlatively, the first Man who has received lessons in the necessities of the
revolution, change and the qualifications for the appropriate leadership is the
Arab man, under the sponsorship of God's apostles and their leading role.
Accordingly, Man's patriotic and national role in our Nation and in Iraq has
been associated with a humanitarian role, which is more universal and more
comprehensive. His existence and life in a prior being have also been associated
with the duty and obligation of the revolutionary man who has shouldered the
responsibilities for constant change and revolting against anything that is
commonplace and conventional and thus outdated by time and reality, as a task
entrusted to the prophets by God or a direct commission to Man from the
successive prophets and messengers. But the timing, type, scope, titles and
methods of the revolution are independent judgments from which the fundamental
one can be inferred so as to be closely related to life, its kind and condition.
Consequently, when an Arab refrains from playing his role in the change to the
better and from making the required move to confront stagnation, to remove the
rust from life, hearts and minds when they become old and blind, and to replace
the obsolete by novelties, such refrainment from playing this role and from
revolting against his reality is not only a misjudgment according to the
standards of divine commission and law of life as well as a low self-estimation,
but it is also a misjudgment when he refrains from playing his humanitarian role
by being an example for others to follow, an intellectual radiation and
everything that plants the promising hope in humanity.
It
is on the premiss of these principles and morals, brethren, sons of our great
people and glorious Arab Nation and people all over the world, that the great
Ba'ath emerged and led the July Revolution, which we celebrate today. This
Revolution has substituted what is existing for what is good, and has proceeded
along a course of incessant advancement, a revolution in which the revolutionary
men do not bargain over such constant ascent nor over prolonging thestruggle
without showing any sign of impatience, so as to set up the just society, to
unify the Arabs in one will, one potent action capable of defence and
advancement and to make the Arab Nation an example to be followed in humanity at
large. Having been put to test, the Arab Nation alone is capable of playing this
role truly and honestly, and not any oppressive, authoritarian or exploitative
role when it becomes distinguished regionally and internationally, in contrast
to other nations which have failed to play that role. The Arab Nation's
capabilities and potentialities have transcended mere relative comprehension of
material life items within its region.
Besides,
the favour of the Arab Nation to humanity in communicating the thought and
obligations of the unity of God and the heavenly religions which had sprung out
of this thought gives this Nation more than any other nation, the priority of
possessing these morals and guarantees its steps in that direction.
Such
is your Revolution, brothers and friends; a thought, a hope, a working
programme, jihad and struggle. It was such when it was a thought in its
starting-point and the underground struggle and such it has remained in the
conscience of the Ba'athist revolutionary men at the beginning of the change and
has been true to this veritable account. It has never substituted the genuine
for the bad, nor the good for the evil; it has neither caused the sublime morals
sink to the lowest level, nor has it bargained over its course of ascent to
bring about progress and change for the better by relying on God, for this
Revolution is a descendent of the great Ba'ath which was founded to revive the
Nation along its high morals and hence to perform its national, faithful,
comprehensive, genuine and humanitarian task.
Arab
Brethren
I
realize the sensitivity of some Arab rulers in our Nation to telling the truth
or listening to a different opinion as regards matters of destiny and national
influence which stretches beyond a limited place into the great Arab homeland,
beyond certain people into the glorious Arab Nation and transcends the short
present time, fast into the another present which extends into a long time and
even into a future whose range of influence may not be wholly conceived.
Notwithstanding I realize the sensitivity of some Arabs to telling the bitter
truth regarding Palestine, and because we are Arabs, we have relied and still
rely upon the sublime principles which we have already stated in the present
speech as we did in other previous speeches. Furthermore, Iraqi people has
evidenced in all circumstances and time-phases that it has borne, and is still
bearing, a special burden and honour compatible to its doctrine and the historic
role in reviving the Nation, we have to state the truth and act in pursuance of
it, irrespective of the consequences. We shall try to shelter ourselves from the
echo of ravens' croak or a stab in the back, by generalizing rather than
specifying, so that this topic should be overwhelmed with objectivity and
principled motives. We shall also shun mentioning the tokens and their people as
we have done in tackling all national issues in general, not evading a certain
affair, but hoping for a possible interaction according to the minimum standards
of what is right.
Palestine
is our unforgettable, national and humanitarian issue. Some may find us
insistent on it if relevance is neglected and scrutiny of what has been referred
to and stated in this speech as in others is overlooked, albeit it is a vital
part of the core of our belief in Iraq's role in the life of the Arabs and
humanity as well as the role of our Nation towards itself and humanity. But if
anyone scrutinizes a stance which accepts an exchange of viewpoints without
being precharged with a counter-stance, he will then understand that what we say
on Palestine is not a separated view, nor is it emotional; likewise, it is not
part of outdated slogans nor is it a forfeiture on the national and human level.
It can, however, be a varied view from those thoughts held by some. It is a hope
that does not set with sunset nor does it appear only at sunrise, a hope that
derives is constant radiation and proclamation from the legitimacy of its
premiss and the relevant right and justice.
Brethren,
Palestine is an Arab land, the homeland of the Palestinians, as a part of the
great Arab homeland and the glorious Arab Nation; it is the first of the two
qiblahs and the third in the hierarchy of sacred places. Is it right for any
Arab man or any man who speaks of Arabicism or attributes Arabicism and faith to
himself to give up all these morals and principles? Is it possible for anyone
who acquiesces and concedes its occupation by the Zionists and al-Quds
(Jerusalem) being under the Zionist occupation or captivity to be called a
faithful believer and to ascertain that his prayers would be received by God?
We
in great mujahid Iraq do not accept this, having relied upon the principles and
morals we have just stated. We pronounce in a voice, which means no harm to
anyone but performs our duty towards God, ourselves, the Nation and humanity:
Palestine is Arab; the Zionists must depart from it. Jews who want to co-live
with its people have a right as citizens of one country, and those who have
emigrated to it have likewise rights as well as obligations which they must
accept. If they do not, each emigrant should go back to where he has come from
and nothing else.
Arab
Brethren
Muslims
Believers
in other religions
It
may be said that these thoughts are not realistic, but they represent the
historical fact as it is, the truth of what the sons of our Arab and Islamic
Nation, and probably other, believe in, albeit they do not act accordingly. As
it is itself the historical fact whereas anything else is false or sheer
falsification of the statement and deformation of the truth and history, we have
to state it as it is and act accordingly. But how to put it into effect is
another matter.
Yet,
at all events, our endeavour should not contradict the premiss and aspiration.
As we wish a just peace for all nations of the world, we ought to adhere to a
just peace for our Nation regarding its issues and enemies and to reject
surrender and all forms of humiliation, submissiveness and looking down at the
Arab Nation.
This
is the fact of the matter: if overlooked today and if veiled by deception,
dismissed from light by an apparition of fright and failed to elevate itself
into visibility due to weakness, there will come at any time, as in the past,
someone who will tell the truth as we, and many sons of our Nation, are doing
now on the basis of these principles and facts and who will act, struggle and
fight in jihad for consolidating the truth and accomplishing its objectives.
Therefore,
we see that any treatment, which does not target the core, will be partial, if
not deformed or contrary to the truth. It will bring malice to the souls and
will incite destructive turmoil more than it appeases them to be calm and
peaceful. At all events, any call for so-called peace is merely an opportunity
for the Zionists not only to gain time for occupying (the rest) of Palestine but
also to cause disagreement among the rulers themselves and even between the
rulers and people, which is more serious. When this discord is created between
all Arab rulers on one hand and the whole glorious Arab Nation, we mean here the
overwhelming majority, on the other hand, it becomes perilous, resolvable only
by revolution. Thence, we see that it is better for the Arab rulers to
accommodate the viewpoints of the other Arab rulers or leaders vis-à-vis their
own, and accept a policy different from theirs as regards the fateful issues on
which they disagree, among and foremost of which is the question of Palestine.
They should be broad-minded, or at least their minds must be open to accommodate
the other opinions of their brothers, the Arab rulers or leaders, when they fail
to convince the majority of the Arabs, including the sons of our Arab Nation in
various countries, to adopt the thoughts and stances concerning the national
pan-Arab fateful issues. Only then and by virtue of taking this attitude, they
are able to present a ransom for compatibility instead of revolution which will
be ignited by the blazing flame of the disregard of the Nation's opinion and the
complete contradiction between one stance and another.
Thus,
you see, when we speak of the revolution and its historical necessity, we in
point of fact describe it as a means of change for the better; we do not call
for it out of an arbitrary, demagogic attitude, nor do we mean certain Arab
rulers, still nor out of a personal intention in all events, rather we call for
it without labelling tokens and with no prior ill-intention, not even for a
subjective, personal purpose but as an objective means when all other recourses
fail, as a principled commitment and indispensable cauterization, and as a means
for change when all other means fall short, as we have said.
So
you see, brethren, that what some of those driven by the lashes of the
executioners of information and Western and Zionist diplomacy so call
dictatorship in Iraq that actually calls in pursuance of this fair account of
the people for the respect of dialogue and different opinions. Thence, through a
free and coequal dialogue and good intention, we can be rightly guided to a
better way in dealing with information, diplomacy and even armies, should the
circumstance requires. The accommodation of more than one opinion in the Arab
homeland vis-à-vis fundamental or fateful issues without constraints and
without the discord which may cause destruction or collaboration with
foreigners, and consultation strengthen the Arabs and is even beneficent
to those who hold the view which is close to the appearance rather than the
essence of the so-called available, peaceful solutions by this or that concerned
and with the spirit of this stance, and the allusion to the Zionists and their
allies to the so-called extremists and hawks in the confrontation of the
humiliating insolence and arrogance rejectable by anyone with a sound mind and
will. So you see Arabs that differences in viewpoints is useful.
Brethren
Arab rulers: the haste of some of you for the so-called peaceful solutions which
are in essence surrendering, has made the Zionists in Palestine, the centre of
Zionism, or in other supporting places, disesteem and disdain the Arabs
irrespective of what they say or call for. The plethora of relinquishments have
caused the Arab Nation not to trust those who patronize this losing approach.
Let
it be known to you, Arab brethren, that the public confidence is vital for any
ruler or any leader, be it in peace or in war; it is even more compelling in
negotiation with a second party than in any other situation. If the negotiator
forfeits it, he may have to offer relinquishments not required by the balance of
power, let alone countering principles. He may desist from flexibility under the
influence of sensitivity to peoples' rejection and distrust of whoever
represents them. Hence it is not wise that any of the Nation's sons should
forfeit the trust of the People and Nation except, without regret, the
despicable traitor albeit what treason brings to a Nation known to be faithful
to God, His holy books and messengers, a Nation which has played a leading role
in conveying faithfulness, love, peace, justice and fairness to the whole
humanity.
Thus,
on these premisses we evaluate the statements by exhausted cravers for the
threshold of Zionism who entertain hopes of the so-called new prime minister of
the Zionist entity and his Western allies. At the time Lebanon is being
destroyed, allegedly as an implementation of the resolution by the former
Zionist prime minister, none of the Arabs concerned has uttered imprecations on
the former prime minister until they have been given a green light from the U.S
Black-House. Thereupon, praise and flattery have hailed down on a new Zionist
prime minister in the hope of enabling the flatterer to play a new card on a new
horse, not knowing that the exchange of roles, faces and names is merely a
circumstance needed by Zionism to gain time, involve those led astray in new
mazes and leave them all the time in a trend contrary to the trends of their
Nation's opinion and will, and by corollary helping Zionism to utilize despair
or revolution triggered by people's distrust of the ruler.
God
is behind our intention.
Of
Him, be gloried, we seek assistance.
Revolt
against oppressors.
God
is Most Great.
Long
live Palestine, free and Arab.
God
is Most Great.
Down
with Zionism.
Arabs
We
said in a previous speech that "Arab oil is for the Arabs" was one of
the Ba'athists' banners, which we had raised and fought for it. On the path of
Ba'ath struggle in Iraq, many have died martyrs in the cause of this banner
since we were students in preparatory and secondary schools. Days went by. Now
we are in the position of responsibility which has given us access to
information and now we have assumed authority and supervision, we have realized
the rightness of our mujahid party when it had attracted attention in early
underground struggle to the significance of the Arab oil to be for the Arabs.
Now that it has become explicit that it is for the foreigners as it had been, in
the 50's and not for the Arabs, is this then possible?
The
Arab oil was seized by the foreign companies of the imperialist and colonialist
states whether in extraction, industrial treatment, transportation and
exportation, in quality and pricing. Virtually its price was not known then as
there was no neutral party to purchase or sell it. The industrially developed
world was divided into two camps: communist and capitalist. If any neutral state
emerged between the two, it was of no importance in determining the
international policy, nor was it aware of this policy tricks but for one
exception whose limited potentialities began to grow in the 60's and 70's under
the banner of non-aligned states. The world, therefore, was either provided with
oil needs from the capitalist states and enjoyed some facilities under (foreign
aids) or furnished with similar facilities within the socialist camp or
whichever politically affiliated to it under the placard of COMECON, which is an
economic group comprising the relevant members.
The
first time the real value of oil, the range of market demands and its role in
the strategic calculations of the states and their endeavour for foreign
hegemony or imperialist-colonialist policy was known when Iraq nationalized its
oil in 1972, and when nationalization was crowned with success after nine years
of boycott imposed by the concessionary companies backed by their governments
then, with the exception of France which took no part in it, but accepted
special arrangements made by an initiative from Iraq in the era of the de
Gaullist president Pompidou. The imperialist states were then put in an
embarrassing situation and were obliged to reconsider their concessionary
relations with the countries in the third world at a large scale for fear of the
blowing winds of nationalization from Iraq where it triumphed, thanks to Iraq's
steadfastness and the world's openness to purchase its oil on a competitive
basis and price differential temptations granted to crown nationalization with
success and due to the balance policy prevalent then in the two blocks to which
we have referred.
At
present and after the balance of power in the world has retrograded among
superpowers which exercise influence and interest extending beyond their
boundaries or among those that seek imperialist and colonialist hegemony, oil
prices have been developed in an excessive fogginess. USA together with the
Western states which share imperialist ambitions has recoursed to the policy of
domination over oil from its resources to transportation and selling via the
governance of the balance of offer and demand which is met from the U.S
available store a at very low prices, as we explicated on previous occasions.
But the worst of it is that USA no longer contended with this ugly imperialism
and hegemony over oil so much so that it has become politically valueless or
without any effective, strategic significance which might enhance its owners'
stance. Indeed USA has imposed on them, particularly in the Arab Gulf, the
purchase of the commodities and services it deems necessary, be they civil or
military, whether in quantities, kinds, prices and payment schedules, by the
help of its fleets and occupation forces in the Arab Gulf. USA has not only
dominated all this, but it has dispossessed oil rulers in general of any
control, influence or freedom of decision over oil which has turned an ordinary
commodity and which the Americans fix its price and decide its influential
significance in the Arab land and the third world according to certain terms of
description and according to other terms of description elsewhere. The Arab
rulers concerned and even non-Arabs are now no more than night watchmen
performing sometimes their guard-duty or at others being but crippled rear men
and experts for guards brought from beyond the borders and the region.
This
tragic situation is in need of a serious consultation among the oil states
whenever the will and intention exist, albeit it may start on a small scale and
not for all OPEC states which have been penetrated by the foreigners' tricks,
because this very small scale may be always appropriate for such a consultation
to rescue those who evince the will of rejection of such a situation from being
victims to the foreigners' cutting fangs, if not possible to save the others
whose strength and will have dwindled under the weight of their inadvertence or
slumber, their hatred and rancour.
Thus,
it is the responsibility of all those who want to be liberated or preserve their
freedom.
The
people, each in its country, can play a great and historic role in moving the
rulers, supporting them, or putting them in a critical situation if unable to
push them forward with the rising current.
Arab
Brethren
One
of the strategic objectives of July Revolution is socialism beside Arab unity
and freedom of Man, intellectually and constructively, psychologically and
mentally, theoretically and practically. As the essence of any socialist
activity and its humanitarian and political influence centrally lie within the
concept of social and economic justice, establishment of balance in society and
fortifying it against imbalance in addition to building it and developing its
potentials, resources and kinds of wealth, socialism in our viewpoint and as in
our national and pan-Arab progarmmes cannot actually be applied in this
particular aspect as it should be and in such a manner as to comply with the
principles of great Ba'ath unless and until the Arab relations are truly based
on its concepts and not on those mere relations that exist among the sons of the
one people within its domestic and national borders. Hence, the good which
benefits Iraq, for instance, should, since we are one nation, benefit all the
sons of our Arab Nation in one way or another: Iraqis, Egyptians, Syrians,
Yemenis, people in the Arab Gulf and Maghrib (Northwest Africa), otherwise, the
concept of one nation remains inadequate, unable to cherish the principles of
the fateful Arab solidarity among the sons of the Nation to stand in one rank in
word, in deed and in trend. We have already proposed various projects and
thoughts on previous occasions, particularly prior to embargo, and presented
projects and proposals for cooperation to Arab summit conferences in addition to
certain initiatives concerning bilateral relations known to many sisterly Arab
states and their representatives who are still living, and provided with
sustenance.
On
this occasion, we would like to attract attention to what we see useful to our
Nation to grant it strength, capability and support, after relying upon the
Great, the Most Capable. Yet one may say, particularly of those privileged with
natural wealth, that a call indeed indicates realistic miscalculations and
remains a mere slogan if it targets the distribution of wealth among the Arab
countries, albeit they are diverse states with no constitutional bond of
relationship which legitimatizes such an action, invites enthusiasm of the
original owners and grants them some sort of readiness for sacrifice vis-à-vis
the elements of power and the kind of opportunity bestowed upon them by the type
of unity, under a certain constitutional relationship between one Arab country
and another or among the concerned parties when they are under a tent sheltering
more than one Arab country.
These
thoughts are not proposed now, for we are a living part of reality. We realize
its truth and consequences, and we know what is possible or impossible, but we
also see that the reality of the Arab economics, social and cultural relations
and the pursuant bonds of the Arab countries with each other represent a
backward reality even in achieving its relative objectives which can be
formulated so as to be advanced with respect to the present reality and the Arab
status quo. Serious attention should be attracted to the description of the
possible and the impossible, since these two are relative, and since the
presence or absence of will and awareness behind the true intention plays a
decisive role in the account and its applications, for what is not possible in
one viewpoint that might be equally possible in another, and each viewpoint is
in accordance with the pertinent will, awareness and prior intention. We have
experienced in Iraq, even under the embargo circumstances, the possibility of
economic cooperation based on the memorandum of understanding with various Arab
countries and have found it possible. This cooperation has activated the
economic markets, enhanced relations and enlivened social thinking, though
perhaps not according to the above account at any previous time. So and by
giving priority to the Arab-Arab relations in this respect, by word and deed,
the Arab markets will become lively, relations will be enhanced, products will
grow both quantitatively and qualitatively, and the weight of influence of every
Arab market will be in accordance with its capabilities. Too, one of the most
important of any Arab country's capabilities, indeed the most fundamental, is
people. Thus we shall see after a while that the market which is more developed
will contribute to raise the standard of the less developed in everything, and
likewise the country with greater population will participate in making its
production larger when it ensures a market for its commodities and services.
Only then the whole can benefit and all can genuinely cooperate within the tent
of the one nation. The expanding and intricate economic relations will be
correlated with social and cultural ones, so that their texture becomes a new
shield sheltering the heads of the good men from afflictions of time. This tent
with its multiple means of protection and expanding space will be also a new
haven for the Arab Nation protecting them from heat and cold, otherwise
development and progress in most times, various fields and diverse countries
become mere words which others may call nonsense under the domination of the big
powers on the world markets of raw materials down to the shaving commodities and
services. Furthermore, capitalism which was used to propagating (Let work, let
pass) as a type of anti-communist propaganda now calls for a different thing,
having become vexed over the simplest things, and the U.S administration which
has recently exaggerated the nonsensical talk on freedom, now stifles the free
flow of goods, commodities, services and persons to their fields, and even tries
to dictate on others what to sell, and before it, what to manufacture, which
goods and commodities they have to buy, how and how many; what accruements of
money they have to deposit, where and how?
A
condition like the above renders economic development and progress merely an
unattainable wish for many Arabs, if not all, in our greater homeland and even
in the third world countries for some time to come. It also makes thick a burden
and a major obstacle to development and progress and by corollary to stability,
instead of serving as a decisive factor when cooperation in what we have cited
is open to the Arabs on the premisses of the sense of one nation, one market and
one will. Besides, the hostile powers may employ under-population in the lands
isolated from the depth of the Nation and its great potentiality under the
apparition of fear and scare as a means of destruction in the wall, depth and
soul of the Nation.
What
we call for, brethren, represents the minimum as regards the relations within
the one nation, and aims at primarily future results more than those pertaining
to a short time. In formulating these thoughts, embargo has not played any role;
rather, they have been triggered by the principles of the Arab Nation, its great
Ba'ath, and our national and humanitarian responsibility towards the sons of our
Nation and its role and our humanitarian duty towards humanity at large. Unless
the Nation is in a good condition, it is arduous for any of its countries alone
to be so, and it is equally hard for itself to be a good example for others to
follow who will find it difficult to accept any effective role it might play
amidst them or even to be conceived as a model for a better life.
Iraq
has evidenced that it is capable of acting as though it were a nation by itself
when it summons the spirit and morals of the glorious Arab Nation, of
shouldering the responsibility of bearing the message and of reviving the
Nation's role on the national and human levels. Hence Iraq, the strong, is not
our main concern in these thoughts, but our Nation at large, including Iraq of
vanguard and jihad…
God
is Most Great.
Perished
be the impossible.
Long
live mujahids.
Arab
brethren, on various occasions and under different addresses: some are formal,
some are informal, many pieces of advice have been given to us from Arab
brothers concerning our concept of the Arab masses, our prospect of them and our
relationship with them. They told us specifically that you hold out too much
hope of the Arab masses, and that you, that is we, attach great importance to
the masses and think that they have far too much weight than in actuality, all
of which necessitate on your part, that is our part in Iraq, a reconsideration,
because the Arab and other masses are either absent or absented from taking an
effective stance in confronting events, developments and attitudes in the Arab
homeland and elsewhere beside being dispossessed of their will and thus
incapable of bringing about any change, etc.
I
should like therefore to answer them, partly esteeming their opinion and giving
a true assessment of the Arab masses as a phenomenon, a stance and an influence,
and partly correcting an aspect of the mistake in those Arabs' advice. The major
mistake, however, is that they thought that our appeal to the Arab masses to be
aware of their role and realize their capabilities so as to appraise their
influence in space, time and direction has been hastily made to take a certain
stance. Most probably, those Arabs have gone too far in thinking that we hasten
the masses for the purpose of lifting the embargo and that we think that these
masses are capable of halting an offensive by the aggressors. Accordingly and
being hasty, that appeal may seem to them merely circumstantial in both
description and relationship to us.
Brethren,
our prospect of the people's role, its revolutionary masses and its
comprehensive, long-term strategy springs from our doctrine which deems
the people a sufficiency to our struggle, fight, jihad and construction, and a
historical means intrinsic in all the principles and morals we aspire after in
the course of the victorious Revolution and its objectives, and not merely an
unspecified, temporary means.
Our
rapport with the masses is totally different from what some brothers think. As a
corollary of the requisites of the legitimate struggle to which we appeal to the
Arab masses including the requisite of awareness of their historic role in the
battle we fight against oppressors, we do not dismiss in course and ardour, that
the masses should defend, to a certain extent or in one manner or another, the
Revolution and its right course, which, pursuant to what we have said in this
speech as on other occasions, is their revolution too. The sacrifices offered
along its course are not only for the sake of Iraq, but also for the sake of our
glorious Arab Nation as long as the Revolution remains national and for the
whole Nation as it is for Iraq, as it is for humanity in general. The Revolution
has proved by word and deed that the above account is genuine, not an
allegation, and has been tested by precious blood in the most complicated
circumstances.
We
look at the Arab and other masses and their role in a historical perspective
which is comprehensive but not temporary, not isolated nor circumstantial,
principled and disinterested, continual not sporadic, constant not
temperamental. Our prospective has never changed whether the Arab masses have
acted in accordance with the level of their role in this or that cause or
otherwise when their action or influence are below the level of their real
capabilities. Indeed, we more adhere to our role and to our national and moral
responsibility towards the Nation and its masses when they are weak; and
conversely feel happy and rejoice when they promote their awareness and
principles to a higher level. Truly, our moral and principled commitment has
never changed nor has our hope retreated from its orbit.
Our
Nation is not only known for its civilization and humanitarian role, but also as
a nation of prophets and messengers from which God had chosen them and selected
it to be a cradle and historical depth for them and for their role as well as a
scene of action and holy fight, jihad. Consequently, the Nation shall not be
held responsible for any negative account stated, attributed or accordingly
described both as a historical formation and a historical force capable of
playing its role when the Nation is revived. Others perhaps within the tokens of
the Nation's items shall be. Definitely they are not within the live historical
texture to which the role they have ascribed for themselves is applicable.
Anyone
who describes the Nation in negative terms, be he a journalist, a writer or a
man of letters, should, before uttering imprecations upon the public or
reminding it or his nation of what is negative, ask himself what he has offered
as a person in an advanced position. If his reply is that he is apprehensive for
the means of subsistence, for himself, his position, title or chair, or is
unable to offer more, the responsibility rests squarely on him and not on the
people or nation, because those in prominent posts alone bear the burden and
responsibility of any defectiveness or weakness which afflict the Nation, people
or a collective part, but not conversely the collective part, people or Nation
that should be responsible.
Is
it right, for instance and for the sake of approximating the image, that the
officers should run away from the battle and simultaneously blame the soldiers
for defeat? Nevertheless, the officers have enjoyed commandership as well as
giving orders and have exercised them on the soldiers, they have even relished
and boasted of the military ranks they have and their privileges in all the
circumstances prior to defeat. He who enjoys the material and moral privileges
of his post should shoulder the responsibility for any weakness in the people's
ranks before such a responsibility should rest on a certain, collective part of
those ranks. This, therefore, applies to those who cherish a thought opposite to
ours, be they rulers, judges, writers, journalists, men of letters, professors
and so on and so forth.
We
deal with our Nation and People as a historical capability and as a historical
formation on the strength of what is possible when other factors exist, so as
their role will be great, but not on the basis of an inane description of a
situation in the time of the account without depthe role which revolutionizes
and sets it in motion, likewise we have delineated the requisites and our
genuine role.
Our
dealing with the People and Nation is carried out on the basis of a very
accurate, humanitarian, revolutionary and principled account of our
responsibility towards them, and on the strength of the common action and effect
and reciprocal influence, but not on the basis of loneliness, isolation and
abandonment. We are a live part in the Nation and People in order to perform our
national and pan-Arab role and duty towards them, and indeed towards humanity.
We do not presume that our People and our Nation are two piecework contractors
who would relieve us of the duty of executing a certain affair so that all we
have to do is to wait and receive the keys of an accomplished project. With
both, we construct and take the risk of construction just as we share happiness
and delight when the construction is completed within its relative utmost. Too,
we all defend the construction when it is exposed to danger.
We
are a family of one house, and as long as we bear the epithet of leadership, we
have the responsibility of initiation, enlightenment and creation of awareness,
beside a higher degree of good patience and endurability, so as to be an example
worthy of respect and appreciation. We realize the significance of the morals we
hold and our trueness to them. Surely we shall be victorious by the people and
by the leadership of all prominent titles in our Nation: rulers or faithful
leaders, or the heedful educated, self-sacrificers, mujahids and the steadfast
of the People and Nation, men or women, civil or military, judges or university
professors, artists, journalists, writers, great engineers or others. The young
men and women of the Nation will be a tremendous enlightened force in all this.
We do not grow date-palms or oranges, nor oats or barley. Thus our patience
knows no limits, except when ordained by God, glory be to Him, in Whom we trust
and unto Whom we turn.
Brethren
who raise queries: such has been our commitment, thinking and our prospect of
affairs at the starting point. Yet the experience, which has been replete with
the morals of construction and ardour in our fight against the unjust and
injustice, the despots and despotism for more than thirty years during which we
have lead the great people of Iraq within the Ba'ath responsible, collective
leadership, has taught us scientific, practical and social lessons as regards
the People and its role with respect top the Nation's vitality as a base and a
practical, spiritual and moral profundity, the basis of which is the human
morals with which we interact and share our Nation and people.
Like
you, we realize that the Nation and People may slug or neglect playing a certain
role or roles, but they can never be inadvertent, sluggish or defeated for the
whole time, indeed they cannot be negligent, slothful, indolent or defeated if
they have a genuine leadership appropriate in mind, conscience, intellect and
sword beside other conditions which are prerequisites to their tasks. They
cannot be put to fight or neglect except when their leadership is put to rout,
is indolent or treasonable. Hence the People and the Nation cannot be held
responsible for any shortcoming even when they recoil from playing a role by
which they are supposed to advance. Rather the leading, key posts shall be
responsible. We have not seen or heard of a people under a leadership whose role
has met all principled, moral and practical requisites at reasonable utmost has
ever been defeated, sluggish or lazy and has left the leadership alone to bare
upper arms in construction. Too, we have not seen or heard of a leader who has
the minimal requisites of leadership, has acted soundly and has unsheathed his
sword without having simultaneously heard the clatter of the swords of those who
fight at his right, at his left, in front and behind, having caused the ears of
those nearby tingled when those swords have been drawn of their sheaths aiming
at the covetous, despot, occupant or oppressor.
Yet
no blame should lie on a people or a nation if it neglects its role in
construction when the leader or leaders do not call for construction except at
the time their pockets or accounts in the banks grow less than the minimum and
hence have to be filled under the token of construction, whereby the slogan of
construction and the appeal to it will be but a trickery.
Likewise,
no blame should lie on the people, nation, masses and armies when they see those
designated with leading titles are whiling away their time, busying themselves
in such affairs which are of no concern to the masses, and that they betray them
to the foreigners, in which case their call against the foreigners who have
ill-intentions and bad-deeds will be no more than a trick-cover.
The
masses, like any living being, do not act unless fed, and their essential food
to support the ruler or leader is their unmistakable feeling that the leader or
ruler has given his life for their cause, pride, glory and welfare. Only then
the masses will forgive and indulge the lapses and faults which do not involve
relinquishment, treason or prior ill intention. Furthermore, one of the most
significant, historical duties towards the nation and people is either to back
the one who presides over a leading post and dignify him or else to utter a
resounding pronouncement of what is right to attract attention to a deviation or
an unusual commission. If he does not retreat, he will have nothing before him
save cauterization, i.e., revolution, which will substitute what is bad for good
lest the masses' aspirations should be buried alive and their forward movement
should be hampered.
When
we address the masses and the Arab masses in particular, we do not do so because
we deem them a practical substitute from now on for any Arab ruler performing
his national duty albeit it is not as perfect as it should be, but as a rear
support for any national case and its great profundity together with other
tokens including the cases of some rulers as described in accordance with what
we have referred to. But the ruler, any ruler, is on his way to vanish, whereas
the people and nation are the historical forces that can never disappear even
though they might be enveloped in lunar or solar eclipse. In them both, the sun
rises from the east, and the moon is full in its due day. Those who never
vanish, like the nation and people, are the ones with great acts and stances,
which represent the essence of the Nation's conscience and its living mind.
Among those who are concealed from the vision and the tangible feel of the
masses, albeit they are living and sustained, are the ones who have assumed, at
an undated time, a prominent responsibility yet they do not comprehend its
significance nor are they trustworthy for it and its honour.
In
pursuance with this description, they are merely lifeless carcasses though they
are living.
God
is Most Great.
Gallant
Iraqis, who are a source of joy and delight for your leadership, but a malady
for the enemies, who are salubrious to great Iraq, but arrows set at the foes of
God and humanity
Praiseworthy,
magnificent women whose ardour we call together with the sublime morals when
mishaps intensify, when we honour someone highly and preciously and when the
soul's great morals are summoned
The
fragrance of Iraq and sweet smelling of its battle trenches
Peace
be upon you, and God's mercy and blessings.
Your
presence has been brilliant, with all the significance of the model and example,
which you represent in every part of the present speech and in what we have been
talking about to the Arabs since you constitute with them the sons of one nation
and because you have realized from gesture or wink what must and ought to be,
what is acceptable or rejectable after this long time of relationship and
attitude.
Because
we do not defer any act or statement which is of importance, waiting for what to
say or act on occasions only, albeit everything has its circumstance and due
time to be said and acted, God willing, we have not found it necessnor do we
want to burden you with a long speech, reiterating what we have already said or
done, what we did in the years past or intend to do in a new year which will
come into view with goodness and delight for all of us and our Nation. Thus I
find it sufficient to greet you and the revolutionary men and hail your great
steadfastness, your high inventiveness for creating an example of life which
will enter, for the first time and in accordance with its usual context, the
history and action of the Arabs in the present age.
Because
we trust in God, our confidence is great in His capability to strengthen your
victory as it is already evinced and witnessed without any shade, and to be
incessant, God willing, without interruption.
I
implore God to bestow upon you more pride, glory, health and well-being, to
perpetuate the grace of faith and patience and to rejoice you with whatever
delights the soul and brings comfort to it.
Long
live our glorious Arab Nation.
Long
live Iraq.
Long
live Iraq.
Long
live Palestine, free and Arab.
God
is Most Great.
God
is Most Great.
Shame
be on the despicable.