Who wore red poppies for them?

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Workers' Fight workplace bulletin editorials
14 November 2006

On Monday, just after the weekend's Remembrance Day ceremonies, Blair announced that preparations would now begin for next year's 25-year commemoration of the Falklands War.

But despite this all too obvious attempt to shift public attention away from the catastrophe that his government and the Bush administration are still perpetrating in Iraq, who can forget it? 4 more British soldiers have just died in Basra.

However, as usual, the focus of the ceremonies this year was the "Great War (1914-18) to end all wars", as well as the even greater war which followed it in 1939.

And all these ceremonies as usual, were designed to cover up the fact that none of the millions of soldiers killed in these wars died to defend their "motherland", let alone their own interests.

In WW1 and WW2, what was at stake was not democracy, as was claimed at the time. Especially not in Britain, which was not threatened. No, what was at stake was which one of the rich powers was going to dominate the resources of the Third World.

From Normandy to Burma and the Philippines, millions of workers paid with their lives to ensure that the big shareholders in the City and Wall Street would get the lion's share of the post-war world order. Nor did the 225 soldiers who died in the Falklands give their lives in order to defend the interests of British workers.

No, they died to reassert a principle - that no Third World country will ever be allowed to restore its control over its own territory. In this case, islands off the coast of Argentina, on the other side of the world, which cannot, by any stretch of the imagination be considered as a part of Britain.

But of course, the most hypocritical tribute made at the weekend ceremonies was for the soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan - a tribute made by the same politicians who decided to send them there in order to tighten the grip of the Western powers over the Middle East.

Yes, these soldiers died for nothing and certainly they were not defending their own interests, let alone ours.

As for the victims of these wars, like the over 600,000 ordinary Iraqis killed so far and the growing number of Afghan people - there was not even one word of remembrance for them.