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Most Americans care little what label is used to describe the guerrillas responsible for daily attacks on U.S. troops in Iraq. For Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, however, this detail is far from trivial. Visiting Baghdad in late July, he pointedly told U.S. officials and reporters to refer to Iraqi guerrillas not as "resistance" fighters, but rather as "forces of reaction." Wolfowitz's insistence on using that phrase--one foreign to most Americans--says a lot about his political pedigree.
The same phrase favored by Wolfowitz found its way into a November 4, 1956 radio address by Janos Kadar, the Soviet stooge installed in Budapest following Hungary's abortive anti-Communist uprising. Kadar announced that his puppet regime had "requested... the Soviet Army Command to help our nation in smashing the sinister forces of reaction and [o restore order and calm."
The expression figured prominently in an editorial published on the same day in the Soviet newspaper Pravda. For page after tedious page, Pravda's propaganda hacks wove an elaborate narrative of the evil acts carded out by the "forces of reaction," accused of "trying to destroy the socialist conquests of the workers and to restore capitalism in the country.... The anti-popular elements, hiding behind the false mask of 'freedom fighters,' are trying to deceive the working classes and gain their support...."
Shortly after the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy, The Worker--the daily newspaper of the American Communist Party--laid that crime at the feet of "the forces of reaction within our country who constitute the extreme right band of the political spectrum," who were "the enemies of the people's progress...."
The Kremlin and its agents of influence used similar language to describe any setback experienced by the "forces of progress"--that is, the worldwide Communist movement. Accordingly, the September 1973 Chilean coup that overthrew Salvador Allende's Marxist regime was supposedly the sinister work of "the forces of reaction and imperialism." When, in the mid-1980s, Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe confiscated farms and consolidated power, he announced his determination to destroy "all the forces of reaction bent on destruction and division of the Zimbabwean people for parochial and other personal gains."
Obviously, the Iraqi guerrillas killing our men have little if anything in common with the heroic Hungarian freedom fighters of 1956, or others who bravely resisted Communism. But Wolfowitz has more than a little in common with the Communists who applied that label to their adversaries. He is ...
Source: HighBeam Research, Commissar Wolfowitz.(The Last Word)