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<div>Jimmy Breslin<br>
<br>
March 30, 2003<br>
<br>
The least blood, a small squirt when removing a needle, two drops,
that's<br>
all, no more than two drops, and suddenly it is everywhere. It
remains<br>
after all. Wipe and it returns. Look about and it is in two and
three<br>
places. Wipe those places and the blood does not go away. Two drops
appear<br>
as a needle comes out and then it is endless.<br>
<br>
Blood from the body of a baby bombed to death in Baghdad, blood by
the<br>
pint, running onto the street as fast as a swift river, has magic in
its<br>
pure infant cells. Of course you cannot scrub the street clean because
the<br>
blood from the baby already has covered the street and is in the
air.<br>
<br>
Blood from a bombed baby in Baghdad goes over the wide choking sands
and it<br>
crosses mountains and then great land masses and then suddenly, over
a<br>
channel, it is in Westminster, in London, and people look at the
sidewalk<br>
and wonder where these large blood spots came from, and the officer on
duty<br>
in front of 10 Downing Street looks at the door handle and worries,
how did<br>
this get here without me seeing this and having it cleaned? He has
a<br>
servant rush to the door with cloth and polish and he wipes the blood
and<br>
polishes the door handles and then walks off and the guard happens
to<br>
glance at the door handle and the blood is back, smeared bright new
red<br>
over the polished handle.<br>
<br>
The baby's blood is off to rush over the ocean, a strange red cloud
poised<br>
to rain and it floats over the green of the Washington parks and goes
down<br>
a sloping street to the State Department, where as a man opens a car
door<br>
for Colin Powell he suddenly notices blood on the door handle and
he<br>
quickly unfurls a handkerchief and wipes the handle and Powell gets in
and<br>
the car goes off and the man who held the door is left in the driveway
and<br>
he sees the red that is still on Powell's door handle.<br>
<br>
When he leaves the car, Powell does not notice the door handle as
he<br>
touches it himself. The blood red cloud goes over the river to the
Pentagon<br>
and it suddenly pours on the car that takes Rumsfeld to an appearance,
and<br>
this time the blood is left on the door handles of both sides. A
sergeant<br>
wipes. The blood is there when Rumsfeld gets home.<br>
<br>
The red cloud then comes down on the White House lawn and it does more
than<br>
sprinkle, it splashes the helicopter of the president and he strolls
out<br>
with his wife, his dog and his chesty walk and slight smirk and the
wife at<br>
his side is smiling, for it is the end of the week and we are good,
decent<br>
Christian people, God bless us and God bless everybody, and as they
are<br>
about to get into the helicopter, an Air Force officer rushes up in
alarm<br>
and says, please, just give us a moment, and he has three people
scrubbing<br>
so quickly to clean the blood from the helicopter and then Bush and
his<br>
wife get aboard and they fly off to Camp David, for where else would
you go<br>
on a weekend, and as they have neglected to have two men hanging out
of the<br>
windows and inspecting the sides of the craft in midair, nobody can
see the<br>
blood back on the helicopter.<br>
<br>
As they get off at at Camp David, Bush's hand brushes against baby
blood on<br>
the plane, as does his wife's.<br>
<br>
At this hour in London, Blair arises in the middle of his long night
and<br>
goes to the bathroom to try and wash this blood off. He couldn't do
it<br>
before he went to bed.<br>
<br>
In Washington, Rumsfeld stares at the red splotches on both his hands
and<br>
Colin Powell calls out that there must be something wrong with the
soap<br>
because it does not get the blood off his hands.<br>
<br>
At Camp David, Bush notices blood on his right hand and he goes to
the<br>
bathroom to wash it off and he holds his hands under the water and
rubs<br>
them with a bar of soap and then puts them under the water and he
takes<br>
them out and holds them out to dry with a towel. He glances at his
hands<br>
and sees the blood of the dead baby is bright on his fingers. He
mutters<br>
and washes the hands again.<br>
<br>
He will do it again. Again this year and then next year and through
all the<br>
years because the blood remains forever on the hands.</div>
<div><br>
Copyright (c) 2003, Newsday, Inc.<br>
</div>
<div>--------------------<br>
<br>
This article originally appeared at:<br>
<a
href=
"http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/iraq/ny-bres0330,0,3765540.column"
>http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/iraq/ny-bres0330,0,3765540.c<span
></span>olumn</a></div>
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<div>Marta Russell<br>
Los Angeles, CA<br>
http://www.disweb.org</div>
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