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War of Lies: Film Review

Author
James Robins,
Publish Date
Tue, 19 May 2015, 11:54am

War of Lies: Film Review

Author
James Robins,
Publish Date
Tue, 19 May 2015, 11:54am

Director: Matthais Bittner

3/5


An Iraqi defector named Rafed Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi (codename 鈥楥urveball鈥) rests his elbows on the steel table. All of the indignancy that animated him throughout the film vanishes. He stares at the off-screen interrogator, considering the question.

鈥淲hen you see the chaos and your destroyed homeland,鈥 the disembodied voice of writer and director Matthais Bittner asks, 鈥渁re you ashamed of your lie?鈥

鈥淪hould I be honest?鈥 Rafed replies. 鈥淵es.鈥

War of Lies is the tense retelling of an informant鈥檚 dishonesty and whether one man ought to shoulder the guilt for a liberation turned catastrophe.

Curveball鈥檚 mostly falsified evidence 鈥 that Saddam Hussein was still manufacturing chemical and biological weapons until the early 2000s 鈥 would become the central jigsaw puzzle piece which tied together the case for the 2003 intervention in Iraq. The information would appear in 112 US reports on Iraq, and famously in Colin Powell鈥檚 February 2003 address to the UN. The British government would ignore David Kay鈥檚 insistence of inconsistencies in the story.

At its heart, this documentary has all the mystery and motive of John Le Carre鈥檚 best literary work, though with very tangible real-world consequences.

The film鈥檚 central interview is spliced between point-of-view re-enactments which push the story forward. In these handheld set-pieces each character is given a name but no face. Rafed鈥檚 wife is never seen. The asylum officers and intelligence agents are simply shirtsleeves or shadowy spectres. When Rafed begins to fear Baathist death squads want him dead, paranoia sets in.听 The breathing behind the camera becomes shallower. Curtains are peered through as black-hatted silhouettes patrol orange-lit streets.

Brittner鈥檚 technique is a welcome relief from the typical talking-head documentary format. The endless exposition is disappeared and replaced with near-silent scenes rendered taught with suspense.

Swapping between interviews, set-pieces, and occasional news bulletin montages, the story unravels.

Rafed, arriving as a defector in Germany in 1999, gets 鈥榗arrot and stick鈥 from the asylum office. Stowed away with eight other migrants, the protagonist receives no special treatment until he mentions his degree in chemical engineering from a Baghdad University.

The 鈥榮tick鈥 very quickly becomes a 鈥榗arrot鈥. Rafed is bumped up to rooms all to himself. He divulges more falsehoods about various chemical plants which leads to an apartment upgrade. Once the UN inspectors show up at the plant and find nothing to corroborate the tale, Rafed recycles Saddam鈥檚 notorious reputation for cat-and-mouse concealment tactics.

The chemicals and biological weapons facility is actually mobile, he claims, spread across three trucks. They鈥檙e able to disappear into the desert whenever needed. (It should be noted that Rafed is not far from the mark: Saddam buried entire squadrons of fighter jets in sand dunes to avoid inspectors鈥 sanctions, and ordered an entire nuclear warehouse bulldozed and rebuilt with a few days. As always, he got his wish.)

Those infamous roving labs later become central to the American case for regime change in Iraq. Most remarkably the Americans, not long after the invasion, 鈥榩roduced鈥 two of three non-existent trucks. Rafed鈥檚 deception is complete.

However, having Curveball on camera 鈥 all toothy grins and gesticulation 鈥 allows for the other end of the moral equation which Bittner seems entirely reluctant to include.

Rafed very early on highlights two important points often lost in the prevailing anti-war narrative (Bittner鈥檚 clear ideological base): that Saddam Hussein and his quarter-decade regime needed to be ended, and war was going to inevitable because of it.

When Bittner confronts Rafed with the images of a bloodied child after Saddam鈥檚 downfall, he delivers his own return serve. What about the horrible necessity of sanctions, and corrupt oil-for-food programme? What about Halabja in 1988, where 5000 civilians were gassed to death in a single afternoon? He goes further, arguing that for the Iraqi diaspora, there was always going to be a price for a tyranny overthrown.

This arrives closer to the single largest problem of War of Lies. Under a different title (perhaps Culture of Lies?) Bittner might鈥檝e have turned his eye on just why the Germans, the Americans, and the British entertained Rafed鈥檚 fantasies for so long. The questions dangle unattended: Why use a fantasy as the cornerstone for an action which was justifiable without it? Was Curveball鈥檚 evidence simply the trigger on what was already a plan in action? Was it post-hoc justification?

The depth and breadth of the intelligence community鈥檚 failure goes untroubled because Bittner, it seems, wants to see Rafed squirm. He wants Curveball humiliated in the public eye.

He could鈥檝e succeeded, too. Bittner, for most of what is an otherwise gripping film, keeps dealing out more and more rope which Rafed can hang himself with. But by pushing an Iraqi defector into a sensitive area, the director鈥檚 prejudice is exposed.

Go and live for a day under Saddam鈥檚 regime, Rafed implies, and tell me you wouldn鈥檛 have done the same thing.

War of Lies is showing at the听.听

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