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War on Iraq

Military Slaughters Iraqi Civilians

By Dahr Jamail, Tomdispatch.com. Posted November 27, 2007.


Mainstream media would have you believe the U.S. military has only killed Iraqi "militants," "extremists" and "criminals" -- even when the people gunned down are women and children.
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"Sometimes I think it should be a rule of war that you have to see somebody up close and get to know him before you can shoot him." -- Colonel Potter, M*A*S*H

Name them. Maim them. Kill them.

From the beginning of the American occupation in Iraq, air strikes and attacks by the U.S. military have only killed "militants," "criminals," "suspected insurgents," "IED [Improvised Explosive Device] emplacers," "anti-American fighters," "terrorists," "military age males," "armed men," "extremists," or "al-Qaeda."

The pattern for reporting on such attacks has remained the same from the early years of the occupation to today. Take a helicopter attack on October 23rd of this year near the village of Djila, north of Samarra. The U.S. military claimed it had killed 11 among "a group of men planting a roadside bomb." Only later did a military spokesperson acknowledge that at least six of the dead were civilians. Local residents claimed that those killed were farmers, that there were children among them, and that the number of dead was greater than 11.

Here is part of the statement released by U.S. military spokeswoman in northern Iraq, Major Peggy Kageleiry:

"A suspected insurgent and improvised explosive device cell member was identified among the killed in an engagement between Coalition Forces and suspected IED emplacers just north of Samarra…. During the engagement, insurgents used a nearby house as a safe haven to re-engage coalition aircraft. A known member of an IED cell was among the 11 killed during the multiple engagements. We send condolences to the families of those victims and we regret any loss of life."

As usual, the version offered by locals was vastly different. Abdul al-Rahman Iyadeh, a relative of some of the victims, revealed that the "group of men" attacked were actually three farmers who had left their homes at 4:30 A.M. to irrigate their fields. Two were killed in the initial helicopter attack and the survivor ran back to his home where other residents gathered. The second air strike, he claimed, destroyed the house killing 14 people. Another witness told reporters that four separate houses were hit by the helicopter. A local Iraqi policeman, Captain Abdullah al-Isawi, put the death toll at 16 -- seven men, six women, and three children, with another 14 wounded.

As often happens, the U.S. military, once challenged, declared that an "investigation" of the incident was under way.

And So It Goes

On October 21st, two days before that helicopter strike near Djila, American soldiers, again aided by helicopters, but this time in a heavily populated urban neighborhood, claimed to have killed 49 "armed men" in a "gun battle" in Sadr City, a sprawling Shi'ite neighborhood in eastern Baghdad. Then, too, the military initially insisted "no civilians were killed or injured." A Shi'ite citizens' council and other Shi'ite groups responded that many innocent bystanders had died. Among the 13 dead mentioned in initial reports by local Iraqi police were three children and a woman. Other Iraqi authorities announced that 69 people had been injured.

The U.S. military had no explanation for the widely varying American and Iraqi tallies of casualties.

The official American account went like this:

"The operation's objective was an individual reported to be a long time Special Groups member specializing in kidnapping operations. Intelligence indicates he is a well-known cell leader and has previously sought funding from Iran to carry out high profile kidnappings. Upon arrival, the ground force began to clear a series of buildings in the target area and received sustained heavy fire from adjacent structures, from automatic weapons and rocket propelled grenades, or RPGs. Responding in self-defense, Coalition forces engaged, killing an estimated 33 criminals. Supporting aircraft was also called in to engage enemy personnel maneuvering with RPGs toward the ground force, killing an estimated six criminals. Upon departing the target area, Coalition forces continued to receive heavy fire from automatic weapons and RPGs and were also attacked by an improvised explosive device. Responding in self-defense, the ground force engaged the hostile threat, killing an additional estimated 10 combatants. All total, Coalition forces estimate that 49 criminals were killed in three separate engagements during this operation. Ground forces reported they were unaware of any innocent civilians being killed as a result of this operation."

To be fair, the military admitted that the target of this manhunt was not, in fact, among those captured or killed.

After the "operation," television news outlets broadcast images of grieving families in the streets of Sadr City. One man reported that his neighbor's 6-year-old child had been killed, and a 2-year-old wounded. Arab television outlets caught scenes of ambulances with wailing sirens carrying the injured to the Imam Ali hospital, the largest in Sadr City, where doctors were shown treating the casualties, including children.

Typically with such incidents, those 49 dead "criminals" turned back into civilians when local police began checking, including two (not three) children in their final count.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nour al-Maliki vowed an investigation for which U.S. military officials offered to form a joint committee; but, as is so often the case in such "investigations," there have been no follow-up reports. In this "incident," the U.S. military, as far as we know, still stands by its assertion that no civilians were killed or wounded.


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Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq (Haymarket Books, 2007).

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View:
Same as it ever was
Posted by: Dboy on Nov 27, 2007 11:42 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The United States is the biggest terrorist state ever to rampage this planet, and our tax dollars continue to pay for it. What else is new.

I've been to Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam. The bomb craters are still visible in the rice fields. Are rice farmers terrorists, or are the Air Force pilots?

Why are US military (the thug class) considered to be heroes? Why the ribbons on cars? Why the constant fawning on CNN (nevermind Fox, they are obviously idiots along with their viewers).

Why do THE REST of us still fall for this nightmare that the US political class has created? Why can PNAC executives sleep without fear, while surrounded by a fed-up American people? Or ARE we fed up?


dboy

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» RE: Same as it ever was, killing is our thing Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
Why You Will Never Win
Posted by: braxxian1 on Nov 27, 2007 8:41 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America's casual brutality in the Middle East is a classic reason why the so called "war on terror" will never be won. Its generally known that due to the culture and history of revenge in the Middle East that for every person you kill you simply make 2 more enemies. Every Son, brother, father ,sister, daughter, uncle and aunt killed by Americas crusade across the sands of Iraq will simply swell the ranks of those who will hate America till the end of time.

Still maby that the point. America is a war nation, simple as that. Weapons and violence seem to be your most profitable exports these days, so it makes sence to be as brutal as possible when dealing with your enemies, that way your war machine will have a whole new generation of "rag heads" to kill next time. Makes you proud to be an American right.

You guys used to be the leaders of the free world, now you are a discrace.

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» RE: Why You Will Never Win Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Why You Will Never Win Posted by: willymack
We Still Haven't Learned
Posted by: AlexLawyer on Nov 28, 2007 12:14 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most Americans aren't concerned about a million plus Iraqi deaths, nor that most of them are noncombatant women and children, nor the millions maimed or driven into exile. No, they supported this war and have only turned against it because it's costing too much money and too many American lives (around 4000), not on principle. We still haven't learned.

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War is hell, literally
Posted by: vox persona on Nov 28, 2007 12:29 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Many here are lulled into a sense of complacency by the controlled corporate media (the 'surge' is 'working'), and by a lying ruling class that can manipulate a pliant sheeple that can be herded in whatever direction they choose. War is peace, we're fighting to bring'em demokracy, up is down....Orwell would be proud. Lies are now Truth. Remember when 'they' (who the F are they anyway?) 'elected' a 'uniter, not a divider', who told us he would conduct a 'humble foreign policy' and the US wasn't/couldn't be 'the world's policeman' and he wasn't into 'nation building'? It is rare in history when one man's decision destroyed an entire country, committed to a self-defeating self-sustaining self-fulfilling war of choice. There is nothing casual about casualties. We may be distracted by our own materialism and shallow interests (American Idol, etc), but to Iraqis it IS their Armegeddon.....it is hell on Earth thanks to the Bu$hCo Crime Syndicate, and their war profiteering cronies and the militaryindustrialcomplex. AAAAARRRRRGGGGGHHHHH!!!!! That's my scream therapy for the day.....there , I feel better. I wonder who's on Letterman tonight?

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» RE: War is hell, literally Posted by: vox persona
Lucky
Posted by: ankhet on Nov 28, 2007 3:46 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wow, it's a good thing that "criminals" always cluster together like that! And certainly there's no better way to deal with a "report" of a "suspected"(by whom?)criminal with possible hostile intentions than to eradicate entire neighborhoods - where have we seen this tactic before?

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Only The Begining
Posted by: Tom Degan on Nov 28, 2007 4:10 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The damage that this half-witted little piece of shit (Note to viewers of FOX Noise: I'm referring to George W. Bush) has done to this country and this planet will be palpable a century and a half from now. Remember something - In 1945 America dropped two atomic bombs on Japan and, sixty-two years later, we're just the best of friends! The Iraqis, for whatever reason, are not like that. They hold a grudge and they never let go. Just look at the fighting between the Shiites and the Sunnis! How many centuries has that been going on now?

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

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war is hell
Posted by: Rod on Nov 28, 2007 4:28 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When politicians and the war industry begin to believe that technology can limit (limit is not always zero ) non-combatant fatality's and injury to an acceptable (warning, definition of acceptable may vary) level they often decide to wage a war.

War is hell. People always have and always will die. If you are in the wrong place at the wrong time you get it. People, when shot at tend to make decisions to keep them safe at any cost of the enemy. The enemy is dehumanized, you have to or you go nuts. It is not criminal, or a failing of the military, it is just the way it is. It is not romantic, or heroic, it is what it is. Mistakes will be made. We all are human.

Any time anyone tells you different you are being lied to. If you believe them, you are naive or guilty.

Are there war criminals, IMHO yes. Virtually none of them are wearing the uniform. Almost everyone else is a victim. The true criminals are at the top, GWB, Cheny and all the war mongers who lie, manipulate etc.

Those are the criminals. We should be dealing with them, but impeachment is off the table. Thanks Nancy, I wonder are you naive or criminal. Either way, you did a bad thing, I do hope you are not re-elected. The solders being asked to perform an impossible task are not criminals.

We broke a country. We should fix it before we leave. We will not, but we should.

My opinion.

Rod

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» RE: War is hell we create! Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: War is hell we create! Posted by: hilaryuk
» RE: War is hell we create! Posted by: Just The Facts
» RE: War is hell we create! Posted by: EKSwitaj
» RE: War is hell we create! Posted by: Just The Facts
» RE: War is hell we create! Posted by: teufelhunde
» RE: war is hell Posted by: packrat083
Here is a way to help Iraqi civilians
Posted by: sarahk on Nov 28, 2007 7:09 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here is an organization that is directly helping civilians in Iraq and also displaced people in Jordan:
The Collateral Repair Project

I found this organization by reading Raed Jarrar's blog. Raed has been blogging about his experiences in Iraq for years. He has since fled to the US, and his parents fled to Jordan. His mother, an engineer who has not been able to find work since leaving Iraq, began working with the Collateral Repair group to help other displaced people.

On a side note, my brother is working for KB&R in rural south Iraq. He manages a group of about 30 Iraqis on his base. He asked them if their lives had improved since we went into Iraq. They said no as the Americans are just as bad as Saddam. They went on to say that they have been oppressed for over a thousand years, and it wasn't going to get any better no matter who controlled Baghdad. One guy said Iraq has never been the same since the Mongols invaded. My brother asked when the Mongols invaded. Evidently, it was in 1285.

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Death Comes Easy
Posted by: QQOblivion on Nov 28, 2007 7:16 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is American POLICY to kill civilians in war -- If there is any chance to kill just one SUSPECTED "terrorist", then the dozens of innocent civilians that get in the way are fair game too. Those are the rules of war the US helped write.

And it is not just in Iraq that this slaughter in our name continues. Just recently, for example, US forces killed at least a dozen road-construction workers in an airstrike in Afghanistan. And, surprise surprise, the American military does what it ALWAYS does in this situation, it blames the enemy. (It has been claimed by the US military that the Taliban "fed" the US faulty intelligence.)

Yeah, brown people aren't worth very much to the American public or to our military. From the wars with the Native Americans, to the bombing with nuclear weapons of the Japanese, from Afghanistan to Iraq, death comes easy.
For killing someone is the most extreme form of control you can have over that someone. And killing people on a large scale, like torture, is another form of control over the "enemy" people.
That is the way Americans like it -- having us in charge.
Bend over, world, or else -- 'cause Bush and friends have got a hard-on thinking about all that misery they can inflict upon you.

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A few stories BushCo would rather have you forget about:
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Nov 28, 2007 9:50 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The U.S. government and its corporate and international partners (such as Carlyle, Lockheed, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, AT&T, Verizon, Chevron, Exxon, the Saudis, the Israelis, etc.) operate with a total propaganda mindset - reality is what they say it is.

However, they have left a trail, haven't they?

Pentagon's Recipe For Propaganda: By Carol Brightman, AlterNet. Posted February 20, 2003.

"There’s a kind of strange naivete on the part of journalists, especially in a war situation when it comes to accepting official explanations," says Richard Rubenstein, professor of Conflict Resolution at George Mason University. "One gets the feeling that the press is being played."

I Was A PR Intern in Iraq
By Willem Marx, Harper's. Posted September 18, 2006.


“The villa's other inhabitants had been sent to Iraq as part of a contract Lincoln Group had with USAID to build training centers for Iraqi businesses. None of them had much experience in the region nor had worked very long for the company. . . They often speculated about the company, suspecting that it might secretly be owned by the Carlyle Group or that some of its employees were really CIA. I asked them whom I should speak to about getting going on my media internship, but they only shrugged. They had no idea. . .”

A Lesson In U.S. Propaganda: By Mark Crispin Miller, AlterNet. Posted January 3, 2003.

“As we sit and wait for another war against Iraq, we should remember this triumphant bit of spin -- and all the other winning lies of Operation Desert Storm. The Gulf War was itself a propaganda masterpiece, which wowed the TV audience far more than it threatened the grotesque regime in Baghdad. And because the propaganda always blocked our view of things, it left us with important questions that remain unanswered to this day:
How exactly -- and for how long -- did the Reagan and the Bush administrations fund and arm Saddam?

Why did April Glaspie, our ambassador in Baghdad, tell Hussein, one week before he grabbed Kuwait, that the U.S. had "no opinion" on "your border disagreement"?

Where is the evidence that Iraq threatened Saudi Arabia? In the summer of 1990, that claim was crucial to the drive for war?”


At least in the Soviet Union, the general public knew they were being fed propaganda, and so most of them ignored it. The remarkable thing about the U.S. is the number of people who unquestioningly believe what they see on TV, read in the paper, and hear on the radio. Must be all the Prozac in distribution.

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» Speaking of lucrative markets Posted by: eddie torres
They are 'Targets' not people
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Nov 28, 2007 10:54 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In military speak,the only thing fired upon in a war zone is 'Targets'. I've been told many times by folks behind the guns,'If someone moves into a 'target area' it don't matter who they are they're dead'. Such is war thinking. You can't go off on a presidential vendetta if you believe you're shooting people. You have to dehumanize them. You create new names for the people you kill. They pin medals on you for the most kills you get,try to call you a hero but the facts are the facts.
If you participate in a vendetta you are a hired killer. You can put stars on 'em and call them whatever but you are still a hired killer. Not as well paid as Blackwater or as well protected but you are a killer.
It's been true for all of us who were in the service. They made us all killers. The site of a round you fired and the result of it's impact on the person you just shot and the fact that you know it was your shot never leaves you. The blood soaked beaches from WW2 are still in their minds. The napalmed bodies of Vietnamese children still run in my mind, so I know anyone who has killed anyone in Iraq will be with them for the rest of their lives too.
This is how societies driven by pure capitalism works. They make shakey friendships with folks they can later deem 'enemies' and create a war to make lots of money screwing everybody from their citizens to the folks they call enemy. That's why it's time to reinvent what America really stands for. We are not Free. We have little Liberty. The country is pretty far from 'By and For the People'. I believe it's time to enforce the Preamble. The two party system is broken and we must remove them from power. Neither party deserves your vote. It's time to 'Just say NO' to all candidates,paying taxes or buying flags.
Peace is the only way
Jeffrey7

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» RE: They are 'Targets' not people Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
murderous government
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Nov 28, 2007 11:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the people should not be afraid of their government, the government should be afraid of the people

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You got it all wrong
Posted by: willymack on Nov 28, 2007 12:08 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Really. Bush and his pals are a swell bunch of guys who have our best interests in mind. Those civilians dying in Iraq really are terrorists, because we use only smart bombs and bullets which can tell the difference between the good guys and the bad guys. Our glorious victories in Iraq will soon be followed by an even more righteous and honorable one in Iran, because we'll use nookular bombs there. The radiation should only last a few thousand years, besides, it's not like it's over here, is it? Well, gotta go; those pesky guys with the nets are headed my way, again.

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» RE: You got it all wrong...Lol Posted by: Captainmagic
Remember Mi Lai
Posted by: dayenta on Nov 28, 2007 12:40 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When the massacre at Mi Lai happened in Viet Nam, the media was all over it, and the public was outraged. Ya hardly hear anything about this stuff in this war. Hmmmm...do ya think someone's controlling the media?
Strange lack of outrage among the general population.

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» RE: emember Mi Lai Posted by: Vik
Ain't nobody gittin kilt but turrorists
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Nov 28, 2007 1:55 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Any fool knows that. I know that, Bush told me so and he gits it from gawad in his ear ever fuckin day. U bettah beleev it or suffah in hell for uh long tahm, or awhall anuways. Bless ya bubba.

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I'm not at all surprised....
Posted by: risk on Nov 28, 2007 3:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm not at all surprised. However, I believe that killing anyone innocent comes with a price and living with the memory and the finality as well as the total change that comes after the murderous act has been committed will rob many of these soldiers of sleep and peace of mind for all time. Self defense is one thing but murder is a whole new ball game and it's demonically ugly.

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Conundrum
Posted by: rockpicker on Nov 28, 2007 4:31 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When a bunker buster
falls in the desert
and no one
shows you photos
of the shadows
of little bodies
etched on concrete walls,
is the wailing of mothers
undone
by the whirr
of rotors?

-gkm
1/7/06 for FP

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They All are War Criminals
Posted by: Jersey Devil on Nov 28, 2007 7:13 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is difficult to support the troops when they permit these murderous acts to continue unpunished. Hopefully some time in the future the World Court will try these murderers for slaughter of these innocent civilians and try George W. Bush for the War Crimes he has ordered as Commander in Chief of US Armed Forces in Iraq and Afganistan.

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killing civilians, women and children?
Posted by: Doubtom on Dec 1, 2007 9:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Shoot, I thought this was about my favorite group Blackwater. What a disappointment.

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What are terrorists?
Posted by: teufelhunde on Dec 2, 2007 9:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Are terrorists civilians? Isn't their mission the same as Giap's in the seventies? Wait until America gets tired of its happily ever after dream?

What's the solution the next time we get attacked?

And does anybody here think that maybe people who join the military might actually care about their country?

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