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War on Iraq

U.S. 'the Biggest Producer of Terror'

By Dahr Jamail and Ahmed Ali, IPS News. Posted January 28, 2008.


"Every one of these prisoners has a family, and these families now have reason to hate Americans."
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Broken promises have brought a dramatic increase in anti-U.S. sentiment across the capital city of Iraq's Diyala province.

Many people in Baquba, capital of Diyala 40 km northeast of Baghdad, had supported U.S. forces when they ousted former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. But failed reconstruction projects and muddled policies mean the U.S. has lost that support.

"The Americans based their strategy in Iraq on certain Shias here who have direct enmity with Sunnis and allegiance to Iran," resident Ayub Ibrahim told IPS. "This was the source of the gap between certain Shias which the U.S. backs, and certain Sunnis they back." Shias and Sunnis are different sects within Islam.

The U.S. has also alienated people through its policy of extensive detentions. Many believe that raids that lead to arrests are based on motivated information given to the U.S. military by Shia militiamen who have infiltrated the Iraqi army and police.

"We never witnessed an attempt to arrest Shia people either by the U.S. army or the Iraqi police and army," resident Abdul Sattar al-Badri told IPS. Most people see no reasonable basis for many of the arrests.

In November the International Committee of the Red Cross said that around 60,000 people are currently detained in Iraq.

"The Americans occupied our country and put our men in prisons," Dhafir al-Rubaiee, an officer from Iraq's previous army told IPS. "The majority of these prisoners have been arrested for nothing other than for being Sunni. Every one of these prisoners has a family, and these families now have reason to hate Americans."

Others blame the lack of security and the destroyed infrastructure for the increasing anti-U.S. sentiment.

"The lack of security is a direct result of the occupation," resident Abu Ali told IPS. "The Americans crossed thousands of miles to destroy our home and kill our men. They are the reason for all our disasters."

Another resident, speaking on condition of anonymity added, "We lived in need during the period of the Saddam government, but we were safe. We were compelled to work sometimes 20 hours a day to earn our living, but we were happy to see our children and relatives together." U.S. forces, he said, have ended all that.

Abu Tariq believes the U.S. military intentionally destroyed Iraq's infrastructure. "The Americans destroyed the electricity, water pumping stations, factories, bridges, highways, hospitals, schools, buildings, and opened the borders for strangers and terrorists to get easily into the country," he said.

The large number of Iraqis killed by U.S. forces has also hardly endeared the forces to the people.

"When targeted by a roadside bomb or suicide bomber, U.S. soldiers shoot at people randomly. Innocent civilians have been killed or injured," Yaser Abdul-Rahman, a 45-year-old schoolmaster told IPS. "Thousands of people have been killed like this."

The anti-U.S. sentiment in Baquba is now so high that people no longer hide their distrust of the U.S.

"At the beginning of the occupation, the people of Iraq did not realize the U.S. strategy in the area," Abu Taiseer, a member of the communist party in the city told IPS. "Their strategy is based on destruction and massacre. They do anything to have their agenda fulfilled.

"Now, Iraqis know that behind the U.S. smile is hatred and violence," Taiseer added. "They call others violent and terrorists, but what they are doing in Iraq and in other countries is the origin and essence of terror. America is the biggest producer of terror, and they spend huge funds for creating and training death squads all over the world."

Despite the differing U.S. ways of dealing with Shias and Sunnis, the two sects seem one in their hatred of the U.S.

"Look at our country, it will need 30 years to get back again," Edan Barham told IPS. "This has nothing to do with sects; all of us are Iraqis, and we should think of Iraq in a better way than sectarian lines."

"People of Iraq of all sects now realize that it is the occupation represented by the Americans that has damaged the country," resident Khalil Ibrahim said.

Political analyst Azhar al-Teengane says the only Iraqis who support the occupation are those benefiting directly from it.

"The occupation is good for politicians who have made money, militiamen, contractors and opportunists," Teengane said. "These form not more than 5 percent of Iraqi people."

Self-rule could help lower anti-U.S. sentiment, said resident Jalal al-Taee. "In order to improve the situation, the U.S. army should let the people of this city run it."

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Dahr Jamail is an independent journalist who reports from Iraq.

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View:
A little report from Diwaliya
Posted by: sarahk on Jan 28, 2008 12:33 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dear Dahr, thanks so much for your intelligent coverage of our war. I count on you and Raed Jarar (www.raedinthemiddle.blogspot.com) for good, commonsense reporting on Iraq.

My brother, a carpenter with KBR contracters, recently came back from a year in Diwaliya in south, rural Iraq. As a friendly, talkative fellow, he learned a lot about the lives of the Iraqis who worked on the base. Here is some of his accounts:

When he asked some of his workers if things had improved for them since Saddam was gone, they said that it was hard to say. No matter who ruled Baghdad, whether Saddam or the Americans, it was just a continuation of a thousand years of invasions and oppression by different forces. The general consensus was that Baghdad has never been the same since the Mongol invasion.

Some of the men he worked with had lived through the violent repression of their Shia uprising against Saddam Hussein during the 1st US Iraq War. These men said that security had improved (except for a few months last year when violent car bombs were happening)in that they were not afraid of mass killings and arrests.

These people did not have good electricity, water or healthcare before the US war so the lack of it now is not a huge change in their lives like it has been for other Iraqis.
John said that in his small group of Iraqi carpenters, three of them had children die this year of simple, preventable illnesses like fever.

Because there is no electricty, during the hot summer months when it is 120degrees, families sleep on their roofs. This is dangerous if mortar firing starts during the night.

There is a lack of good quality, cotton socks and undershirts in Iraq. John realized that a lot of his workers were having feet trouble because of having only nylon socks to wear with their boots. KBR had a rule that you have to wear boots on the worksite, which is a problem in the heat and humidity.

John also found that traditional Iraqi clothing like sandals, headscarfs and what American soldiers call the "man-dress" have practical applications. In extreme desert heat, John found that traditional western clothing like jeans can cause body and feet rashes. Wearing the mandress and sandals keeps the skin dry and comfy. John also found his headwrap perfect for working a construction site in the desert heat. During the cool mornings, it keeps your head warm. Later in the day, you can wet it to keep your head cool, and if the sand starts to blow hard, you can wrap it to protect your mouth and nose.

If any of you would like to help Iraqis displaced by the war, here is a good website:
Collateral Repair Project

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Ho Hum .. whats Britney doing?
Posted by: Paxmana1 on Feb 1, 2008 1:35 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The perfect combination .. American Zionist Huns and the Israeli hit men ..what a combination .. from Montezuma to Baghdad .. from Cuba to the Phillipines .. from Korea to Vietnam .. an American/British/Jewish river of toxic blood as they slaughter their way around the world.

Britannia and her bastard daughter America .. shimmy like the Israeli whores they are .. America and Britain are slave nations who are incapable of bringing their Governments into line and cutting out the cancer in the body politic ..

The figure of an excess of 1000,000 Iraqi dead has been confirmed .. the Americans and the British are no different from the Jews with the infanticide .. the rape of the women and the starving and the shooting in the head of the Palestinian children.

Whats Britney doing .. it seems she has lost the plot but Americans and Britons never lose the plot .. the Jews have tied the plot around their necks.

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