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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Iraqis demand end to American occupation
By James Conachy
19 April 2003
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Fridays prayer sessions in Baghdad were followed by a
mass demonstration of the Iraqi peoples hostility toward
the US invasion. As many as 20,000 worshippers left the citys
Abu Haneefa al-Numan mosque and marched through the streets
waving Korans and carrying banners in Arabic and English reading
Leave our country, we want peace.
Prior to the protest, Ahmed Al-Kubaisi, a leading Sunni Muslim
cleric, accused the US of crushing Iraq on Israels behalf
and denounced the American military occupation as illegal. Calling
for the unity of the countrys Sunni and Shiite populations
in a common struggle to expel the American troops, he told worshippers
that Saddam Hussein had betrayed the Iraqi people
by failing to defend the country.
Al-Kubaisi advocates the establishment of an Islamic state,
and among the banners carried by demonstrators was one declaring,
No to America! No to secular state! Yes to Islamic state!
American troops in the path of the demonstration were withdrawn
as the angry crowd advanced toward them. On both Tuesday and Wednesday,
US marines gunned down Iraqi civilians in the northern city of
Mosul, fueling the nationwide anger against the US forces.
The unrest in Mosul was sparked by the display of the American
flag on US military vehicles and over the citys municipal
offices, and an attempt by Mishaan Al-Jubari, a pro-US former
Republican Guard general who fled Iraq after he was accused of
corruption, to declare himself the city governor.
According to the US Central Command spokesman General Vince
Brooks, a large crowd outside the municipal offices on Tuesday
was violent, throwing rocks at the marines, hitting them
with their fists and spitting on them. Whether responding
to direct orders or due to panic, marines opened fire, killing
ten demonstrators and wounding at least another 16. A US soldier
complained to the New York Times that the people in Mosul
were not grateful.
On Wednesday, according to Iraqi witnesses, US marines killed
civilians a second time, opening fire on a crowd beginning to
gather for another protest. Mosuls emergency hospital reported
that three fatalities and 12 wounded were brought in, including
two children. The US military claims its troops in the municipal
offices only fired on snipers shooting at them from neighboring
buildings.
Other leading Muslim clerics used Friday prayers to preach
opposition to the US. In Karbala, southwest of Baghdad, a leading
Shiite cleric denounced the US invasion before thousands
of worshippers at one of the holiest sites of Shiite Muslims,
the shrine to the prophet Mohammeds grandson, Hussein. Sheikh
Kaazem al-Abahadi al-Nasari told worshippers: We reject
this foreign occupation, which is a new imperialism. We dont
want it anymore. We dont need the Americans. Theyre
here to control our oil. Theyre unbelievers, but as for
us, we have the power of faith.
In the predominantly Shiite Muslim northern suburbs of
Baghdadpreviously called Saddam City but now
renamed Sadr Citysome 50,000 worshippers filled
the streets surrounding the Al-Hikma mosque to hear leading Shiite
cleric, Sheikh Mohammed Fartusi, implicitly attack the US moves
to install a puppet regime. A government that allows Iraqis
to say what they want but gives them no say in their destiny,
he said, would be worse than that of Saddam Hussein.
Demonstrations against the US have also been reported this
week in the cities of Kut, Nassiriya and Basra. In Kut, demonstrators
spat on American troops and chanted no Chalabi. Ahmad
Chalabi is the leader of the US-sponsored and financed Iraqi National
Congress and may be installed by the Bush administration as a
leading figure in an American puppet government.
The outpouring of sentiment in Iraq denouncing the US troops
as invaders and occupiers has reached such dimensions that it
cannot be ignored even by the media outlets that have claimed
American forces are being welcomed as liberators.
The most shameless advocate and apologist of US militarism,
Fox News, has elected to report Fridays demonstration in
Baghdad as the positive expression of the democracy
the US has brought to the country. Perhaps more concerned about
its credibility than Fox, CNN introduced its news bulletins throughout
Friday with the statement that US forces have gone from
heroes to aggressors in the eyes of some Iraqis. Wire reports
by Associated Press, AFP and Reuters have analyzed the demonstration
as being primarily a reflection of discontent over the failure
of the American forces to prevent looting and restore essential
services.
There is little doubt that much of the Iraqi population blames
the US for the looting and anarchy since the Iraqi government
collapsed and Baghdad fell on April 9. The talk on Iraqs
streetswith good reasonis that the US military directly
facilitated and encouraged the chaos in order to further weaken
the country and justify a permanent military occupation with the
claim the Iraqi people cannot govern themselves.
At the more fundamental level, the gatherings and demonstrations
are an expression of the bitterness, humiliation and anger of
a people who have seen their country reduced to rubble and helplessness
by the worlds greatest power. Iraq has been brought to its
knees, at the cost of hundreds of thousands of lives, by 12 years
of US aggression. The looting and destruction of museums, libraries,
schools, hospitals and government buildings over the last nine
days can only take place in a society that has been shattered.
As the shock and trauma of war begins to dissipate, however,
it is inevitable that Iraqs different ethnic and religious
groups will begin demanding solutions to their complex array of
national, democratic and social aspirations left unanswered when
Britain and France created the nation by drawing lines in the
sand. Uniting large sections of the Iraqi population will be demands
for the full withdrawal of foreign troops and their right to decide
their own fatenot to be governed by a regime headed by people
like Chalabi and Al-Jubari, corrupt figures with no political
legitimacy or following.
The US massacres in Mosul are an anticipation of what can be
expected across the country over the coming weeks and months.
The Bush administration will be driven by the predatory aims of
the US ruling elite to brutally repress the Iraqi people.
See Also:
A revealing glimpse of Washingtons
free and democratic Iraq
[18 April 2003]
The fight against imperialist war: the
socialist perspective
[17 April 2003]
American troops massacre Iraqi protesters
in Mosul
[16 April 2003]
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