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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
US military metes out collective punishment to Iraqi city
By Peter Symonds
22 December 2003
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Despite the attempts of the Bush administration and international
media to claim the capture of Saddam Hussein as a major breakthrough
in suppressing armed resistance, events on the ground in Iraq
speak otherwise. As the attacks on US troops and Iraqi collaborators
continue unabated, the response of the US military has been to
intensify its heavy-handed repression aimed at terrorising the
Iraqi people into submission.
Just days after Husseins detention, some 2,500 US soldiers
sealed off Samarra, a city of 200,000 people, in the early hours
of December 17 and set about smashing their way into homes and
factories in search of insurgents. It was a classic
reprisal raid, not unlike those carried out by Israeli troops
against the Palestinian population, or for that matter by the
Nazis against villages and towns accused of harbouring resistance
fighters in occupied Europe.
The Pentagon identified Samarra as a hotspot after
two separate US convoys were ambushed simultaneously on November
30. American troops responded and claimed to have scored a
significant victory by killing 54 of the attackers. However,
journalists who later questioned hospital staff and local residents,
found an entirely different story: that US soldiers had fired
indiscriminately, killing nine civilians including a child and
an elderly Iranian pilgrim, and wounding others.
On December 15, US troops were ambushed again. Military spokesmen
claimed that 11 insurgents had been killed, but like
the earlier clash, failed to produce any evidence. According to
veteran Middle East journalist Robert Fisk, the only dead man
to be found was a vegetable seller. The following day, American
soldiers raided a nearby village and detained more than 70 people,
including an alleged rebel commander Qais Hatten.
December 17s huge operation, however, was clearly planned
well in advance. US military planners decided the city had to
be taught a lesson. Or as Lieutenant Colonel Nate Sassaman told
the media afterward: Samarra has been a little bit of a
thorn in our side. It hasnt come along as quickly as other
cities in the rebuilding of Iraq. This operation is designed to
bring them up to speed.
Operation Ivy Blizzard began at 2 a.m. Troops from the Armys
4th Infantry Division, backed by Apache attack helicopters and
F-16 fighters, blocked the main routes and poured into the city.
Using sledgehammers, crowbars, explosives and armoured vehicles,
US forces smashed down the gates of homes and the doors of workshops
and junkyards to attack the Iraqi resistance that has persisted
despite the capture of Saddam Hussein, Associated Press
reported.
According to other accounts, US troops detonated plastic explosives
to break open doors. In one of the citys industrial areas,
the military used Bradley Fighting Vehicles to ram through the
doors of warehouses and workshops. US military officials cited
by the Los Angeles Times described the operation as a robust
response to insurgents in Samarra. Others explained that
a force of some 1,500 fighters was conducting attacks on US troops
as well as police and civilians working for the US occupation
authorities.
In a sinister development, hooded men described as Iraqi
civil corpsmen accompanied the US troops. One of them told
the Los Angeles Times: This is a tribal town, and
everyone knows everyone else. If someone knows who I am, they
will surely try to kill me as a collaborator. The resistance is
everywhere here. While he did not explain his role in the
operation, the obvious function of such Iraqi militia is to finger
and interrogate suspected insurgents.
The US soldiers had been primed for the task. Staff Sergeant
Tome Walker told the press: They hyped this place like it
was the Wild West. We heard there were two factions of foreign
fighters, and Fedayeen Saddam [Husseins paramilitary forces].
We havent seen it yet. Maybe later in the week. By
the end of the day, 86 people had been detained, just 12 of whom
were on the US list of targets, and a cache containing 200 automatic
rifles and some bomb-making material had been uncovered.
According to the US military, several civilians were wounded
but no one was killed. But as on previous occasions, this bland
statement proved to be a mixture of lies and callous indifference
to the suffering, not to speak of the anger and resentment, which
had been caused. A dispatch by Robert Fisk entitled Shooting
Samarras schoolboys in the back reported at least
one fatalitya taxi driver Amer Baghdadi who was shot dead
by US troops. Other casualties were in the Samarra hospital.
Maouloud Hussein, 31, was shot in the back as he tried to shepherd
his family into the back room of their house. His brother Hamid
Hussein angrily declared: You said you would bring us freedom
and democracy but what are we supposed to think? My neighbour,
the Americans took him in front of his wife and two children and
tied his hands behind his back, and then, a few hours later, after
all this humiliation, they came and told his wife to take all
her most expensive things and they put explosives in their house
and blew it up. He is a farmer. He is innocent. What have we done
to deserve this?
Issam Naim Hamid, 17, was in the emergency ward with a bullet
wound to his stomach. His mother, Manal, explained that US troops
had come to their home at around 3 a.m. and fired through the
gate. As the family huddled for protection, one of the bullets
hit Issam and another hit his father who was in a serious condition
in Tikrit hospital. Manal was terrified that they would bleed
to death as the US troops refused to allow anyone to leave the
house for several hours.
In a separate interview with the Los Angeles Times, Manal,
a teacher, denounced the heavy-handed methods of the US military.
The best thing America can do for us is go home and let
us take care of our own security. This will only make the resistance
stronger... How can the Americans treat us this way? Where is
the democracy they promised us? she asked.
Asked to comment on the impact of the operation on civilians,
Colonel Frederick Rudesheim, commander of one of the 4th Infantry
Divisions combat teams, was completely unapologetic. Certainly
weve inconvenienced a number of citizens of Samarra. But
these same citizens are the ones whove been living for months
with terrorists among them, he said.
Rudesheims comments reveal the logic behind Operation
Ivy Blizzard. It is not only the resistance groups that are being
blamed for the attacks on US troops. All of the citys residents,
whove been living for months with terrorists,
are being held responsible. The response was a form of collective
punishment, aimed at intimidating and terrorising the city as
a whole. The US military is increasingly resorting to such methods
to pacify a population that is becoming more and more hostile
to the neo-colonial occupation of the country.
It is significant that the US military has singled out Samarra
for special attention. Prior to the US invasion, the city and
its tribal leaders were regarded as anti-Husseintraditionally
it had been a rival to Husseins hometown of Tikrit. As Ali
Hussein, 35-year-old labourer, exclaimed to the press: Saddam
accused us of being against him, and now the Americans accuse
us of being with Saddam. If Samarra has now become a hotbed,
it is one more indication of the extent of the opposition to the
US occupation.
The US military claims that there has been a significant decline
in the level of attacks in Samarra. The city has been placed under
an 11 p.m. to 4 a.m. curfew. The arrests have continued. Any lull,
however, is dependent on the presence of large numbers of US troops
and is therefore only temporary. One insurgent told
the Washington Post: There is a total siege of the
city. They are all over the streets. If we hit them, people are
bound to get hurt. If one shot is fired, the whole street will
be shot up.
Elsewhere, the anti-US attacks and American reprisals continue
unabated. Over the weekend, guerrillas struck oil storage tanks
in southern Baghdad, blew up a pipeline in the al-Mashahda area
north of the capital and fired a rocket-propelled grenade on a
US military convoy in Mosul. The US military continued its raids
and house-to-house searches in Fallujah and Rawah, as well as
Samarra.
See Also:
Bush calls for Husseins execution:
a portrait of sadism and ignorance
[18 December 2003]
Saddam Husseins capture will not
resolve Iraqi quagmire
[15 December 2003]
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