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Analysis : Middle
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US unleashes renewed bombing raids on Iraqi towns
By Richard Phillips
11 November 2003
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The US military launched bombing strikes against Iraqi civilians
last weekend for the first time since President Bush declared
an end to major combat on May 1. The air campaign, involving F-16
bombers, targeted two towns, Tikrit and Fallujah, which have become
centres of popular resistance to the US occupation. It was aimed
at terrorising the Iraqi people in response to the escalating
number and sophistication of attacks on American troops in the
last weeks.
While American officials, from President Bush down to senior
military commanders, continue to claim that progress
is being made, the reality on the ground is that the US is sinking
into an ever-deepening quagmire. Washingtons answer to growing
popular hostility and increasingly well-organised resistance is
to revive the methods used by US forces during the Vietnam war:
mass roundups, death squads and the wholesale destruction of villages
and towns.
Lt. Col. George Krivo, a spokesman for the US command, told
the media that military action was being intensified against all
noncompliant forces. The campaign, code-named Operation
Ivy Cyclone, began last Friday night with air bombing raids,
coordinated ground-troop assaults and mass arrests. According
to media reports, the US Army has so far admitted to killing five
Iraqis and arresting 140 people.
A US officer speaking on condition of anonymity said the army
was on offensive operations and that the attacks would
continue for several days. You can expect to see an increase
in the level of intensity and the amount of activity, he
said. In a chilling reminder of US terror in Vietnam, the officer
continued: Part of warfare is coercion and affecting the
hearts and minds of the enemy.
In the first week of November alone, 34 US troops were killed,
the highest losses since the American-led occupation began on
March 21, and more than the total fatalities in all of October.
Over 150 American soldiers have been killed in combat since May
1.
Sixteen US soldiers lost their lives on November 2 when guerilla
fighters downed a Chinook helicopter in Fallujah. This was followed
by the death of six American troops on Friday November 7 when
a Black Hawk helicopter was shot down in Tikrit.
Two of those killed on Friday were from the Department of the
Army headquarters at the Pentagon and an American major general
travelling in another helicopter narrowly escaped death. This
was the third US helicopter hit in the last two weeks.
Washington responded to the Black Hawk crash with an extended
assault on Tikrit, Saddam Husseins home town, beginning
at midnight and lasting until just before dawn on Saturday. US
troops bombarded the area near the helicopter crash site with
mortar fire and then attacked a warehouse and two houses with
rockets, missiles and heavy-machine guns, claiming that anti-coalition
forces were using the properties as hideouts. F-16 jets then dropped
three 227-kilogram laser guided bombs to completely destroy the
buildings.
Lt. Col. Steven Russell of the 4th Infantry Division who led
the raid told Associated Press: We want to remind this town
that we have teeth and claws and we will use them. According
to the press agency, soldiers yelled, knock, knock
and good morning in celebration as the structure crumbled
amid plumes of dust and smoke.
US military officials have attempted to blame the mounting
resistance on Saddam Hussein loyalists, criminals and foreign
fighters. But claims about foreign fighters
are beginning to wear thin. Russell admitted to the press last
weekend that US forces are yet to kill or capture a foreign
fighter in Tikrit.
In fact, the US military, conscious of the widespread and popular
character of the resistance, is increasingly directing its repression
against the Iraqi population as a whole.
In Al Auja, a Tikrit suburb and the birthplace of Saddam Hussein,
the US has established virtual concentration camp conditions.
Surrounded by almost eight kilometres of razor wire the 3,000-strong
community is permanently guarded and patrolled by heavily armed
US troops. No one is allowed in or out of the area without US
Army permission, and US troops have interrogated nearly every
male in the suburb. Last Friday American soldiers poured into
Al Auja before dawn and ordered all residents 18 years and older
to register for identity cards.
Fallujah targetted
Like Tigrit, Fallujah has become another key target. Since
April, when American troops opened fire on a crowd of protesters,
killing 15 people, the town has become a major centre of resistance
to the US occupation.
Late on Saturday, US troops and airforce planes began bombarding
parts of Fallujah after three paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne
Division in the area were wounded. The US military has provided
little details about the attack, but at least three 227-kilogram
bombs were dropped on the town and scores of Iraqis detained.
Hours before the bombing, General John Abizaid, chief of US
Central Command, threatened community officials and tribal chiefs
from a nearby province who were meeting in Fallujah. He described
the province as a hot area and warned that unless
officials cooperated with the US military there might be
another policy.
Fallujah mayor Taha Bedawi quoted the general as saying: Irresponsible
behaviour such as explosions and strikes against coalition forces
were prohibited and we will take measures. We have the capabilities
and the equipment.
While the US military claims Operation Ivy Cyclone
is having the desired effect, resistance attacks have
continued unabated throughout the country, with at least three
Americans and one British soldier killed since the weekend. Two
US soldiers were fatally wounded on patrol in Fallujah when their
vehicle hit a roadside bomb, and a rocket-propelled grenade killed
a US military police officer in Iskandariyah, 60 kilometres south
of Baghdad.
Mortar bombings on the west side of the Tigris River, where
the Coalition Provisional Authority headquarters and other key
occupation facilities are located, are also conducted on a daily
basis. Several loud explosions echoed across Baghdad on Sunday
night when mortars hit properties in the area. At the same time,
patrolling US troops came under small arms fire in Baghdads
Kamal Jumblatt Square and immediately fled the scene.
In the midst of the new American onslaught, US Deputy Secretary
of State Richard Armitage admitted during a heavily guarded visit
to Baghdad, that the US military confronted major problems in
Iraq. [I]ts not a secret to anyone that in the Baghdad,
Tikrit, Ramadi, Fallujah area, weve got a security problem
[and] were sobered by the problem, he told the press.
Armitage made clear, however, there would be no letting up
in US violence. The military had a very solid plan to go
out and get these people, he said. Were going
to take this fight to the enemy.
These threats are in line with recent comments by Republican
Senator Trent Lott who declared: If we have to, we just
mow the whole place down, see what happens. Youre dealing
with insane suicide bombers who are killing our people and we
need to be very aggressive in taking them out.
Far from intimidating the resistance, such methods will only
produce deepening hostility to the illegal occupation.
Commenting on the Tikrit bombings local resident Najih Latif
Abbas told Associated Press: Neither America, nor the father
of America, scares us. Abbas said his 17 children were terrified
as bombs shook their house. Iraqi men are striking at Americans
and they retaliate by terrifying our children.
Sixty-year-old farmer, Fakhri Fayadh, insisted that the US
reprisals will only increase our spite and hatred of them.
If they think they will scare us, they are wrong. Day after day,
Americans will be harmed and attacks against them will increase.
See Also:
Bush vows decades of war for "democracy"
in the Middle East
[8 November 2003]
Iraqi guerrillas shoot down US helicopter,
killing 16 soldiers
Rumsfeld says more such "bad days" to come
[3 November 2003]
Bush lays out his "vision"
for the Middle East
US imperialism's rendezvous with disaster
[28 February 2003]
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