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Descent into chaos:
US soldiers slaughter 10 Iraqi police in clash outside Fallujah
By Peter Symonds
15 September 2003
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As the level of attacks on US troops in Iraq and the number
of casualties has continued to mount, the Pentagon has been attempting
to recruit, train and deploy tens of thousands of Iraqi police
in a desperate bid to shore up its control of the country and
get American soldiers out of the firing line. But the killing
of 10 Iraqi police by US soldiers outside the town of Fallujah
last Friday reveals that the plan is rapidly unravelling amid
the tensions created by growing popular opposition to the US occupation.
The deaths took place in the early hours of Friday morning.
According to Iraqi officials, around 25 police officers in three
vehicles were chasing a BMW after several gunmen opened fire on
the governors headquarters in Fallujah, 50km west of Baghdad.
Outside the town the police came under fire from a US patrol and
were forced off the road near a hospital built by Jordan after
the fall of Saddam Hussein.
More than an hour later, eight Iraqi officers were dead and
nine more were injuredwith another two dying later of their
wounds. The nearby hospital was severely damaged by American tank
fire, one of its Jordanian security guards was dead and five others
were wounded. According to eyewitnesses, in the midst of the chaotic
situation the hospital guards had become involved in the shooting.
No formal investigation has taken place and the details are
still unclear. But of all the versions, the least likely is that
provided by American military spokesmen. They have asserted that
US forces only opened fire after being shot at by unknown
forces from one of the three police vehicles. The claim,
which is the routine explanation given in all cases involving
the killing of Iraqi civilians, is directly contradicted by the
statements of surviving officers and other eyewitnesses.
Sergeant Assem Mohammed, who was wounded in the attack, told
the Washington Post that the police had broken off the
chase and turned around when they came under fire. Two of the
three vehicles were white with blue markings that read Iraqi
Police, Fallujah. The police were all members of the Fallujah
Protection Forcea militia trained and equipped by US forcesand
half were dressed in uniforms and wore distinctive arm bands with
FPF in English.
The police tried to explain who they were but to no avail.
They kept firing, and we kept shouting at them, We
are police! We are police! Mohammed said. Another wounded
officer, Arkan Adnan, said that officers had shouted in English
Police and We are officers. He said that
one policeman had pulled off his armband and waved it in the air
but was shot.
Several accounts indicate that the police were not even returning
fire. Arkan Adnan told the New York Times that none of
the Iraqi police had fired their weapons. An Associated Press
reporter who examined the scene said none of the spent shell casings
were from the AK-47 rifles used by Iraqi police. All came from
weapons used by US forces.
In the course of the frenzied attack, Dhia Mahmoud, a doctor
at the Jordanian hospital, had approached the American force to
request permission to evacuate the wounded but was refused. I
asked the Americans to let me in, and they said No, you
have to stop, Mahmoud said. He described the scene
as horrific when he was allowed to approach, with bodies torn
apart from large calibre weapons fired at close range.
Abdul Jalil, another of the wounded police, told the New
York Times that the US force had been armed with at least
two tanks which opened fire not only on the police but the hospital
as well. The attack severely damaged one of the hospitals
buildings, which had large holes and soot in its concrete façade,
the newspaper explained. Hundreds of spent cartridges, including
from large calibre weapons and tanks, littered the ground where
the US forces had been positioned, just 15 metres from the spot
where the Iraqi police had huddled.
At the very least, the incident reveals a complete breakdown
in cooperation between the US military and the Iraqi police. Facing
a hostile population, US soldiers increasingly regard all Iraqis
as enemies and react in knee-jerk fashion to any threatreal
or imaginarywithout bothering to take the most elementary
precautions.
These tensions are particularly explosive in Fallujah. The
international media regularly describes the town as a bastion
of Baath party supporterspart of the so-called Sunni trianglebut
real responsibility for the hostility rests with the heavy-handed
repression meted out by American forces. In late April, American
troops opened fire on a crowd of protesters, killing at least
15 people and wounding many more. The US military claimed soldiers
had fired in self-defence and, after sharply escalating tensions,
paid a pittance in compensation to the families of the victims
in an attempt to pacify opposition.
Following the killings last Friday, the Fallujah police force
is on the point of open mutiny, threatening to end any cooperation
with US forces and vowing revenge. Sergeant Khaled Abed Hammadi
told the Washington Post: If they kill one of ours,
well kill 10 of theirs. If they kill 10 of ours, well
kill 100 of theirs. We will not stand for it, well not support
them, we want nothing to do with them. A black banner was
strung above the one-story police headquarters building. It carried
the names of the dead and was inscribed with the words Fallujah
Protection Force mourns the martyrdom of its members who have
been killed at the hands of American forces.
During the funerals for the dead officers on Saturday, crowds
took to the streets chanting America is the enemy of God
and The blood of our martyrs will not go in vain.
One of the mourners, Taleb Hameed, a 30-year-old school teacher,
told the press: We want the Americans to leave our country
because they have brought us only death. We are fed up with their
apologies. We will continue our resistance. Senior Sunni
clerics issued a statement condemning the killings and called
for a general strike on Sunday to coincide with the beginning
of three days of mourning.
A belated statement of regret by the US military issued more
than 36 hours after the massacre did nothing to stem the outrage.
Spokesman Lieutenant Colonel George Krivo told reporters in Baghdad
that he expressed our deepest regrets for the deaths
and the damage to the hospital. He provided no account of the
events, saying there would be an investigation, but insisted that
US forces only responded after being fired upon.
Further attacks on US troops
Widespread anger at the massacre of Iraqi police has no doubt
provided further fuel for the continuing guerrilla attacks on
US troops in Fallujah. Two incidents have been reported over the
last three days.
Last Friday a convoy of US Humvees came under attack from rocket
propelled grenades after a bomb exploded underneath one of the
vehicles. An eyewitness Haythem Saleh said that US troops poured
onto the street and opened fire. The Americans started to
shoot randomly against the houses, Saleh said. At least
four bystanders were injured, including a young girl Usama Hamid
who was playing in her house. She later died in hospital, compounding
the anger of residents.
On Sunday an American soldier was killed and another three
were wounded in an attack outside Fallujah. The death brings to
155 the number of US troops who have died in Iraq since President
Bush announced the end of major combat on May 1.
As for the Iraqi police, they find themselves in an untenable
situation, despised as collaborators by their fellow citizens
and distrusted by their paymasters. Many are young and ill-trained.
The remainder were members of the hated security forces of the
Hussein dictatorshipanother source of distrust and hostility.
Their position was highlighted in an article in the Washington
Post which followed up an attack last week on a convoy of
US military engineers in the town of Khaldiyah near Fallujah.
During the fighting, which lasted over an hour, a small crowd
gathered to cheer on the guerrillas with shouts of Oh Iraq
we sacrifice our lives and blood for you. The US troops
suffered no casualties but they left behind at least three destroyed
vehiclesa transporter, a five-tonne truck and at least one
Humvee.
A Washington Post reporter who went to the town found
the US-trained police force besieged, demoralised and widely despised.
The police complained to the newspaper that they were openly insulted
as collaborators, lackeys and spies, on the occasions that they
ventured outside the police station. The people tell us
were selling our country for dollars, Thaer Abdullah
Saleh said. Even our families call us collaborators.
At the scene of the Khaldiyah ambush, a number of young men
had blocked the road with parts of the burnt out US trucks. They
were stopping vehicles and forcing the drivers to kiss the Iraqi
flag as a sign of their allegiance. At a nearby barbers
shop, the barber Hakim Talib and his customers warned the police
against interfering. If the policemen work with the Americans,
we consider them enemies, Talib said. The police officers
indicated that they had taken the message to heart.
The Khaldiyah police are ill-equipped and ill-trained. Their
station has no phone. The police chiefs pickup is nothing
but a charred frame after it was torched during the earlier clash
with protestors at the mayors office. And like their counterparts
in Fallujah, some were expressing open rebellion. Dhiaa Din Rajoub
declared his sympathy for the resistance, saying: Its
our right. This is our country, this is an occupation, and we
dont accept it.
Far from the Iraqi police providing a solution to the deepening
crisis of the US occupation, it appears just as likely that they
will join the armed opposition against it.
See Also:
Bombing in Irbil points to growing instability
in northern Iraq
[13 September 2003]
Desperate over growing debacle: Bush
justifies Iraq occupation with lies on "terror"
[8 September 2003]
Bush seeks UN bailout of Iraqi occupation
[4 September 2003]
The Najaf bombing: US occupation yields
catastrophe
[1 September 2003]
The Iraq quagmire
[21 August 2003]
US troops gun down Iraqi demonstrators
[30 April 2003]
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