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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Iraqi hatred for US occupation erupts in Fallujah
By James Conachy
1 April 2004
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In scenes captured by television cameras, crowds of Iraqi men
hacked apart and lynched the bodies of four Americans killed yesterday
in the restive city of Fallujah.
According to witnesses interviewed by Associated Press (AP),
a convoy of three unmarked civilian SUVs was ambushed as it travelled
along a Fallujah street. Iraqi resistance fighters threw hand
grenades into two of the vehicles and raked them with machine
gun fire, setting them ablaze and killing the four men inside.
The occupants of the third vehicle sped off and escaped. The US
military has reported only two vehicles were involved.
Jubilant locals gathered around the burning vehicles, cheering,
dancing and hurling bricks at the corpses inside. One body was
pulled from the wreckage and dismembered with shovels. Bodies
and body parts were filmed hanging from a telephone pole and a
bridge over the Euphrates River, and being dragged through Fallujah
behind cars and donkey carts.
Throughout the incident, men in the crowd chanted Viva
the mujahadeen, Down with the occupation, Long
live the resistance and Down with America. According
to AP reporters, a nearby group of Iraqi police did not intervene.
No effort to recover the bodies was made by either the US military
or other Iraqi security forces for 10 hours.
Inevitable comparisons have been made with the 1993 incident
in Somalia, when the bodies of dead Army rangers were paraded
through the streets of Mogadishu by triumphant Somalis opposed
to the US military presence in their country.
Eleven months after George Bush declared combat in Iraq over,
the US military is still confronted with a hostile population
and an ongoing guerilla war across the country. American combat
casualties in March increased to 35 dead and 291 wounded, up from
16 combat deaths and 147 wounded in February. Five of the military
deaths took place yesterday just outside Fallujah, when a convoy
was hit by a massive roadside bomb.
The US government and military have stated that the four Americans
were contractors working for the private security firm, Blackwater
Security, and employed to protect food deliveries in the Fallujah
area. No explanation has been given as to why they were so far
inside the city. AP cameras filmed a US Department of Defence
identification card among the wreckage, giving rise to suspicions
that the men may have been American intelligence operatives.
The passions of the crowd reflect the hostility toward the
US invasion and ongoing occupation of Iraq. In the last week,
the American military has intensified the repression of the 500,000
residents of Fallujah. On March 24, the California-based First
Marine Division took over control of the area, which has been
one of the centres of opposition and armed resistance to the US.
The newly arrived troops have been attempting to assert their
control using brutal tactics.
Last Friday morning, hundreds of marines with tanks and armoured
vehicles deployed into the city in forcethe first time American
troops have done so for months. Exchanges of mortar and gunfire
flared throughout the day, especially in the working class suburb
of al-Askari where the marines fought battles with local resistance
fighters. Most of the 15 Iraqis killed and many of the wounded
were non-combatants gunned down by the Americans.
A farmer, Jamal Mahesem, told the Washington Post he
was shot in the leg while he was walking down a road. I
didnt even see the American soldiers, he said. I
dont know why they started shooting. I didnt hear
anyone shooting at them.
Another wounded man, Ahmed Yusuf, who claimed he was shot as
he turned his car into a side street, told the Post: They
think that theyre going to control the city by doing this?
Theyre wrong. They will never be able to control the city
like this. They will turn the situation here to a war situation.
The man in the car behind him was shot in the head.
Among those killed by American bullets was Mohammed Mazhour,
a freelance cameraman working for US ABC News. Hospitals reported
treating at least 25 wounded, including five children.
The marines offensive continued over the following days.
The major roads in and out of Fallujah were blockaded by US tanks
and troops until Tuesday, with hundreds of people being subjected
to vehicle searches. On Monday and Tuesday, marines carried out
house-to-house searches for insurgents in three suburbs, including
al-Askari. An unknown number of men were detained. A local, Khaled
Jamaili, told AP: If they find more than one adult male
in any house, they arrest one of them. Those marines are destroying
us. They are leaning very hard on Fallujah.
As they rampaged through the city, the marines tossed Arabic
leaflets into the streets that provocatively read: You cant
escape and you cant hide.
The offensive has inflamed what was already a population fiercely
opposed to the US occupation. Fallujah was a centre of support
for the former Baathist regime and fighting has not stopped since
the US-led invasion. As a result, the city has suffered considerably
at the hands of the USA military. In April 2003, unarmed demonstrations
were fired on by American soldiers, killing and wounding scores
of civilians. In the months since, resistance fighters have killed
and wounded dozens of Americans.
Last November, in an attempt to reduce casualties, the US military
withdrew to the outskirts of Fallujah and ostensibly left security
in the hands of the local forces it had recruited. The city immediately
came under the sway of the insurgency. This was demonstrated on
February 14 when up to 75 heavily armed men stormed the police
station to free a group of captured guerillas. Dozens of the US-trained
police were killed or wounded.
Yesterdays incident has set the stage for a further escalation
of violence and greater US reprisals against the civilian population.
American general Mark Klimmit told a press conference: The
Marines, like their predecessors, will continue to maintain control.
There often are small outbursts of violence. As weve seen
today, they will go in, they will restore order, and theyll
put those people back in their place.
In the face of a constant cycle of death and mayhem, the political
and military spokesmen for the Bush administration continue to
assert that only a minority of Iraqis oppose the US presence and
that the security situation is improving. The hatred and anger
shown yesterday on the streets of Fallujah, however, is not confined
to a few hundred men in one city. To one degree or another, it
is shared by the vast majority of Iraqis.
The increased US casualties are partly due to stepped-up operations
against the Iraqi resistance ahead of the scheduled June 30 transfer
of power to an Iraqi puppet government. Far from bringing greater
stability, however, the military offensive has only fueled opposition
and the determination among Iraqis to resist the US plans.
It is likely that sections of the American establishment will
attempt to exploit the four contractors deaths to argue
for greater numbers of American and foreign troops to be sent
to Iraq in order to guarantee security. Against such
calls, the demand must be raised for the immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of US and all foreign troops from the country.
See Also:
US shuts down anti-occupation
Iraqi newspaper
[30 March 2004]
One year since the US invasion
of Iraq
[19 March 2004]
Attack on Fallujah police
highlights lack of US control in Iraq
[23 February 2004]
Guerrilla war intensifies
in Iraq despite Hussein's capture
[11 February 2004]
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