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Operation Iraqi Bloodbath: US prepares reprisals against uprising
By James Conachy
6 April 2004
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The invasion of Iraq last year was christened Operation
Iraqi Freedom in an attempt to deflect from the utterly
predatory and criminal character of US ambitions in the Middle
East. Twelve months later, as American troops prepare to close
in on the Shiite youth who have taken up arms against them in
Baghdad and other cities, and marines prepare reprisals against
the city of Fallujah, a more apt name would be Operation
Iraqi Bloodbath.
As the situation stood on Monday night, an arrest warrant has
been issued by the US Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) against
the religious leader of the Shiite uprising, 31-year-old cleric
Moqtada Sadr. Along with many of his most senior associates, he
has been accused of responsibility for the killing of a Shiite
cleric in April 2003. No evidence has been provided and the allegation
has been repeatedly denied.
Sadr is barricaded inside the main mosque in the city of Kufa.
He has issued a statement that he will not leave until the US
occupation authority guarantees when foreign forces
will leave Iraq and the lifting of the ban on his newspaper Al
Hawza. Thousands of his young supporters, both armed and unarmed,
are occupying the mosques courtyard and surrounding area
to prevent any attempt by the American military to seize him.
In a direct threat against the clerics life, US General
Mark Kimmitt told the press yesterday: Whether Sadr decides
to come peacefully, or whether he decides to come not peacefullythat
choice is the choice of Mister Moqtada Sadr. Kimmitt declared:
Individuals who create violence, who incite violence...
will be hunted down and captured or killed. Its that simple.
A member of Sadrs Mehdi Army militia told
Agence France Presse (AFP) in Kufa: We are ready to sacrifice
our lives for our leader Moqtada if the coalition troops touch
a single strand of his hair.
The 500,000 citizens of Fallujah, the Sunni Muslim centre where
four American mercenaries were killed and paraded through the
streets last week, are waiting for the inevitable re-entry of
US troops into the city. The American military has sealed off
the roads with earth barricades and imposed a dawn to dusk curfew.
Al Jazeera reported that its journalists have been blocked
from entering the city. Helicopters and jet fighters are stalking
the sky above.
A force of 1,200 marines and hundreds of Iraqi Civil Defence
Corp (ICDC) troops are poised to go in, according
to a marine spokesman Lieutenant James Vanzant. The US troops
reportedly have lists of addresses they allege are the homes of
resistance fighters, or of youth who were involved in parading
the mercenaries corpses. Leaflets were distributed throughout
the city yesterday warning people to stay inside their homes.
Air strikes were called in Sunday night against a residential
area the American military claimed was being used as a mortar
base. Five houses were damaged, five civilians killed and a number
of others injured. One marine was reportedly killed and several
wounded on the fringes of the city by mortar attacks.
A marine colonel told the Los Angeles Times on the weekend:
Fallujah is a barrier on the highway to progress. Were
going to eliminate the barrier without damaging the highway.
Reprisal mentality
The reprisal mentality guiding the American military forces
calls to mind nothing less than the conduct of Nazi occupation
forces in Europe during World War II. By the end of the war, the
very term reprisal had become synonymous with the mass killing
of civilian populations supporting popular and legitimate guerilla
warfare against the Nazis. Hitler, in answer to the operations
of Soviet partisans, for example, issued instructions in 1942
that whatever succeeds is correct. The German military
command responded by ordering its occupation troops to use any
means, even against women and children, provided they are conducive
to success.
The prospect is looming in Iraq for an orgy of killing by US
troops, in desperate and murderous efforts to carry out the orders
of the Bush administration that they bring the situation under
control. Bush declared from North Carolina that the US had to
stay the course, and we will stay the course [in Iraq].
He was joined by Democrat presidential candidate John Kerry.
While calling again for the involvement of the United Nations
and other powers in Iraq, he declared his full support for whatevers
necessary to protect our troops that are there and to provide
for stability and success. Other leading Democrats have
followed suit.
The implications of restoring stability are enormous.
Entire swathes of the country are now in a state of revolt over
the crackdown against Sadr.
Militiamen have control of the streets of Najaf, where they
have taken up positions around one of the holiest sites of the
Shiite faith, the mausoleum of Ali. Spanish troops in the area
came under what the Spanish Defence Ministry described as sporadic
attack from mortar launchers. The Spanish statement declared:
The situation in Najaf has been one of high tension.
The Iraqi police have reportedly abandoned the city to Sadrs
supporters.
In Karbala, Kut, Amara and Basra armed militiamen are also
on the streets. So far, British and other occupation forces have
avoided a direct confrontation, but gunfire exchanges took place
at various times during the day.
In Baghdad, senior members of Sadrs organisation are
barricaded inside their headquarters in the eastern Sadr
City suburb, which was named after the radical clerics
father. American tanks and troops are in battle positions just
hundreds of metres away. Militiamen are manning road and rooftop
positions and at main intersections leading into the area. When
US forces attempted to move toward the headquarters earlier in
the day, crowds of unarmed Shiite civilians sat down in the middle
of road to block their path, chanting Long live Moqtada.
Fighting flared early Monday in the northwest Baghdad suburb
of Shuala. A convoy of US and ICDC troops attempting to enter
the area was attacked and one truck set ablaze. According to an
unconfirmed report, the ICDC troops joined the militia and turned
their guns on the Americans. For the first time since last November,
Apache attack helicopters were called in to provide covering fire
while the US troops pulled out.
It is now clear that the events on Sunday have already inflicted
large numbers of civilian casualties in Baghdad. At least 47 people
were killed when US troops opened fire on a pro-Sadr demonstration
in the city centre. During the fighting that raged Sunday night
in Sadr City, a market and a number of buildings were levelled
by American tanks. They came in humvees and we kicked their
asses, a 20-year-old youth told United Press International,
but after we burned the two humvees, their tanks came late
last night and shot everyone.
UPI reporters saw at least 12 civilian bodies in one hospital,
including two children. Doctors claimed at least 12 others had
already been taken away by their families. According to militiamen,
they did not take their dozens of dead and wounded to the hospitals
out of fear they would be arrested.
Doctor Tariq Atham told UPI: I never saw a more despicable
and evil action by the Americans. Even Sharon or Saddam are better.
They [the American troops] shot children and women in the face
and neck every time.
An illegal occupation
In the midst of such atrocities, and preparations for even
greater ones, CPA head Paul Bremer denounced Sadr yesterday as
an outlaw, who was attempting to establish his
authority in the place of the legitimate authority.
The only authority Bremer is referring to is the
repressive power of the American military. Despite the Islamic
fundamentalist perspective of Sadrs organisation, the movement
that erupted on Sunday in his name is based among Iraqs
urban poor and is motivated by justified, anti-colonial resistance
to the American conquest of their country.
No institution created by the US invasion, especially the one
Bremer heads, has any political or moral legitimacy, let alone
popular support. The war was illegal and conducted on the basis
of threadbare liesone of the most threadbare of which, apart
from Iraq possessing weapons of mass destruction,
was that the Iraqi people would welcome foreign invaders as liberators.
The majority of Iraqis have been reduced to unspeakable poverty
and deprivation by 13 years of US-led wars and economic sanctions.
While still enduring mass unemployment and deprivation, they are
witnessing the US attempt to install a puppet government that
they do not support and which will give the US control over the
countrys energy resources and territory for military bases.
There is a clear element of provocation in the US actions against
Sadr. Bremer and the military have sought to push the clericwho
has been one of the more vocal critics of the US plans for a puppet
regimeinto a corner from which he had no choice but to either
completely capitulate or sanction an uprising.
Sadrs newspaper was banned on March 28 for inciting
violence, bringing thousands of his supporters into the
streets throughout last week in protest. Amidst the turbulence,
one of his closest associates was arrested on Saturday on murder
charges. The resulting mass protests on Sunday were fired on by
coalition troops in both Najaf and Baghdad, leading to the uprising
and pitched battles of Sunday night. It is doubtful whether Sadr
had any particular control over the course of events.
In a column in todays British Guardian, journalist
Naomi Klein posed the obvious question: Why would the US provoke
armed resistance in the Shiite population when it is already incapable
of suppressing the guerilla war in the Sunni regions of the country?
Klein gave one possible answer: Washington has given
up on its plans to hand over power to an interim Iraqi government
on June 30, and is creating the chaos it needs to declare the
handover impossible. A continued occupation will be bad news for
George Bush on the campaign trail, but not as bad as if the hand-over
happens and the country erupts, an increasingly likely scenario
given the widespread rejection of the legitimacy of the interim
constitution and the US-appointed Governing Council.
The speculation is entirely valid. The invasion of Iraq has
become a political debacle for the Bush administration. The latest
Pew Research opinion poll shows that only 32 percent of Americans
believe the White House has a clear plan of what to
do in Iraq. Only 50 percent support keeping troops in the country,
down from 63 percent in January. Bushs personal approval
rating of 43 percent is the lowest the survey has ever registered.
The US political and media establishment, which completely
backed the war and is totally committed to continuing the occupation,
faces an increasingly skeptical and hostile American public that
believes anything Bush says about Iraq is a lie. All that are
left are hollow appeals that the US cannot risk the global political
consequences of being seen to cut and run in the face
of the growing quagmire. The Democrats have stepped forward as
the main promoters of this position. The US, Kerry declared yesterday,
cannot allow this [Iraq] to end in failure.
The American working class, however, has everything to gain
from the failure of the criminal enterprise in Iraq. It is being
carried out against their interests, at the expense of their democratic
rights and at the cost of hundreds of American, and thousand of
Iraqi, lives. The only progressive answer is the immediate and
unconditional withdrawal from Iraq of all US and foreign forces.
See Also:
Shiite uprising erupts against US occupation
of Iraq
[5 April 2004]
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