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Analysis : Middle
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Fury in Fallujah after US air strikes
By James Conachy
23 June 2004
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The US military carried out its second air strike in four days
on residential areas in south central Fallujah yesterday. According
to witnesses interviewed by Agence France Presse and other agencies,
missiles fired from jet fighters slammed into a mechanics
garage at 10:30 p.m. The mechanic, Abu Fares, was killed, as were
his two sons. The Fallujah hospital informed the press that at
least 10 other people were injured.
Yesterdays attack follows the devastating air strike
on Saturday, which claimed the lives of 22 members of an extended
family, including at least three women and five children. Missiles
fired from F-16 jet fighters reduced their house and a neighboring
home to rubble. As many as 30 other people were wounded.
A Fallujah doctor, Fadhil al-Baddrani, told the British Observer
that the house belonged to Mohammed Hamadi, a 65-year-old farmer.
The whole family is gone. The blast was so powerful it blew
them to pieces. We could only recognize the women by their long
hair.
Witnesses also claim the American pilots delayed firing a second
missile into the house until people had begun desperately digging
in the rubble for survivors. Wissam Ali Hamad told Al Jazeerah,
The number of casualties is so high because after the first
missile we jumped to rescue the victims. The second missile killed
those trying to carry out the rescue.
The US military claims that both yesterdays and Saturdays
attacks were against safe houses being used by Tawhid
wa al-Jihadan alleged Islamic extremist group headed by
Abu Musaab al-Zarqawi.
The US justification, however, was rejected over the weekend
by the Fallujah police and witnesses.
The Fallujah police chief, Colonel Sadr al-Janabi, told Al
Jazeerah, This was an attack on a family in a house and
it killed all of them. There are no signs that people like Zarqawi
were in the house or in Fallujah. A police captain, Mohammed
Abdul Karim, told Agence France Presse, We have not found
any evidence of an armed group there.
The Fallujah Brigadethe paramilitary forcewas not
consulted about the American intelligence accusations that the
house was being used by terrorists and not even notified that
an air strike was going to take place. General Mohammed Abid Dulaimi
told the Los Angeles Times, We were supposed to be
consulted. We would have been able to uncover any suspicions in
this respect and would have done our security duties.
The Pentagon has admitted the attack was ordered with the full
knowledge it would inflict substantial civilian casualties. A
statement issued in the name of US spokesman Brigadier General
Mark Kimmitt coldly declared: It is standard operating procedure
to conduct a detailed collateral damage estimate prior to approval
of this type of mission. The collateral damage estimate was within
permissible limits and this operation was within standing rules
of engagement.
A sentiment is developing in Iraq and internationally that
the alleged terrorist network of Zarqawi is being used as a bogey-man
to justify ongoing US military actions in Iraq.
Thousands of Iraqis demonstrated in Fallujah on Monday and
Tuesday to condemn the air strikes and accuse the US of trying
to provoke conflict. One of the banners carried at the demonstration
on Monday read: The lie about Zarqawi is like the one about
weapons of mass destruction. A Fallujah leader, Shaikh Abd
Allah al-Janabi, told Al Jazeerah the US occupation forces were
conducting a dirty tricks campaign.
The most likely explanation for the US air strikes is that
they are intended to provoke retaliation attacks on American troops
by resistance groups in Fallujah and thereby provide the US military
with an excuse for once again going into the city in force.
The Washington Post reported that last Friday, just
24 hours before the first strike, an unnamed senior US military
commander was called before Deputy Defense Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz to brief him on the situation in Fallujah. The commander
told the Post that on at least three or four occasions
the US military has been on the verge of pulling the plug
on the deal with the Iraqi generals.
A senior official accompanying Wolfowitz on his trip to Iraq
told the Post: The Fallujah Brigade was a band-aid
to create a cease-fire. It has to be seen as a temporary fix.
There is growing criticism of the Bush administration over
the state of affairs in Fallujah. After issuing repeated declarations
the US military would pacify the city and hunt down
the men who killed four American mercenaries on March 30, the
White House sanctioned a compromise deal that has left it effectively
outside the authority of the US occupation.
Anthony Zinni, a former US military commander and a critic
of the Bush administrations conduct of the war, declared
in a recent speech: In this part of the world [the Middle
East], strength matters. And if you say you are going to go in
and wipe them out, you better do it.
The New York Times and Washington Post have both
published extensive on-the-spot reports that the resistance groups
that held Fallujah against an assault by US marines in April are
still in control in the city. The reports have accused the Fallujah
Brigade, which recruited a number of the insurgents into its ranks,
of making no attempt to disarm them.
The discussion in US ruling circles about a possible end to
the cease-fire in Fallujah coincides with another increase in
US forces in the country. Some 2,200 Marines have already left
their home base in San Diego for Iraq, with a total of 5,000 fresh
marines being rushed to the country by August. The overall number
of US troops in Iraq is being temporarily increased from 138,000
to 145,000.
See Also:
US killed hundreds of Iraqi civilians
in precision strikes
[18 June 2004]
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